
The most revolutionary aspect of Maurice is Forster’s insistence on a happy ending. In the Edwardian era, literature involving "the unspeakable vice" almost always ended in suicide, prison, or a lonely "cure." Forster explicitly rejected this, stating in his terminal note that he wanted to show that "a happy ending was imperative. I shouldn't have bothered to write otherwise."
"You are obtuse, Hall," Clive would say, but kindly. And Maurice would laugh, a deep, rumbling sound, and think: If you only knew the exact geometry of my obtuseness. maurice by em forster
At Cambridge, Maurice meets the intellectual Clive Durham. Clive introduces Maurice to the "Greek" ideal of love, leading to a passionate but strictly platonic relationship. The most revolutionary aspect of Maurice is Forster’s
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EM Forster once wrote that his motto was "Only connect." In Maurice , he connects the intellectual with the physical, the master with the servant, and the past with the future. The novel remains a fragrant, thorny, hopeful anomaly in his body of work—the secret heart he hid from the public for over half a century.
: An intellectual peer at Cambridge whose love remains platonic and eventually ends when Clive chooses a conventional marriage to fit societal expectations.
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