Summary
Maggie
Tulliver is the impetuous, clever younger daughter of the Tullivers of Dorlcote
Mill in St. Ogg's. Maggie frustrates her superficial mother with her
unconventional dark coloring and unnatural activeness and intelligence.
Maggie's father often takes Maggie's side, but it is Maggie's older brother Tom
upon whom she is emotionally dependent. Maggie's greatest happiness is Tom's affection,
and his disapproval creates dramatic despair in Maggie, whose view of the
world, as all children's, lacks perspective.
Though
Tom is less studious than Maggie appears to be, Mr. Tulliver decides to pay for
Tom to have additional education rather than have him take over the mill. This
decision provokes a family quarrel between Mr. Tulliver and his wife's sisters,
the Dodsons. Mr. Tulliver is frustrated by the snobbish contrariness of the
Dodsons, led by Mrs. Tulliver's sister Mrs. Glegg, and vows to repay money that
Mrs. Glegg had lent him, thereby weakening her hold on him. He has lent almost
an equal sum to his sister and her husband, the Mosses, but he feels
affectionately toward his sister and decides not to ask for money back, which
they cannot pay.
Mr.
Stelling, a clergyman, takes Tom on as a student, and Maggie visits him at
school several times. On one of these visits, she befriends Mr. Stelling's
other student—the sensitive, crippled Philip Wakem, son of her father's enemy,
Lawyer Wakem. Maggie herself is sent to school along with her cousin, Lucy, but
is called home when she is thirteen when her father finally loses his extended
lawsuit with Lawyer Wakem over the use of the river Floss. Mr. Tulliver is
rendered bankrupt and ill. Tom returns home as well to support the family, as
the Dodson's offer little help. The mill itself is up for auction, and Lawyer
Wakem, based on an idea inadvertently furnished to him by Mrs. Tulliver, buys
Dorlcote Mill and retains Mr. Tulliver as a manager in an act of humiliating
patronage.
Even
after Mr. Tulliver's recovery, the atmosphere at the Tullivers' is grim. One
bright spot is the return of Bob Jakin, a childhood friend of Tom's, into Tom
and Maggie's life. Bob, a trader, kindly buys books for Maggie and one of
them—Thomas a Kempis's The Imitation of Christ—influences a spiritual
awakening in her that leads to many months of pious self-denial. It is only
after Maggie reencounters Philip Wakem on one of her walks in the woods that
she is persuaded to leave her martyrish dullness in favor of the richness of
literature and human interaction. Philip and Maggie meet clandestinely for a
year, since Maggie's father would be hurt by their friendship as he has sworn
to hold Lawyer Wakem as his life-long enemy. Philip finally confesses to Maggie
that he loves her, and Maggie, at first surprised, says she loves him back.
Soon thereafter, Tom discovers their meetings, cruelly upbraids Philip, and
makes Maggie swear not to see Philip again.
On
a business venture with Bob Jakin, Tom has amassed enough money to pay off Mr.
Tulliver's debts to the family's surprise and relief. On the way home from the
official repayment of the debts, Mr. Tulliver meets Lawyer Wakem and attacks
him, but then Mr. Tulliver falls ill himself and dies the next day.
Several
years later, Maggie has been teaching in another village. Now a tall, striking
woman, she returns to St. Ogg's to visit her cousin Lucy, who has taken in Mrs.
Tulliver. Lucy has a handsome and rich suitor named Stephen Guest, and they are
friends with Philip Wakem. Maggie asks Tom for permission to see Philip, which
Tom grudgingly gives her. Maggie and Philip renew their close friendship, and
Maggie would consider marriage to Philip, if only his father approved. Lucy
realizes that Tom wishes to purchase back Dorlcote Mill, and she asks Philip to
speak to his father, Lawyer Wakem. Philip speaks to his father about selling
the mill and about his love for Maggie, and Lawyer Wakem is eventually
responsive to both propositions.
Meanwhile,
however, Stephen and Maggie have gradually become helplessly attracted to each
other, against both of their expectations and wishes. Maggie plans for their
attraction to come to nothing, as she will take another teaching post away from
St. Ogg's soon. Stephen pursues her, though, and Philip quickly becomes aware
of the situation. Feeling ill and jealous, Philip cancels a boat- ride with
Maggie and Lucy, sending Stephen instead. As Lucy has proceeded down river,
meaning to leave Philip and Maggie alone, Stephen and Maggie find themselves
inadvertently alone together. Stephen rows Maggie past their planned meeting
point with Lucy and begs her to marry him. The weather changes and they are far
down the river. Maggie complacently boards a larger boat with Philip, which is
headed for Mudport. They sleep over night on the boat's deck and when they
reach Mudport, Maggie holds firm in her decision to part with Stephen and
return to St. Ogg's.
On
her return to St. Ogg's, Maggie is treated in town as a fallen woman and a
social outcast. Tom, now back in Dorlcote Mill, renounces her, and Maggie,
accompanied by her mother, goes to lodge with Bob Jakin and his wife. Despite
public knowledge of Stephen's letter, which acknowledges all the blame upon
himself, Maggie is befriended only by the Jakins and the clergyman Dr. Kenn.
Lucy, who has been prostrate with grief, becomes well again and secretly visits
Maggie to show her forgiveness. Philip, as well, sends a letter of forgiveness
and faithfulness.
Stephen
sends Maggie a letter renewing his pleas for her hand in marriage and
protesting the pain she has caused him. Maggie vows to bear the burden of the
pain she has caused others and must endure herself until death but wonders to
herself how long this trial, her life, will be. At this moment, water begins
rushing under the Jakin's door from the nearby river Floss, which is flooding.
Maggie wakes the Jakins' and takes one of their boats, rowing it down river in
a feat of miraculous strength toward Dorlcote Mill. Maggie rescues Tom, who is
trapped in the house, and they row down river towards Lucy. Before they can
reach Lucy's house, the boat is capsized by debris in the river, and Maggie and
Tom drown in each other's arms. Years go by and Philip, and Stephen and Lucy
together, visit the grave.
Criticism:
Autobiographical Criticism relates the life of the author to their works of literature. It also incorporates the author's own experiences into a narrative fiction.
The Mill on the floss is a novel by George Eliot. It is her most autobiographical work of fiction. The story is all about Maggie Tulliver, her relationship with her brother Tom and her inability to adopt to the traditional society in which she lives. The autobiographical nature of "The Mill on the floss" has been identified because George Eliot touch the portrayal of Maggie Tulliver's childhood.
Autobiographical Criticism relates the life of the author to their works of literature. It also incorporates the author's own experiences into a narrative fiction.
The Mill on the floss is a novel by George Eliot. It is her most autobiographical work of fiction. The story is all about Maggie Tulliver, her relationship with her brother Tom and her inability to adopt to the traditional society in which she lives. The autobiographical nature of "The Mill on the floss" has been identified because George Eliot touch the portrayal of Maggie Tulliver's childhood.
it is a summary of the novel, not an Autobiographical reference. Kindly rewrite the question and repost it because this might drown the boat of many students.
ReplyDeleteThanks.
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