Before we can discuss the rape vs. seduction of Tess, I think that we need to discuss the personalities of the leading characters and without any firm conformation by Hardy I have made some assumptions about each.
Alec – I have assumed that he has engaged in premarital sex and has an eye for the ladies, today he would not be considered to be a bad person who needs to be saved, but this would not be the case in Victorian society. Personally I like Alec, I think that his feelings towards Tess are more genuine than those of Angel. I think that unlike Angel, he does not deny his sexual feelings and is comfortable with those desires. Tess is often described as beautiful and it’s no wonder that he is attracted to her and sees her in a sexual way.
Tess – is described in the sub-heading as pure. It has been assumed that by pure Hardy meant had no lustful feelings, but I don’t agree with this. I think Tess is a sensual woman, but in Hardy’s opinion “pure” as she didn’t use her attractiveness to take advantage of men like other women in her position would have. I think that she believes that she should love a man before being romantically involved with him and not to become the mistress of a man for financial gain.
Angel – Hardy often describes his love for Tess as ethereal. I think that in contrast to Alec, rather than being in love with Tess the sensual women, he is in love with the women he believes Tess to be. I think if Tess had been a virgin when they married, he would have put her on a pedestal and I don’t believe that Tess would have been fulfilled as a woman and would not have been truly happy.
Rape or Seduction? - Although the narrative states that, once he gained his bearings, Alec came upon Tess while she was asleep, the narrative stops here and does not take up again until a few weeks later as she leaves Tantridge, by which time we know she is a maiden no more. We do not know exactly what happened that night in the Chase and although other posters have assumed that Alec starts to have sex with Tess while she is still asleep, I have not made that assumption.
Up to the point in the Chase, Alec has clearly been making advances toward Tess which she has rejected but he has not mistreated her, in fact I feel that he very much likes her. Tess’s own mother felt sure that given time Alec would ask Tess to marry him, Alec replaced the Durbyfield’s dead horse, goes to visit Tess at her home before she starts working for his mother, personally meets her along the road to give her a lift to Tantridge and on the night in question, saved her from being bullied by two other women from Tantridge. I will agree that he has taken some liberties with Tess up to that point, such as scaring her during their initial drive to Tantridge and then getting her to kiss him, but I do not think that Alec had deliberately taken Tess off with a mind to rape her that night. I think that he enjoyed her company, the feeling of her close to him and wanted to prolong the time they spent together only to genuinely get lost. I think that upon his return, Alec has renewed his advances toward Tess who finally gives in and sleeps with him and so beings a brief romance between the two. However, as Tess does not love Alec, within a few weeks she comes to regret the arrangement and returns home. When talking to Alec on her way home, she states that she “loathe[s] and hate[s]” herself for her “weakness,” and laments that her “eyes were dazed by [Alec] for a little.” Once back home, she reflects how she was “stirred to confused surrender” because of “his ardent manners” despite not loving him. The narrative also states that she accepts some gifts of “finery” from him too, although she is not fully comfortable with this arrangement. Some readers have assumed that when Hardy talks about Tess’s knightly ancestors, who centuries before likely imposed themselves on peasant girls “even more ruthlessly,” meant she was raped by Alec, I’ve assumed that it meant that the peasant girls were raped by her ancestors, although Tess was not raped but had her repeated rejections of Alec worn down by his persistence against her better judgement.


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No, as Hardy genuinely loved Tess, he may have tinkered with the plot because he felt sorry for her or maybe he started feeling sorry for Alec. Some authors (and I suppose readers too) do start to think of their characters as real people.
