She complaints Tim Burke about the worse behaviour of Mor who cheated her. However, Tim did not reveal the truth that they …show more content…
she focuses on the mind state of a man in several situations.she says
“Human mind is full of dreams, illusions and fantasies, some of them wild and unbounded, others more down-to earth wishes or little superstitions”(p.67).
She told him to stop being a mad for loving a young girl who is around the age of his daughter Felicity. Finally, she gives up her authority and starts to realize her mistakes for dominating her husband that resulted in a negative way. She did not give up her family bonding and took the perfect and right remedy to put an end to this problem. She confesses by saying her mistakes and says
As Shakespeare says, there is tide in the affairs of men that taken at the flood leads on to fortune. This time now runs from my husband and for myself and for our children. We have discussed the matter fully and we all at last, greed that there is no other bond or tie which can prevent us from adventuring forward together. Courage is needed to make the great step. To delay will be fatal. Such a chance comes, but once in a lifetime. Courage he has never lacked—nor is it lightly that he will hesitate now when all his deepest and most cherishers wishes or about to find so complete a fulfilment. …show more content…
She believe that freedom is likely for the individuals who know how to love and admit an entity including both human or non-human which is other and discrete from the loving obsession. The moralities that guide any character from his factual hallucination of realism are the mistakes.
Liberty can be an sentiment, performance, or deed. However, it brings out the person from genuine 'love' and 'freedom' that might lead him to utmost error in his life. Murdoch acknowledged that the enticement of ‘identical love’ and the ‘Good’ must be protested because love is more often than not self-possessed and self-centred. However, in his instance of magnanimous love- of a mother, affection towards her retarded child or of love for a complicated elderly relation-she sees love as saturated by the Good, true love and conservative on one’s one feeling.
Murdoch’s caution that ‘as soon as philosophy gets into a novel. It ceases to be philosophy; it becomes a plaything of the writer’. (p. 3). The perception of inner conflict as a ethical movement, of freedom and of love all contribute to one significant requirement, which is concentration. It is interest to the contiguous humanity and predominantly thought to the