Imagine complex high-integrity components, without joints or welds, from design to finished product in a matter of weeks. Proxima combines Powder Metallurgy (PM) and Hot Isostatic Pressing (HIP) to realise this possibility, creating near-net-shaped parts without the need for bespoke tooling. The result is a reduction in costs, resources and lead times whilst maximising design flexibility.
Proxima’s technology is trusted by leading businesses in the most highly regulated, quality-demanding industries.
Proxima combines Powder Metallurgy and Hot Isostatic Processing (PM-HIP) to manufacture high-integrity components.
The novel’s first half is a masterful depiction of internalized shame. The young Maurice Hall, a respectable, unremarkable middle-class man, navigates the “miasma” of Cambridge and then the grinding machinery of London stockbroking. He is taught to desire women, to value “manliness,” and to suppress any flicker of difference. His first love for his Cambridge friend, Clive Durham, is a painful education. Clive, an intellectual aesthete, offers a pseudo-Platonic solution: a love of the mind and spirit that never touches the body. He is a classicist who fears the flesh. Forster devastatingly shows how this “higher” love is a cage. When Clive marries a woman and retreats into politics and respectability, Maurice is left shattered, not just by rejection, but by the realization that his entire society has no language, no ritual, no place for the truth of his desire.
The novel’s genius lies in its pivot from this elegant, tragic world to something raw and unprecedented. Clive’s solution fails. The true answer arrives not from Cambridge, but from the greenwood—in the form of Alec Scudder, the family’s under-gamekeeper. Scudder is everything Maurice is not: working-class, uneducated, physically direct, and unburdened by philosophical anxiety about his own desires. The famous night when Alec climbs through Maurice’s bedroom window is the novel’s seismic center. It is not a fall from grace, but an escape into reality. Forster contrasts the tortured, intellectual “love” with Clive with the honest, physical, and ultimately spiritual union with Alec. Alec doesn’t want to talk about Plato; he wants to love Maurice. maurice by em forster
This union forces a final, crucial choice. Forster brilliantly structures the climax around two acts of “crossing.” First, Maurice must cross the rigid line of class. He abandons the safe, neurotic world of Clive—his class, his friends, his career—to join Alec in the “savage” world of the lower orders. Second, and more importantly, he must cross the line of the law and social convention. The novel’s most famous lines capture this: “He had lived in the darkness for so long… He had heard the phrase ‘a happy ending’ but had not conceived that it could be prefaced by the word ‘a.’” Forster argues that happiness is not a generic, universal reward for virtue, but a specific, singular, and often defiant act of claiming one’s own truth. The novel’s first half is a masterful depiction
E.M. Forster’s Maurice occupies a strange and powerful place in literary history. Written in 1913-1914, in the shadow of the Oscar Wilde trial, it was a novel so ahead of its time that Forster, fearing public and legal ruin, stipulated it only be published after his death. It finally appeared in 1971. To read Maurice is to encounter a paradox: a groundbreaking gay romance that is, in many ways, a deeply conventional Edwardian novel. It is precisely this tension—between the radical subject of homosexual love and the conservative form of the English social comedy—that gives the book its enduring power. Forster’s central argument is not merely for the acceptance of homosexuality, but for a more profound, almost revolutionary idea: the pursuit of personal happiness, even if it means abandoning the very civilization that claims to love you. His first love for his Cambridge friend, Clive