登陆注册
5584900000005

第5章

THE SOLID SIDE OF THE SCOTCH CHARACTER.

AT ten o'clock the next morning, Mr. Neal--waiting for the medical visit which he had himself appointed for that hour--looked at his watch, and discovered, to his amazement, that he was waiting in vain. It was close on eleven when the door opened at last, and the doctor entered the room.

"I appointed ten o'clock for your visit," said Mr. Neal. "In my country, a medical man is a punctual man.""In my country," returned the doctor, without the least ill-humor, "a medical man is exactly like other men--he is at the mercy of accidents. Pray grant me your pardon, sir, for being so long after my time; I have been detained by a very distressing case--the case of Mr. Armadale, whose traveling-carriage you passed on the road yesterday."Mr. Neal looked at his medical attendant with a sour surprise.

There was a latent anxiety in the doctor's eye, a latent preoccupation in the doctor's manner, which he was at a loss to account for. For a moment the two faces confronted each other silently, in marked national contrast--the Scotchman's, long and lean, hard and regular; the German's, plump and florid, soft and shapeless. One face looked as if it had never been young; the other, as if it would never grow old.

"Might I venture to remind you," said Mr. Neal, "that the case now under consideration is MY case, and not Mr. Armadale's?""Certainly," replied the doctor, still vacillating between the case he had come to see and the case he had just left. "You appear to be suffering from lameness; let me look at your foot."Mr. Neal's malady, however serious it might be in his own estimation, was of no extraordinary importance in a medical poi nt of view. He was suffering from a rheumatic affection of the ankle-joint. The necessary questions were asked and answered and the necessary baths were prescribed. In ten minutes the consultation was at an end, and the patient was waiting in significant silence for the medical adviser to take his leave.

"I cannot conceal from myself," said the doctor, rising, and hesitating a little, "that I am intruding on you. But I am compelled to beg your indulgence if I return to the subject of Mr. Armadale.""May I ask what compels you?"

"The duty which I owe as a Christian," answered the doctor, "to a dying man."Mr. Neal started. Those who touched his sense of religious duty touched the quickest sense in his nature.

"You have established your claim on my attention," he said, gravely. "My time is yours.""I will not abuse your kindness," replied the doctor, resuming his chair. "I will be as short as I can. Mr. Armadale's case is briefly this: He has passed the greater part of his life in the West Indies--a wild life, and a vicious life, by his own confession. Shortly after his marriage--now some three years since--the first symptoms of an approaching paralytic affection began to show themselves, and his medical advisers ordered him away to try the climate of Europe. Since leaving the West Indies he has lived principally in Italy, with no benefit to his health.

From Italy, before the last seizure attacked him, he removed to Switzerland, and from Switzerland he has been sent to this place.

So much I know from his doctor's report; the rest I can tell you from my own personal experience. Mr. Armadale has been sent to Wildbad too late: he is virtually a dead man. The paralysis is fast spreading upward, and disease of the lower part of the spine has already taken place. He can still move his hands a little, but he can hold nothing in his fingers. He can still articulate, but he may wake speechless to-morrow or next day. If I give him a week more to live, I give him what I honestly believe to be the utmost length of his span. At his own request I told him, as carefully and as tenderly as I could, what I have just told you.

The result was very distressing; the violence of the patient's agitation was a violence which I despair of describing to you. Itook the liberty of asking him whether his affairs were unsettled. Nothing of the sort. His will is in the hands of his executor in London, and he leaves his wife and child well provided for. My next question succeeded better; it hit the mark:

'Have you something on your mind to do before you die which is not done yet?' He gave a great gasp of relief, which said, as no words could have said it, Yes. 'Can I help you?' 'Yes. I have something to write that I _must_ write; can you make me hold a pen?'

"He might as well have asked me if I could perform a miracle. Icould only say No. 'If I dictate the words,' he went on, 'can you write what I tell you to write?' Once more I could only say No. Iunderstand a little English, but I can neither speak it nor write it. Mr. Armadale understands French when it is spoken (as I speak it to him) slowly, but he cannot express himself in that language; and of German he is totally ignorant. In this difficulty, I said, what any one else in my situation would have said: 'Why ask _me?_ there is Mrs. Armadale at your service in the next room.' Before I could get up from my chair to fetch her, he stopped me--not by words, but by a look of horror which fixed me, by main force of astonishment, in my place. 'Surely,' I said, 'your wife is the fittest person to write for you as you desire?'

'The last person under heaven!' he answered. 'What!' I said, 'you ask me, a foreigner and a stranger, to write words at your dictation which you keep a secret from your wife!' Conceive my astonishment when he answered me, without a moment's hesitation, 'Yes!' I sat lost; I sat silent. 'If _you_ can't write English,'

he said, 'find somebody who can.' I tried to remonstrate. He burst into a dreadful moaning cry--a dumb entreaty, like the entreaty of a dog. 'Hush! hush!' I said, 'I will find somebody.'

同类推荐
  • 六字咒王经

    六字咒王经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 广卓异记

    广卓异记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 玄珠歌

    玄珠歌

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • A Letter Concerning Toleration

    A Letter Concerning Toleration

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Their Silver Wedding Journey

    Their Silver Wedding Journey

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 我的地图不见了

    我的地图不见了

    一朝穿越,好在得了一个地图系统,可是有一天……
  • 万界无道

    万界无道

    叶无极修炼三生道经,拥有三位本尊,四种逆天至尊血脉!叶无极:我的目标是成为人皇,龙皇以及魔皇!一统三族,唯我独尊!
  • 愤怒的苹果

    愤怒的苹果

    九年前,亮气刚来的时候,书记王旗红嘻嘻哈哈陪着他,又是讲黄段子又是拍膀子亲热得了不得,还亲自卷了裤腿陪他过了南边的那条河,河水真凉。他们往南走了好远好远,南边都是坡地,留不住雨水,不好种庄稼。“这么大一片地我都想包了。”亮气指了指周围的坡地对书记王旗红说,书记王旗红说亮气你随便,这地你想怎么使唤就怎么使唤,就像使唤你老婆,你使劲使,不使劲使你就是个脓包!时间是什么?时间就是根利箭,“嗖”的一下子九年就过去了。
  • 他该死的甜美

    他该死的甜美

    “阿鸣阿鸣!你快看!林沐阳!是林沐阳!”“知道了,然后呢?”“哇,如果能跟这种男人在一起……啧啧啧,想想就好甜哦!”“……”宁鸣终于掀起眼皮看了一眼台上的沐浴在夕阳下的男人。“对不对!是不是!”注目半晌,某鸣终究是撇了撇嘴:“不知道,甜不甜的,我又没尝过。”
  • 农门丑妻逆袭攻略

    农门丑妻逆袭攻略

    【推荐新书《农家娇女福满多》】一场历练,李木槿再次醒来,成了石霞子沟有名的丑女。爹死娘改嫁,爷奶不爱,叔婶嫌弃,还要被卖。见此,李木槿撸撸袖子,开起了虐渣之路。当然,在虐渣的路上,李木槿还不忘种种田,致致富,朝着美好的康庄大道飞奔。
  • 不需要秒回

    不需要秒回

    本书收录了26个鲜活的段子,曰“把日子过得特二”;10篇逗哏的个人博客,曰“起哄架秧子”;还有31则“妖蛾子世界杯”,看准球盲王小柔如何施展她的“妖蛾子大法”,演绎2006年世界杯球赛。
  • 洛天依的汉国往事第一部

    洛天依的汉国往事第一部

    算是和汉语语音史(上古汉语)和建筑史(汉代建筑)相关的一个作品。当然,还是VocaloidChina的同人文。大致讲述的故事是上海市某洛姓文员醒来后突然发现自己身处BC122的时空,同时和周遭的人语言不通,且没有任何可以回去的途径时,她应该如何从零开始学习汉武帝时期的洛下方言,摆脱自己的黑户身份,并艰难地面对接下来降临在自己身上的命运的故事。每章都会或多或少地携带有关于语音史、方言学、古建筑的小知识,同时会有一些南北组和其他cp的狗粮。写得这么枯燥,有人看我就很高兴了,故本文永久免费。更新是定时的,大约每两到三天一更,每更5千字左右。不会鸽的。
  • 一念心动,一生绵延

    一念心动,一生绵延

    如果感情可以如程序一般设定重来,白晞一定会告诫自己,千万不要在那一天的那个时候遇到沈钦隽,更千万不要对这个冷酷的男人一见钟情。他用尽各种手段将她留在身边,只偶尔施舍一点可怜的温暖,却在她心甘情愿将一切都献给他的时候,冷冷地告诉她,他接近她只是一个阴谋,一切都是为了报复。她说:沈钦隽,你只是在伤害一个愿意相信你的人而已。当过往的真相水落石出,她却看不透,他决然的背影之后,掩盖的究竟是冷酷还是深情。这是一个关于暗恋与守护的故事。漫长的时光之中,谁曾因为一念的心动,甘愿让思念绵延自己的一生?
  • 巍巍上国

    巍巍上国

    巍巍上国,风谲云诡。要想赢过他们,只有比他们更残忍。
  • 罪恶终结1狂徒之惩

    罪恶终结1狂徒之惩

    梦境与现实,深陷其中之后究竟该怎样分析并跳出。有得必有失,得到的越丰厚,失去的也就越重要,当他追逐强大力量的同时,他所珍视之人已被神明盯上!从精神病院接出的当天就奉命前往神秘的SoPhia号执行代号为“清扫”的任务,他的首战最终敌人竟然是高高在上的“神明!”当他察觉之时,为时已晚,他们驾驶着被元素魔法加固的SoPhia号闯进神之领域,他们在“神”的地盘与“神”的子嗣展开厮杀。充满戾气的红瞳之人释放猛兽野性,大杀特杀,直至最后,“天神降临”……