E. M. Forster
(1879-1970), noted English
author wrote Howards End (1910);
Edward Morgan Forster was born on 1
January 1879 in London, England
to Alice Clara née Whichelo (1855-1945) and
architect Edward Morgan Llewellyn Forster (1847-1880) who died soon after his
son was born. Living at Rooksnest (which would later
prove the model for Howards End near Stevenage
in Hertfordshire) young Edward was raised by his mother, aunts, and
governesses. A precocious young man, he started writing stories at the age of
six. He attended the Tonbridge School in Kent
County, then
went on to study history, philosophy, and literature at King's College, Cambridge. He received his
Bachelor of Arts in 1900. Although his public school years were unhappy, at
King's he blossomed under tutors and the atmosphere of intellectual freedom. He
joined groups like the Cambridge Conversazione Society, also known as the
Cambridge Apostles, and met lifelong friends including Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson
(1862-1932). Many of them went on to form the Bloomsbury Group.
After coming into an inheritance
from his Great Aunt Marianne Thornton (1797-1887), Forster was off on his first
of many trips to Europe with his mother. They
visited Italy, then Greece, where Forster
first experienced the Mediterranean culture he would grow to love and write
about. When he was not travelling he lived with his mother at Abinger Hammer in Surrey
until her death in 1944. Forster knew early on he would be a writer and was
fortunate enough to not experience financial hardships. His first of many
sketches, essays, and stories was printed in the Independent Review in
1904. Later, he contributed greatly to the London literary journal The Athenaeum.
His first novel Where Angels Fear to Tread (1905), set in Tuscany, was
followed by his Bildungsroman novel The
Longest Journey (1907), Rickie Elliot being one of his most
autobiographical characters. A Room With a View (1908) was Forsters next work, a romance set
in Italy,
contrasted with Edwardian England's society and mores. While he started writing
Maurice in 1912, it was not officially published until after his death
in 1971.
During World War I, while Forster
was in Alexandria, Egypt serving with the Red Cross,
he met and fell in love with Mohammed el Adl
(1900-1922), a young tram conductor. He also penned short stories that were
printed in local newspapers under his pseudonym 'Pharos'.
Works inspired by this period of his life include Alexandria: A History and Guide
(1922) and Pharos and Pharillon:
A Novelist's Sketchbook of Alexandria Through the Ages
(1923), printed by Leonard and Virginia Woolf's Hogarth Press. Forster also spent much time
in India
and became well-acquainted with the conflict between the British Raj and the
Indian Independence Movement of which he wrote about in A Passage to India
(1924), his last novel to reach international acclaim. In recognition he won
the James Tait Black Memorial Prize and the Prix Femina Vie Heureuse.
Forster was deeply committed to
numerous literary causes during his lifetime including PEN, the international
association of writers. He was a witness for the defence in the obscenity case
of D.H. Lawrence's novel Lady Chatterley's Lover. As an
Honorary Fellow at Cambridge,
he lectured there and was a well-known and respected figure on campus. After
the death of his mother he maintained residences at Cambridge
and in London. In
the 1950's he worked with Eric Crozier to write the
libretto to Benjamin Britten's opera Billy Budd, based on Herman Melville's 1924 novel of the same name. In 1953 he was
awarded the Order of Companions of Honor and in 1969
given Queen Elizabeth's Order of Merit. At the age of ninety, on 7 June 1970,
Edward Morgan Forster died at the home in Coventry
of friend and long-time companion Robert Buckingham.
E.M Forster – Biography and Works 27.October.2008
Biography
written by C. D. Merriman for Jalic Inc. Copyright Jalic Inc. 2007. All Rights Reserved.
URL: http://www.online-literature.com/forster/
MORE BIOGRAPHIES: [1] [2] [3] [4] [5] [6] [7] [8] …. [E.M. Forster]
Academic year 2008/2009
© a.r.e.a./Dr.Vicente Forés López
© Mónica Panadero
mopasa@alumni.uv.es
Universitat de Valčncia Press