Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Stylistic writing features of
Thomas Hardy
- Biblical allusions
- contextual change
in christianity
- "Thy,
damnation,
slumbereth,
not."
- Colloquial language
- Joan Durbeyfield
- "Yll be fess enough, my
poppet, when th'st know!"
- Metaphors
- Tess' body
- "beautiful feminine
tissue, sensitive as
gossamer"
- Tess' journey
- "long and stony
highway"
- Exposure
- "they were every one put to
death by the sticks and stones
of the harvesters"
- Descriptive writing
- Describing Marlott
- "The village of
Marlott...Such is the vale of
Blackmoor."
- Pathetic fallacy
- hidden/secret plans
- "mist of yellow"
- "The Chase was
wrapped in thick
darkness"
- Mirrors Tess
- "Sad October"
- Irony
- Alec is not
honourable/loses
his honour
- "Upon my honour!"
- Alec whistles
love song
- "Take, O
take those
lips away"
- Motif
- White - purity,
innocence, virginity
- "all dressed in white
gowns"
- "revealing the
red and ivory of
her mouth"
- Red - danger,
passion, blood, hell
- "Red ribbon in her hair"
- "Red and smooth"
(Alec's lips)
- "made her
blush a little"
- "Red coal of a cigar"
- Birds - Tess,
freedom, caged
- "gentle roosing birds"
(pheasants - bred to be
killed)
- Symbolism
- Phallic shape
- Alecs cigar
- Arrow that kills the
white Hart
- Snake (Garden of
Eden)
- Alec is
dangerous
- "behind, the green
valley of her birth"
- Birds represent
Tess
- Angelic
- "his room was an immense
attic" (watching over Tess)
- Allusion
- Romeo & Juliet
- "the pretty maiden
he had not danced"
- Alexander the
Great (Alec
d'Urberville)
- Greek
mythology
- "Lotis attempting
to elude Priapus,
and always failing"
- Modern views
- Not Tess'
fault she was
raped
- "immeasurable social
chasm" (loss of virginity)
- "and you did not help me!"
- Angel is modern
- "I should prefer to not
take orders"
- "taking his meals
downstairs in the general
dining-kitchen"
- "his object being to
acquire a practical skill
in the various
processes of farming,
with a view either to
the Colonies, or the
tenure of a home-farm"
- Loss of faith
- "the ache of modernism"
- Eponymous
- Tess of the d'Urbervilles is
named after the protagonist
- Recurring themes
- Merlott is a safe
place
- "an engirdled and
secluded region"
- The White Hart
represents Tess
- "killing by a certain Thomas de
la Lynd of a beautiful white
Hart"
- Tess is innocent/naive
- "held it by the
stem to her
mouth"
- Alec is
manipulative/cruel/childish
- "Your father has a new cob"
- "Don't you love
me ever so little
now?"
- Foreshadowing
- White Hart story
foreshadows
penetration/Tess'
being raped
- Tess is dangerous to Alec
- "regarded herself in the light of a
murderess"
- "of which he was to see
more some day"
- Alec wants to
pursue her
(white Hart)
- "he thought
better of it, and
let her go"
- "What a crumby girl!"
- Alec is dangerous to Tess
- "the protection of
their companionship
homeward"
- "Lotis
attempting to
elude Priapus,
and always
failing"
- Death
- "cheeks that were
damp and
smoothly chill"
- "they were every one put to
death by the sticks and
stones of the harvesters"
- Other
- Similies
- Personification
- Onomatopeia
- Assonance
- Alliteration
- Sibilance
- Listing
- Trippling
- Punctuation
- 3rd person (omnicient) narrative
- Dialect
- Direct speech
- Interventional narrator
- Humour
- Verisimilitude