Brain Structure Differences
It is said that George Eliot’s style of writing deals with much
realism.
Eliot, herself meant by a "realist" to be "an artist who values
the truth
of observation above the imaginative fancies of writers of
"romance" or
fashionable melodramatic fiction." (Ashton 19) This technique is
artfully
utilized in her writings in a way which human character and
relationships are
dissected and analyzed. In the novel The Mill on the Floss,
Eliot uses the
relationships of the protagonist of the story, Miss Maggie
Tulliver, as a medium
in which to convey various aspects of human social
associations. It seems that
as a result of Maggie’s nature and of
circumstances presented around her, that
she is never able to have a
connection with one person that satisfies her
multifaceted needs and desires.
Maggie is able, to some extent, to explore the
various and occasionally
conflicting aspects of her person with her
relationships between other
characters presented in the novel. "From an early
age, Maggie needs approval
from men...Maggie is not shown in any deep
relationship with a female
friend." (Ashton 83) A reader can explore into
Maggie Tulliver’s person
and her short development as a woman in four primary
male associations: her
father—Mr. Tulliver, her brother—Tom Tulliver, her
friend and mentor—Philip
Wakem and her dangerous passion with Steven Guest.
Maggie unconditionally
loves her father although he has been the unconscious
root of many of her
misfortunes. "Tom’s and Maggie’s young lives are
blighted by the gloom,
poverty, disgrace and death of their father...Maggie is
obliged by her
father’s failure to leave school...It is the misfortune of a
clever girl
denied any activity other than domestic." (Ashton 50) In the time
period of
the setting of the novel, women were regarded as male property, to
take care
of household matters and without skill, originality and intelligence
of a
man. Mr. Tulliver cared deeply for his daughter’s future but
inadvertently
oppressed Maggie through his views of women. This idea is
represented in his
dialog with Mr. Riley of Maggie’s "unnatural"
intelligence: "It’s a pity but
what she’d been then lad—she’d
ha’been a match for the lawyers, she would.
It’s the wonderful’st
thing." (Eliot 68) Mr. Tulliver by nature was stubborn,
opinionated and led
his family to disgrace as a result. However, there is a
close bond between him
and Maggie for which he had always protected her and
favored her over Tom, as
much as would permit in that age. Maggie always felt
a responsibility to please
her father and to never cause him any grievances.
She was loyal to him at times
that he seemed to not return her affection "How
she wished that [her father]
would stoke her head, or give her some sign that
he was soothed by the sense
that he had a daughter who loved him!" (Eliot
371) When her father was in the
lowest point of self-ruin and was under the
scrutiny of the family, Maggie took
upon the position of the protector and
loyally defended her protector. "Her
father had always defended and excused
her, and her loving remembrance of his
tenderness was a force within her that
would enable her to do or bear anything
for his sake." (Eliot 284) Maggie’s
brother, Tom, is the person of whom she
was the most fond of. She turned the
cheek on some of his unkind actions toward
her in the realization of a
strong, unbreakable bond. This excerpt from
"Brother and Sister" (Ashton
90) portrays the type of relationship Maggie
and Tom Tulliver have. He was
the elder and a little man Of forty inches, bound
to show no dread, And I the
girl that puppy-like now ran, Now lagged behind my
brother’s larger tread.
"Every episode in the early chapters show Maggie’s
high hopes of pleasure
being dashed by disagreements with Tom." (Ashton 75)
"Tom indeed was of
opinion that Maggie was a silly little thing: all girls
were silly...still he
was very fond of his sister and always meant to take care
of her." (Eliot 92)
Even with this mutual love, Tom is extremely harsh of
Maggie, whose only
concern is to please him and maintain closeness with him
throughout their
lives. In many instances, Tom would feel his authority being
threatened by
Maggie and bear insensitive punishments upon her. He shows his
rage and after
his own personal interpretation and feeling, giving Maggie no
chance to
defend herself. The worst punishment he could evoke upon Maggie is
to
estrange himself from her and banish him from [their] home. This action in
their
troubled relationship causes Tom to be callous and harsh and raises
the
possibility for Maggie to be isolated in the world. "You will find no
home
with me...You have been a curse to your best friends...I wash my hands
of you
forever. You don’t belong to me!" (Eliot 612) Till the dire years
whose
awful name is change Had grasped our soul still yearning in divorce,
And
pitiless shaped them in two forms that range Two elements which sever
their
life’s course. This excerpt taken from the same poem is significant of
the
divided views and paths of these two siblings. The only thing Maggie
desired was
to have no "cloud between herself and Tom." (Eliot 577) Despite
all of the
hardships that Tom had inflicted in Maggie, the possibility of his
danger during
the flood sparked the natural protective nature in Maggie as
she laboriously
fought the river to Tom’s house in a small boat. As seen
before in times of
great dispair, they put aside their differences and for
gave each other without
saying a word. In their unfortunate ending, their
mutual love was shown as "an
embrace never to be parted" (Eliot 655) "Tom and
Maggie must be reconciled
in Death, where they could not be in life." (Ashton
92) One of the major
arguments between Tom and Maggie resulted in her
friendship with Philip Wakem.
Tom furiously hated Philip as a result of
his father, Mr. Wakem, which Tom
regarded as an accomplice to his father’s
and his family’s downfall. Maggie
was given strict orders to stay clear of
all Wakem accompaniments. However,
good-natured Maggie saw goodness in Philip
that he was not associated with his
father’s actions. They developed a close
friendship where Philip resultantly
developed a deep love for Maggie that
exceeded the bounds of their comradeship.
"Philip is from their
schooldays a brotherly figure for Maggie, a loving
substitute for
Tom...Maggie's feelings for him will fall short of passion;
though he is a
more satisfactory brother figure." (Ashton 92) In this
relationship, Maggie
finds the love she has yearned for from her own brother,
however it is
complicated from external issues and irrational thought of a lover
status by
Philip. Philip provided education and moral support for Maggie during
their
time together and she regarded him very dear. Philip can relate
to
Maggie’s inferior status as a woman because he has been plagued by a
physical
deformity and therefore is inferior to society. "He is marganalized
by his
deformity as women are marginalized by their gender." (Carlisle 7) As
their
relationship progressed, it is threatened by another force: the
appearance of
Steven Guest. Steven Guest can provide the aspect of
passion for Maggie that
Philip cannot provide. In their first interaction
Steven felt an instant
attraction for her, as she for him. "For one instant
Stephen could not conceal
his astonishment at the sight of this tall,
dark-eyed nymph with her jet-back
coronet of hair, the next, Maggie felt
herself, for the first time in her life,
receiving the tribute of a very deep
blush and a very deep bow from a person
towards she herself was conscious of
timidity." (Eliot 484) Steven complicates
Maggie’s life because his
attraction is also irrational—he is courting her
loving and dear cousin.
Maggie is aware of the danger in these passions and
takes great effort not to
partake in them, on an external display. Maggie stated
that she would rather
take death than to participate in temptations that could
hurt so many people:
Herself, Steven, Lucy—her cousin and Philip. How little
she did not know of
the disastrous effects it would have on a more broad scale.
As time
progresses, both Steven and Maggie find it more difficult to hide
such
attractions for each other and eventually Steven makes a thoughtless
gesture
that the two of them should be together...forever. Maggie’s conscious
and her
inability to directly cause grief to her loved ones overcomes her
strong sexual
attraction for Steven and the prospects of a free life with
him. This action
causes the complexities of their relation to be exposed to
the general public,
the public to pass ill judgment on her and begins the
second major dispute
between her and her and Tom. Steven is said to "be a
catalyst in the primary
drama between brother and sister" (Ashton 52) This is
an accurate statement
because tension was already established between Maggie
and Tom and if it were
not for Steven, it would have been another thing to
cause further conflicts.
"It is perhaps worth remarking that he is the
literary descendant to other
energetic, simple, sexually powerful men in
novels who create quite complex
problems for women whose alternative lovers
are perhaps more sensitive." (Byatt
690) Despite of her short and
problematic life, Maggie Tulliver has the
opportunities to explore various
aspects of her personality and womanhood in her
variety of relationships
especially with male characters. She was able cherish
the forgiving love of a
father, which made so much impact on her life. She was
able to experience
virtually unpressured friendship and intellectual stimulation
from her
beloved friend Philip. She experienced a glimpse of sexual identity
and
attraction with her relations with Steven Guest that unfortunately caused
them
both much pain. Maggie was also allowed to experience the type of love
that can
exist between siblings, despite all of their disagreements, Maggie
and Tom were
able to realize that their bond was deeper than could have been
imagined. George
Eliot artfully created such relationships in this novel
in a successful method
to analyze and probe into the complexities of human
interaction. This comes
along with the message that it may be possible to
have everything that one may
want in life, just not all at once or at the
same time.
Bibliography
Works Cited Ashton, Rosemary. The Mill on
the Floss: A Natural History.
Twayne’s Masterwork Studies. Boston, G.K.
Hall & Co. 1990 Byatt, A.S.
"The Placing of Steven Guest". Appendix,
The Mill on the Floss, Middlesex,
Blays Ltd, St Printing; Penguin
Classics. 1979 Carlisle, Janice. "The Mirror
In the Mill on the Floss;
Toward Reading of Autobiography Discourse". Studies
in the Literary
Imagination. Vol 23:Issue 2. [EBSCO] Masterfile Premier 1990
Edinborough
and London. "Brother and Sister" The Legend of Jubal and Other
Poems.
London, Blackwood 1874 Eliot, George. The Mill on the Floss.
Middlesex,
Penguin English Library, 1979.