Secrets In George Elliot's Middlemarch

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Secrets in Middlemarch Secrets are the integral driving force behind the plot of George Elliot’s Middlemarch. From the first paragraph when a young girl and her brother try to leave to save the world, to when Rosamond tries to sabotage Dorothea and Will, secrets abound. The time period Middlemarch was written about seems to be fraught with the keeping of secrets. The idea of wives keeping secrets from their husbands, husbands from their wives, parents from children, and vice versa is not a foreign thought, but the amount of surreptitiousness is astounding. Secrets drive every decision made in the town of Middlemarch. Dorothea keeps the truth from Casaubon about the reason she married him. Rosamond keeps the secret that she only married …show more content…

She wants more than anything to help those around her, starting with the tenants of her uncle. She desires to redesign their cottages, but Arthur Brooke, her elderly uncle with whom she and her younger sister Celia Brooke lives with, does not want to spend the money required. So Dorothea shares her dream with Sir James Chettam, who finds her fascinating, and encourages her to use the plans she has drawn up for the tenants on his land instead. He falls in love with her, but does not share his feelings for her quickly enough. Edward Casaubon, an older scholarly clergyman asks Dorothea to marry him, she does not accept until she finds out Sir James means to seriously court her, then turns around and tells Casaubon yes. What she does not tell him, is that she is only marrying him because she feels she can learn through him, essentially getting a “man’s education,” as girls getting a higher education in that time was frowned upon. Dorothea felt “Here was something beyond the shallows of ladies’ school literature: here was a living Bossuet, whose work would reconcile complete knowledge with devoted piety, here was a modern Augustine who united the glories of doctor and …show more content…

All she wants in life is to get away from Middlemarch. She sees an out by way of Tertius Lydgate, though she does not love him, she is quite able to pretend that is the case to get her way. In her mind she believes Lydgate’s titled relatives can help them work their way up the ranks in London society, though her spending habits leave much to be desired. She uses any and all money he has to look the part to which she feels entitled. At the conclusion, Dorothea offers to take his debt from him, and he gratefully accepts. Though most would completely blame Rosamond for the debt accrued, Lydgate is not as innocent as he would seem to outsiders. He does not let on how much debt has been amassed, and when he could get help up to this point, he says no to, which financially ruins him. He also hides his past from most of Middlemarch. Though he is helped with his financial obligation, he leaves Middlemarch, still feeling the shame from the entire

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