To what extent is character and fate responsible for tragedy in Return of the Native
Pessimism, Fatalism, Determinism: Words
like pessimism, fatalism and determinism have freely been used by
critics and readers to describe Hardy’s philosophy of life. These labels largely convey his outlook and attitude. Every where in the
novels of Hardy, human beings appear to us crushed by a superior force.
He is pessimistic because he believes that man is born to suffer and he
is fatalistic because he believes that destiny is hostile to man and
that it governs human life, allowing very little free will.
Whether his creed is fatalism or determinism, Hardy is haunted by the vision of necessity. He shows us the sad consequences of a conflict of contradictory wills and the
development of this conflict is crossed at every moment by accidents
which interpret them. Hardy, however, is not cynic. He doesn’t regard
man as essentially mean and wicked. There are villains in his novels;
but he believes that there is more goodness than evil in human nature.
Man is capable of heroic endurance of misfortune. Therefore it is
possible to call Hardy a determinist than a fatalist. Fatalism implies a
blind supernatural power and determinism implies the logic of cause and effect.
Character and Fate responsible: Hardy
believes that “happiness is an occasional episode in a general drama of
pain.” He didn’t think life to be a boon. Hardy’s conception of life is essentially tragic. The conflict is one in which there is only the
remotest chance of escape. Man suffers from a lack of foresight and
from an inability to subdue his own insubordinate nature and this
suffering is aggravated by the chances and incidents and a strange overwhelming power. The Tragedy in RN is due largely to the weaknesses and faults of the characters themselves. To that extent, character is fate, but tragedy is also caused by the natural and fateful forces working on the other end.
Clym’s responsibility: Human weaknesses largely determine the course of events in the
novel. Clym is a noble man and would like to serve his fellow human
beings by educating them. He is not a materialistic man. In fact, has
forsaken the fashionable life of Paris
and returned to Egdon Heath. We should not expect such a man to be
unhappy; but he has his shortcomings. He fails to perceive Eustacia’s
unsuitability as a wife to a man like himself. He is unable to see
materialistic nature of Eustacia and love for worldly gaiety. She warns
him that she doesn’t have the makings of a “good some-spun wife” and his mother emphatically tells him that he would regret his marriage to Eustacia whom she rightly describes as an “idle, voluptuous woman” but Clym doesn’t see to these warnings. Having fallen in love with and married Eustacia, fails to keep the marriage. He also fails to balance between his wife and mother. Both the couples are incompatible with each other.
Mrs. Yeobright’s responsibility: Mrs. Yeobright, though a respectable matron for whom we feel great
respect, is rigid and obstinate. Being worldly and practical, she is
unable to read Clym’s mind and feels unsympathetic to his humanitarian
projects. She objects to her educational plans and marriage to Eustacia.
Wildeve’s responsibility: Wildeve is the villain of the piece and is the author of much of the misery that the
characters suffer. He is an unscrupulous man, with a shallow nature and
shifting loyalties. He fluctuates between one woman and another,
marries one of them but keeps running after the other. His intimacy towards married Eustacia triggers more crises in the lives of characters.
Incongruities of the situation: The tragedy in RN results from the incongruities of the situation in which these characters find themselves. For example, the incongruity of incompatibility between Clym and Eustacia, she hates Edgon Heath as much as Clym likes it. She like the glamour of Paris and thinks Heath a hell. Describe the tragic story in brief…
The role of destiny: The responsibility of the characters for their tragedy is obvious. We repeatedly have a clash of wills and a conflict of purposes between the various persons involved, each pulling in a different direction. The tragic situation keeps mounting and the characters reach the limit. We are unable to understand the force working behind their tense and tragic life. It is destiny which manifests itself in the form of accidents and incidents. It is just when Mrs. Yeobright has determined to reconcile between the couple that the demon of mischance begins its game. Mrs. Yeobright’s death is the
result of many ironic accidents and coincidences. She arrives at her
son’s house at a time when Wildeve is having an intimate conversation
with Eustacia and when she cannot immediately open the door. Mrs. Yeobright turns back and on her way back home is bitten by an adder and is killed. Before her death, she tells the boy, Johnny whom she meets purely by chance that Eustacia had discarded her. Clym has driven out Eustacia; fate resumes its flippant jests. He writes a letter to her to come back; but the letter miscarries by a few minutes. Clym, unaware of this, sits in his house waiting for Eustacia to knock. The night is the worst imaginable. The Heath is beaten by wind and rain.
At length, a woman’s footstep is heard. He feels excited. Thinking it
to be Eustacia, he finds Thomasin who breaks the news of Eustacia’s
elopement with Wildeve which ends in drowning. We must remember that
almost all Eustacia’s meetings with Wildeve after her marriage to Clym
have been accidental. All these incidents are responsible for their
tragic ends and are supplemented by human weaknesses and get aggravated.
The Part of Nature and Egdon Heath:
In Hardy’s stories, nature is always a personage and this personage is
embodied here in Egdon Heath. Heath is the dark immemorial environment
whose influences control the lives and destinies of those who dwell
here. Egdon Heath symbolizes the whole cosmic order, win which man is
but an insignificant particle. Eustacia looks upon Heath as a great
enemy. She regards it as her cross, as her shame and as the potential
cause of her death. Egdon Heath is swept by rain and wind causing death to Eustacia and Wildeve and it also kills Mrs. Yeobright with its venomous adder from its bosom.
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