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Dr. Salah Second Semester Prose (7) Fourth Year A Passage to India by E.M Forster Part two (Caves): Remember that the first part (Mosque) was dominated by the mood of unity. The second part is entitled (Caves) and it is an ingenious choice by Forster to associate these caves with the Europeans, because the dark caves represent the darkness and the hardness of the western culture. It also shows that the westerners are advanced, yet, they are not openhearted. This is also the major theme in The Heart of Darkness by Joseph Conrad, in which Africans are black in color but they are white at heart, whereas the westerners are white in color but black at heart. Therefore, the darkness of the caves represents the darkness of the hearts of the westerners who are scientifically advanced, yet spiritually living in darkness. Darkness is also associated with sin. Remember that Pluto (god of the underworld) kidnapped Persephone (the daughter of Demeter) to the underworld, the world of darkness; this underworld represents sin and injustice. Thus, the caves represent a clash, a friction against nature, the hardness of the western culture, and the enclosure of the western mind that does not accept the other. The echo in the caves represents the hollowness of modern people; remember The Hollow Men by T.S. Eliot. It also represents the culture of fear, because Mrs. Moore is afraid of going into the other caves. The caves represent sin, because it Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 1 Dr. Salah Second Semester is in the caves that Adela thought Dr. Aziz molested her. The caves are a symbol of the physicality of the modern culture, because they are where Mrs. Moore was disgusted at the physical touch of the sweaty Indians; so many people crowded in the darkness, and this was too much for her. The caves also represent the vacuity and the emptiness of the western culture; an empty place gives more echoes. The darkness there represents the lack of knowledge of the other, although the westerners say that they have knowledge of the brain and the mind. However, they don’t have the knowledge of the heart, which is stronger and more valid. So, their culture is hollow and their knowledge is not a valid one. The caves are also similar to the civil stations in which the westerners live in fission or separateness. Remember that the first part (Mosque) was dominated by a sense of unity. When speaking about Dr. Aziz and Hamidullah, the writer associates their life with the word (delicious): Delicious indeed to lie on the broad verandah with the moon rising in front and the servants preparing dinner behind, and no trouble happening. Also when the writer describes Mrs. Moore after her encounter with Dr. Aziz: Mrs. Moore, whom the club had stupefied, woke up outside. She watched the moon, whose radiance stained with primrose the purple of the surrounding sky. In England the moon had seemed dead and alien; here she was caught in the shawl of night together with earth and all the other stars. A sudden sense of unity, of kinship with the heavenly bodies, passed into the old woman and out, like water through a tank, leaving a strange freshness behind. This is contrasted by the second part which is dominated by a sense of separateness and fission. The second part marked by a kind of hostility and hate, because Ronny represents hate in the novel. Ronny wanted to Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 2 Dr. Salah Second Semester frame Dr. Aziz; to fabricate a case against him. It is the part in which the Anglo-Indians have the upper hand. The writers Gertrude M. White and Betty Gill point out that in A Passage to India Forster condemns the unfair colonial British policy in India. Forster presents the Indians as especially Muslims and the novel is a condemnation of the British colonial policy in India, because he represents the Anglo-Indians or the Europeans as evil, hostile, and unjust. He presents that the British colonial policy as an evil that should be eradicated )(تمحى من على وجه األرض. Mr. Turton signifies hostility, and Ronny is against any kind of intimacy between the Anglo-Indians and the natives. So, Turton, Ronny and all the Anglo-Indians in the novel, except for (Adela, Mrs. Moore and Mr. Fielding), believe that any kind of intimacy or unity between the two races will result in disaster. Therefore, the second section of the novel is dominated by fear, disunity, fission, hate, and darkness of the heart. The main incident which manifests the hostility that dominates the second part is the shattering experience of accusing Aziz of molesting Adela in the Marabar Caves; this is the climax of the novel with the highest emotional experience. Aziz would never have thought that Adela the decent girl would accuse him. Adela accused him because she was mistaken, after that she convinced herself that she was mistaken. This incident brought nothing but evil which dominates the second part; it is catastrophic to everyone, especially Mrs. Moore. All the Anglo-Indians, except for Mrs. Moore accused Dr. Aziz; she is a spiritual woman and she liked Dr. Aziz more than anybody else. So, Mrs. Moore was torn between the love to her son, and her admiration and respect towards Dr. Aziz. That is why she became physically and spiritually dead; she was Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 3 Dr. Salah Second Semester destroyed. Thus, the moods that dominate the second part are that of darkness, enclosure, echo, fear, sin, physicality, and death. Mrs. Moore, the most admirable character in the novel, dies in this part as a result of the experience Adela had inside the caves. Whether it was Dr. Aziz or not, it is dubious, and there is a sense of ambiguity (absence of clarity) regarding the incident in the caves; because we are not sure of the way Adela was touched, or who touched her. The writer intentionally presents it as ambiguous because the western culture is not the culture of light, rather of darkness. Maybe Adela was not touched by anyone, but she got hysterical. In the darkness of the heart and the mind we are not sure about anything. It is true that the westerners know a lot, but they know through the brain, and the brain’s knowledge is changeable; it is different from knowledge of the heart. Knowledge of the mind is based on the five human senses and on observation, whereas knowledge of the heart is based on the spirit, which is divine. Sensual knowledge is changeable while spiritual knowledge is not, and is not explainable. Thus, modern culture is based on ambiguity and the absence of surety. The Victorians were so solid and so sure about themselves, but after the two WWs the westerners began to have this sense of ambiguity and uncertainty. That is why modern western culture is a culture of uncertainty. Nothing is so clear. Eliot talks about spring in his poem saying: “APRIL is the cruelest month” The western culture is also a culture of death because it is a culture of comfort. The maximum of physical comfort is death while the maximum of the spiritual culture is activity and action; they say that the spirit of God is the spirit of progression. That is why Mrs. Moore died as a result of the caves experience. The caves drive Adela to the brink of madness; this means that the culture of the Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 4 Dr. Salah Second Semester caves is going to lead us to madness because it expresses one aspect of the two; we are not made only of the brain, we also have a heart. We have the physique but we have to have the spirit, the others. We have to have a balance between the heart and the mind. If a person doesn’t balance between the mind and the heart they are going to die, because they overload the brain. All of the destructive incidents in the novel are the result of the negative experience of the caves; it ruins Dr. Aziz and his alters entire beliefs. He believes he shall move away from this culture so he moves to a small village. The experience of the caves destroys all good relations between the British and the Indians; they got hectic and emotional and they would start to fight. The caves thus destroy all constructive relations between individuals. As we said before, the caves represent darkness of the western culture. The modern culture is a culture of knowledge, of knowing, of trying to discover, uncover, unveil or decentralize. The devil convinced Adam to eat the forbidden fruit because he wanted to (de-veil) Adam. Modern man is eating from the same tree because he wants to know. So, knowledge is based on dissection and division. This led to the division of the atom eventually leading to the discovery of the atomic bomb which caused to the destruction of humans. The incident of the caves united all the Indians in their fear and hate against the British colonialists who are united in their arrogance and injustice against the natives. The major theme of this part is the conflict between the forces of love and dialogue on the one hand against the forces of hate and clash on the other. In this sense, the second part is dominated by the spirit of clash and violence; there is Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 5 Dr. Salah Second Semester violence between the Anglo-Indians and the natives because of the caves incident, whether it was imagined or real. The word Marabar is symbolic: the word ends in (bar) which can be interpreted as indicative of the nature of enclosure, of the western culture of the head. You put bars around a place for example so that thieves or outsiders cannot get into your house. The incident in the caves isolates the Indians from the British. It was only in the open that Mrs. Moore felt a sense of unity because she lived in the spirit. She lived a moment of perfection, Nirvana or epiphany; she lived in the spirit, and the spirit is associated with God and the spirit is free from enclosure. If you travel from your country to America for instance you would take long hours, but if you close your eyes and travel through the spirit you can travel immediately; it is through the spirit that you can know. The failure to connect and to be fair led to the accumulation of evil which led to the incident in the caves. Ronny was afraid of Dr. Aziz so he tried to frame him as the person who touched Adela in the caves. for all the misery men must undergo whatever their opinion and position, and however much they dodge or bluff—it would amount to the same, the serpent would descend and return to the ceiling. Devils are of the North, and poems can be written about them, but no one could romanticize the Marabar because it robbed infinity and eternity of their vastness, the only quality that accommodates them to mankind. When he Dr. Aziz about Adela and he said he doesn’t know Ronny tried to charge him of a crime he didn’t commit. He wanted to humiliate Aziz and torture him for attempting to get into a cordial relationship with Adela. Adela herself admits she is not sure and that she must have made a mistake in saying that Dr. Aziz molested her. Ronny and the Anglo-Indians wanted to prove by any means Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 6 Dr. Salah Second Semester that Adela was assaulted by Dr. Aziz; they would pick up pieces of evidence that incriminate Dr. Aziz and hide the evidence of his vindication. End … Mrs. Eman Afifi 2010/2011 7