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Tess as a pure woman.

In Hardy's Tess of the D'Urbervilles, Tess, the heroine, has hardships and injustices endlessly
heaped upon her, however, she never wallows in self-pity or abandons hope. Pragmatic and
selfless, honest and kind, she is clearly shown to the reader to be "a pure woman", as the subtitle
of the novel states. Society, human selfishness, and the "President of the Immortals" are all guilty
of dragging her inexorably towards her tragic grave, while she is innocent - or nearly so and
fight against her fate to the end.

Ironically, it is because Tess is so pure that she is banished from society, just as Jesus Christ
becomes a martyr for truth. Again and again she has the opportunity to improve her own material
lot but she is not prepared to compromise her principles. In Chapter XII, on learning of her affair
with rich Alec, Tess's mother exclaims, Any woman but you would have got him to marry thee".
Tess, however, will not stoop to a "convulsive snatching at social salvation". Similarly, Tess
agonizes over whether to reveal her "Bygone Trouble" to Angel, and is twice warned: Many a
woman...have had a Trouble in their time; and why should you trumpet yours when others don't
trumpet theirs? However, Tess does not follow the advice of her worldly-wise mother. A deeply
moral person, she cannot bring herself to conceal the truth, when Angel believes her to be
spotless.

Though Tess is not entirely without sin and does make mistakes in her life, inspirit her intentions
are invariably good. Twice she is seduced by Alec and lives with him for a period of time, and
there is little doubt that the second time at least, as a married woman, she is doing the wrong
thing. However, both times she is not thinking of her personal gains or pleasure but of her family,
towards whom she still feels a debt, and Alec ruthlessly takes advantage of this weakness to
seduce her. After her fathers death, the family is evicted and becomes penniless. Tess, given a
second chance, sacrifices her own peace of mind for the well being of her relatives: My little
sisters and brothers and my mother's needs - they were the things you moved me by...and you
said my husband would never come back - never!

Until the moment of her final crime, Tess is prepared to suffer for others, to the extent of
abandoning all hope of personal happiness with Angel; yet her most altruistic actions are
perversely seen by society as evidence of her immorality. Because of her sacrificial attitude, Tess
becomes a natural scapegoat, and those around her find it easy to shake off their own
responsibilities. In the very beginning of the novel she is propelled from her sheltered existence
into the clutches of Alec, because she wrongly feels entirely responsible for the death of the
family's horse and thinks it her duty to support the family after this catastrophe. Similarly, it is
out of respect for Angel's preposterous wishes that she refrains from writing to him in Brazil to
tell him how she misses him, until it is too late. Furthermore, it is because she can sense an air of
reproach in her family when she returns home for the second time that she casts herself out and
endures physical hardship and mental pain at Flint comb-Ash. Her sensitivity to others' emotions
undoubtedly plays a central role in the ruination of her life, and so in absolute terms Tess is at
least partly responsible for her fate.

There is a slight suggestion in Hardy's writing that Tess's stoicism is derived from pride and self-
righteousness. When Angel hypocritically rejects her on account of her past, "if Tess had been
artful, had she made a scene, fainted, wept hysterically...he would probably not have withstood
her", the narrator comments, Pride, too, entered into her submission - which perhaps was a
symptom of that reckless acquiescence in chance too apparent in the whole d'Urberville family.
However, this is the only reference in the novel to any self-respect feelings in Tess, and until the
bitter end she is depicted as unassuming, pragmatic, and determined not to give in to fate like her
family or the other Talbothays girls. It is because she worships Angel that she is proud not to
contradict him, in the same way martyrs are proud to be tortured for their God.

Throughout the novel, then, Tess is shown to be pure in intention and selfless in all acts, until she
surprisingly, spitefully murders Alec. This is the single action that proves to be her ultimate
downfall, a totally unnecessary crime of passion. Perhaps any other person in the same situation
would have cracked much earlier, perhaps any other person would not have attempted to abide
by the rules of personal morality for so long; nonetheless, Tess has no right to take Alec's life.

In terms of the society in which she lives, Tess is to some extent guilty of bringing about her
own fate, and is somewhat her own hangman. However, it is this same society that has so
unjustly marked her out as unclean that has so forcefully put the noose around her neck. This
society blindly ignores Christian principles, judging her on deeds and not on intentions, and
unwilling to forgive her past. This impure society, argues Hardy punishes the honest and the
conscientious. There is another factor too in Tess's downfall, namely, a fate that has sought in
every step of Tess's life to trip her up, a "President of the Immortals that plays with Tess in the
way a cat plays with a helpless mouse. Tess is alone fighting against these huge forces, the social
and the natural, heroically defending virtue in the face of rampant vice. It is little wonder she
finally cracks. Indeed, it may well be because she finally cracks, because she is human, that the
reader admires her and sympathizes with her to such an extent.

From the above analysis, we can get a general knowledge about Tess. In Hardys eyes, though
Tess lost her virginity, she was still a pure woman, and she was the representative of all pure
women. On the other hand, though she murdered Alec, she was not a murderess but a fighter
against fate. As a dutiful daughter and passive victim, she is a fighter against fate and other tragic
issues. She is a heroic martyr.

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