My first interview with Dr. James
Winter was under dramatic circumstances. It
occurred at two in the morning in the bedroom of an
old country house. I kicked him twice on the
white waistcoat and knocked off his gold spectacles,
while he with the aid of a female accomplice stifled
my angry cries in a flannel petticoat and thrust me
into a warm bath. I am told that one of my parents,
who happened to be present, remarked in a whisper
that there was nothing the matter with my lungs.
I cannot recall how Dr. Winter looked at the time,
for I had other things to think of, but his description
of my own appearance is far from flattering.
A fluffy head, a body like a trussed goose, very
bandy legs, and feet with the soles turned inwards those
are the main items which he can remember.
From this time onwards the epochs
of my life were the periodical assaults which Dr.
Winter made upon me. He vaccinated me; he cut
me for an abscess; he blistered me for mumps.
It was a world of peace and he the one dark cloud
that threatened. But at last there came a time
of real illness a time when I lay for months
together inside my wickerwork-basket bed, and then
it was that I learned that that hard face could relax,
that those country-made creaking boots could steal
very gently to a bedside, and that that rough voice
could thin into a whisper when it spoke to a sick
child.
And now the child is himself a medical
man, and yet Dr. Winter is the same as ever.
I can see no change since first I can remember him,
save that perhaps the brindled hair is a trifle whiter,
and the huge shoulders a little more bowed.
He is a very tall man, though he loses a couple of
inches from his stoop. That big back of his has
curved itself over sick beds until it has set in that
shape. His face is of a walnut brown, and tells
of long winter drives over bleak country roads, with
the wind and the rain in his teeth. It looks
smooth at a little distance, but as you approach him
you see that it is shot with innumerable fine wrinkles
like a last year’s apple. They are hardly
to be seen when he is in repose; but when he laughs
his face breaks like a starred glass, and you realise
then that though he looks old, he must be older than
he looks.
How old that is I could never discover.
I have often tried to find out, and have struck his
stream as high up as George IV and even the Regency,
but without ever getting quite to the source.
His mind must have been open to impressions very
early, but it must also have closed early, for the
politics of the day have little interest for him, while
he is fiercely excited about questions which are entirely
prehistoric. He shakes his head when he speaks
of the first Reform Bill and expresses grave doubts
as to its wisdom, and I have heard him, when he was
warmed by a glass of wine, say bitter things about
Robert Peel and his abandoning of the Corn Laws.
The death of that statesman brought the history of
England to a definite close, and Dr. Winter refers
to everything which had happened since then as to
an insignificant anticlimax.
But it was only when I had myself
become a medical man that I was able to appreciate
how entirely he is a survival of a past generation.
He had learned his medicine under that obsolete and
forgotten system by which a youth was apprenticed
to a surgeon, in the days when the study of anatomy
was often approached through a violated grave.
His views upon his own profession are even more reactionary
than in politics. Fifty years have brought him
little and deprived him of less. Vaccination
was well within the teaching of his youth, though I
think he has a secret preference for inoculation.
Bleeding he would practise freely but for public
opinion. Chloroform he regards as a dangerous
innovation, and he always clicks with his tongue when
it is mentioned. He has even been known to say
vain things about Laennec, and to refer to the stethoscope
as “a new-fangled French toy.” He
carries one in his hat out of deference to the expectations
of his patients, but he is very hard of hearing, so
that it makes little difference whether he uses it
or not.
He reads, as a duty, his weekly medical
paper, so that he has a general idea as to the advance
of modern science. He always persists in looking
upon it as a huge and rather ludicrous experiment.
The germ theory of disease set him chuckling for
a long time, and his favourite joke in the sick room
was to say, “Shut the door or the germs will
be getting in.” As to the Darwinian theory,
it struck him as being the crowning joke of the century.
“The children in the nursery and the ancestors
in the stable,” he would cry, and laugh the tears
out of his eyes.
He is so very much behind the day
that occasionally, as things move round in their usual
circle, he finds himself, to his bewilderment, in
the front of the fashion. Dietetic treatment,
for example, had been much in vogue in his youth,
and he has more practical knowledge of it than any
one whom I have met. Massage, too, was familiar
to him when it was new to our generation. He
had been trained also at a time when instruments were
in a rudimentary state, and when men learned to trust
more to their own fingers. He has a model surgical
hand, muscular in the palm, tapering in the fingers,
“with an eye at the end of each.”
I shall not easily forget how Dr. Patterson and I
cut Sir John Sirwell, the County Member, and were
unable to find the stone. It was a horrible
moment. Both our careers were at stake.
And then it was that Dr. Winter, whom we had asked
out of courtesy to be present, introduced into the
wound a finger which seemed to our excited senses to
be about nine inches long, and hooked out the stone
at the end of it. “It’s always well
to bring one in your waistcoat-pocket,” said
he with a chuckle, “but I suppose you youngsters
are above all that.”
We made him president of our branch
of the British Medical Association, but he resigned
after the first meeting. “The young men
are too much for me,” he said. “I
don’t understand what they are talking about.”
Yet his patients do very well. He has the healing
touch that magnetic thing which defies
explanation or analysis, but which is a very evident
fact none the less. His mere presence leaves
the patient with more hopefulness and vitality.
The sight of disease affects him as dust does a careful
housewife. It makes him angry and impatient.
“Tut, tut, this will never do!” he cries,
as he takes over a new case. He would shoo Death
out of the room as though he were an intrusive hen.
But when the intruder refuses to be dislodged, when
the blood moves more slowly and the eyes grow dimmer,
then it is that Dr. Winter is of more avail than all
the drugs in his surgery. Dying folk cling to
his hand as if the presence of his bulk and vigour
gives them more courage to face the change; and that
kindly, windbeaten face has been the last earthly
impression which many a sufferer has carried into the
unknown.
When Dr. Patterson and I both
of us young, energetic, and up-to-date settled
in the district, we were most cordially received by
the old doctor, who would have been only too happy
to be relieved of some of his patients. The
patients themselves, however, followed their own inclinations which
is a reprehensible way that patients have so
that we remained neglected, with our modern instruments
and our latest alkaloids, while he was serving out
senna and calomel to all the countryside. We
both of us loved the old fellow, but at the same time,
in the privacy of our own intimate conversations, we
could not help commenting upon this deplorable lack
of judgment. “It’s all very well
for the poorer people,” said Patterson.
“But after all the educated classes have a
right to expect that their medical man will know the
difference between a mitral murmur and a bronchitic
rale. It’s the judicial frame of mind,
not the sympathetic, which is the essential one.”
I thoroughly agreed with Patterson
in what he said. It happened, however, that
very shortly afterwards the epidemic of influenza broke
out, and we were all worked to death. One morning
I met Patterson on my round, and found him looking
rather pale and fagged out. He made the same
remark about me. I was, in fact, feeling far
from well, and I lay upon the sofa all the afternoon
with a splitting headache and pains in every joint.
As evening closed in, I could no longer disguise the
fact that the scourge was upon me, and I felt that
I should have medical advice without delay.
It was of Patterson, naturally, that I thought, but
somehow the idea of him had suddenly become repugnant
to me. I thought of his cold, critical attitude,
of his endless questions, of his tests and his tappings.
I wanted something more soothing something
more genial.
“Mrs. Hudson,” said I
to my housekeeper, “would you kindly run along
to old Dr. Winter and tell him that I should be obliged
to him if he would step round?”
She was back with an answer presently.
“Dr. Winter will come round in an hour or so,
sir; but he has just been called in to attend Dr.
Patterson.”