Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope (interesting books to read TXT) đź“–
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with himself, he might marry her. But, what then?
As he walked slowly about, cutting off the daisies with his stick, he
met Mr Oriel, going up to the house, as was now his custom, to dine
there and spend the evening, close to Beatrice.
“How I envy you, Oriel!” he said. “What would I not give to have such
a position in the world as yours!”
“Thou shalt not covet a man’s house, nor his wife,” said Mr Oriel;
“perhaps it ought to have been added, nor his position.”
“It wouldn’t have made much difference. When a man is tempted, the
Commandments, I believe, do not go for much.”
“Do they not, Frank? That’s a dangerous doctrine; and one which, if
you had my position, you would hardly admit. But what makes you so
much out of sorts? Your own position is generally considered about
the best which the world has to give.”
“Is it? Then let me tell you that the world has very little to give.
What can I do? Where can I turn? Oriel, if there be an empty, lying
humbug in the world, it is the theory of high birth and pure blood
which some of us endeavour to maintain. Blood, indeed! If my father
had been a baker, I should know by this time where to look for my
livelihood. As it is, I am told of nothing but my blood. Will my
blood ever get me half a crown?”
And then the young democrat walked on again in solitude, leaving Mr
Oriel in doubt as to the exact line of argument which he had meant to
inculcate.
The Two Doctors Change Patients
Dr Fillgrave still continued his visits to Greshamsbury, for Lady
Arabella had not yet mustered the courage necessary for swallowing
her pride and sending once more for Dr Thorne. Nothing pleased Dr
Fillgrave more than those visits.
He habitually attended grander families, and richer people; but then,
he had attended them habitually. Greshamsbury was a prize taken from
the enemy; it was his rock of Gibraltar, of which he thought much
more than of any ordinary Hampshire or Wiltshire which had always
been within his own kingdom.
He was just starting one morning with his post-horses for
Greshamsbury, when an impudent-looking groom, with a crooked nose,
trotted up to his door. For Joe still had a crooked nose, all the
doctor’s care having been inefficacious to remedy the evil effects
of Bridget’s little tap with the rolling-pin. Joe had no written
credentials, for his master was hardly equal to writing, and
Lady Scatcherd had declined to put herself into further personal
communication with Dr Fillgrave; but he had effrontery enough to
deliver any message.
“Be you Dr Fillgrave?” said Joe, with one finger just raised to his
cocked hat.
“Yes,” said Dr Fillgrave, with one foot on the step of the carriage,
but pausing at the sight of so well-turned-out a servant. “Yes; I am
Dr Fillgrave.”
“Then you be to go to Boxall Hill immediately; before anywhere else.”
“Boxall Hill!” said the doctor, with a very angry frown.
“Yes; Boxall Hill: my master’s place—my master is Sir Louis
Scatcherd, baronet. You’ve heard of him, I suppose?”
Dr Fillgrave had not his mind quite ready for such an occasion. So he
withdrew his foot from the carriage step, and rubbing his hands one
over another, looked at his own hall door for inspiration. A single
glance at his face was sufficient to show that no ordinary thoughts
were being turned over within his breast.
“Well!” said Joe, thinking that his master’s name had not altogether
produced the magic effect which he had expected; remembering, also,
how submissive Greyson had always been, who, being a London doctor,
must be supposed to be a bigger man than this provincial fellow.
“Do you know as how my master is dying, very like, while you stand
there?”
“What is your master’s disease?” said the doctor, facing Joe, slowly,
and still rubbing his hands. “What ails him? What is the matter with
him?”
“Oh; the matter with him? Well, to say it out at once then, he do
take a drop too much at times, and then he has the horrors—what is
it they call it? delicious beam-ends, or something of that sort.”
“Oh, ah, yes; I know; and tell me, my man, who is attending him?”
“Attending him? why, I do, and his mother, that is, her ladyship.”
“Yes; but what medical attendant: what doctor?”
“Why, there was Greyson, in London, and—”
“Greyson!” and the doctor looked as though a name so medicinally
humble had never before struck the tympanum of his ear.
“Yes; Greyson. And then, down at what’s the name of the place, there
was Thorne.”
“Greshamsbury?”
“Yes; Greshamsbury. But he and Thorne didn’t hit it off; and so since
that he has had no one but myself.”
“I will be at Boxall Hill in the course of the morning,” said Dr
Fillgrave; “or, rather, you may say, that I will be there at once: I
will take it in my way.” And having thus resolved, he gave his orders
that the post-horses should make such a detour as would enable him
to visit Boxall Hill on his road. “It is impossible,” said he to
himself, “that I should be twice treated in such a manner in the same
house.”
He was not, however, altogether in a comfortable frame of mind as he
was driven up to the hall door. He could not but remember the smile
of triumph with which his enemy had regarded him in that hall; he
could not but think how he had returned fee-less to Barchester, and
how little he had gained in the medical world by rejecting Lady
Scatcherd’s bank-note. However, he also had had his triumphs since
that. He had smiled scornfully at Dr Thorne when he had seen him in
the Greshamsbury street; and had been able to tell, at twenty houses
through the county, how Lady Arabella had at last been obliged to
place herself in his hands. And he triumphed again when he found
himself really standing by Sir Louis Scatcherd’s bedside. As for Lady
Scatcherd, she did not even show herself. She kept in her own little
room, sending out Hannah to ask him up the stairs; and she only just
got a peep at him through the door as she heard the medical creak of
his shoes as he again descended.
We need say but little of his visit to Sir Louis. It mattered
nothing now, whether it was Thorne, or Greyson, or Fillgrave. And Dr
Fillgrave knew that it mattered nothing: he had skill at least for
that—and heart enough also to feel that he would fain have been
relieved from this task; would fain have left this patient in the
hands even of Dr Thorne.
The name which Joe had given to his master’s illness was certainly
not a false one. He did find Sir Louis “in the horrors.” If any
father have a son whose besetting sin is a passion for alcohol, let
him take his child to the room of a drunkard when possessed by “the
horrors.” Nothing will cure him if not that.
I will not disgust my reader by attempting to describe the poor
wretch in his misery: the sunken, but yet glaring eyes; the emaciated
cheeks; the fallen mouth; the parched, sore lips; the face, now dry
and hot, and then suddenly clammy with drops of perspiration; the
shaking hand, and all but palsied limbs; and worse than this, the
fearful mental efforts, and the struggles for drink; struggles to
which it is often necessary to give way.
Dr Fillgrave soon knew what was to be the man’s fate; but he did what
he might to relieve it. There, in one big, best bedroom, looking out
to the north, lay Sir Louis Scatcherd, dying wretchedly. There, in
the other big, best bedroom, looking out to the south, had died the
other baronet about a twelvemonth since, and each a victim to the
same sin. To this had come the prosperity of the house of Scatcherd!
And then Dr Fillgrave went on to Greshamsbury. It was a long day’s
work, both for himself and the horses; but then, the triumph of being
dragged up that avenue compensated for both the expense and the
labour. He always put on his sweetest smile as he came near the hall
door, and rubbed his hands in the most complaisant manner of which he
knew. It was seldom that he saw any of the family but Lady Arabella;
but then he desired to see none other, and when he left her in a good
humour, was quite content to take his glass of sherry and eat his
lunch by himself.
On this occasion, however, the servant at once asked him to go into
the dining-room, and there he found himself in the presence of Frank
Gresham. The fact was, that Lady Arabella, having at last decided,
had sent for Dr Thorne; and it had become necessary that some one
should be entrusted with the duty of informing Dr Fillgrave. That
some one must be the squire, or Frank. Lady Arabella would doubtless
have preferred a messenger more absolutely friendly to her own side
of the house; but such messenger there was none: she could not send
Mr Gazebee to see her doctor, and so, of the two evils, she chose the
least.
“Dr Fillgrave,” said Frank, shaking hands with him very cordially as
he came up, “my mother is so much obliged to you for all your care
and anxiety on her behalf! and, so indeed, are we all.”
The doctor shook hands with him very warmly. This little expression
of a family feeling on his behalf was the more gratifying, as he had
always thought that the males of the Greshamsbury family were still
wedded to that pseudo-doctor, that half-apothecary who lived in the
village.
“It has been awfully troublesome to you, coming over all this way, I
am sure. Indeed, money could not pay for it; my mother feels that. It
must cut up your time so much.”
“Not at all, Mr Gresham; not at all,” said the Barchester doctor,
rising up on his toes proudly as he spoke. “A person of your mother’s
importance, you know! I should be happy to go any distance to see
her.”
“Ah! but, Dr Fillgrave, we cannot allow that.”
“Mr Gresham, don’t mention it.”
“Oh, yes; but I must,” said Frank, who thought that he had done
enough for civility, and was now anxious to come to the point. “The
fact is, doctor, that we are very much obliged for what you have
done; but, for the future, my mother thinks she can trust to such
assistance as she can get here in the village.”
Frank had been particularly instructed to be very careful how he
mentioned Dr Thorne’s name, and, therefore, cleverly avoided it.
Get what assistance she wanted in the village! What words were those
that he heard? “Mr Gresham, eh—hem—perhaps I do not completely—”
Yes, alas! he had completely understood what Frank had meant that he
should understand. Frank desired to be civil, but he had no idea of
beating unnecessarily about the bush on such an occasion as this.
“It’s by Sir Omicron’s advice, Dr Fillgrave. You see, this man
here”—and he nodded his head towards the doctor’s house, being still
anxious not to pronounce the hideous name—“has known my mother’s
constitution for so many years.”
“Oh, Mr Gresham; of course, if it is wished.”
“Yes, Dr Fillgrave, it
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