Tess
of the D'Urbervilles (1891)
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PREFATORY NOTES
Exlpanatory Note to the First Edition
The main portion of the following Story appearedwith slight modificationsin
the Graphic newspaper; other chapters, more especially addressed to adult
readers, in the Fortnightly Review and the National Observer, as episodic
sketches. My thanks are tendered to the editors and proprietors of those periodicals
for enabling me now to piece the trunk and limbs of the novel together, and
print it complete, as originally written two years ago.
I will just add that the story is sent out in all sincerity of purpose, as
an attempt to give artistic form to a true sequence of things; and in respect
of the book's opinions and sentiments, I would ask any too genteel reader,
who cannot endure to have said what everybody nowadays thinks and feels, to
remember a well-worn sentence of St. Jerome's: If an offense come out of the
truth, better it is that the offense come than that the truth be concealed.
Thomas Hardy November 1891.
PREFATORY NOTES
Fifth and Later Editions
This novel being one wherein the great campaign of the heroine begins after
an event in her experience which has usually been treated as fatal to her
part of protagonist, or at least as the virtual ending of her enterprises
and hopes, it was quite contrary to avowed conventions that the public should
welcome the book and agree with me in holding that there was something more
to be said in fiction than had been said about the shaded side of a well-known
catastrophe. But the responsive spirit in which Tess of the d'Urbervilles
has been received by the readers of England and America would seem to prove
that the plan of laying down a story on the lines of tacit opinion, instead
of making it to square with the merely vocal formulae of society, is not altogether
a wrong one, even when exemplified in so unequal and partial an achievement
as the present. For this responsiveness I cannot refrain from expressing my
thanks; and my regret is that, in a world where one so often hungers in vain
for friendship, where even not to be wilfully misunderstood is felt as a kindness,
I shall never meet in person these appreciative readers, male and female,
and shake them by the hand.
I include amongst them the reviewersby far the majoritywho have
so generously welcomed the tale. Their words show that they, like. the others,
have only too largely repaired my defects of narration by their own imaginative
intuition.
Nevertheless, though the novel was intended to be neither didactic nor aggressive,
but in the scenic parts to be representative simply and in the contemplative
to be oftener charged with impressions than with convictions, there have been
objectors both to the matter and to the rendering.
The more austere of these maintain a conscientious difference of opinion concerning,
among other things, subjects fit for art, and reveal an inability to associate
the idea of the sub-title adjective with any but the artificial and derivative
meaning which has resulted to it from the ordinances of civilization. They
ignore the meaning of the word in Nature, together with all aesthetic claims
upon it, not to mention the spiritual interpretation afforded by the finest
side of their own Christianity. Others dissent on grounds which are intrinsically
no more than an assertion that the novel embodies the views of life prevalent
at the end of the nineteenth century, and not those of an earlier and simpler
generationan assertion which I can only hope may be well founded. Let
me repeat that a novel is an impression, not an argument; and there the matter
must rest; as one is reminded by a passage which occurs in the letters of
Schiller to Goethe on judges of this class: "They are those who seek
only their own ideas in a representation, and prize that which should be as
higher than what is. The cause of the dispute, therefore, lies in the very
first principles, and it would be utterly impossible to come to an understanding
with them." And again: "As soon as I observe that any one, when
judging of poetical representations, considers anything more important than
the inner Necessity and Truth, I have done with him."
In the introductory words to the first edition I suggested the possible advent
of the genteel person who would not be able to endure something or other in
these pages. That person duly appeared among the aforesaid objectors. In one
case he felt upset that it was not possible for him to read the book through
three times, owing to my not having made that critical effort which "alone
can prove the salvation of such an one." In another, he objected to such
vulgar articles as the Devil's pitchfork, a lodging-house carving-knife, and
a shame-bought parasol, appearing in a respectable story. In another place
he was a gentleman who turned Christian for half-an-hour the better to express
his grief that a disrespectful phrase about the Immortals should have been
used; though the same innate gentility compelled him to excuse the author
in words of pity that one cannot be too thankful for: "He does but give
us of his best." I can assure this great critic that to exclaim illogically
against the gods, singular or plural, is not such an original sin of mine
as he seems to imagine. True, it may have some local originality; though if
Shakespeare were an authority on history, which perhaps he is not, I could
show that the sin was introduced into Wessex as early as the Heptarchy itself.
Says Glo'ster in Lear, otherwise Ina, king of that country:
As flies to wanton boys are we to the gods;
They kill us for their sport.
The remaining two or three manipulators of Tess were of the predetermined
sort whom most writers and readers would gladly forget; professed literary
boxers, who put on their convictions for the occasion; modern "Hammers
of Heretics"; sworn Discouragers, ever on the watch to prevent the tentative
half-success from becoming the whole success later on; who pervert plain meanings,
and grow personal under the name of practising the great historical method.
However, they may have causes to advance, privileges to guard, traditions
to keep going; some of which a mere tale-teller, who writes down how the things
of the world strike him, without any ulterior intentions whatever, has overlooked,
and may by pure inadvertence have run foul of when in the least aggressive
mood. Perhaps some passing perception, the outcome of a dream hour, would,
if generally acted on, cause such an assailant considerable inconvenience
with respect to position, interests, family, servant, ox, ass, neighbour,
or neighbour's wife. He therefore valiantly hides his personality behind a
publisher's shutters, and cries "Shame!" So densely is the world
with any shifting of positions, even the best warranted advance, galls somebody's
kibe. Such shiftings often begin in sentiment, and such sentiment sometimes
begins in a novel.
Thomas Hardy July 1892.
The foregoing remarks were written during the early career of this story,
when a spirited public and private criticism of its points was still fresh
to the feelings. The pages are allowed to stand for what they are worth, as
something once said; but probably they would not have been written now. Even
in the first short time which has elapsed since the book was first published,
some of the critics who have provoked the reply have "gone down into
silence," as if to remind one of the infinite unimportance of
both their say and mine.
Thomas Hardy January 1895.
The present edition of this novel contains a few pages that have never appeared
in any previous edition. When the detached episodes were collected as stated
in the preface of 1891, these pages were overlooked, though they were in the
original manuscript. They occur in Chapter X.
Respecting the sub-title, to which allusion was made above, I may add that
it was appended at the last moment, after reading the final proofs, as being
the estimate left in a candid mind of the heroine's characteran estimate
that nobody would be likely to dispute. It was disputed more than anything
else in the book. Melius fuerat non scibere. But there it stands.
The novel was first published complete, in three volumes, in November, 1891.
Thomas Hardy March 1912.