The relationship between nature and humans has been widely explored in literature. Spirituality, through which both human individuals and nature are connected, is the core concept in British and American transcendentalism, whose ideas permeate E.M. Forster’s novel A Room with a View (1908). Forster’s stance on nature and its role in the life of humans is striking in this narrative and enables multiple interpretations that are relevant today when eco-awareness is one of humanity’s key goals. This article examines the intricate relationship between nature and humans that Forster establishes via both the narrative structure and the characters, and argues that it is through the depictions of nature and the environment that the author celebrates individualism and diversity. Yet it is also with the help of overt comparisons and parallelism of environmental fluctuations with the events that happen in the lives of the main characters that Forster introduces a unique ecological philosophy, underlining the inseparability of humans from nature and vice versa, thus expressing both humility and rapture with regard to the created symbiosis, its beauty and inscrutability.