George Eliot
is the third Victorian female author whose novel I’ve ever read. The first is
Louisa May Alcott (which I have failed), then Anna Sewell. And I have to
confess sadly that Sewell is the only one so far I could get on very well;
meaning that The Mill on The Floss
did not quite impressed me like I have expected. I can blame it on Zola, for I
confessed that I haven’t completely moved on from La Bête Humaine before I took
The Mill, but I think it’s just me.
The Mill on
the Floss is about the Tullivers who owned Dorlcote Mill on the bank of Floss
River. There Tom and Maggie Tulliver had a happy childhood and formed an
intimate bond as brother and sister. Until one day the Tullivers lost their
fortune, land and mill from bankruptcy. Tom must drop out his education and
were forced to finance the family on very early age, while the whole family was
suffering from humiliation. Meanwhile Maggie met Philip Wakem, the son of
Tullivers’ enemy, a hunchback and deformed young man who fell in love with
Maggie. Inspired by the childhood sentimental friendship and out of pity,
Maggie met Philip secretly.
Years later
Tom successfully restored the family honor by paying the debt. While Philip was
once again trying to renew his approach to Maggie, the girl found herself
attracted to Stephen—her cousin’s fiancée—who returned her feeling. Now Maggie
was in a dilemma between love and conscience. Which one should she accept: the
man she didn’t love but she couldn’t hurt the heart; or the man she’s in love
with, who belonged to her beloved cousin?
Actually this
book is rather flat to me especially in the early pages, which I often skipped
whenever the story switched to the nonsense Gleggs or Pullets. And although the
ending is unexpected—but quite cliché—Eliot has failed to grab me deep into the
story.
From the
main characters, I did not find any favorite, Maggie is the least one. I felt
there was a contradiction in her personality. In a way she was a smart girl
with self-esteem, and person like this usually acts more from logic than from
emotion. At first I imagined Maggie would grow up like Isabel Archer in The Portrait of A Lady; but the more I follow her story, the more I’m
astonished to find Maggie turned to be sentimental and always in confused
state. She kept changing her decision and could not be firm with what she has
decided.
I think the
main youngsters in this story were all selfish in their own ways—yes, even
Maggie. Tom was the ‘best of the bad’ for me, for although he was selfish and
narrow minded, he has been successful in fulfilling his father’s will. I can’t
blame him too much because he had grown up with the fixed idea which his
father, the families and the society have planted on him that family honor is
number one. Tom has carried a burden too heavy for him; and in that situation,
there’s no place for any imagination, and that’s why he kept carrying a
straight purpose in life; because he saw that’s the only way he could survive.
Stephen
Guest was a pure egoist man. He was born and grown up as the son of a rich and
honorable family; he always got what he needed. I think there were a lot of
examples of his kind. Philip Wakem was the most annoying one for me. I know
that it’s hard to live as a half-crippled man, but that didn’t give him the
right to force others to make him happier or make his life easier. It was selfishness
too; and I always dislike people who pity himself and make his weakness as an
excuse. Life is hard for everyone, but our Creator gives us the mean to
survive. To be different with others doesn’t mean we are weaker than them. Wake
up Wakem! Don’t just drown yourself in romantic love, there’re many other
things in life you can pursue!
And last but
not least there is Maggie, the so called ‘heroine’. Maggie was a person who
always longed for love, she needed to be treated passionately and be forgiven
from her faults, but she never tried quite hard to repentant. Maybe it’s
because she was careless and lived in her own dreams; but perhaps it’s because
she was indifferent; she lived only for herself. Maggie chose to be with Philip
because she didn’t want to hurt Philip and Lucy. That’s ridiculous because with
that, she would hurt Stephen AND Philip, because she never loved him.
Nonetheless, Maggie kept her decision, because marrying Philip would be a martyrdom
kind of act of her love. Selfishness… or narrow-mindedness?
With The
Mill on The Floss, Eliot would like to criticize people prejudices; and
particularly prejudices which made women suffered. Maggie, with her different
way of thinking than the society, have successively made infamous decisions
which invited unfair prejudices from the society. Both Maggie and Stephen would
be cheating to their supposed partners; but while people forgave Stephen, they judged
Maggie severely. This only reflect where women’s position in the society was when
Eliot lived—in 19th century—as this novel was also a semi-autobiographical
story of Mary Anne Evans, the real
name of George Eliot.
Three stars
for The Mill on the Floss.
~~~~~~
I read
the Penguin English Library paperback version
This book is counted
for:
Baca Bareng BBI 2013 (April – book about woman/written by a woman)
3rd book for Read Big! Reading Challenge
5th book for New Authors Reading Challenge 2013
42nd book for The Classics Club
ada terjemahannya kah mbak fan?
ReplyDeletekilasbuku.blogspot.com
#kilasbukublogwalking
Setahuku belum pernah diterjemahkan...
Deletearghhh I hate books with too many selfish characters in it! Why do authors love to do that to us? :D Btw love the cover though :)
ReplyDeleteI think authors write for many purposes, many of the literary authors write not only to entertain the readers, but more to portray people's struggles and mistakes, so that we can learn from them.
Deletebaru tahu penulis ini, hihi #dikeplakfanda
ReplyDeletePasti baru tahu juga bahwa beliau perempuan kan?... :D
Deleteouw, I thought George Elliot is a male author... is it the same person who wrote Silas Maner ?
ReplyDeleteon the first impression I also though Tom and Maggie are couple, but they are brother and sister are they ? *my-mind-really-slow-this-day*
just curious, why you failed on Louisa, just dislike her works or didn't quite satisfied with the characters ?
Yes, she is the author of Silas Marner.
DeleteDidn't I write that Tom and Maggie Tulliver were brother and sister on the second paragraph? :D
I only read 1 book from Louisa, the Eight Cousins, and it's just too light, boring and girlish for me.
Too bad you didn't like it! Perhaps you should have stuck with Silas Marner, which is a much shorter Elliot book. :)
ReplyDeleteHmm...maybe I picked the wrong start, but now I don't feel like reading another Eliot for the time being. Maybe much later...
Deletehi, can you define Maggie's dilemma?please as soon as possible, me waiting.thanks
ReplyDeletestill waiting, mate?
Delete