A Passage to India E. M. Forster (best ereader manga TXT) đ
- Author: E. M. Forster
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Ronny reminded himself that his mother had left India at her own wish, but his conscience was not clear. He had behaved badly to her, and he had either to repent (which involved a mental overturn), or to persist in unkindness towards her. He chose the latter course. How tiresome she had been with her patronage of Aziz! What a bad influence upon Adela! And now she still gave trouble with ridiculous âtombs,â mixing herself up with natives. She could not help it, of course, but she had attempted similar exasperating expeditions in her lifetime, and he reckoned it against her. The young man had much to worry himâ âthe heat, the local tension, the approaching visit of the Lieutenant-Governor, the problems of Adelaâ âand threading them all together into a grotesque garland were these Indianizations of Mrs. Moore. What does happen to oneâs mother when she dies? Presumably she goes to heaven, anyhow she clears out. Ronnyâs religion was of the sterilized Public School brand, which never goes bad, even in the tropics. Wherever he entered, mosque, cave, or temple, he retained the spiritual outlook of the Fifth Form, and condemned as âweakeningâ any attempt to understand them. Pulling himself together, he dismissed the mater from his mind. In due time he and his half-brother and -sister would put up a tablet to her in the Northamptonshire church where she had worshipped, recording the dates of her birth and death and the fact that she had been buried at sea. This would be sufficient.
And Adelaâ âshe would have to depart too; he hoped she would have made the suggestion herself ere now. He really could not marry herâ âit would mean the end of his career. Poor lamentable Adela.â ââ ⊠She remained at Government College, by Fieldingâs courtesyâ âunsuitable and humiliating, but no one would receive her at the civil station. He postponed all private talk until the award against her was decided. Aziz was suing her for damages in the sub-judgeâs court. Then he would ask her to release him. She had killed his love, and it had never been very robust; they would never have achieved betrothal but for the accident to the Nawab Bahadurâs car. She belonged to the callow academic period of his life which he had outgrownâ âGrasmere, serious talks and walks, that sort of thing.
XXIXThe visit of the Lieutenant-Governor of the Province formed the next stage in the decomposition of the Marabar. Sir Gilbert, though not an enlightened man, held enlightened opinions. Exempted by a long career in the Secretariate from personal contact with the peoples of India, he was able to speak of them urbanely, and to deplore racial prejudice. He applauded the outcome of the trial, and congratulated Fielding on having taken âthe broad, the sensible, the only possible charitable view from the first. Speaking confidentiallyâ ââ âŠâ he proceeded. Fielding deprecated confidences, but Sir Gilbert insisted on imparting them; the affair had been âmishandled by certain of our friends up the hillâ who did not realize that âthe hands of the clock move forward, not back,â etc., etc. One thing he could guarantee: the Principal would receive a most cordial invitation to rejoin the club, and he begged, nay commanded him, to accept. He returned to his Himalayan altitudes well satisfied; the amount of money Miss Quested would have to pay, the precise nature of what had happened in the cavesâ âthese were local details, and did not concern him.
Fielding found himself drawn more and more into Miss Questedâs affairs. The College remained closed and he ate and slept at Hamidullahâs, so there was no reason she should not stop on if she wished. In her place he would have cleared out, sooner than submit to Ronnyâs halfhearted and distracted civilities, but she was waiting for the hourglass of her sojourn to run through. A house to live in, a garden to walk in during the brief moment of the coolâ âthat was all she asked, and he was able to provide them. Disaster had shown her her limitations, and he realized now what a fine loyal character she was. Her humility was touching. She never repined at getting the worst of both worlds; she regarded it as the due punishment of her stupidity. When he hinted to her that a personal apology to Aziz might be seemly, she said sadly: âOf course. I ought to have thought of it myself, my instincts never help me. Why didnât I rush up to him after the trial? Yes, of course I will write him an apology, but please will you dictate it?â Between them they concocted a letter, sincere, and full of moving phrases, but it was not moving as a letter. âShall I write another?â she enquired. âNothing matters if I can undo the harm I have caused. I can do this right, and that right; but when the two are put together they come wrong. Thatâs the defect of my character. I have never realized it until now. I thought that if I was just and asked questions I would come through every difficulty.â He replied: âOur letter is a failure for a simple reason which we had better face:
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