From Our Editors
George Eliot had no peer when it came to finding the drama at the heart of normal lives, lived out in tandem with the slow, gigantic rhythms of nature itself. 'The Mill On The Floss' (1860), a story of the growth of the moral imagination in this young, sensitive heroine, Maggie Tulliver, restores to conditions of human existence that we can all recognize their actual originality and strangeness, and reveals once again how thoroughly, in the hands of a master like George Eliot, the art of fiction can satisfy our deepest mental and emotional cravings.
From the Publisher
(Book Jacket Status: Jacketed)In The Mill on the Floss,
George Eliot re-creates her own childhood through the story of the
wild, gifted Maggie Tulliver and her spoiled, selfish brother.
Though tragic in its outcome, this tenderly comic novel combines
vivid vignettes of family life with a magnificent portrait of the
heroine and an acute critique of Victorian sexual politics. Eliot
had no peer when it came to finding the drama at the heart of
normal lives lived in tandem with the gigantic rhythms of nature
itself, and in The Mill on the Floss she shows us once
again how thoroughly the art of fiction can satisfy our deepest
mental and emotional cravings.
About the Author
Rosemary Ashton is Professor in English Literature at University College, London, and author of The German Idea: Four English Writers and the Reception of German Thought 1800-1860, George Eliot in the Oxford Past-masters Series, and G. H. Lewes: A Life.
Bookclub Guide
1. In the first scene in the novel, Maggie is set in opposition
to her surroundings, her family, and the notion of what it means to
be a Victorian woman. Examine the last four pages of the Chapter II
of Book First. How is this juxtaposition highlighted, and through
what means? What role does the narrator's voice play in this
introduction to our heroine?
Mrs. Tulliver is portrayed as a stagnant and passive woman. Examine
her unraveling in Book Third, Chapter II, as her material
possessions are taken away from her. What does this say about her
identity and its relationship to the material things in her life?
How does this relate back to the ideals about women presented in
the beginning of the novel?
The contrast between fantasy and reality is a theme that permeates
the entire novel. Examine the passage in Book Fourth, Chapter I
which contrasts the ruins of castles along the
Rhine with the "angular skeletons of villages on the Rhone." How is
reality portrayed here and in contrast, what is its relationship
with fantasy? Is one an escape from the other or are they mere
opposites? What does this passage suggest about the human need for
fantasy? Is fantasy an escape or is it portrayed as
oppressive?
How does this contrast between reality and fantasy or nostalgia
relate to Maggie? In Chapter III of the same section above, Maggie
laments the lack of fantasy and nostalgia in her own life and her
desire for the "secret of life" (the paragraph that begins with
"Maggie's sense of loneliness…") What answers does
this passage offer to this question? Does Maggie accept them?
Compare Maggie and her dialogues with Philip to the Maggie during
her romance with Stephen. How does the change in her mirror the
turn of events in the novel? How and why do the two men affect her
in such different ways? Is it merely their own personalities
affecting Maggie, or is it something more internal in Maggie that
the two men merely bring out in her?
Examine Maggie's relationship with Lucy. The contrast between the
two women are clear from the beginning of the novel. How does this
contrast shift throughout the novel? How does Maggie's opinion of
Lucy change? How does the world that Maggie inhibits differ from
Lucy's world?
Representations of "home" vary from chapter to chapter throughout
the book. Compare and contrast the multiple allusions to "home" and
"nurture" and how they affect the various characters. For example,
consider the passage at the end of Chapter III in Book Fifth, where
"desire" is juxtaposed with "home" What does "home" represent for
Maggie and how does her attitude toward it shift throughout the
novel? (Consider the passage towards the end of the novel where
Maggie exclaims "I wish I could make myself a world outside it, as
men do.")
Examine Maggie's relationship with Tom. What does their
conversations throughout Book Fifth suggest about gender? How does
her relationship with Tom affect Maggie and her outlook?
Consider the ending of the novel. Why do you suppose the last
chapter is titled "Final Rescue" even though the novel ends with
Maggie and Tom's tragic death? What does this suggest about the
novel's purpose? Looking back, how does this ending justify or
explain Maggie's journey throughout the novel?
About the Book
In "The Mill on the Floss, George Eliot re-creates her own childhood through the story of the wild, gifted Maggie Tulliver and her spoiled, selfish brother. Though tragic in its outcome, this tenderly comic novel combines vivid vignettes of family life with a magnificent portrait of the heroine and an acute critique of Victorian sexual politics. Eliot had no peer when it came to finding the drama at the heart of normal lives lived in tandem with the gigantic rhythms of nature itself, and in "The Mill on the Floss she shows us once again how thoroughly the art of fiction can satisfy our deepest mental and emotional cravings.