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131
However
,
since
Miss
Brooke
had
become
engaged
in
a
conversation
with
Mr
.
Casaubon
about
the
Vaudois
clergy
,
Sir
James
betook
himself
to
Celia
,
and
talked
to
her
about
her
sister
;
spoke
of
a
house
in
town
,
and
asked
whether
Miss
Brooke
disliked
London
132
Away
from
her
sister
,
Celia
talked
quite
easily
,
and
Sir
James
said
to
himself
that
the
second
Miss
Brooke
was
certainly
very
agreeable
as
well
as
pretty
,
though
not
,
as
some
people
pretended
,
more
clever
and
sensible
than
the
elder
sister
.
He
felt
that
he
had
chosen
the
one
who
was
in
all
respects
the
superior
;
and
a
man
naturally
likes
to
look
forward
to
having
the
best
.
He
would
be
the
very
Mawworm
of
bachelors
who
pretended
not
to
expect
it
.
133
"
Say
,
goddess
,
what
ensued
,
when
Raphael
,
The
affable
archangel
.
.
.
EveThe
story
heard
attentive
,
and
was
filledWith
admiration
,
and
deep
muse
,
to
hearOf
things
so
high
and
strange
.
"
Paradise
Lost
,
B
.
vii
.
Отключить рекламу
134
If
it
had
really
occurred
to
Mr
.
Casaubon
to
think
of
Miss
Brooke
as
a
suitable
wife
for
him
,
the
reasons
that
might
induce
her
to
accept
him
were
already
planted
in
her
mind
,
and
by
the
evening
of
the
next
day
the
reasons
had
budded
and
bloomed
.
For
they
had
had
a
long
conversation
in
the
morning
,
while
Celia
,
who
did
not
like
the
company
of
Mr
.
Casaubon
s
moles
and
sallowness
,
had
escaped
to
the
vicarage
to
play
with
the
curate
s
ill
-
shod
but
merry
children
.
135
Dorothea
by
this
time
had
looked
deep
into
the
ungauged
reservoir
of
Mr
.
Casaubon
s
mind
,
seeing
reflected
there
in
vague
labyrinthine
extension
every
quality
she
herself
brought
;
had
opened
much
of
her
own
experience
to
him
,
and
had
understood
from
him
the
scope
of
his
great
work
,
also
of
attractively
labyrinthine
extent
.
For
he
had
been
as
instructive
as
Milton
s
"
affable
archangel
;
"
and
with
something
of
the
archangelic
manner
he
told
her
how
he
had
undertaken
to
show
(
what
indeed
had
been
attempted
before
,
but
not
with
that
thoroughness
,
justice
of
comparison
,
and
effectiveness
of
arrangement
at
which
Mr
.
Casaubon
aimed
)
that
all
the
mythical
systems
or
erratic
mythical
fragments
in
the
world
were
corruptions
of
a
tradition
originally
revealed
.
136
Having
once
mastered
the
true
position
and
taken
a
firm
footing
there
,
the
vast
field
of
mythical
constructions
became
intelligible
,
nay
,
luminous
with
the
reflected
light
of
correspondences
.
But
to
gather
in
this
great
harvest
of
truth
was
no
light
or
speedy
work
.
His
notes
already
made
a
formidable
range
of
volumes
,
but
the
crowning
task
would
be
to
condense
these
voluminous
still
-
accumulating
results
and
bring
them
,
like
the
earlier
vintage
of
Hippocratic
books
,
to
fit
a
little
shelf
.
In
explaining
this
to
Dorothea
,
Mr
.
Casaubon
expressed
himself
nearly
as
he
would
have
done
to
a
fellow
-
student
,
for
he
had
not
two
styles
of
talking
at
command
:
it
is
true
that
when
he
used
a
Greek
or
Latin
phrase
he
always
gave
the
English
with
scrupulous
care
,
but
he
would
probably
have
done
this
in
any
case
.
A
learned
provincial
clergyman
is
accustomed
to
think
of
his
acquaintances
as
of
"
lords
,
knyghtes
,
and
other
noble
and
worthi
men
,
that
conne
Latyn
but
lytille
.
"
137
Dorothea
was
altogether
captivated
by
the
wide
embrace
of
this
conception
.
Here
was
something
beyond
the
shallows
of
ladies
school
literature
:
here
was
a
living
Bossuet
,
whose
work
would
reconcile
complete
knowledge
with
devoted
piety
;
here
was
a
modern
Augustine
who
united
the
glories
of
doctor
and
saint
.
Отключить рекламу
138
The
sanctity
seemed
no
less
clearly
marked
than
the
learning
,
for
when
Dorothea
was
impelled
to
open
her
mind
on
certain
themes
which
she
could
speak
of
to
no
one
whom
she
had
before
seen
at
Tipton
,
especially
on
the
secondary
importance
of
ecclesiastical
forms
and
articles
of
belief
compared
with
that
spiritual
religion
,
that
submergence
of
self
in
communion
with
Divine
perfection
which
seemed
to
her
to
be
expressed
in
the
best
Christian
books
of
widely
distant
ages
,
she
found
in
Mr
.
Casaubon
a
listener
who
understood
her
at
once
,
who
could
assure
her
of
his
own
agreement
with
that
view
when
duly
tempered
with
wise
conformity
,
and
could
mention
historical
examples
before
unknown
to
her
.
139
"
He
thinks
with
me
,
"
said
Dorothea
to
herself
,
"
or
rather
,
he
thinks
a
whole
world
of
which
my
thought
is
but
a
poor
twopenny
mirror
.
And
his
feelings
too
,
his
whole
experience
what
a
lake
compared
with
my
little
pool
!
"
140
Miss
Brooke
argued
from
words
and
dispositions
not
less
unhesitatingly
than
other
young
ladies
of
her
age
.
Signs
are
small
measurable
things
,
but
interpretations
are
illimitable
,
and
in
girls
of
sweet
,
ardent
nature
,
every
sign
is
apt
to
conjure
up
wonder
,
hope
,
belief
,
vast
as
a
sky
,
and
colored
by
a
diffused
thimbleful
of
matter
in
the
shape
of
knowledge
.