Maurice By Em Forster |best| -
Maurice Hall first understood he was a fraud on a rainy Tuesday in Cambridge. He was nineteen, reading Plato in a panelled room that smelled of old leather and chrysanthemums. His friend, Clive Durham, sat across the fire, explaining that the Greeks never troubled to separate the noble from the physical. "The body," Clive said, tapping his translation, "is not a shame. It is the charioteer's mistake to think so."
What makes Maurice by EM Forster so radical? It is not just the gay happy ending. It is the novel’s sophisticated marriage of sexuality and class politics. maurice by em forster
Maurice is not a victim. He is confused, yes. He is scared. But he finds his own way. The agency he seizes in the final third of the book is inspiring. He does not ask for society’s permission; he simply leaves society behind. Maurice Hall first understood he was a fraud