The Art of Melancholy

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The Art of Melancholy

She liked it, at least to some extent. That subtle weight of sombreness, not quite dark enough to be gloom, and the nearly intangible presence of a blurry ache, not quite sharp enough to be pain. It never failed to surprise her that something which stemmed from a mind tipped slightly off-balance could manifest itself in such a physical way. It didn't rush through her body in a bright flash like fear did, scorching and chilling, nor did it possess the breathtaking, numbing grasp of utter despair. There were no metaphorical metal bands clasped around her chest, no fingers trembling in trepidation, and no heartbeat rapidly trying to keep up with racing thoughts.

Instead, like morphine from a drip, the feeling trickled slowly through her veins, little more than an undercurrent, and settled in her limbs like lead. A grey shadow crept up on her, steadily but not menacingly, and she didn't struggle against it because it revealed itself only in the form of a delicately thin veil, altering her perception but obscuring nothing. It didn't overwhelm her, it didn't demand her entire focus; it was merely there. She wasn't even certain where the feeling was strongest. Perhaps beneath her ribs, between her heart and her stomach, where she felt it lurk like an alien liquid, unable to tell whether it was hot or cold. Or, maybe, along her back, making the skin near her spine tighten and creating a fleeting, prickly sensation every now and then, here and there.

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And yet, she knew, there was no proof of her physical unease, nothing that would show up in her blood if tested, no visible changes in her outward appearance, not even a sign of pallor detectable in her face. She often smiled at the theory of ancient physiology that believed an excess of black bile to be responsible for melancholy when, in her mind, it was so obviously the result of troubled thoughts and circumstance, and sometimes occurred, it seemed, without a reason at all. Sometimes, it came after a case was closed and a life was saved, with the ...

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