George Eliot’s Middlemarch, first published in 1871, is not a book that rushes. It unfolds slowly, like a gray English morning. But for those who stay with it, the novel offers a deep, moving look into the lives of ordinary people trying to do something extraordinary. Full of idealism, disappointment, and quiet transformation, Middlemarch remains one of the most powerful examinations of personal ambition—and the quiet ways it is tested by life. Set in the fictional town of Middlemarch in the early 1830s, the novel follows several characters whose lives gradually intertwine. At the center is Dorothea Brooke, a young…
The Cost of Idealism in a Small English Town: Middlemarch
It asks big questions about what it means to live a good life, and it respects the complexity of the answers.
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