Hehe, that's right, I'm just more sentimental.
Tess did not want to run away in the end because she was tired. Tired of what? Alek, the young master of the d'Urberville family who gave her material because of depriving her of her spirit? Or was it Angel who was abandoned because he thought he could entrust his lifelong happiness?
On the way to Waigaoqiao, I heard Dai Rao, a singer on Hit FM, say something: When you can't be together for her (him), then give up your happiness---at least you can pray her (his) happiness. What really tires Tess is her desperation of fate. The despair of fate did not come from Master Alek-that, it was just an accident; a disaster that could happen to anyone at any time-what really made her feel the cruelty of fate was facing her only sacrifice. Really love Angel's attitude!
I presume that Tess must have wished to part with Angel, and her own destiny, by hanging, in what might be a brief happiness. It was a relatively perfect choice for her. What would happen otherwise? ! An Angel who doesn't know true love and even abandoned it so much, I'm afraid the author will be too lazy to write what kind of care he will give Tess in the future.
However, life is not a novel. In the dark cycle of reincarnation, we are finally satisfied and tired; we have longed for it and abandoned it after all. A person's whole life, but in an inexplicable night, moldy and rotten because of a little bit of excessive love and pity for himself!
While we are proud of our high intelligence in known species, we all yearn for the day sooner or later through continuous learning and understanding, "I will be colder than a fish, dumber, and deaf."
Understand? Strange?
This TMD is where science and philosophy, and even most known beliefs, lead.
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