Maurice By Em Forster «Instant»

Enter Alec Scudder. He is the novel’s secret weapon—an under-gamekeeper on Clive’s estate. Where Clive is intellectual, refined, and ultimately cowardly, Alec is physical, uneducated, and brave. He is also, crucially, working class. When Maurice, desperate and lonely, wanders the estate grounds in the middle of the night, Alec climbs through his bedroom window. They have sex—not euphemistically, but directly, beautifully described. This physical union shatters everything Maurice thought he knew. With Alec, he experiences not the spiritualized love of Cambridge, but a raw, earthy, democratic passion.

Forster later described the sensation as a “shattering” physical and emotional jolt. It was the touch of reality on a life of repressed longing. In that instant, the entire plot of Maurice sprang into his mind. He went home and began writing the novel immediately, driven by a single, unprecedented desire: to write a story about homosexual men that did not end in disgrace, suicide, or madness. maurice by em forster

Clive’s fear wins. After a bout of illness and a friend’s arrest for homosexuality (a plot point mirroring the real-life arrest of Oscar Wilde), Clive retreats into the safety of convention. He marries a woman ("a grey life," Forster notes) and becomes a country squire, effectively breaking Maurice’s heart. This section is a devastating portrait of how society polices the soul. Clive chooses respectability over authenticity, condemning Maurice to a twilight world of self-loathing and hypnotherapy aimed at "curing" his desires. Enter Alec Scudder

Maurice is not as technically perfect as Howards End , nor as epic as A Passage to India . It is, however, Forster’s most personal book. It is the novel where he stopped observing society ironically and started dreaming of a world where two men could walk into the woods and never come back. For any reader seeking a story of love that conquers not just prejudice, but loneliness and fear, Maurice by EM Forster is the destination. It asks us to leave the garden of convention and find our own greenwood. He is also, crucially, working class

The climax of Maurice is the famous "greenwood" ending. Alec, having been dismissed by Clive and planning to emigrate to Argentina, decides to risk everything. He waits for Maurice in the woodshed, and they choose each other over their careers, their classes, and their families. The novel ends with Maurice having abandoned his banking job, living in hiding with Alec, and looking forward to "a life of honesty and happiness." What makes Maurice by EM Forster so radical? It is not just the gay happy ending. It is the novel’s sophisticated marriage of sexuality and class politics.

“A happy ending was imperative,” Forster wrote in the 1960 "Terminal Note" to the novel. He was reacting against the literary tradition of his time. From the moralistic tragedy of Oscar Wilde’s trial to the covert suffering in the poetry of AE Housman, the existing narrative for same-sex love was one of inevitable punishment. Forster, drawing on the proto-liberationist optimism of Carpenter, refused that narrative. He wrote Maurice as a wish-fulfillment, a secret dream for himself and for the "thousands" of others he believed were living in silent agony. The novel follows the life of Maurice Hall, a conventional, unremarkable young man from the English upper-middle class. The arc of the narrative is his slow, painful education in his own nature.