Adam Bede – a psychological novel
Introduction: GEORGE ELIOT is one of the founding-fathers of the modern psychological novel. As W.J. Long points out, “GEORGE ELIOT sought to do in her novels what Browning attempted in his poetry. That is, to represent the inner struggle of a soul, and to reveal the motives, impulses and hereditary influences which govern human action.
Browning
generally stops when he tells his story and either lets you draw your
own conclusion or else gives you his in a few striking lines But GEORGE ELIOT is not content until she ahs minutely explained the motives of her characters and the moral lesson to be learnt from them. It is the development of a soul, the slow growth or decline of moral power, which chiefly interests her. The
Characters of Dickens and Thackeray are already formed when we meet
them and we know what they will do under certain circumstances, but
GEORGE ELIOT’s characters develop gradually as we come to know them. They go from weakness to strength and vice versa. ” Her novels are a study of mental processes. As A.E. Baker rightly points out, “GEORGE ELIOT’s sphere was the inner man, she exposed the internal clockwork. Her characters
are not simply passive. They are shown making their own history,
continually changing and developing as their motives issue into acts
and acts become a part of the circumstances that condition, modify and purify or demoralize the will. ”
GEORGE ELIOT’s power of psycho-analysis and her understanding of mental
processes are fully exposed in AB. Therefore, many critics have called
AB the first psychological novel as later exemplified by Joyce and Woolf because the psychology of the main characters, Adam, Hetty, Arthur and the Poysers is the theme.
Analysis of causes and motives: The chapter called A Journey in hope; GEORGE ELIOT spends far more time in Hetty’s poor brain and heart than Hetty spends on the road in her unwise search for her runaway lover. This is psychology and the chapters immediately before and after this sufficient activity to keep the story rolling; there is much more inner activity than outer. GEORGE ELIOT is deft in her psychological approach. Shortly after the death of Thias Bede, his wife Lisbeth was in the Bede Home alone with the body. After doing the necessary ritual cleansing and purification of the chamber where Thias lay, she slumped into a chair
and contemplated her grief. When GEORGE ELIOT’s characters think we
share their thoughts. When Adam accidentally comes upon Arthur and Hetty
embracing in the woods, Hetty scurries away, and Arthur saunter forwards to Adam. He thought, “After all, Adam was the
bet who could have happened to see him and Hetty together: he was a
sensible fellow and would not babble about it to other people. Arthur
felt confident that he could laugh the thing off, and explain it away.
” But he misunderstood him. GEORGE ELIOT’s grip on psychological
essentials enables her to draw complex characters much better than her
predecessors.
Temptation and Moral Chaos: The filed of her most characteristic triumphs is the moral battlefield. Her eagle eye can penetrate though the entire sock and the
smoke of struggle. She is particularly good at showing how temptation
triumphs. No other English novelist has given as so vivid a picture of the
process of moral defeat, as Arthur’s gradual yielding to his passion
for Hetty. She, with clearness, shows how temptation insinuates in the mind. David Cecil says, “Her characters always hang together, are of a piece, their defects are the defects of their virtues. We are not surprised that a man, so anxious for the good opinion of others as Arthur Donnithorne, should selfishly seduce Hetty, because we realize that the controlling force in his character is the desire for immediate enjoyment.” With equal insight, she can portray the moral chaos that takes possession of the mind after wrong has been done. The guilt ridden conscious of Arthur is analyzed and we are shown the scorpions that sting him and prevent sleep. She lays bare the conscious and semi-conscious motives of Arthur. We see the
workings of his innermost mind: He had been awake an hour, and could
rest in bed no longer. In bed our yesterdays are too oppressive, if a
man can only get up, though it is but to whistle or smoke, he has a
present which resists the past. For Arthur, the loss of Adam’s respect was a shock to his self-contentment, which suffused his imagination with the
sense he had sunk in all eyes; as a shock. Arthur would so gladly have
persuaded himself that he had done no harm if no one had told him the contrary.
Conclusion:
It is GEORGE ELIOT’s psychological insight into the springs of human
action, the subtle analysis of character and motive accompanying the
external action, which gives her peculiar and individual place among the
Victorian novelists. She is one of them and yet how every different and
original. She is the first of the great modern novelists who have a
high conception of their art, who
regard the novel as a serious art form, and who are given to the
probing of the human psyche, to the subtle analysis of the subconscious
and unconscious.
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