The Cave and the Mountain: A Study of E. M. ForsterEn analyse af E.M. Forsters fem romaner: Where angels fear to tread, The longest journey, A room with a view, Howards End og A passage to India |
Contents
Poetry and Prose | 3 |
The Fathers House | 21 |
The Apostolic Ring | 40 |
Goldsworthy Lowes Dickinson | 72 |
From Words to Music | 101 |
Fantasy | 122 |
The Fool as Prophet | 162 |
The Slaughter of the Innocent | 184 |
Sex and Sensibility | 216 |
Redbloods and Mollycoddles | 235 |
A Passage to Alexandria | 279 |
The Great Round | 298 |
The Near and the Far | 347 |
Notes | 391 |
Acknowledgments and Credits | 426 |
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Common terms and phrases
Adela Agnes Alexandria Apostles Arnold artist Aziz beauty become Bloomsbury called Cambridge caves characters Christian Clapham connection critical culture D. H. Lawrence death Dickinson E. M. Forster earth echoes English escape esthetic eternal experience F. R. Leavis fantasy feel Forster writes friends G. E. Moore Gino Helen Henry Thornton hero Herriton Hindu Howards End human Ibid idea ideal Keynes kind Leonard Letters literature live London Longest Journey Lucy Marabar Margaret McTaggart mind Miss Bartlett Miss Raby modern Moore moral mother myth never Noel Annan novel Passage to India passion Philip poet poetry political prophecy prophetic reality Red-bloods religion Review Rickie Rickie's Roger Fry Sawston Schlegels seems sense sexual social society soul spiritual Stephen story symbolic T. S. Eliot things tion truth unconscious Victorian Virginia Woolf wants Wedd whole Wilcox woman words writes Forster York