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  1. Maurice Bendrix is the narrator and protagonist of The End of the Affair and Sarah Miles ’s lover. Sarah calls him Maurice, but everyone else calls him Bendrix. An unmarried writer, Bendrix lives alone in the same square (or Common) as Sarah and Henry. Unbeknownst to Henry, Bendrix and Sarah partake in a passionate love affair from the ...

  2. Bendrix is not a wholly sympathetic character, but his willingness to reveal unlikable traits makes him more trustworthy. For the most part, Bendrix is a man consumed by negative emotions. When he begins to the text, he is wracked with loathing for Sarah.

  3. Maurice Bendrix, the first-person protagonist, is sometimes an unreliable narrator, for he is so consumed by jealousy, self-pity, self-hatred, and bitterness, that he measures everyone else by...

  4. Bendrix is a character who is defined by his arrogance. Since he sees himself as engaged in this struggle with God, he has no doubt that the present love he can give Sarah will allow him to win...

  5. Analysis. After reading Sarah ’s diary, Bendrix is elated and consumed with feelings of love and a desire to go to Sarah. Bendrix immediately calls her, but the maid who answers the phone tells him that Sarah is out. Suspicious that the maid is lying, Bendrix calls back and asks for Sarah again, but disguises his voice to sound like one of ...

  6. Analysis. The work Bendrix is doing on his book isn’t going well, so he goes for a walk in the park. At the park, Bendrix notices Richard Smythe in a crowd in front of a street performer. Bendrix approaches Richard and asks if he still speaks in the park.

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  8. Throughout Graham Greene’s novel, The End of the Affair, Maurice Bendrix, the narrator and protagonist, constantly experiences an internal struggle, the conflict of man vs. self.

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