E. M.
Forster (1879 - 1970)
Edward Morgan Forster was born in London as the only child
of an architect, who died before Edward was two years old. Forster's childhood
and much of his adult life was dominated by his mother and his aunts. The
legacy of his paternal great-aunt Marianne Thornton, descendant of the Clapham
Sect of evangelists and reformers, gave later Forster the freedom to travel and
to write. Forster's years at Tonbridge
School as a teenager were
difficult - he suffered from the cruelty of his classmates.
Forster attended King's College, Cambridge (1897-1901), where he met members of the
later-formed Bloomsbury group. In the
atmosphere of skepticism, he became under the
influence of Sir James Frazer, Nathaniel Wedd,
Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson, and G.E. Moore, and shed his not-very-deep
Christian faith. After graduating, Forster traveled
in Italy and Greece
with his mother and on his return began to write essays and short stories for
the liberal Independent Review. In 1905 Foster spent several months in
German as tutor to the children of the Countess von Armin.
In the same year appeared his first novel, Where
Angels Fear to Tread. In the following year he lectured on Italian art and
history for the Cambridge Local Lectures Board. In 1907 appeared The Longest
Journey, then A Room with a View (1908), based partly on the
material from extended holidays in Italy with his mother. The first
part of the novel is set in Florence,
where the young Lucy Honeychurch is visiting her
older cousin, Charlotte Bartless. Lucy witnesses a
murder and becomes caught between two men: shallow, conventional Cecil Vyse and George Emerson, who kisses Lucy during a picnic.
The second half of the novel takes place at Windy Corner, Lucy's home on Summer
Street. She accepts a marriage proposal from Cecil. The Emersons
become friends of the Honeychurches after George, Mr.
Beebe (who is a clergyman), and Freddie (Lucy's brother) are discovered bathing
nude in the woods. Finally, Lucy overcomes prejudices and marries George.
Forster also wrote during the pre-war years a
number of short stories, which were collected in The Celestial Omnibus
(1914). Most of them were symbolic fantasies or fables.
Howards End (1910) was a story that centered
on an English country house and dealt with the clash between two families, one
interested in art and literature, the other only in
business. The book brought together the themes of money, business and culture.
"To trust people is a luxury in which only the wealthy can indulge; the
poor cannot afford it." (from Howards End)
The novel established Forster's reputation, and
he embarked upon a new novel with a homosexual theme, Maurice. The
picture of British attitudes not long after Wilde was revised several times during
his life and finally published posthumously in 1971. Forster hid his personal
life from public discussion. In 1930 he had a relationship with a London policeman. This
important contact continued after the marriage of his London friend.
Between the years 1912 and 1913 Forster traveled in India.
From 1914 to 1915 he worked for the National Gallery in London. Following the outbreak of World War
I, Forster joined the Red Cross and served in Alexandria, Egypt.
There he met the Greek poet C.P. Cavafy and published
a selection of his poems in Pharos and Pharillon (1923). In 1921 Forster returned to India,
working as a private secretary to the Maharajah of Dewas.
The land was the scene of his masterwork, A Passage to India (1924), an
account of India
under British rule. It was Forster's last novel.
For the remaining forty-six years of his life,
Forster devoted himself to other activities. Writing novels was not the most
important element in his life. In the book he wrote: "Most of life is so
dull that there is nothing to be said about it and the books and talk that
would describe it as interesting are obliged to exaggerate, in the hope of
justifying their own existence. Inside its cocoon of work or social obligation,
the human spirit slumbers for the most part, registering the distinction between
pleasure and pain, but not nearly as alert as we pretend."
After Forster's death his literary executors
turned down approaches from Joseph Losey, Ismail
Merchant and James Ivory, and Waris Hussein, to make
a feature film version of the book, A Passage to India, but eventually
David Lean was approved as director. Forster had shared with T.E. Lawrence both
a dislike and distrust of the cinema. Forster had written the two last chapters
of A Passage to India under the influence of Lawrence's The Seven Pillars of Wisdom.
Later, Lean was criticized that he produced his own vision of India, not Forster's. He also
changed the ending of the story, defending himself: "Look, this novel was
written hot on the movement for Indian independence. I think the end is a lot
of hogwash so far as a movie is concerned." (from
David Lean: A Biography by Kevin Brownlow, 1996)
Passage to India (1924) synopsis: Adela Quested visits Chandrapore with Mrs. Moore in order to make up her mind
whether to marry the latter's son. Mrs. Moore meets his friend, Dr. Azis, assistant to the British Civil Surgeon. She and Adela
accept Azis's invitation to visit the mysterious Marabar
Caves. In this trip, Mrs.
Moore nearly faints in the cave and goes mad for an instant. Adela asks Azis, "Have you one wife or more than one?" and
he is shocked. "But to ask an educated Indian Moslem how many wives he has
- appalling, hideous!" She believes herself to have been the victim of a
sexual assault by Azis, who is arrested. Adela is
pushed forward by his friends and family, but she admits that she was mistaken.
"Something that she did not understand took hold of the girl and pulled
her through. Though the vision was over, and she had returned to the insipidity
of the world, she remembered what she had learnt. Atonement and confession -
they could wait. It was in hard prosaic tones that she said: 'I withdraw
everything.'" Mrs. Moore dies on the voyage home at sea. "The heat, I
suppose," Mr. Hamidullah says. Azis has changed his liberal views. "We may hate one
another, but we hate you most. If I don't make you go, Ahmed will, Karim will, if it's fifty-hundred years we shall get rid of
you; yes, we shall drive every blasted Englishman into the sea, and then' - he
rode against him furiously - 'and then,' he concluded, half kissing him, 'you
and I shall be friends.'" - The novel's title derives from Walt Whitman,
but the American poet's celebration of the opening of the Suez
Canal as bringing together East and West is qualified by Kipling's
assertion that "ne'er the twain shall meet". The Nobel writer V.S.
Naipaul claimed once that Forster knew hardly anything about India: "He just knew a few
middle-class Indians and the garden boys whom he wished to seduce."
Forster contributed reviews and essays to
numerous journals, most notably the Listener. He was an active member of
PEN and in 1934 became the first president of the National Council for Civil Liberties.
After his mother's death in 1945, he was elected an honorary fellow of King's
and lived there for the remainder of his life. In 1949 Forster refused a
knighthood and in 1951 he collaborated with Eric Crozier
on the libretto of Benjamin Britten's opera Billy Budd, which was based
on Herman Melville's novel (film 1962, directed by Peter Ustinov). Forster was made a
Companion of Honour in 1953 and in 1969 he accepted an Order of Merit. Forster
died on June 7, 1970.
"So Two cheers for Democracy:
one because it admits variety and two because it permits criticism."
Forster often criticized in his books Victorian
middle class attitudes and British colonialism through strong woman characters.
However, Forster's characters were not one-dimensional heroes and villains, and
except for his devotion to such values as tolerance and sense of comedy, he was
uncommitted. "For we must admit that flat people are not in themselves as
big achievement as round ones, and also that they are best when they are comic.
A serious or tragic flat character is apt to be a bore. Each time he enters
crying 'Revenge!' or 'My heart bleeds for humanity!' or whatever his formula
is, out hearts sink." (from Aspects of the
Novel)
The epithet "Fosterian"
- liberal, unconventional, skeptical, moral - had
started to circulate since the publication of Howard's End. Forster's
famous essay Two Cheers for Democracy (also: What I Believe),
which was originally printed in 1938 in the New York Nation
reflected his concern for individual liberty. He assumed liberal humanism not
dogmatically but ironically, writing in unceremonious sentences and making
gentle stabs at pomposity and hypocrisy: "If I had to choose between
betraying my country and betraying my friend, I hope I should have the guts to
betray my country." (from Two cheers for
Democracy)
The British Humanist Association has
reissued this classical work and similar essays.
E.M Forster – Free Online Library 27.October.2008
URL: http://forster.thefreelibrary.com/
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