Hardy's Tess has more dreadful things befall her by pure happenstance than most other literary figures of her time. One may say that the parson's revelation of the Durbeyfield's true lineage reveals the instance that causes the rest of the plot to appear feasible. However precipitous that even may have seemed, the accidental skewering of the Durbeyfield's only horse leads to more mishap then any other single event in the text. Tess's rape by Alec Stokes, in the last pages of Phase the First, paves the way for endless reoccurrences of ill happenings throughout the rest of the text. These occurrences may lead the reader to believe, not incorrectly, that much of the rest of the novel contains a great deal of awful events.
Not only does coincidence play a large part in initiating conflict, it also seems to go out of its way to complicate it. Take for example the impregnation of Tess by Alec; this event throws Tess's life far off of its original course. Later the loss of her confessionary letter to Angel, under the carpet of his room, gives her a false sense of hope which he later dashes. Then, irony upon irony, Tess's finding a reformed Alec preaching by the farm she works at gives new meaning to
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the word "complicate." So, not only does Hardy's story start out badly but it continues to go