Tess of the d''Urbervilles is a novel by Thomas Hardy. It initially appeared in a censored and serialised version published by the British illustrated newspaper The Graphic in 1891 and in book form in 1892. Though now considered a major nineteenth-century English novel and possibly Hardy''s fictional masterpiece Tess of the d''Urbervilles received mixed reviews when it first appeared in part because it challenged the sexual morals of late Victorian England. The novel is set in impoverished rural England Thomas Hardy''s fictional Wessex during the Long Depression of the 1870s. Tess is the oldest child of John and Joan Durbeyfield uneducated peasants. However John is given the impression by Parson Tringham that he may have noble blood as Durbeyfield is a corruption of D''Urberville the surname of an extinct noble Norman family. Knowledge of this immediately goes to John''s head. That same day Tess participates in the village May Dance where she meets Angel Clare youngest son of Reverend James Clare who is on a walking tour with his two brothers. He stops to join the dance and partners several other girls. Angel notices Tess too late to dance with her as he is already late for a promised meeting with his brothers. Tess feels slighted. Tess''s father gets too drunk to drive to the market that night so Tess undertakes the journey herself. However she falls asleep at the reins and the family''s only horse encounters a speeding wagon and is fatally wounded. Tess feels so guilty over the horse''s death and the economic consequences for the family that she agrees against her better judgement to visit Mrs d''Urberville a rich widow who lives in a rural mansion near the town of Trantridge and claim kin. She is unaware that in reality Mrs d''Urberville''s husband Simon Stoke adopted the surname even though he was unrelated to the real d''Urbervilles.
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