Sixteen years after finishing his last novel, Hardy prepared the Wessex Edition of his collected works, published by Macmillan in i912.. In the General Preface to this handsome edition he classified his fourteen novels under three headings. The first of these classes, “Novels of Character and Environment,” contained, as it happened, all the novels that he and his readers had judged to be his finest: Far from the Madding Crowd (i 874), The Return of the Native (i 878), The Mayor of Casterbridge (1886), Tess of the d'Urbervilles (1891), and Jude the Obscure (1895). Of these Hardy chose Tess, probably the most widely read, for Volume I of the new edition.
This Third Edition of Tess of the d'Urbert,illes intro-duces a new text--that of the Clarendon edition(1983), edited by Juliet Grindle and Simon Gatrell.The text is fully annotated and includes, for ease of refer- ence, a separate table of contents for the novel. Also new to the Third Edition are reproductions of Hardy's map of Wessex and the manuscript title page for the First Edition.
“Hardy and the Novel” includes seven poems by Hardy that provide greater insight into his ethos, passages from Michael Millgate's biogra-phy of Hardy that depict the relationship between parts of Tess of the d'Urbervilles and the author's own life, and excerpts from Grindle and Gatrelt's introduction to the 1983 edition that discuss Hardy's revision process in both manuscripts and early printed editions of the novel.
“Criticism” features three new contemporary reviews including the first feminist review of Tess of the D'Urbervilles. Also new to the Third Edition is “A Chat with Mr. Hardy,” a hitherto un-reprinted post-publication interview with the author about his new novel. Five new critical interpretations have been carefully selected, including essays by Elliot B. Gose Jr., Peter R. Morton, and Gillian Beer that address Hardy's thought and imagination. Raymond Williams's essay presents a Marxist perspective, and Adrian Poole discusses the significance of Hardy's wise words concerning “the trouble men's words have with women and the trouble women have with men's words.”
A Chronology and, new to this edition, a Selected Bibliography are also included.
Preface to the Third Norton Critical Edition
HARDY'S PREFACES
Explanatory Note to the First Edition
Preface to the Fifth and Later Editions
From the General Preface to the Wessex Edition of Hardy's Novels (1912)
The Text of Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Hardy's Manuscript Title Page for the First Edition (1891)
A Table of Contents
Map: The Wessex of the Novels
Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Hardy and the Novel
HARDY'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY
SELECTED POEMS BY HARDY
Hap
The Sleep-Worker
New Year's Eve
Before Life and After
The Oxen
The Darkling Thrush
Drinking Song
At Castle Boterel
The Well-Beloved
Tess's Lament
We Field-Women
Heredity
The Pedigree
FACTUAL SOURCES
Michael Millgate·[Some Originals of, and Models for, Tess Durbeyfield]
Michael Millgate·[Facts into Fiction]
COMPOSITION AND PUBLICATION
Richard Purdy·[Tess as a Serial]
Ian Gregor and Brian Nicholas [Hardy's Concessions]
Richard Purdy [Later Editions]
Juliet Grindle and Simon Gatrell·[Revision in the Novel]
Criticism
CONTEMPORARY CRITICAL RECEPTION
From The Pall Mall Gazette (December 31, 1891)
From The Athenaeum (January 9, I892)
From The Illustrated London News (January 9, 1892)
From The Saturday Review (January 16, 1892)
From The Spectator (January 23, 1892)
From The Academy (February 6, 1892)
Henry James and Robert Louis Stevenson [On Tess of the d'Urbervilles]
[An Interview with Thomas Hardy]
ESSAYS IN CRITICISM
Lionel Johnson [The Argument]
Virginia Woolf [Hardy's Moments of Vision]
Irving Howe [Tess of the d'Urbervilles--At the Center of Hardy's Achievement]
Elliott B. Gose, Jr.·Psychic Evolution: Darwinism and Initiation in Tess of the d'Urbervilles
Peter R. Morton [Neo-Darwinian Fate in Tess of the d'Urbervilles]
Gillian Beer Descent and Sexual Selection: Women in Narrative
Gillian Beer Finding a Scale for the Human: Plot and Writing in Hardy's Novels
Raymond Williams [Love and Work]
Adrian Poole·‘Men's Words' and Hardy's Women
Thomas Hardy: A Chronology
Selected Bibliography