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Will
Ladislaw
was
delightfully
agreeable
at
dinner
the
next
day
,
and
gave
no
opportunity
for
Mr
.
Casaubon
to
show
disapprobation
.
On
the
contrary
it
seemed
to
Dorothea
that
Will
had
a
happier
way
of
drawing
her
husband
into
conversation
and
of
deferentially
listening
to
him
than
she
had
ever
observed
in
any
one
before
.
To
be
sure
,
the
listeners
about
Tipton
were
not
highly
gifted
!
Will
talked
a
good
deal
himself
,
but
what
he
said
was
thrown
in
with
such
rapidity
,
and
with
such
an
unimportant
air
of
saying
something
by
the
way
,
that
it
seemed
a
gay
little
chime
after
the
great
bell
.
If
Will
was
not
always
perfect
,
this
was
certainly
one
of
his
good
days
.
He
described
touches
of
incident
among
the
poor
people
in
Rome
,
only
to
be
seen
by
one
who
could
move
about
freely
;
he
found
himself
in
agreement
with
Mr
.
Casaubon
as
to
the
unsound
opinions
of
Middleton
concerning
the
relations
of
Judaism
and
Catholicism
;
and
passed
easily
to
a
half
-
enthusiastic
half
-
playful
picture
of
the
enjoyment
he
got
out
of
the
very
miscellaneousness
of
Rome
,
which
made
the
mind
flexible
with
constant
comparison
,
and
saved
you
from
seeing
the
world
’
s
ages
as
a
set
of
box
-
like
partitions
without
vital
connection
.
Mr
.
Casaubon
’
s
studies
,
Will
observed
,
had
always
been
of
too
broad
a
kind
for
that
,
and
he
had
perhaps
never
felt
any
such
sudden
effect
,
but
for
himself
he
confessed
that
Rome
had
given
him
quite
a
new
sense
of
history
as
a
whole
:
the
fragments
stimulated
his
imagination
and
made
him
constructive
.
Then
occasionally
,
but
not
too
often
,
he
appealed
to
Dorothea
,
and
discussed
what
she
said
,
as
if
her
sentiment
were
an
item
to
be
considered
in
the
final
judgment
even
of
the
Madonna
di
Foligno
or
the
Laocoon
.
A
sense
of
contributing
to
form
the
world
’
s
opinion
makes
conversation
particularly
cheerful
;
and
Mr
.
Casaubon
too
was
not
without
his
pride
in
his
young
wife
,
who
spoke
better
than
most
women
,
as
indeed
he
had
perceived
in
choosing
her
.
Since
things
were
going
on
so
pleasantly
,
Mr
.
Casaubon
’
s
statement
that
his
labors
in
the
Library
would
be
suspended
for
a
couple
of
days
,
and
that
after
a
brief
renewal
he
should
have
no
further
reason
for
staying
in
Rome
,
encouraged
Will
to
urge
that
Mrs
.
Casaubon
should
not
go
away
without
seeing
a
studio
or
two
.
Would
not
Mr
.
Casaubon
take
her
?
That
sort
of
thing
ought
not
to
be
missed
:
it
was
quite
special
:
it
was
a
form
of
life
that
grew
like
a
small
fresh
vegetation
with
its
population
of
insects
on
huge
fossils
.
Will
would
be
happy
to
conduct
them
—
not
to
anything
wearisome
,
only
to
a
few
examples
.
Mr
.
Casaubon
,
seeing
Dorothea
look
earnestly
towards
him
,
could
not
but
ask
her
if
she
would
be
interested
in
such
visits
:
he
was
now
at
her
service
during
the
whole
day
;
and
it
was
agreed
that
Will
should
come
on
the
morrow
and
drive
with
them
.
Will
could
not
omit
Thorwaldsen
,
a
living
celebrity
about
whom
even
Mr
.
Casaubon
inquired
,
but
before
the
day
was
far
advanced
he
led
the
way
to
the
studio
of
his
friend
Adolf
Naumann
,
whom
he
mentioned
as
one
of
the
chief
renovators
of
Christian
art
,
one
of
those
who
had
not
only
revived
but
expanded
that
grand
conception
of
supreme
events
as
mysteries
at
which
the
successive
ages
were
spectators
,
and
in
relation
to
which
the
great
souls
of
all
periods
became
as
it
were
contemporaries
.
Will
added
that
he
had
made
himself
Naumann
’
s
pupil
for
the
nonce
.
"
I
have
been
making
some
oil
-
sketches
under
him
,
"
said
Will
.
"
I
hate
copying
.
I
must
put
something
of
my
own
in
.
Naumann
has
been
painting
the
Saints
drawing
the
Car
of
the
Church
,
and
I
have
been
making
a
sketch
of
Marlowe
’
s
Tamburlaine
Driving
the
Conquered
Kings
in
his
Chariot
.
I
am
not
so
ecclesiastical
as
Naumann
,
and
I
sometimes
twit
him
with
his
excess
of
meaning
.
But
this
time
I
mean
to
outdo
him
in
breadth
of
intention
.
I
take
Tamburlaine
in
his
chariot
for
the
tremendous
course
of
the
world
’
s
physical
history
lashing
on
the
harnessed
dynasties
.
In
my
opinion
,
that
is
a
good
mythical
interpretation
.
"
Will
here
looked
at
Mr
.
Casaubon
,
who
received
this
offhand
treatment
of
symbolism
very
uneasily
,
and
bowed
with
a
neutral
air
.
"
The
sketch
must
be
very
grand
,
if
it
conveys
so
much
,
"
said
Dorothea
.
"
I
should
need
some
explanation
even
of
the
meaning
you
give
.
Do
you
intend
Tamburlaine
to
represent
earthquakes
and
volcanoes
?
"
"
Oh
yes
,
"
said
Will
,
laughing
,
"
and
migrations
of
races
and
clearings
of
forests
—
and
America
and
the
steam
-
engine
.
Everything
you
can
imagine
!
"
"
What
a
difficult
kind
of
shorthand
!
"
said
Dorothea
,
smiling
towards
her
husband
.
"
It
would
require
all
your
knowledge
to
be
able
to
read
it
.
"