Doctor Thorne by Anthony Trollope (epub e ink reader .TXT) π

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Doctor Thorne is the third book in Trollopeβs βChronicles of Barsetshireβ series, which is set in the fictional county of Barsetshire, somewhere in Englandβs West Country. Unlike the two earlier novels in the series, Doctor Thorne isnβt set in the cathedral city of Barchester, but in the small village of Greshamsbury and the estate of the local squire, Greshamsbury Park.
Doctor Thorne is a middle-aged medical practitioner in Greshamsbury, a friend of the local squire Mr. Gresham, who is deeply in debt because of ill-advised attempts to gain a seat in Parliament. Doctor Thorne not only provides medical advice to the Greshams, but also assists Mr. Gresham in obtaining financial loans from a local self-made entrepreneur, Sir Richard Scratcherd. When Mr. Greshamβs son Frank comes of age, it is impressed on the young man that he must βmarry moneyβ to overcome the debts of the estate.
Doctor Thorne is regarded highly among Trollopeβs works, with one prominent critic, Michael Sadleir, writing in 1927 of βthe sensational perfection of Doctor Thorne.β
A television adaptation of the book was produced by ITV and aired in March 2016, with a script written by Julian Fellowes, the writer of Gosford Park and Downton Abbey
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- Author: Anthony Trollope
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βI shall not think of holding her to her engagementβ βthat is, ifβ βI mean to say, she should have time at any rate for consideration.β
βOh, I understand,β said the doctor. βShe shall have time for consideration. How much shall we give her, squire? three minutes? Go up to her Frank: she is in the drawing-room.β
Frank went to the door, and then hesitated, and returned. βI could not do it,β said he. βI donβt think that I understand it all yet. I am so bewildered that I could not tell her;β and he sat down at the table, and began to sob with emotion.
βAnd she knows nothing of it?β said the squire.
βNot a word. I thought that I would keep the pleasure of telling her for Frank.β
βShe should not be left in suspense,β said the squire.
βCome, Frank, go up to her,β again urged the doctor. βYouβve been ready enough with your visits when you knew that you ought to stay away.β
βI cannot do it,β said Frank, after a pause of some moments; βnor is it right that I should. It would be taking advantage of her.β
βGo to her yourself, doctor; it is you that should do it,β said the squire.
After some further slight delay, the doctor got up, and did go upstairs. He, even, was half afraid of the task. βIt must be done,β he said to himself, as his heavy steps mounted the stairs. βBut how to tell it?β
When he entered, Mary was standing halfway up the room, as though she had risen to meet him. Her face was troubled, and her eyes were almost wild. The emotion, the hopes, the fears of that morning had almost been too much for her. She had heard the murmuring of the voices in the room below, and had known that one of them was that of her lover. Whether that discussion was to be for her good or ill she did not know; but she felt that further suspense would almost kill her. βI could wait for years,β she said to herself, βif I did but know. If I lost him, I suppose I should bear it, if I did but know.ββ βWell; she was going to know.
Her uncle met her in the middle of the room. His face was serious, though not sad; too serious to confirm her hopes at that moment of doubt. βWhat is it, uncle?β she said, taking one of his hands between both of her own. βWhat is it? Tell me.β And as she looked up into his face with her wild eyes, she almost frightened him.
βMary,β he said gravely, βyou have heard much, I know, of Sir Roger Scatcherdβs great fortune.β
βYes, yes, yes!β
βNow that poor Sir Louis is deadβ ββ
βWell, uncle, well?β
βIt has been leftβ ββ
βTo Frank! to Mr. Gresham, to the squire!β exclaimed Mary, who felt, with an agony of doubt, that this sudden accession of immense wealth might separate her still further from her lover.
βNo, Mary, not to the Greshams; but to yourself.β
βTo me!β she cried, and putting both her hands to her forehead, she seemed to be holding her temples together. βTo me!β
βYes, Mary; it is all your own now. To do as you like best with it allβ βall. May God, in His mercy, enable you to bear the burden, and lighten for you the temptation!β
She had so far moved as to find the nearest chair, and there she was now seated, staring at her uncle with fixed eyes. βUncle,β she said, βwhat does it mean?β Then he came, and sitting beside her, he explained, as best he could, the story of her birth, and her kinship with the Scatcherds. βAnd where is he, uncle?β she said. βWhy does he not come to me?β
βI wanted him to come, but he refused. They are both there now, the father and son; shall I fetch them?β
βFetch them! whom? The squire? No, uncle; but may we go to them?β
βSurely, Mary.β
βBut, uncleβ ββ
βYes, dearest.β
βIs it true? are you sure? For his sake, you know; not for my own. The squire, you knowβ βOh, uncle! I cannot go.β
βThey shall come to you.β
βNoβ βno. I have gone to him such hundreds of times; I will never allow that he shall be sent to me. But, uncle, is it true?β
The doctor, as he went downstairs, muttered something about Sir Abraham Haphazard, and Sir Rickety Giggs; but these great names were much thrown away upon poor Mary. The doctor entered the room first, and the heiress followed him with downcast eyes and timid steps. She was at first afraid to advance, but when she did look up, and saw Frank standing alone by the window, her lover restored her courage, and rushing up to him, she threw herself into his arms. βOh, Frank; my own Frank! my own Frank! we shall never be separated now.β
XLVII How the Bride Was Received, and Who Were Asked to the WeddingAnd thus after all did Frank perform his great duty; he did marry money; or rather, as the wedding has not yet taken place, and is, indeed, as yet hardly talked of, we should more properly say that he had engaged himself to marry money. And then, such a quantity of money! The Scatcherd wealth greatly exceeded the Dunstable wealth; so that our hero may be looked on as having performed his duties in a manner deserving the very highest commendation from all classes of the de Courcy connection.
And he received it. But that was nothing. That he should be fΓͺted by the de Courcys and Greshams, now that he was about to do his duty by his family in so exemplary a manner: that he should be patted on the back, now that he no longer meditated that vile crime which had been so abhorrent to his motherβs soul; this was only natural; this is hardly worthy of remark. But there was another to be fΓͺted, another person to be made a personage, another blessed human mortal about to
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