[Mary Marston by George MacDonald]@TWC D-Link bookMary Marston CHAPTER VIII 10/13
But the shades and kinds and degrees of possession are innumerable; and not until we downright love a thing, can we _know_ we understand it, or rightly call it our own; Tom only admired this one; it was all he was capable of in regard to such at present.
Had the whim for acquainting himself with it seized him in his own study, he would have satisfied it with a far more superficial interview; but the presence of the girl, with those eyes fixed on him as he read--his mind's eye saw them--was for the moment an enlargement of his being, whose phase to himself was a consciousness of ignorance. "It is a beautiful poem," he said at last, quite honestly; and, raising his eyes, he looked straight in hers.
There is hardly a limit to the knowledge and sympathy a man may have in respect of the finest things, and yet be a fool.
Sympathy is not harmony.
A man may be a poet even, and speak with the tongue of an angel, and yet be a very bad fool. "I am sure it must be a beautiful poem," said Letty; "but I have hardly got a hold of it yet." And she stretched her hand a little farther, as if to proceed with its appropriation. But Tom was not yet prepared to part with the book.
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