Compassion, Forgiveness, Sympathy – these are big ideas in Middlemarch. Part of Dorothea's problem is that she feels too much. Both "compassion" and "sympathy," if you look at the root words loosely mean, "feeling with" someone. Dorothea feels with everybody, and she can't turn it off. Is it possible to feel too much compassion and sympathy, or to forgive too easily? This is a big question in Middlemarch.
Questions About Compassion and Forgiveness
- Is it possible to feel too much compassion?
- Are there any characters that forgive too easily?
- Why does Mrs. Bulstrode forgive her husband?
- Will Ladislaw calls Dorothea's feeling that art is only created for the enjoyment of a privileged few a "fanaticism of sympathy." What does he mean by that? Is Dorothea a "fanatic" for sympathy?
Chew on This
Although "fellow-feeling" is important to the moral code of Middlemarch, an excess of it, like Dorothea's "fanaticism of sympathy," can lead one to sacrifice one's own happiness without cause.
Although Dorothea's sympathy might be excessive at times, she is still held up as an ideal to which all others should aspire.