A scene in Middlemarch\u27s thirtieth chapter describes how the creative process can slip out of a writer\u27s control.! A letter has arrived from Mr. Casaubon\u27s estranged cousin, Will Ladislaw, asking whether Will may visit Casaubon and Dorothea at their home at Lowick. But Casaubon is gravely ill and Dorothea is so overwhelmed by her husband\u27s illness and also by the thought of seeing Will that she cannot even read the letter. She asks her uncle, Mr. Brooke, to reply in her stead, \u27to let Will know that Casaubon had been ill, and that his health would not allow the reception of any visitors\u27 (291). She is unwise to trust him with the task. No one more ready than Mr. Brooke to write a letter: his only difficulty was to write a ...