Term
Lack of control over actions |
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Definition
However our impulses are too strong for our judgement sometimes |
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How Blakemore is described |
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Definition
This fertile and sheltered tract of country |
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Tradition being carried on in Blakemore |
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Definition
The banded ones were all dressed in white gowns, a gay survival from old style days |
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Term
Pastoral realism at the dance |
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Definition
There were a few middle aged women...having a grotesque, certainly pathetic appearance |
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Term
Tess Naivity is shown from an early stage |
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Definition
Bless thy simplicity Tess |
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Term
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Definition
Tess' pride would not allow her to turn her head again |
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Term
Tess is naive and inexperienced |
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Definition
phases of her childhood lurked in her aspect still |
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Term
Tess is left split after the rape |
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Definition
An immeasurable chasm was to divide our heroines personality |
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Term
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Definition
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The rape is shocking but fateful - it corrupts her innocence |
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Definition
Why was it on that beautiful feminine tissue...there should have been traced such a coarse pattern as it was doomed to receive |
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Term
Tess is in tune with nature - not society, she is punished for breaking a rule that she doesn't believe in |
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Definition
She had been made to make a necessary social law, but no law known to the environment in which she fancied herself such an anomoly |
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Term
The reaping machine destroys nature |
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Definition
Rabbits, hares, snakes, rats, mice, all retreated...unaware of the ephemeral nature of their refuge...all of them put to death by the sticks and stones of the harvesters" |
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Term
Environment is ambivalent to Tess |
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Definition
The familiar surroundings had not darkened because of her grief nor sickened because of her pain |
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Term
Her baby dies just after she starts to get past her moral issues |
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Definition
But not her moral sorrows were passing away a fresh one arose on the natural side of her which knew no social law |
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Term
Tess' baby died - good or bad? |
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Definition
Poor Sorrow...doomed to be of limited brilliance, luckily perhaps for himself considering his beginnings |
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Term
Tess baby was doomed to failure |
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Definition
that bastard gift of shameless nature who respects not the civil law |
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Term
Tess is transformed by the rape |
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Definition
Almost at a leap Tess changed from simple girl to complex woman |
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Term
Tess takes comfort in her simple, natural, roots |
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Definition
She would now be the dairymaid Tess and nothing more |
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Term
Nature can be kind to Tess - even if it is a coincidence |
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Definition
She had never visited this part of the country before yet she felt akin to the landscape |
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Term
Religion is a topic of discussion - The pagan tradition is seen by Hardy as more "pure" |
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Definition
Nature retain in their souls far more of the pagan fantasy of their distant forefathers than of the systematized religion taught to their race at a later date |
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Term
Clare has the freedom to enjoy pastoral life - doesn't realise that for some people it is the only way to live |
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Definition
Unexpectedly he began to like the outdoor life for its own sake |
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Term
Clare likes Tess for what she represents |
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Definition
What a genuine daughter of Nature that milkmaid is |
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Term
Tess finds happiness in Talbothays |
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Definition
Tess had in recent life never been as happy as she was now, perhaps would never be so happy again. She was, for one thing, mentally and physically in tune with her surroundings |
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Term
Tess and Angel are presented at the start to have an innocent love - almost a prelapsarian ideal |
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Definition
As if they were Adam and Eve |
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Term
Angel starts to see Tess as a 'lover' |
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Definition
She was no longer a milkmaid, but a visionary essence of woman, a whole sex condensed into one form |
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Term
Clare is much akin to Alec in that he stalks her slightly |
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Definition
He sat under his cow watching her |
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Term
Clare sexualizes Tess, and then complains when he finds out she is "corrupt" |
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Definition
How very lovable her face was to him, but there was nothing ethereal about it, all was real vitality, real warmth, real incarnation" |
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Term
Clare plays around with Tess |
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Definition
Tess was no insignificant creature to toy with and dismiss |
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Term
Angel claims to love her for herself |
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Definition
It was for herself that he loved Tess, her soul, her heart, her substance |
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Term
It is shown how Angels love was always based on a type rather than an individual |
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Definition
He loved her dearly though perhaps rather ideally |
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Term
Angel, like Alec, abuses Tess due to her naivity and lack of power |
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Definition
His experience of women was great enough for him to know that the negative often meant nothing more than the preface to the affirmative |
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Term
Angel, like Alec, can be presented as quite predatory |
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Definition
He kissed the inside vein of her soft arm |
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Term
Angel claims to not care about her heritage but... |
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Definition
Society is hopelessly snobbish...you mnust spell your name correctly - D'Urberville, from this very day" |
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Term
Hardy idealises Tess and describes her as a... |
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Definition
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Term
Angel tries to mould Tess |
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Definition
To produce Tess, fresh from the Dairy, as a D'Urberville and a lady |
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Term
Angel goes off her when he hears about the rape |
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Definition
I repeat, the woman I have been loving is not you...another woman in your shape |
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Term
Tess, as a natural being, cannot understand Angels anger |
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Definition
I have done nothing that interferes with or belies my love for you |
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Term
Angel patronises Tess about the fact that they are from different walks of life with different rules |
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Definition
Different societies, different manners |
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Term
Angel now decides that he dislikes her heritage |
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Definition
Here I was thinking you a new sprung child of nature, there were you, the exhausted seedling of an effete aristocracy |
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Term
Tess in Angels eyes changes completely due to the rape |
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Definition
Nothing so sweet, so pure, so Virginal as Tess had seemed possible...the little less and what worlds away |
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Term
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Definition
He was bitterly disposed towards social ordinances |
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Term
Hardy uses pheasants to show that the only way out for Tess is death |
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Definition
Pheasants...all of them writing in agony, except the fortunate ones whose torturers had ended during the night by the inability to bare no more" |
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Term
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Definition
Tess hoped for some accident that might favour her but nothing favoured her |
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Term
Alec tries to justify and pass off the rape |
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Definition
was but a momentary spasm, and considering what you had been to me it was natural enough |
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Term
Alec recognises her naivity but still doesn't apologise |
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Definition
What a blind young thing you were as to possibilities |
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Term
Alec at his most hypocritical |
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Definition
But has not a sense of what is right and proper have no weight with you |
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Term
Tess is shown to still be a bit naive with Angel near the end of the novel |
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Definition
a triumphant simplicity of faith in Angel Clare |
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Term
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Definition
he was in the agricultural world but not of it...with a sustained hiss |
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Term
Tess is governed by her natural side rather than the rules of society |
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Definition
a vessel of emotions rather than reasons |
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Term
Tess doesn't feel as if she has any luck |
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Definition
once victim, always victim, that's the law |
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Term
The novel shows the death of the peasantry |
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Definition
A depopulation was also going on...the tendency of the rural population towards the large towns being really the tendency of water to flow uphill when forced by machinery |
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Term
Tess is condemned by Angels mum for being... |
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Definition
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Term
At the end they don't act like adults but... |
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Definition
Their every idea was temporary and unforefending, like the plans of two children |
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Term
At the end of the novel... |
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Definition
Justice was done...and the D'Urberville knights slept on in their tomb unknowing |
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Term
Tess is doomed from the first few pages |
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Definition
Like apples on our stubbard tree. Most of them splendid and sound - a few blighted |
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Term
Tess' dad refuses to live in the present and gets caught up in the past - perhaps a weakness of the pastoral |
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Definition
I won't sell his old body - when we D'Urbervilles were knights in the land, we didn't sell our charges for cat's meat |
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Term
Tess was never in a good situation before the Slopes - just a bit of a less bad one |
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Definition
Out of the frying pan into the fire |
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Term
Tess is not protected by nature or the natural gods |
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Definition
But where was her guardian angel, where was the providence of her simple faith |
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Term
Tess has a tendency to worry about issues that cannot be changed |
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Definition
O, I hope that is no ill omen for us now |
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Term
Tess gives in to Angel in the hope he will give her a small punishment and then forgive her |
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Definition
I agree to the conditions, Angel; because you know best what my punishment ought to be; only, only, don't make it more that I can bear! |
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Term
Tess' love for Angel can not be surpassed |
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Definition
She would have laid down her life for 'ee. I could do no more |
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Term
Tess' religion is of the natural type |
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Definition
How can I pray for you when I am forbidden to believe that the great power who moves the world would alter his plans on my account |
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Term
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Definition
Remember, my lady, I was your master once. I will be your master again. If you are any mans wife you are mine |
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Term
Tess for a while tries to rebel against Alec |
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Definition
You are cruel, cruel indeed! I will try to forget you. It is all injustice I have received at your hands |
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Term
Tess' Ancestors don't care |
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Definition
And the D'Urberville knights slept on in their tombs unknowing |
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Term
Tess' grows to hate her ancestors |
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Definition
She had no admiration for them now; she almost hated them for the dance they had led her |
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Term
Tess finally realises that she cannot worry about or predict the future |
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Definition
Don't think of what's past!" said she. "I am not going to think outside of now. Why should we! Who knows what tomorrow has in store? |
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Term
Tess is raped by Alec - much like the snake corrupts eve in return for experience. The name of the forest - the Chase, shows how she then has to flee from "Eden" |
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Definition
Darkness and silence ruled everywhere around. Above them rose the primaeval yews and oaks of the Chase |
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