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Thread: Mr Brooke's incomprehension of women

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    Registered User kev67's Avatar
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    Mr Brooke's incomprehension of women

    There are some good lines in Middlemarch. The three that have amused me the most concern Mr Brooke's incomprehension of women.

    Chapter 4
    Mr Brooke wondered, and felt that women were an inexhaustible subject of study, since even he at his age was not in a perfect state of scientific prediction about them! Here was a fellow like Chettam with no chance at all.

    In short, woman was a problem which, since Mr Brooke's mind felt blank before it, could be hardly less complicated than the revolutions of an irregular solid.

    Chapter 6
    'Your sex are not thinkers, you know - varium et mutabile semper - that kind of thing. You don't know Virgil, I knew' - Mr Brooke reflected in time that he had not had the personal acquaintance of the Augustan poet
    Last edited by kev67; 01-03-2014 at 02:50 PM.
    According to Aldous Huxley, D.H. Lawrence once said that Balzac was 'a gigantic dwarf', and in a sense the same is true of Dickens.
    Charles Dickens, by George Orwell

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