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The Victorian Literature
NAME :-Olakiya Sonal Z.
ROLL NO :-23
PAPER NO :-6
SEMESTER :-2(Two)
YEAR :-2016-2018
EMAIL ID :-sonalolakiya2405@gmail.com.
SUBMITTED :-Dr.Dillip Barad Dept of Eng.
Smt.S.B Gardi Maharaja Krishnakumar Sinhji Bhavnagar Univercity.
Topic
Write critical note on the Significance of subtitle "A study of Provincial life" in Middlemarch.
George Eliot(1819-1880)

Her first novel “Adam Bede “and was a great
success. She used a male pen name to ensure her works were taken seriously in
an era when female authors were usually associated with romantic novels. After
that her famous novels are,
•
The Mill on the Floss
•
Silas Marner
•
Romala
•
Middlemarch
•
Daniel Deronda
These all are famous novels by Eliot give a
grand popularity to her brought social acceptance, and Lewes and Eliot's home
became a meeting place for writers and intellectuals. The novels of the first
period deal with life in the countryside in which she was brought up; the
society is depicted as a strong and stable one. Eliot called them "natural
history" or "history incarnate" and not fiction.
Introduction
“Middlemarch” is written by George Eliot who
was born on November 22, 1819. Eliot chose to write her novels under a male
pseudonym Mary Anne Evans. This is a highly unusual novel. Though it is
primarily a Victorian novel it has many characteristics typical to modern
novels. The subtitle of this novel is “A study of provincial life.” This means
the Middlemarch represents the lives of ordinary people, not the grand
adventures of princes and kings. Middlemarch represents the spirit of
nineteenth century England through the unknown, historically unremarkable common
people.
“Middlemarch the psychology tends more
clearly towards an intuitive idea of mind and consciousness.”
Setting of the novel
Middlemarch is George Eliot’s sixth novel.
The reaction to the novel has been a mixed one. Contemporary reviewers, in
general, admired it four its life likeness for its characters which they felt
were very true to life. In Middle march, the novelist returns once again to the
English Midlands in which her girlhood had been passed and which had fertilized
her imagination. The location of Middle march has been left indeterminate the
setting has not been precisely delineated, as is the case with the other early
novels like ‘Adam Bede’. The time of action of the novel is the period
immediately preceding the reform Act of 1832? Middlemarch acquires a symbolic
significance, symbolic of English, rural life in the 1830’s. What happens in
Middle march was happening in provincial society.
The Characters of Middlemarch
The canvas of Middle march is a crowded one.
It is a long novel running into over eight hundred minutely printed pages in
the penguin edition. There is a host of characters, so many that all of them
cannot even be named in the space. The main characters may be divided into four
groups. The first one is Brooks – consisting of Mr. Edword Brooke, his two
nieces- Dorothea, the elder sister and Celia, the younger one. The reside at
Tipton Grance near the town of Middle march secondly, there are the Vincy the
father and head of the family is Mr. Walter Vincy, The elder son is Fred Vincy,
the daughter is RosamandVincy and Mrs. Lucy Vincy, wife of Walter Vincy. The
third one is the Garth family including Caleb Garth, Mary Garth. The fourth
family is of Mr. EdwardCasaubon, a clergy and scholar. Middlemarch of the Minor
character, the more important ones are Mr. and Mrs. Cadwallader, Trumbull, the
auctioneer etc. The list is a long one and it is by no means exhaustive or all
inclusive.
Title:
In any literary work in title is more
significant. As the title suggest, the novel gives us a realistic, vivid and
comprehensive picture of provincial life of England. The picture is such that
if there is any hero in the novel it is the society of Middle march. The
novelist remembers her early girlhood and this gives the picture of truthfulness
and vividness of her portrait of provincial life. The action in the novel takes
place in Middle march or the neighboring parishes of Tipton, Lawic or Freshets.
A host of characters belonging to every profession, age group and walk of life
have been brought in, and through their action and interactions life in a
limited region.
Middlemarch has different types of plot and situations.
1. Initial situations:
Dorothea
marries Mr. Casaubon and Lydgates marries Rosamond. Here as the Victorian age
Middlemarch is totally against it tradition when main protagonist gets married
at the end of the first volume.
2.
Conflicts:
The main problem is marriage here. Dorothea
finally tied up with Mr. Casaubon and she doesn't look up to him enough. This
way an another side Rosamond discovers that Lydgate lives for his work not for
her. The both marriages became a major problem between couples.
“When a man has seen the woman whom he would
have chosen if he had intended to marry speedily, his remaining a bachelor will
usually depend on her resolution rather than on his.”
3.
Complications:
Now another complication is happening when
Dorothea becomes friend with Will Ladislaw. At that time Mr. Casaubon is
feeling jealousy about it. “One can begin so many things with a new person! -
even begin to be a better man.”
4. Climax:
Climax is like a soul of story and also
valuable part of any story. Now Dorothea is ready for remarriage with Will, he
feels like he can't go anywhere near her without people whispering about how
he's only after her money.
5. Suspense:
Now one day Dorothea found Will and Rosamond
together. There is a big misunderstanding happening by Dorothea, that there is
a secret affair between Will and Rosemont.
Frustration in Middlemarch
Frist we know about what is frustration? It
means the feeling of being upset or annoyed as a result of being unable to
change or achieve something. In novel one need only look to Lydgate to see an
example of idealism being destroyed by the environment in which it is found. At
the start of the novel, we are introduced to the "young, poor and
ambitious" and most of all idealistic Doctor Lydgate, who has great plans
for the fever hospital in Middlemarch. The second example of the young being
destroyed by the old is that of Dorothea.This can be seen by her continuing
desire to "bear a larger part of the world's misery" or to learn
Latin and Greek, both of which are continually thwarted by Casaubon, though
this ends after his death, with her discovery of his selfish and suspicious
nature, by way of the codicil.
A Conservative, Tradition Bound Society
This limited, isolated community has certain
well-marked characteristics. For one thing, it is deeply conservative.
Everything new, every hint of change, is looked upon with suspicion. Railways
which are yet distant and far off are regarded as a threat to the agricultural
way of life. Class distinctions are taken for granted, and every class carries
with it, its own privileges. Class privileges protect a person, even when he or
she behaves in a way inappropriate for the class to which he or she belongs.
Thus Mrs. Cadwallader, a lady of high birth, descended from the nobility,
haggles and bargains with common traders and cuts jokes with them, but nobody
thinks of the worse of her for these reasons. The class to which she belongs
shields her effectively.
Stress on Birth and Family Background
“Middlemarch society, Birth still
counts for a good deal, but money is more important”
The strength of the position of a man like
Mr. Brooke is that he combines both advantages, and has never really been
forced into the recognition that the advantages are separable. But others are;
Lydgate a man of family, is compelled to beg money from the very middle-class
has its gradations, and in reckoning these money is always more important than
education or culture. People related by marriage may be separated by economic
differences, like the Vincy and the Bulstrodes. And George Eliot is keenly
aware of the perennial tendency of the sons and a daughter of the merchant
class is to hanker after upper class status.
Melancholy in Middlemarch
R.H.Hutton says, “It is a world not in
sympathy with lofty aspirations, and to make this world convincing, and real,
it was essential for her to give such a solidity and complexity to her picture
of the world by which her hero’s and heroine’s idealism was to be more or less
tested and partly subjugated as would justify the impression that she
understood fully the character of the struggle. We doubt if any other novelist,
whoever wrote could have succeeded equally well in this melancholy design,
could have framed as complete a picture of English country and country town
society with all its rigidities, jealousies and pettiness, with its through
good nature”
Conflict in the Town
Old and new both existed in Middlemarch. Old
was dominant but new was future. Religion was divided into two. One is the
practical kindly, unidiomatic tradition of Anglicanism, the best representative
of which is Mr.Farebrother. The other is vehement and fanatical, is loosely
called EvangelicalBulstrode and Tyke represented this trend. In Middlemarch,
the two sects are in conflict, and the order is suspicious of the new.
Conclusion:
In short, Middlemarch is such a great novel
because of the solidity, vividness, truthfulness and comprehensiveness of the
picture of provincial life presented in the novel. This makes it a valuable
social document which tells us more about the real, day to day, common,
provincial life of England in the 1830’s, than any book of history.
Can you found the impact of money on the mind of characters?
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