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62 pages 2 hours read

Maurice

Fiction | Novel | Adult | Published in 1971

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Character Analysis

Maurice Hall

Maurice Hall is the novel’s protagonist, and the character whose perspective dominates the narrative. As Forster himself notes, Maurice largely represents the average or even ideal turn-of-the-century Englishman; he is “handsome, healthy, bodily attractive, mentally torpid, not a bad business man and rather a snob” (250). His background is likewise unremarkable; his family is suburban and comfortably middle-class, and though they can afford to provide a “gentleman’s” education for Maurice, they don’t expect him to aspire to anything above his father’s job as a stockbroker (an upper-class man would traditionally enter a more pedigreed field like the law, the Church, or the military).

The only thing that distinguishes Maurice from any other Englishman is his sexual orientation; Maurice is gay at a time when being gay wasn’t simply taboo but actually illegal (at least in England). Maurice is characteristically slow to realize his feelings, only becoming fully aware of them after a Cambridge classmate—Clive Durham—admits his own love for him. The rest of the novel details Maurice’s efforts to accept his orientation, and to build a meaningful life for himself. Unlike the more intellectual Clive, Maurice approaches these problems from a practical rather than philosophical angle, and is therefore less inclined to question his feelings provided he can avoid both isolation and imprisonment.

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