Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope (epub ebook reader .TXT) đź“•
The two eldest, Augusta and Beatrice, lived, and were apparently likely to live. The four next faded and died one after another--all in the same sad year--and were laid in the neat, new cemetery at Torquay. Then came a pair, born at one birth, weak, delicate, frail little flowers, with dark hair and dark eyes, and thin, long, pale faces, with long, bony hands, and long bony feet, whom men looked on as fated to follow their sisters with quick steps. Hitherto, however, they had not followed them, nor had they suffered as their sisters had suffered; and some people at Greshamsbury attributed this to the fact that a change had been made in the family medical practitioner.
Then came the youngest of the flock, she whose birth we have said was not heralded with loud joy; for when she came into the world, four others, with pale temples, wan, worn cheeks,
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Thorne. His conviction became stronger and stronger that no human
efforts would keep Sir Louis in the land of the living till he
was twenty-five. Could he, therefore, wisely or honestly, in true
friendship to the squire, to Frank, or to his niece, take any steps
to separate two persons who loved each other, and whose marriage
would in all human probability be so suitable?
And yet he could not bring himself to encourage it then. The idea
of “looking after dead men’s shoes” was abhorrent to his mind,
especially when the man whose death he contemplated had been so
trusted to him as had been Sir Louis Scatcherd. He could not speak
of the event, even to the squire, as being possible. So he kept his
peace from day to day, and gave no counsel to Mary in the matter.
And then he had his own individual annoyances, and very aggravating
annoyances they were. The carriage—or rather post-chaise—of Dr
Fillgrave was now frequent in Greshamsbury, passing him constantly
in the street, among the lanes, and on the high roads. It seemed as
though Dr Fillgrave could never get to his patients at the big house
without showing himself to his beaten rival, either on his way
thither or on his return. This alone would, perhaps, not have hurt
the doctor much; but it did hurt him to know that Dr Fillgrave was
attending the squire for a little incipient gout, and that dear Nina
was in measles under those unloving hands.
And then, also, the old-fashioned phaeton, of old-fashioned old
Dr Century was seen to rumble up to the big house, and it became
known that Lady Arabella was not very well. “Not very well,” when
pronounced in a low, grave voice about Lady Arabella, always meant
something serious. And, in this case, something serious was meant.
Lady Arabella was not only ill, but frightened. It appeared, even to
her, that Dr Fillgrave himself hardly knew what he was about, that he
was not so sure in his opinion, so confident in himself, as Dr Thorne
used to be. How should he be, seeing that Dr Thorne had medically had
Lady Arabella in his hands for the last ten years?
If sitting with dignity in his hired carriage, and stepping with
authority up the big front steps, would have done anything, Dr
Fillgrave might have done much. Lady Arabella was greatly taken with
his looks when he first came to her, and it was only when she by
degrees perceived that the symptoms, which she knew so well, did not
yield to him that she began to doubt those looks.
After a while Dr Fillgrave himself suggested Dr Century. “Not that
I fear anything, Lady Arabella,” said he,—lying hugely, for he did
fear; fear both for himself and for her. “But Dr Century has great
experience, and in such a matter, when the interests are so
important, one cannot be too safe.”
So Dr Century came and toddled slowly into her ladyship’s room. He
did not say much; he left the talking to his learned brother, who
certainly was able to do that part of the business. But Dr Century,
though he said very little, looked very grave, and by no means
quieted Lady Arabella’s mind. She, as she saw the two putting their
heads together, already had misgivings that she had done wrong. She
knew that she could not be safe without Dr Thorne at her bedside, and
she already felt that she had exercised a most injudicious courage in
driving him away.
“Well, doctor?” said she, as soon as Dr Century had toddled
downstairs to see the squire.
“Oh! we shall be all right, Lady Arabella; all right, very soon. But
we must be careful, very careful; I am glad I’ve had Century here,
very; but there’s nothing to alter; little or nothing.”
There were but few words spoken between Dr Century and the squire;
but few as they were, they frightened Mr Gresham. When Dr Fillgrave
came down the grand stairs, a servant waited at the bottom to ask him
also to go to the squire. Now there never had been much cordiality
between the squire and Dr Fillgrave, though Mr Gresham had consented
to take a preventative pill from his hands, and the little man
therefore swelled himself out somewhat more than ordinarily as he
followed the servant.
“Dr Fillgrave,” said the squire, at once beginning the conversation,
“Lady Arabella, is, I fear, in danger?”
“Well, no; I hope not in danger, Mr Gresham. I certainly believe I
may be justified in expressing a hope that she is not in danger. Her
state is, no doubt, rather serious—rather serious—as Dr Century has
probably told you;” and Dr Fillgrave made a bow to the old man, who
sat quiet in one of the dining-room arm-chairs.
“Well, doctor,” said the squire, “I have not any grounds on which to
doubt your judgement.”
Dr Fillgrave bowed, but with the stiffest, slightest inclination
which a head could possibly make. He rather thought that Mr Gresham
had no ground for doubting his judgement.
“Nor do I.”
The doctor bowed, and a little, a very little less stiffly.
“But, doctor, I think that something ought to be done.”
The doctor this time did his bowing merely with his eyes and mouth.
The former he closed for a moment, the latter he pressed; and then
decorously rubbed his hands one over the other.
“I am afraid, Dr Fillgrave, that you and my friend Thorne are not the
best friends in the world.”
“No, Mr Gresham, no; I may go so far as to say we are not.”
“Well, I am sorry for it—”
“Perhaps, Mr Gresham, we need hardly discuss it; but there have been
circumstances—”
“I am not going to discuss anything, Dr Fillgrave; I say I am sorry
for it, because I believe that prudence will imperatively require
Lady Arabella to have Doctor Thorne back again. Now, if you would not
object to meet him—”
“Mr Gresham, I beg pardon; I beg pardon, indeed; but you must really
excuse me. Doctor Thorne has, in my estimation—”
“But, Doctor Fillgrave—”
“Mr Gresham, you really must excuse me; you really must, indeed.
Anything else that I could do for Lady Arabella, I should be most
happy to do; but after what has passed, I cannot meet Doctor Thorne;
I really cannot. You must not ask me to do so; Mr Gresham. And, Mr
Gresham,” continued the doctor, “I did understand from Lady Arabella
that his—that is, Dr Thorne’s—conduct to her ladyship had been
such—so very outrageous, I may say, that—that—that—of course, Mr
Gresham, you know best; but I did think that Lady Arabella herself
was quite unwilling to see Doctor Thorne again;” and Dr Fillgrave
looked very big, and very dignified, and very exclusive.
The squire did not ask again. He had no warrant for supposing that
Lady Arabella would receive Dr Thorne if he did come; and he saw
that it was useless to attempt to overcome the rancour of a man so
pig-headed as the little Galen now before him. Other propositions
were then broached, and it was at last decided that assistance should
be sought for from London, in the person of the great Sir Omicron
Pie.
Sir Omicron came, and Drs Fillgrave and Century were there to meet
him. When they all assembled in Lady Arabella’s room, the poor
woman’s heart almost sank within her,—as well it might, at such
a sight. If she could only reconcile it with her honour, her
consistency, with her high de Courcy principles, to send once more
for Dr Thorne. Oh, Frank! Frank! to what misery your disobedience
brought your mother!
Sir Omicron and the lesser provincial lights had their consultation,
and the lesser lights went their way to Barchester and Silverbridge,
leaving Sir Omicron to enjoy the hospitality of Greshamsbury.
“You should have Thorne back here, Mr Gresham,” said Sir Omicron,
almost in a whisper, when they were quite alone. “Doctor Fillgrave
is a very good man, and so is Dr Century; very good, I am sure. But
Thorne has known her ladyship so long.” And then, on the following
morning, Sir Omicron also went his way.
And then there was a scene between the squire and her ladyship. Lady
Arabella had given herself credit for great good generalship when she
found that the squire had been induced to take that pill. We have
all heard of the little end of the wedge, and we have most of us an
idea that the little end is the difficulty. That pill had been the
little end of Lady Arabella’s wedge. Up to that period she had been
struggling in vain to make a severance between her husband and her
enemy. That pill should do the business. She well knew how to make
the most of it; to have it published in Greshamsbury that the squire
had put his gouty toe into Dr Fillgrave’s hands; how to let it
be known—especially at that humble house in the corner of the
street—that Fillgrave’s prescriptions now ran current through the
whole establishment. Dr Thorne did hear of it, and did suffer. He had
been a true friend to the squire, and he thought the squire should
have stood to him more staunchly.
“After all,” said he himself, “perhaps it’s as well—perhaps it will
be best that I should leave this place altogether.” And then he
thought of Sir Roger and his will, and of Mary and her lover. And
then of Mary’s birth, and of his own theoretical doctrines as to pure
blood. And so his troubles multiplied, and he saw no present daylight
through them.
Such had been the way in which Lady Arabella had got in the little
end of the wedge. And she would have triumphed joyfully had not her
increased doubts and fears as to herself then come in to check her
triumph and destroy her joy. She had not yet confessed to any one
her secret regret for the friend she had driven away. She hardly yet
acknowledged to herself that she did regret him; but she was uneasy,
frightened, and in low spirits.
“My dear,” said the squire, sitting down by her bedside, “I want to
tell you what Sir Omicron said as he went away.”
“Well?” said her ladyship, sitting up and looking frightened.
“I don’t know how you may take it, Bell; but I think it very good
news:” the squire never called his wife Bell, except when he wanted
her to be on particularly good terms with him.
“Well?” said she again. She was not over-anxious to be gracious, and
did not reciprocate his familiarity.
“Sir Omicron says that you should have Thorne back again, and upon my
honour, I cannot but agree with him. Now, Thorne is a clever man, a
very clever man; nobody denies that; and then, you know—”
“Why did not Sir Omicron say that to me?” said her ladyship, sharply,
all her disposition in Dr Thorne’s favour becoming wonderfully damped
by her husband’s advocacy.
“I suppose he thought it better to say it to me,” said the squire,
rather curtly.
“He should have spoken to myself,” said Lady Arabella, who, though
she did not absolutely doubt her husband’s word, gave him credit
for having induced and led on Sir Omicron to the uttering of this
opinion. “Doctor Thorne has behaved to me in so gross, so indecent a
manner! And then, as I understand, he is absolutely encouraging that
girl—”
“Now, Bell, you are quite wrong—”
“Of course I am; I always am quite wrong.”
“Quite wrong
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