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Felix Holt (1866) and Middlemarch (1871–72)

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George Eliot

Part of the book series: Literary Lives ((LL))

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Abstract

In 1848 revolutionary events on the continent had prompted Marian Evans to make one of her infrequent comments on the social and political situation in her own country:

Our working classes are eminently inferior to the mass of the French people. In France, the mind of the people is highly electrified — they are full of ideas on social subjects — they really desire social reform — not merely an acting out of Sancho Panza’s favourite proverb ‘Yesterday for you, to-day for me.’ The revolutionary animus extended over the whole nation, and embraced the rural population — not merely as with us, the artisans of the towns. Here there is so much larger a proportion of selfish radicalism and unsatisfied, brute sensuality (in the agricultural and mining districts especially) than of perception or desire of justice, that a revolutionary movement would be simply destructive — not constructive. Besides, it would be put down. Our military have no notion of ‘fraternizing.’ They have the same sort of inveteracy as dogs have for the ill-drest canaille. They are as mere a brute force as a battering ram and the aristocracy have got firm hold of them. Our little humbug of a queen is more endurable than the rest of her race because she calls forth a chivalrous feeling, and there is nothing in our constitution to obstruct the slow progress of political reform. This is all we are fit for at present. and out of it. But we English are slow crawlers.

(L, i, 254)

‘What do I think of Middlemarch?’ What do I think of glory … The mysteries of human nature surpass the ‘mysteries of redemption.’

Emily Dickinson

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© 1991 Kerry McSweeney

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McSweeney, K. (1991). Felix Holt (1866) and Middlemarch (1871–72). In: George Eliot. Literary Lives. Palgrave Macmillan, London. https://doi.org/10.1057/9780230389656_7

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