Character Thursday: Mrs. Moore
It feels so long since I last posted! Since school started, most of my reading time has been for school. I read on the bus, at school, and at home, but there is always more... Anyways, I managed to squeeze in "The Legend of Sleepy Hollow" and The Hobbit (still re-reading). For British history class, I also read E. M. Forster's A Passage to India.
Mrs. Moore was, to me, the main character of that novel. I don't know that I have ever read a book (apart from Miss Marple) where an elderly lady takes on such a huge role, and Mrs. Moore is even more unique because she does not actually "take on" any role. She philosophizes, she talks, she visits India, but she doesn't do anything.
At the same time, I felt that she was the reason the relationships between the other characters had substance to them. She has some strange influence over them, which is never fully explained. Dr Aziz, a young Indian doctor, befriends her, but it is never described exactly what they have in common or see in each other. Finally, her influence causes one of the characters to make a vastly important decision, where another character's honor and career are at stake.
I've got to say that, for all that, I did not like Mrs. Moore (or the book, for that matter). Her "powers" were vague and unsubstantiated, and I felt like the book promotes turning to people (e.g. Mrs. Moore), instead of God, for ultimate spiritual and moral guidance. Also, it doesn't help that Mrs. Moore takes a sort of indifferent view of morals altogether and hardly cares what happened or might have happened to her potential daughter-in-law. This was what particularly stopped me from warming up to her character.
Mrs. Moore was, to me, the main character of that novel. I don't know that I have ever read a book (apart from Miss Marple) where an elderly lady takes on such a huge role, and Mrs. Moore is even more unique because she does not actually "take on" any role. She philosophizes, she talks, she visits India, but she doesn't do anything.
At the same time, I felt that she was the reason the relationships between the other characters had substance to them. She has some strange influence over them, which is never fully explained. Dr Aziz, a young Indian doctor, befriends her, but it is never described exactly what they have in common or see in each other. Finally, her influence causes one of the characters to make a vastly important decision, where another character's honor and career are at stake.
I've got to say that, for all that, I did not like Mrs. Moore (or the book, for that matter). Her "powers" were vague and unsubstantiated, and I felt like the book promotes turning to people (e.g. Mrs. Moore), instead of God, for ultimate spiritual and moral guidance. Also, it doesn't help that Mrs. Moore takes a sort of indifferent view of morals altogether and hardly cares what happened or might have happened to her potential daughter-in-law. This was what particularly stopped me from warming up to her character.
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