

Meanwhile, the sisters are taken aback when the Wilcoxes move into a flat opposite theirs. Another chance meeting at a concert brings Helen in contact with the poor, but socially aspiring bank employee, Leonard Bast.

However, the affair ends badly and the Schlegel sisters slip back into their routine. Helen meets Paul Wilcox, the son of a commercially successful businessman, Henry Wilcox, and falls in love with him. Their lively group of friends meets often to discuss the questions of the day with passion and exuberance. The plot concerns two sisters, Margaret and Helen Schlegel, wealthy, independent and intellectual, who enjoy a privileged life filled with music, theatre, literature and art. He had published three other novels earlier, Where Angels Fear To Tread (1905), The Longest Journey (1907) and A Room With a View (1908) but none of them had been received with so much acclaim. Howard's End was published in 1910 and it marked Forster's first taste of critical and commercial success. Yet, these adaptations have spurred many a fascinated viewer into going back to the library and finding the book that the film or miniseries was based on and this is ultimately the power of Forster's literary appeal. It's sad, but true to say that today Edward Morgan Forster's works are known more from their film and television adaptations rather than from their original novels.
