4.6 • 1.1K Ratings
🗓️ 12 March 2024
⏱️ 95 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Welcome to The Literary Life Podcast and the final episode in our our series on Howards End by E. M. Forster. Today Angelina and Thomas seek to sum up the book and wrap up their thoughts on the way Forster weaves this story. The open with some comments on the almost allegorical nature of Howards End, then talk about the words “only connect” and their meaning in the context of the book. They discuss the problem of Helen and Leonard’s relationship and the romance of pity. Other topics of the conversation are the crisis point between Mr. Wilcox and Margaret, the contrast between Charles and Tibby, the fate of Leonard Bast, and the future of Howards End.
We hope you will join us for the sixth annual Literary Life Online Conference, “Dispelling the Myth of Modernity: A Recovery of the Medieval Imagination.” During the live or later series of webinars, we will seek to dis-spell the Myth of Modernity and gain eyes to see and ears to hear Reality as it truly is. Speakers include Jason Baxter, Jenn Rogers, and Kelly Cumbee, in addition to Angelina and Thomas.
Life without dragons would be tame indeed.
Desmond MacCarthy, “The Poetry of Chesterton”
Howards End is a novel of extraordinary ambition and wide scope. Written in prose with the texture of restrained poetry, it is consummately controlled and sure of purpose. It is Forster’s most complexly orchestrated work to its date, and it smoothly manipulates imagery and symbolism, plot and character, into an organic whole. In so doing, it gracefully integrates social comedy, metaphysical explorations, and political concerns. Howards End tests Forster’s liberal humanism, finds it wanting, and proposes a marriage of liberal values to conservative tradition. Without destroying the practical contributions of progressivism, it forcefully attacks the mindless materialism that yields rootlessness and spiritual poverty.
Claude J. Summers, from E. M. Forster
By Marjorie Pickthall
Give me a few more hours to pass With the mellow flower of the elm-bough falling, And then no more than the lonely grass And the birds calling. Give me a few more days to keep With a little love and a little sorrow, And then the dawn in the skies of sleep And a clear to-morrow. Give me a few more years to fill With a little work and a little lending, And then the night on a starry hill And the road's ending.
Jayber Crow by Wendell Berry
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0:00.0 | You're going to. This is not just another book chat podcast. |
0:22.8 | Lifelong, |
0:24.8 | joins teachers Angelina Stanford and Thomas Banks |
0:27.6 | for an ongoing conversation |
0:29.5 | about the skill and art of reading well. |
0:33.0 | Explore the lost intellectual tradition |
0:35.6 | and discover how to fully enter into the great works of literature. |
0:40.2 | Learn what books mean while delighting |
0:42.4 | in the sheer joy of imagination. |
0:45.0 | Each week we will rescue a story from the ivory tower |
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0:53.6 | The literary life is for everyone, because in the words of Stratford Caldecott, |
0:57.9 | to be enchanted by story is to be granted a deeper insight into reality. |
1:03.5 | Join us for an ever unfolding discussion |
1:06.6 | of how stories will save the world. |
1:09.5 | This is the Literary Life Podcast. I'm Angelina Stanford and And I'm Thomas Banks. And we are the literary life podcast. And today we are going to be talking about our ending rather our series on E.M. Forsters, Howard's Inn and I gotta tell you Mr Banks, |
1:46.4 | um I've read this before and with that ending I actually tiered up I like teared up put my book in my lap grabbed my heart |
1:58.0 | I did not but then it's been suggested that I'm emotionally stunted. My reaction was more Wilcoxian, I suppose. |
2:06.8 | Well, it was beautiful though. It was like coming to the end of a symphony. He just like brought it all together. |
2:11.6 | Yeah. Goblin football is notwithstanding. |
2:14.0 | So we'll be finishing up the book today and |
2:20.0 | before we jump in of course we'll start with our commonplace quotes and I don't really think we have anything to say too much about the different House of Humane Letters projects |
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