BOOK I. MISS BROOKE. 
10. CHAPTER X.
 (continued)
Certainly this affair of his marriage with Miss Brooke touched him
 more nearly than it did any one of the persons who have hitherto
 shown their disapproval of it, and in the present stage of things I
 feel more tenderly towards his experience of success than towards
 the disappointment of the amiable Sir James.  For in truth, as the
 day fixed for his marriage came nearer, Mr. Casaubon did not find
 his spirits rising; nor did the contemplation of that matrimonial
 garden scene, where, as all experience showed, the path was to be
 bordered with flowers, prove persistently more enchanting bo him
 than the accustomed vaults where he walked taper in hand.  He did
 not confess to himself, still less could he have breathed to another,
 his surprise that though he had won a lovely and noble-hearted girl
 he had not won delight,--which he had also regarded as an object
 to be found by search.  It is true that he knew all the classical
 passages implying the contrary; but knowing classical passages,
 we find, is a mode of motion, which explains why they leave
 so little extra force for their personal application. 
Poor Mr. Casaubon had imagined that his long studious bachelorhood
 had stored up for him a compound interest of enjoyment, and that
 large drafts on his affections would not fail to be honored; for we
 all of us, grave or light, get our thoughts entangled in metaphors,
 and act fatally on the strength of them.  And now he was in danger
 of being saddened by the very conviction that his circumstances
 were unusually happy: there was nothing external by which he could
 account for a certain blankness of sensibility which came over him
 just when his expectant gladness should have been most lively,
 just when he exchanged the accustomed dulness of his Lowick library
 for his visits to the Grange.  Here was a weary experience in which
 he was as utterly condemned to loneliness as in the despair which
 sometimes threatened him while toiling in the morass of authorship
 without seeming nearer to the goal.  And his was that worst
 loneliness which would shrink from sympathy.  He could not but wish
 that Dorothea should think him not less happy than the world would
 expect her successful suitor to be; and in relation to his authorship
 he leaned on her young trust and veneration, he liked to draw
 forth her fresh interest in listening, as a means of encouragement
 to himself: in talking to her he presented all his performance and
 intention with the reflected confidence of the pedagogue, and rid
 himself for the time of that chilling ideal audience which crowded
 his laborious uncreative hours with the vaporous pressure of Tartarean shades. 
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