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Daily Inspiration Quote by E. M. Forster

"Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvellous than the land"

About this Quote

Forster’s Italy is never just a place; it’s a moral weather system. “Love and understand the Italians” sounds like benevolent advice to the traveler, but the real target is the English reader who arrives armed with aesthetic hunger and colonial reflexes. The line flips the usual Grand Tour hierarchy: landscape and ruins as the main event, locals as scenery. Forster insists the reverse. The “land” can be devoured as postcard beauty, but “the people” demand the harder work of attention, empathy, and the surrender of superiority.

The phrasing does something sly. “Love and understand” is not “admire” or “study.” It’s intimate, almost domestic language, pushing against the tourist gaze. And “more marvellous” is pointedly comparative: Italy’s famous assets - art, light, antiquity - are demoted in favor of living human complexity. He’s praising Italians, yes, but also warning that they won’t behave like museum exhibits for British consumption.

Context matters. Forster wrote in an era when Italy functioned as a permissive fantasy for Northern Europeans: sensual, chaotic, emotionally “real,” safely other. His fiction often stages the English abroad as spiritually undernourished, trapped in propriety, then shaken awake by encounters that don’t flatter their self-image. This sentence carries that whole Forster project in miniature: travel as an ethical test, not a cultural shopping trip. The marvel isn’t the vista; it’s what happens when you stop using a country to decorate your own narrative.

Quote Details

TopicTravel
Source
Verified source: Where Angels Fear to Tread (E. M. Forster, 1905)
Text match: 95.00%   Provider: Cross-Reference
Evidence:
And don’t, let me beg you, go with that awful tourist idea that Italy’s only a museum of antiquities and art. Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvellous than the land.” (Chapter 1). This line appears as dialogue spoken by the character Philip in Chapter 1 of E. M. Forster’s novel. The Project Gutenberg HTML text (eBook #2948) shows it in Chapter 1 immediately after Philip’s travel advice about going ‘off the track’ to small towns.
Other candidates (1)
The love that failed (Richard Martin, 2011) compilation95.0%
ideal and reality in the writings of E. M. Forster Richard Martin. ness - authority , powerful religion , and ... Lov...
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Forster, E. M. (2026, February 11). Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvellous than the land. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/love-and-understand-the-italians-for-the-people-35945/

Chicago Style
Forster, E. M. "Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvellous than the land." FixQuotes. February 11, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/love-and-understand-the-italians-for-the-people-35945/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Love and understand the Italians, for the people are more marvellous than the land." FixQuotes, 11 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/love-and-understand-the-italians-for-the-people-35945/. Accessed 3 Mar. 2026.

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Love and understand the Italians more marvellous than the land
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About the Author

E. M. Forster

E. M. Forster (January 1, 1879 - June 7, 1970) was a Novelist from England.

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