Originally Posted by
kiki1982
A good lawyer can put a credible good spin on things. It doesn't seem to be about the Truth in court, but rather how the Truth is presented, or something.
But that aside :), I think Tess, indeed could be excused for killing Alec in a fit of passion after he provoked her (so it was not premeditated), but it is murder nonetheless. These days, you would maybe not get life, but you would get a substancial number of years, depending on your age probably.
However, I think we are missing the point a bit.
I think the idea is that Tess would have come to her end in that way anyway, as she was never going to be free from Alec as long as he was alive (and maybe as long as she herself was alive). To me, the ending of Tess left me with an immense empty feeling of indignation at the Victorian law system (did she really have to die for Alec?) and towards her life itself. Couldn't God have let her die before, if that was the inevitable end she was moving to all along?
Let's say she would have died on the scaffold anyway, whether 20 years later or then. That's quite sad.