""No, Mother, Lilia was really keen on going to Italy!" said
Philip, finding the situation full of whimsical romance. There was
something half attractive, half repellent in the thought of this
vulgar woman journeying to places he loved and revered. But why
should she not be transfigured by her journeys? The same had
happened to the Goths!"
When a man or woman is "neither well-bred, nor well-connected,
nor handsome, nor clever, nor rich," what chance does he or she
have for success, in turn-of-the-century England -- at least in
that portion of London society almost ridiculously proper and
well-behaved? The Philistines, the vulgar, the ones talented in
making absurd impressions when in public . . . could they do well
for themselves? Horrid thought!
The author of "A Passage to India," E.M. Forster published his
clever and incisive novel on English manners, "Where Angels Fear to
Tread," in 1905.
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