Thomas Hardy - Tess of the d’Urbervilles
Thomas Hardy was born on the 2nd of June , 1840, at Higher Bockhampton. He attended the village school at Bockhampton and then he went to school at Dorchester. This is the period when he started studying Latin, French and German. Hardy left Dorchester for London where he started working as an assistant-architect. It is the period (1862-1967) when he read Spencer, Huxley, Shelley, Browning, Scott and Swinburne.
Around 1870 Hardy returned to Higher Bockhampton. He began his first novel. “Far from the Madding Crowd”(1874) was the novel to establish Hardy’ s reputation. Other novels were: 1878, “The Return of the Native”; 1880, “The Trumpet Major”; 1886, “The Mayor of Casterbridge”;1887, “The Woodlanders”; 1891, “Tess of the D’Urbervilles”.
Thomas Hardy died on the 11th of January, 1928; his ashes were laid in the Poets’ Corner of Westminster Abbey.
“Tess of the D’Urbervilles” is Hardy’ s tragic masterpiece. It is the story of innocence and evil, of man and nature, of history and its relation to the present, concentrated on the fate of a simple country girl.
Tess is the daughter of a poor villager of Blackmoor Vale, who believes that he is the descendent of an ancient family, the D’Urbervilles. Tess is seduced by Alec, the rich son of a family that bears the name of D’Urberville. Tess give birth to a child who dies after its baptism. The heroine leaves her native village; later, while working as a dairymaid, she gets engaged to Angel Clare, the son of a clergyman. On their wedding night, she confesses to him the seduction by Alec; Angel, cruelly abandons her. She is once more thrown in the arms of Alec D’Urberville. When Tess’ s appeals to her husband, now in Brazil, remain unanswered, she becomes, for the sake of her family, Alec’ s mistress; Clare, returning from Brazil and repenting of his harshness, finds her living with Alec. Maddened by the second wrong that has been done to her by Alec, Tess stabs and kills him