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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
In four pages this paper examines the character of Lucy Honeychurch and considers her in relation to the other characters in the novel, including her mother, her cousin Charlotte Bartlett, her true love George Emerson, her former fiancé Cecil Vyse, and her hometown rector Mr. Beebe. Five sources are listed in the bibliography.
Page Count:
4 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TG15_TGlucyhoney.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
girl into a passionate and confident woman. Her sequestered life has ill prepared her for what is beyond the confines of her Surrey home. Lucy has musical potential,
but is uncertain how to develop them. She has an artists temperament in that she feels things deeply, and yet at the beginning of the novel is uncertain how
to express her emotions articulately. Her opinions would come in interruptions and outbursts with little in the way of insightfulness. With regard to the opposite sex, Lucy initially
has commitment issues because she was incapable of the confrontation intimacy demands. She "only faced the situation that encompassed her. She never gazed inwards. If at times
strange images rose from the depths, she put them down to nerves" (Forster 217). However, through her relationships with the various people in her life - including her mother,
her cousin Charlotte Bartlett, her true love George Emerson and his father, her former fianc? Cecil Vyse, and her hometown church rector Mr. Beebe - and a cathartic European vacation,
Lucy transforms into an individual who is capable of looking inward. Furthermore, with increased self-assurance, she unapologetic about her views regardless of how socially shocking they might be.
Lucys mother always has the best intentions and willing to share openly her thoughts and feelings with others. She would frequently admonish her daughter, "Youve a bad habit of
hurrying away in the middle of ones sentences" (Forster 156). Of Cecil Vyse as a possible husband for Lucy, Mrs. Honeychurch revealed herself as very much a woman of
her generation and social status when she explained, I like him... I know his mother; hes good, hes clever, hes rich, hes well connected... And he has beautiful manners" (Forster
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