We compare one marriage, one person, to another, and another, and learn this disconcerting truth: bad people, like the banker Nicholas Bulstrode, can make good husbands. Her protagonists wed early in the page-count – and then she lets us watch as their lives begin to fray. They are as much a part of any reader’s mind as Jane Eyre or Jay Gatsby, and in an age when many novels still found their subject in courtship, George Eliot used them to look at marriage instead. Middlemarch has at least three characters whose names have become bywords, starting with its great heroine, Dorothea Brooke the others are the young doctor, Tertius Lydgate, and Dorothea’s first husband, the pedant Edward Casaubon. Each page is a lesson in how to be honest with yourself. If you really read this novel, you will learn about yourself if you listen to her, if you let her sentences penetrate, you will find out things about yourself that you didn’t and maybe don’t even want to know. Her pronouns pull the reader into the narrative, dispensing wisdom, and as often as not suggesting that our first reactions are shallow. It has George Eliot, it has a narrator whose voice and presence are as memorable as that of any character in English literature.
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