definitely if discreetly the possibility
of magic. Omnibuses drive to Heaven;
Pan is heard in the brushwood; girls
turn into trees. The stories are ex-
tremely charming. They release the
fantasticality which is laid under such
heavy burdens in the novels. But the
vein of fantasy is not deep enough
or strong enough to fight single-
handed against those other impulses
which are part of his endowment.
We feel that he is an uneasy truant
in fairyland. Behind the hedge he
always hears the motor horn and
the shuffling feet of tired wayfarers,
and soon he must return. One slim
volume indeed contains all that he has
allowed himself of pure fantasy. We
pass from the freakish land where boys
leap into the arms of Pan and girls
become trees to the two Miss Schlegels,
who have an income of six hundred
pounds apiece and live in Wickham
Place.
III
Much though we may regret the
change, we cannot doubt that it was
right. For none of the books before
Howards End and A Passage to India
altogether drew upon the full range of
Mr. Forster's powers. With his queer
and in some ways contradictory assort-
ment of gifts, he needed, it seemed,
some subject which would stimulate his
highly sensitive and active intelligence,
but would not demand the extremes of
romance or passion; a subject which
gave him material for criticism, and
invited investigation; a subject which
asked to be built up of an enormous
number of slight yet precise obser-
vations, capable of being tested by
an extremely honest yet sympathetic
mind; yet, with all this, a subject which
when finally constructed would show
up against the torrents of the sunset
and the eternities of night with a
symbolical significance. In Howards
[new column]
End the lower middle, the middle, the
upper middle classes of English society
are so built up into a complete fabric.
It is an attempt on a larger scale than
hitherto, and, if it fails, the size of the
attempt is largely responsible. Indeed,
as we think back over the many pages
of this elaborate and highly skilful
book, with its immense technical ac-
complishment, and also its penetration,
its wisdom, and its beauty, we may
wonder in what mood of the moment we
can have been prompted to call it a
failure. By all the rules, still more by
the keen interest with which we have
read it from start to finish, we should
have said success. The reason is sug-
gested perhaps by the manner of one's
praise. Elaboration, skill, wisdom, pen-
etration, beauty—they are all there,
but they lack fusion; they lack cohe-
sion; the book as a whole lacks force.
Schlegels, Wilcoxes, and Basts, with all
that they stand for of class and envi-
ronment, emerge with extraordinary
verisimilitude, but the whole effect is
less satisfying than that of the much
slighter but beautifully harmonious
Where Angels Fear to Tread. Again we
have the sense that there is some per-
versity in Mr. Forster's endowment so
that his gifts in their variety and
number tend to trip each other up. If
he were less scrupulous, less just, less
sensitively aware of the different as-
pects of every case, he could, we feel,
come down with greater force on one
precise point. As it is, the strength of
his blow is dissipated. He is like a light
sleeper who is always being woken by
something in the room. The poet is
twitched away by the satirist; the
comedian is tapped on the shoulder by
the moralist; he never loses himself or
forgets himself for long in sheer delight
in the beauty or the interest of things
as they are. For this reason the lyrical
passages in his books, often of great
beauty in themselves, fail of their due