Arrowsmith Sinclair Lewis (books suggested by elon musk TXT) đ
- Author: Sinclair Lewis
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âOf course!â
IIHe had read in the Journal of the American Medical Association that Gustaf Sondelius was giving a series of lectures at Harvard. He wrote asking whether he knew of a public health appointment. Sondelius answered, in a profane and blotty scrawl, that he remembered with joy their Minneapolis vacation, that he disagreed with Entwisle of Harvard about the nature of metathrombin, that there was an excellent Italian restaurant in Boston, and that he would inquire among his health-official friends as to a position.
Two days later he wrote that Dr. Almus Pickerbaugh, Director of Public Health in the city of Nautilus, Iowa, was looking for a second-in-command, and would probably be willing to send particulars.
Leora and Martin swooped on an almanac.
âGosh! Sixty-nine thousand people in Nautilus! Against three hundred and sixty-six hereâ âno, wait, itâs three hundred and sixty-seven now, with that new baby of Pete Yeskaâs that the dirty swine called in Hesselink for. People! People that can talk! Theaters! Maybe concerts! Leora, weâll be like a pair of kids let loose from school!â
He telegraphed for details, to the enormous interest of the station agent, who was also telegraph operator.
The mimeographed form which was sent to him said that Dr. Pickerbaugh required an assistant who would be the only full-time medical officer besides Pickerbaugh himself, as the clinic and school doctors were private physicians working part-time. The assistant would be epidemiologist, bacteriologist, and manager of the office clerks, the nurses, and the lay inspectors of dairies and sanitation. The salary would be twenty-five hundred dollars a yearâ âagainst the fifteen or sixteen hundred Martin was making in Wheatsylvania.
Proper recommendations were desired.
Martin wrote to Sondelius, to Dad Silva, and to Max Gottlieb, now at the McGurk Institute in New York.
Dr. Pickerbaugh informed him, âI have received very pleasant letters from Dean Silva and Dr. Sondelius about you, but the letter from Dr. Gottlieb is quite remarkable. He says you have rare gifts as a laboratory man. I take great pleasure in offering you the appointment; kindly wire.â
Not till then did Martin completely realize that he was leaving Wheatsylvaniaâ âthe tedium of Bert Tozerâs naggingâ âthe spying of Pete Yeska and the Norblomsâ âthe inevitability of turning, as so many unchanging times he had turned, south from the Leopolis road at the Two Mile Grove and following again that weary, flat, unbending trailâ âthe superiority of Dr. Hesselink and the malice of Dr. Coughlinâ âthe round which left him no time for his dusty laboratoryâ âleaving it all for the achievement and splendor of the great city of Nautilus.
âLeora, weâre going! Weâre really going!â
IIIBert Tozer said:
âYou know by golly thereâs folks that would call you a traitor, after all weâve done for you, even if you did pay back the thousand, to let some other doc come in here and get all that influence away from the Family.â
Ada Quist said:
âI guess if you ainât any too popular with the folks around here youâll have one fine time in a big city like Nautilus! Well Bert and me are going to get married next year and when you two swells make a failure of it I suppose weâll have to take care of you at our house when you come sneaking back do you think we could get your house at the same rent you paid for it oh Bert why couldnât we take Martâs office instead it would save money well Iâve always said since we were in school together you couldnât stand a decent regular life Ory.â
Mr. Tozer said:
âI simply canât understand it, with everything going so nice. Why, youâd be making three-four thousand a year some day, if you just stuck to it. Havenât we tried to treat you nice? I donât like to have my little girl go away and leave me alone, now Iâm getting on in years. And Bert gets so cranky with me and Mother, but you and Ory would always kind of listen to us. Canât you fix it somehow so you could stay?â
Pete Yeska said:
âDoc, you could of knocked me down with a feather when I heard you were going! Course you and me have scrapped about this drug business, but Lord! I been kind of half thinking about coming around some time and offering you a partnership and let you run the drug end to suit yourself, and we could get the Buick agency, maybe, and work up a nice little business. Iâm real sorry youâre going to leave usâ ââ ⊠Well, come back some day and weâll take a shot at the ducks, and have a good laugh about that bull you made over the smallpox. I never will forget that! I was saying to the old woman just the other day, when she had an earache, âAinât got smallpox, have yuh, Bess!âââ
Dr. Hesselink said:
âDoctor, whatâs this I hear? Youâre not going away? Why, you and I were just beginning to bring medical practice in this neck of the woods up to where it ought to be, so I drove over tonightâ âHuh? We panned you? Ye-es, I suppose we did, but that doesnât mean we didnât appreciate you. Small place like here or Groningen, you have to roast your neighbors to keep busy. Why, Doctor, Iâve been watching you develop from an unlicked cub to a real upstanding physician, and now youâre going awayâ âyou donât know how I feel!â
Henry Novak said:
âWhy, Doc, you ainât going to leave us? And we got a new baby coming, and I said to the woman, just the other day, âItâs a good thing we got a doctor that hands you out the truth and not all this guff we used to get from Doc Winter.âââ
The wheat-buyer at Delft said:
âDoc, whatâs this I hear? You ainât going away? A fellow told me you was and I says to him, âDonât be more of
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