11 Chapter 5
11 Chapter 5
11 Chapter 5
- E.M. Forster.
Chapter 5
Hardy lived in an age of transition which added to his natural disposition toward a
melancholy view of life. The industrial revolution was in the process of destroying the
agricultural life and the nature around him that he was so fond of. Subsequent shifting of
population caused a disintegration of rural customs and traditions which had meant security,
stability, and dignity for the people. It was a period when fundamental beliefs -- religious,
social, scientific, and political -- were shaken to their very core and brought in their stead the
"ache of modernism". Hardy's early struggle with religious problems was an important factor
in shaping his fatalistic nature. As a child, it was Hardy's dream to become a parson. He had
several clerical relatives who supported him in his goal. His grandfather, father, uncle,
brother, cousin, and two sisters had been musicians in various churches. As a young man, he
frequently read church lessons and became curious of the different religions of Christianity.
He couldn't understand that if each religion believed in the same god how they could practice
their faith so differently. This was very bothersome to him and eventually resulted in his
conversion to a fatalistic approach to life. Hardy's loss of religious belief was very painful
and was accompanied by deep struggles, but his new belief of fatalism enabled him to write
many great works.
Struggle between man and fate is Hardy’s interpretation of the human situation. It
determines characters of his novels. Hardy’s conflict is not between one man and the other or
between man and an institution. Man is ranged against impersonal forces that condition his
fate. His characters are not aware of all this. Destiny in the novels of Hardy appears in
different forms. Sometimes it appears as a natural force. In ‘The May or of the Caster bridge,’
Henchard’s plans for making himself rich are frustrated by a bad harvest. Here, destiny takes
shape of weather. Sometimes, it appears as some innate weakness of character e.g. in
Jude the Obscure – Jude’s life is ruined because by birth he had intensity of sexual
temperament. He could not control it and it ruined him. Mainly, in Hardy’s novels fate
appears in the form of Chance and love. Chance is the most typical. In his novels, we see
that chance exercises great influence on the course of events. We witness a battle between
man and Destiny.
Following piece of interview better presents Hardy’s concept of man and destiny.
Anderson: Free will versus determinism is a theme throughout the works of Thomas Hardy.
Drabble: I was deeply influenced by Hardy and his rather gloomy view of destiny. Hardy's
characters can't evade their fate; mine seem to have a little more free will. Or maybe they're
just born in happier times.
(Margaret Drabble Discusses Fate, ‘Gloomy' Thomas Hardy.
Interview by Hephzibah Anderson - August 14, 2007 01:29 EDT.)
Fate and Chance:
Chance and coincidence play crucial role in all the novels of Hardy. They often
operate as the deciding factors. Character is certainly responsible for the tragedy. Hardy felt
that an evil power ruled the universe, defeating every attempt of man to make better his
fortune or to find happiness. He believed that fate or destiny was sometimes indifferent, but
most often hostile, to human happiness. The hostility of fate can be seen in Hardy’s novels.
Fate acts in the form of chance or accident or coincidence to ruin them.
Hardy presented Destiny as hidden force. Man can’t understand its nature or
intentions. Man can’t predict what it will do. Hardy shows working of Destiny in the shape of
inexplicable unexpected blows of chance. Discord in human life is presented. Man is
working to one end and Destiny to other. Destiny decides what will happen. Man can’t
change and divert will of Destiny. In Hardy’s novels some past actions remain secret for
some time and then they are revealed. By using this method he conveyed how destiny of his
characters is pre-determined by the forces hidden from them. Characters can’t escape from
consequences of past actions and they become instruments in the hands of Destiny and
destiny uses this instrument against them. Hardy’s fatalism is transferred from outside to
inside. He presented heroes and heroines struggling hopelessly in the net. His novels present
the play of alien force controlling actions of mere puppets. His novels present tragedy of
man, in which, man is mere plaything of chance or fate.
“Hardy’s ‘The Return of the Native’ is based on the assumption that man is destined
by God to suffer the overwhelming pain and suffering which exits in the world. All the main
characters of Return of the Native namely- Clym, Eustacia, Wildeve, and Mrs Yeobright have
their own aims and ambitions. But all their plans turn into vain. They are trapped in a series
of bitterly ironic events. They are faced with an incomprehensible universe. Destiny shows its
power in more glaring form, namely in the form of accidents and coincidences.”
(Schirf D.L.Book Review, 2004.)
Characters' personality is the main influence in their actions and because their fate
relies largely on their actions; characters have the chance to change their fate if they change
their character. Characters who are unchangeful like Eustacia will never escape her fate. For
example it is fate that Wildeve and Mrs. Yeobright visit Eustacia at the same time and it is
fate that Clym is asleep.
To Hardy, Nature is symbol of impersonal force of fate. It works not from
background but an actor in the play. It is an incarnation of a living force having its own will
and purpose, e. g. ruining Henchard’s crops, sometimes; it is aloof, silent and ironic spectator
of human creatures who are struggling in life. Hardy draws special aesthetic effect by
presenting discord between man and his environment. The movement of man’s life and the
movement of life of nature are set in contrast to present superiority of nature. Through
all this Hardy wants to suggest that nature can be seen as self sacrificing force. It can be
experienced in different forms. Man must realize the spell of brooding woods, the magic of
quiet enduring trees. Fascination of Egdon Heath presents different moods of man. It shows
that in different forms of nature, Hardy feels presence of some human qualities.
Hardy is known for his pessimism. Chance plays a very significant role in his novels
is that of chance. We see in ‘Tess of the D’urbervilles’ how Tess is treated unjustly by the
society, which followed the law in words and not in spirit. In Hardy’s novels conflict between
man and destiny is the centre of events. David Cecil remarks,”A struggle between man on
one hand, and an omnipotent and indifferent fate, on the other hand goes on and that is
Hardy’s interpretation of the human situation.” Man is a mere puppet in the hands of an all
powerful fate or destiny. According to Hardy there is a mysterious force that is always hostile
to human happiness and circumstances always act against him and lead him towards
destruction. Hardy has given different shapes to fate and destiny. A change in the weather
changes the fate of Henchard, the protagonist of ‘The Mayor of Casterbridge’. It could the
death of a horse changing the life of Tess or a chance meeting with Alec, the villain turned
into preacher in ‘Tess of D’urbervilles’.
Nature, in Hardy novels, too takes the form of cruel fate. But inspite of all this
Hardy’s novels are not totally dark. For instance ‘Tess of D’urbervilles’, ends on a note of
hope. There is a new beginning, something to look forward to.Madgulkar’s most novels
present the same idea that hints the conclusion.
Thomas Hardy was considered a fatalist. Fatalism is a view of life which insists that
all action everywhere is controlled by nature of things or by a power superior to things. It
grants the existence of Fate, a great impersonal, primitive force, existing from all eternity,
absolutely independent of human wills, superior even to any god whom humanity may have
invented. The power of Fate is embracing and is more difficult to understand than the gods
themselves.
The scientific parallel of fatalism is determinism. It acknowledges, just as fatalism,
that man's struggle against the Will behind things, is of no avail, but does decree that the laws
of cause and effect must not suspend operation. Determinism seeks to explain conditions
which fatalism is content to describe. The use of fatalism for furthering the plot was a
technique used by many Victorian authors, but with Thomas Hardy it became something
more than a mere device.
He shows that human beings are fundamentally at the mercy of the forces of the
natural world, supernatural agencies, and destiny itself, and it is particularly noticeable that
the female characters in Tess. Due to his fatalistic outlook of life, Hardy presents the
character of Tess as having a variety of forces working against her efforts to control her
destiny. Fate approaches Tess in a great variety of forms. Fate is present through chance and
coincidence, and the manisfestations of nature, time, and woman.
Free will versus determinism is a theme throughout the works of Thomas Hardy.
Critics are influenced by Hardy and his rather gloomy view of destiny. Hardy's
characters can't evade their fate. But, Madgulkar’s characters sometimes overcome the fate
and start new life.
Jude has the first of several personal crises when the dean suggests that Jude’s dream
of higher education is unrealistic. This crisis brings out several negative qualities of Jude’s
personality. He continues to indulge his tendency to turn to alcohol when he is upset, as we
first saw when he learned that Arabella had tricked him into marriage. We also see Jude’s
pompous, boastful side.
This flaw is an example of the novel’s moral complexity. On the one hand, it is
heavily in favor of making higher education more accessible. Hardy emphasizes the
inequality of his society by contrasting the two supposedly ‘elite’ undergraduates, who don’t
know a word of Latin, with Jude, who can movingly recite the Bible even while drunk. But
on the other, the narrator sometimes seems to disdain Jude for aspiring to transcend his
working-class origins. The narrator frequently derides Jude for the ‘impracticality’ of his
goals, and he characterizes the dean’s advice as “terribly sensible” (120). This could be read
as conflicting with the novel’s overall moral: the narrator seems to say that the working class
deserves to be more educated as a whole, but individuals from the working class who try to
seek education are impractical and uppity. However, we could also read these statements as
reflections of character flaws that result from Jude pursuing his goals too single mindedly.
Following happenings and ideas in ‘Far from the Madding Crowd’ better
present Hardy’s concept of Man and Destiny.
Fate operates through natural occurrences. In ‘Far from the Madding Crowd’, Gabriel
must work feverishly to protect Bathsheba's harvest from a terrible storm. Although Gabriel
succeeds in overcoming the fate of the storm, Boldwood is not so lucky and loses all his
crops. Gabriel Oak also loses his fortunes through an occurrence of natural fate; his sheep fall
off a cliff to their deaths, and Gabriel must sell out to repay his debts.
Fate is responsible for Bathsheba's changes in fortune as well. Her uncle happens to
die and leave her the farm. Gabriel happens to go to sleep in a wagon that carries him near
Bathsheba's farm; he then happens to see the fire and is concerned enough to go and help put
it out, thus earning a position for himself near the woman he loves. Bathsheba happens to see
Boldwood and be offended by his lack of attention just at the time of Valentine's. She and
Troy happen to pass Fanny on the road when Fanny is about to die. Bathsheba's sheep happen
to take ill when she has just foolishly sent Gabriel away, forcing her to call him back. Hardy
combines these and many other fateful incidents with a carefully crafted sense of realism to
make them seem natural.
Following happenings and ideas in ‘Return of the Native’ better present Hardy’s
concept of man and destiny.
When human figures do finally appear, they seem insignificant against the backdrop
of the indifferent, if not hostile, Egdon. Many times during the course of the story, for
instance, Clym will be shown to appear like a tiny insect moving across the face of nature.
These elements — the heath as a setting and a symbol, and the way the first people to appear
are shown in relation to their surroundings — demonstrate Hardy's theme: Man lives his life
in a universe that is at least indifferent to him and may be hostile. (Book 1, ch.2)
Hardy's use of coincidence in his novel is well known and often criticized. Some
critics have suggested that coincidence is so often to be found because Hardy uses it as a way
of expressing his idea that chance governs man's life more than man wishes to admit. To
illustrate this theory, Johnny encounters Venn by chance and tells him of accidentally
overhearing the conversation between Eustacia and Wildeve. (Book 1, ch.9)
Hardy says of man's world in relation to the universe: "Amid the soft juicy vegetation
of the hollow in which [Wildeve and Venn] sat, the motionless and the uninhabited solitude,
intruded the chink of guineas, the rattle of dice, the exclamations of the reckless players." In
short, the actions of men scarcely ruffle the surface of the great world around them. This idea
is consonant with the several times Hardy shows Clym aware of his insignificance in the
universe. (Book 3, ch.8)
The fact that Hardy added this book to his original conception of the novel causes
many consequences, most of which are obvious enough. For example, it blunts the
effectiveness of his demonstration of the idea that man lives in an indifferent, perhaps hostile,
universe. In speaking of the fact that Clym, unlike Eustacia, does not blame either Destiny or
God for his fate, Hardy says: "Human beings, in their generous endeavor to construct a
hypothesis that shall not degrade a First Cause, have always hesitated to conceive a dominant
power of lower moral quality than their own; and, even while they sit down and weep by the
waters of Babylon, invent excuses for the oppression which prompts their tears." But Eustacia
Vye never hesitates to blame Destiny, which she always thinks of as having a questionable
"moral quality." The whole movement of the first five books is unmistakably in this direction
of questioning the power that governs the universe. In this novel, Hardy depicts the universe
as essentially indifferent to man rather than, as in later novels (notably Jude the Obscure),
hostile to him. (Book6, ch.1)
The theme of being plagued by a blind fate has already become clear to Susan and
Michael. Now the same fate is working against Elizabeth-Jane, in the form of a relationship
between Farfrae and Lucetta. (Chapter 24)
The dark fate again haunts Henchard. Despite his noble act of confession, the
townspeople instantly think his act is scandalous--implying the hurtful nature of public
opinion once more. Ironically, Michael could have stopped the damage if he had been honest
from the beginning. Hardy notes that the damage would not have been as great if the news
had been older. Regardless, his debtors fail and all his property is taken. On the other end of
the scale, Farfrae has gained the business that Michael has lost due to the same fate. The
punishment that Michael deems fitting for himself is self-destruction. (Chapter 31)
Following happenings and ideas in ‘Jude the Obscure’ better present Hardy’s concept
of man and destiny.
Jude has the first of several personal crises when the dean suggests that Jude’s dream
of higher education is unrealistic. This crisis brings out several negative qualities of Jude’s
personality. He continues to indulge his tendency to turn to alcohol when he is upset, as we
first saw when he learned that Arabella had tricked him into marriage. We also see Jude’s
pompous, boastful side.
This flaw is an example of the novel’s moral complexity. On one hand, it is heavily in
favor of making higher education more accessible. Hardy emphasizes the inequality of his
society by contrasting the two supposedly ‘elite’ undergraduates, who don’t know a word of
Latin, with Jude, who can movingly recite the Bible even while drunk. But on the other, the
narrator sometimes seems to disdain Jude for aspiring to transcend his working-class origins.
The narrator frequently derides Jude for the ‘impracticality’ of his goals, and he characterizes
the dean’s advice as “terribly sensible” (120).
This could be read as conflicting with the novel’s overall moral: the narrator seems to
say that the working class deserves to be more educated as a whole, but individuals from the
working class who try to seek education are impractical and uppity. However, we could also
read these statements as reflections of character flaws that result from Jude pursuing his goals
too single mindedly. (At Christminster: Chapters 4-7)
The composer’s personality also foreshadows Jude’s fate. Because he is so poor, the
composer fixates on making money by selling wine, going so far as to solicit Jude, who has
come by for a friendly talk. Jude will also be altered by financial woes before the end of the
novel. Indeed, the pressure to earn money destroys his relationship with Sue and causes him
to comment to his children that they are ‘too many’, leading to the murder-suicide by Little
Father Time.
Although relatively little of the story takes place at Shaston, Hardy uses a fair amount
of space to describe the city’s physical layout. This further develops the richly detailed
geography of Wessex that Hardy creates in this and his other novels. It also hints at the
predestined quality of the Phillotsons’ separation - their marriage is literally founded on
rocky, difficult, terrain. The numerous images of characters struggling to walk uphill evoke
the futility of forcing an unwanted romantic relationship. (At Shaston: Chapters 1-6)
Country life is a very important theme in this novel, and in this section, Hardy
emphasizes the relationship between rustic life and superstition (Webb 3). Arabella buys a
love potion from Physician Vilbert, and Anny suggests that she put her hands on a lock of
Cartlett’s hair to help eliminate her feelings for Jude. However, even characters that are
ostensibly intelligent submit to the logic of superstition. For example, Jude and Sue are
unsettled when they hear Widow Edlin’s story about the gibbet, even though they don’t know
whether they are actually related to the father in the story.
(At Aldbrickham and Elsewhere: Chapters 5-8)
The novel’s final chapters also continue the book’s motif of superstition. Widow
Edlin’s folk tale about devils disguising themselves as husbands foreshadows the way Sue’s
marriage to Phillotson will seem to drain the life from her. Physician Vilbert’s fake medicines
also play an important role here; the fact that Arabella consults Physician Vilbert instead of a
real doctor speaks both to her rustic naïveté and to her lack of consideration for Jude. (At
Christminster Again: Chapters 6-11)
‘Destiny governs man’. The human soul consists of both good as well as evil
elements. The monkeys in Sattantar have both the aspects. They are as cruel even they do not
feel about equality. Everyone behaves and treats others according to his own wish. No one
takes into account the wish of others, apart from following the natural instincts.
Welfare state is the imaginary mission which is continuously taken in hand by many
people. There is a particular gap-line between the reality and the ideal state. No human soul is
free from the existence of inherent evils. The dream of an ideal state without considering the
human nature cannot be fulfilled. People of all the ages and the nations in the world are
continuously striving to demolish the evils. There is continuous fight between the good and
the evil. It will be a golden moment, when the good would win the fight overcoming and
defeating the evil in it. That day the struggle will stop. But no one knows when such ideal
state will appear.
“His novels present plight of characters set against an agricultural society
threatened by the forces of change. From his childhood he observed relentless regularity of
natural changes. So, through his novels, he presented nature as an agent of destiny. Most of
his characters try to defy social conventions. It leads to their misery. Through this
Vyankatesh Madgulkar presented issue of fixed class boundaries. His characters present man
as the victim of decisions forced on him by a kind of predestination.”
(Madgulkar V.‘Formulae of my writing’, Speech, Solapur.)
Structure of his novels is based on conflicts between human will and destiny. His
heroes present optimism. His novels present the play of alien force controlling actions of
mere puppets. His novels present tragedy of man in which, man is mere plaything of chance
or fate.
Nature is symbol of impersonal force of fate. It performs the role of an actor in his
novels. It is an incarnation of a living force having its own will and purpose e.g. drought in
Bangarwadi responsible for many social changes, sometimes it is aloof, silent and ironic
spectator of human creatures who are struggling in life. e. g. novelist himself had to change
his hiding places in the novel Vavtal. All of them are isolate and natural. Madgulkar also
draws special aesthetic effect by presenting discord between man and his environment. The
movement of man’s life and the movement of life of nature are set in contrast to present
superiority of nature. He tried to suggest that man must learn from nature – benevolence,
endurance, self sacrifice etc…
Following thoughts, ideas and dialogues present Madgulkar’s revelation of Man and
Destiny in the novel ‘Kowale Diwas.’
Following thoughts, ideas and dialogues present Madgulkar’s revelation of Man and
Destiny in the novel ‘Sattantar.’
1. New intruders were becoming leaders. Looser were killed, defeated run away.
‘Continuous struggle was going on. ‘Huge lifecycle was encircling.’ (Chapter 1, pg.6)
It was Sattantar.
2. Madgulkar writes that to take birth as a monkey’s child, to grow and to be a leader,
to rule others for some years and to grow old – this wasn’t a destined path of all monkeys.
For them life was an accident. (Chapter 4, pg. 43)
Sattantar ends with the birth of Moga's likely competitor, i.e. Muda's son. This novel
symbolically reflects the exploitation of the commons. It throws light on the truth that the
typical human weakness is to break the promises, especially the political wish to spoil the
society leaders are well known in this regard. Everywhere man is caught into his age-old evil
tendencies. Human life has become meaningless, chaotic and self-centered. The self-centered
behavior of the male monkeys in Sattantar is responsible for bringing the chaos in the lives of
all the female and children monkeys. The desire of power becomes responsible to create the
restlessness in the society. It happens due to the evil hidden in man. This novel presents wish
of the novelist to make the world free from such evils. The strong, at intellectual level as well
as physical level, always makes the weak to surrender. Sattatntar presents such truth by
describing the weak condition of the females and the children monkeys. They easily
surrender the winner male. This study shows the harsh truth that the weak are always inferior
and the strong are always superior.
“The desire of power in the journey of power-struggle turns the common man into a
leader and at last converts him into a dictator. The dictatorship is the sole cause of many
sufferings of the present world. The chaos of the modern world in the life of common man is
one of the main evil consequences of the dictatorships.”
Once the leader turns into the dictator his selfless soul automatically transforms into
the selfish soul which always concentrates the attention on the preservation of the power. The
strong holds his power by applying the violence and terror. The restless, disturbed, confused
state of today's world is the result of such dominating aspect of the power-holders. While
removing to the would-be competitors from the way, Moga forcefully crushes the male
children snatching them from the female monkeys.
Comparative perspective
This research compares Thomas Hardy’s philosophy of life to that of Vyankatesh
Madgulkar’s through the selected novels. To form comparative, critical and theoretical
framework-analysis, interpetration and evaluation of selected novels of both novelists has
done. It provides necessary scope and basis to form comparative perspective about the
concept of Man and Destiny as revealed through their novels. Comparison of the thematic
aspect pinpoints most unexplored similarities between novels of both novelists.
• Hardy’s ‘Far from the Madding crowd’ presents central figure Bathsheba, running
here and there to get a better suitor but, fails. So, at last she had to accept hand of Gabrial
Oak whom she doesn’t like. Destiny makes man to adjust many ideas. It plays central role in
uniting couples. Life partner of man is also determined by destiny. Hardy suggests this
view.
• Hardy’s ‘Return of the Native’ presents main character Clym, struggles hard to tread
new way of life but at last accepts the earlier or original. Hardy presented that Destiny makes
man to follow path of established order otherwise he suffers a lot.
• Hardy’s ‘Mayor of the Casterbridge’ presents, sufferings of the hero, Michael Hen
chard due to selection of immoral way of living life. Ups and down in the life of Michael
Henchard are presented. It shows that man can be master of his fate in limited sense but at
the end destiny overpowers man.
Vyankatesh Madgulkar’s Pudhach Paul (Next step) presents sufferings of the hero,
Krishna due to selection of immoral way of living life; and regretted at last. Krishna wasn’t
lured by advances of Mogari. So, he suffered much. Both novels present that Destiny makes
man to face many difficulties and to adopt new way of life. Sometimes, last overcomes sense
of intellect.
• Thomas Hardy’s ‘Tess of the de’ Urber villes’ presents tragedy of Tess as a young
lady. She couldn’t understand real meaning of life and was tossed here and there up to the
end. She travelled many places for settlement but couldn’t fulfill her aim. So, tragedy takes
place.
• Thomas Hardy’s ‘Judge the Obscure’ presents, Judge Fawley as hero, a village boy
fired by academic aspirations. He fails due to sensual temper. Here, destiny works in the
form of sensuous love. Jude was motivated, intelligent but, lacked perseverance, application
and ability so, suffered a lot.