Your daily #Middlemarch quotation, exploring dusty corners of the world’s greatest #novel. #GeorgeEliot #Victodon #DailyMiddlemarch @litstudies

“'Young ladies don’t understand political economy, you know,' said Mr. Brooke, smiling towards Mr. Casaubon. 'I remember when we were all reading Adam Smith. There is a book, now. I took in all the new ideas at one time—human perfectibility, now. But some say, history moves in circles; and that may be very well argued; I have argued it myself. 1/2

"'The fact is, human reason may carry you a little too far—over the hedge, in fact. It carried me a good way at one time; but I saw it would not do. I pulled up; I pulled up in time. But not too hard. I have always been in favor of a little theory: we must have Thought; else we shall be landed back in the dark ages.'" 2/2
@doctorwaffle Love love LOVE Mr. Brooks’s uncooked dumpling of a mind.
@Devo3000 LOL, perfect. Eliot is so good at giving characters enough rope with which to hang themselves.
@doctorwaffle With just enough kindness to allow sympathy with them. (Even Casaubon, who is pretty monstrous most of the time.)

@tomlevenson @doctorwaffle

I have never for a moment sympathised with Casaubon. He even manages to make mythology dull. And he absolutely crushes Dorothea's youthful idealism and intellectual aspirations.

#Middlemarch

@vogelbeere @doctorwaffle There is that one moment, early in the tale, when Eliot breaks the fourth wall to lay bear Causkubon’s sense of his own failure/imposter hood, and how it will now be exposed by a marriage to someone who believes in him. It’s an explicit moment when Eliot asks us to feel Causubon’s inner life, and it’s amazing.

And never repeated in the whole of ther est of the novel.

@tomlevenson @doctorwaffle that’s true but I still didn’t really sympathize with him.I think I saw the TV series before I read the book, so I knew what was coming. I can see why Dorothea wants to escape from the stifling atmosphere of her uncle’s house but it’s fairly clear that marrying Casaubon will be a disaster.
@tomlevenson as I remarked in another reply to @doctorwaffle — in a way, the whole book is an extended meditation on the question, why do intelligent men fear intelligent women? Casaubon stifles Dorothea, Lydgate marries airhead Rosamond, only Ladislaw appreciates Dorothea’s mind.
@vogelbeere @doctorwaffle Oh, it was clear. Eliot just makes sure we know it was a disaster for Causubon too.
@tomlevenson @doctorwaffle but he should've known better, and the reasons it is a disaster for him are different

@vogelbeere @doctorwaffle So should we all.

To me, that one moment of sympathy for a character she otherwise paints pretty monochromatically as a monster is very important to the novel's success. He wanted saiving, but nothing in his character, talent, or circumstances permitted saving.

Eliot was being both humane and brutal.