Minor Characters
Reverend James Clare
Angel's father, a parson with a very strict moral code and intense religious fervor. He can be severe but is also extremely charitable, especially towards hopeless cases, and he manages to convert even Alec d'Urberville with his patience and fortitude.
Marian
Another of the Talbothays women who loves Angel. Marian responds to his rejection by turning to alcohol. She later gets Tess her job at Flintcomb-Ash.
Retty Priddle
The third of Tess's Talbothays friends. Retty is also descended from an ancient, noble family, but they, like the d'Urbervilles, have lost all power and wealth. Retty reacts to Angel's rejection by attempting suicide and then leaving the farm.
Mrs. Clare
Angel's mother, a pious woman who is also concerned with upholding social conventions.
Eliza Louisa Durbeyfield
“Liza-Lu,” Tess's younger sister. Tess describes her to Angel as “all the best of me without the bad of me” and asks him to marry her once she is dead.
Abraham Durbeyfield
Tess's inquisitive younger brother. She sends him to fetch their parents from Rolliver's, and later asks him to accompany her on her trip to the Casterbridge market.
Mrs. d'Urberville
Alec's mother, a blind, eccentric old woman who owns a huge estate but spends most of her time tending to her birds. She disapproves of her son's behavior but cannot control him.
Sorrow
Tess's baby from Alec. He only lives a few weeks, and Tess has to baptize and bury him herself.
Felix Clare
One of Angel's brothers, the curate of a nearby town who follows all the latest fashions in dress and doctrine.
Cuthbert Clare
Angel's other brother, a Fellow and Dean of Cambridge University, also unoriginal in his beliefs.
Mercy Chant
The pious woman that the Clares hope Angel will marry. Cuthbert ends up marrying her instead.
Dairyman Richard Crick
The master-dairyman of Talbothays farm. A kind employer who is fond of telling rambling, humorous stories.
Farmer Groby
A man who makes a reference to Tess's past and is struck by Angel. Later he employs Tess at Flintcomb-Ash, but remains an antagonistic character.
Car Darch
“The Queen of Spades,” a girl from Trantridge who was one of Alec's favorites before Tess.
Parson Tringham
The man who first discovers that the Durbeyfields are related to the d'Urbervilles. His revelation to John Durbeyfield on the road begins the plot of the novel.
Mrs. Brooks
Landlady of “The Herons” boarding house, who spies on Tess and Alec arguing and then raises the alarm when she sees a bloodstain spreading across her ceiling.
Mrs. Crick
Dairyman Crick's wife, who makes Angel sit at a separate table from the rest of the workers because of his gentility.
Jack Dollop
An acquaintance of Dairyman Crick's and a character in his stories, whose escapades relate coincidentally with Tess's life.
Jonathon
a worker at Talbothays.
Simon Stoke
The ancestor of Alec d'Urberville, who generated the family's wealth as a merchant and changed the family name from Stoke to d'Urberville (somewhat randomly picking d'Urberville) as a way to give his new-money wealth a sense of old-money history.
Hope
A younger sister of Tess.
Modesty
A younger sister of Tess.