Dr. James Ripley was always looked
upon as an exceedingly lucky dog by all of the profession
who knew him. His father had preceded him in
a practice in the village of Hoyland, in the north
of Hampshire, and all was ready for him on the very
first day that the law allowed him to put his name
at the foot of a prescription. In a few years
the old gentleman retired, and settled on the South
Coast, leaving his son in undisputed possession of
the whole country side. Save for Dr. Horton,
near Basingstoke, the young surgeon had a clear run
of six miles in every direction, and took his fifteen
hundred pounds a year, though, as is usual in country
practices, the stable swallowed up most of what the
consulting-room earned.
Dr. James Ripley was two-and-thirty
years of age, reserved, learned, unmarried, with set,
rather stern features, and a thinning of the dark
hair upon the top of his head, which was worth quite
a hundred a year to him. He was particularly
happy in his management of ladies. He had caught
the tone of bland sternness and decisive suavity which
dominates without offending. Ladies, however,
were not equally happy in their management of him.
Professionally, he was always at their service.
Socially, he was a drop of quicksilver. In vain
the country mammas spread out their simple lures in
front of him. Dances and picnics were not to
his taste, and he preferred during his scanty leisure
to shut himself up in his study, and to bury himself
in Virchow’s Archives and the professional journals.
Study was a passion with him, and
he would have none of the rust which often gathers
round a country practitioner. It was his ambition
to keep his knowledge as fresh and bright as at the
moment when he had stepped out of the examination
hall. He prided himself on being able at a moment’s
notice to rattle off the seven ramifications of some
obscure artery, or to give the exact percentage of
any physiological compound. After a long day’s
work he would sit up half the night performing iridectomies
and extractions upon the sheep’s eyes sent in
by the village butcher, to the horror of his housekeeper,
who had to remove the debris next morning. His
love for his work was the one fanaticism which found
a place in his dry, precise nature.
It was the more to his credit that
he should keep up to date in his knowledge, since
he had no competition to force him to exertion.
In the seven years during which he had practised
in Hoyland three rivals had pitted themselves against
him, two in the village itself and one in the neighbouring
hamlet of Lower Hoyland. Of these one had sickened
and wasted, being, as it was said, himself the only
patient whom he had treated during his eighteen months
of ruralising. A second had bought a fourth
share of a Basingstoke practice, and had departed honourably,
while a third had vanished one September night, leaving
a gutted house and an unpaid drug bill behind him.
Since then the district had become a monopoly, and
no one had dared to measure himself against the established
fame of the Hoyland doctor.
It was, then, with a feeling of some
surprise and considerable curiosity that on driving
through Lower Hoyland one morning he perceived that
the new house at the end of the village was occupied,
and that a virgin brass plate glistened upon the swinging
gate which faced the high road. He pulled up
his fifty guinea chestnut mare and took a good look
at it. “Verrinder Smith, M. D.,”
was printed across it in very neat, small lettering.
The last man had had letters half a foot long, with
a lamp like a fire-station. Dr. James Ripley
noted the difference, and deduced from it that the
new-comer might possibly prove a more formidable opponent.
He was convinced of it that evening when he came
to consult the current medical directory. By
it he learned that Dr. Verrinder Smith was the holder
of superb degrees, that he had studied with distinction
at Edinburgh, Paris, Berlin, and Vienna, and finally
that he had been awarded a gold medal and the Lee Hopkins
scholarship for original research, in recognition of
an exhaustive inquiry into the functions of the anterior
spinal nerve roots. Dr. Ripley passed his fingers
through his thin hair in bewilderment as he read his
rival’s record. What on earth could so
brilliant a man mean by putting up his plate in a
little Hampshire hamlet.
But Dr. Ripley furnished himself with
an explanation to the riddle. No doubt Dr. Verrinder
Smith had simply come down there in order to pursue
some scientific research in peace and quiet.
The plate was up as an address rather than as an invitation
to patients. Of course, that must be the true
explanation. In that case the presence of this
brilliant neighbour would be a splendid thing for
his own studies. He had often longed for some
kindred mind, some steel on which he might strike his
flint. Chance had brought it to him, and he rejoiced
exceedingly.
And this joy it was which led him
to take a step which was quite at variance with his
usual habits. It is the custom for a new-comer
among medical men to call first upon the older, and
the etiquette upon the subject is strict. Dr.
Ripley was pedantically exact on such points, and
yet he deliberately drove over next day and called
upon Dr. Verrinder Smith. Such a waiving of
ceremony was, he felt, a gracious act upon his part,
and a fit prelude to the intimate relations which he
hoped to establish with his neighbour.
The house was neat and well appointed,
and Dr. Ripley was shown by a smart maid into a dapper
little consulting room. As he passed in he noticed
two or three parasols and a lady’s sun bonnet
hanging in the hall. It was a pity that his
colleague should be a married man. It would
put them upon a different footing, and interfere with
those long evenings of high scientific talk which
he had pictured to himself. On the other hand,
there was much in the consulting room to please him.
Elaborate instruments, seen more often in hospitals
than in the houses of private practitioners, were
scattered about. A sphygmograph stood upon the
table and a gasometer-like engine, which was new to
Dr. Ripley, in the corner. A book-case full
of ponderous volumes in French and German, paper-covered
for the most part, and varying in tint from the shell
to the yoke of a duck’s egg, caught his wandering
eyes, and he was deeply absorbed in their titles when
the door opened suddenly behind him. Turning
round, he found himself facing a little woman, whose
plain, palish face was remarkable only for a pair of
shrewd, humorous eyes of a blue which had two shades
too much green in it. She held a pince-nez
in her left hand, and the doctor’s card in her
right.
“How do you do, Dr. Ripley?” said she.
“How do you do, madam?”
returned the visitor. “Your husband is
perhaps out?”
“I am not married,” said she simply.
“Oh, I beg your pardon! I meant the doctor Dr.
Verrinder Smith.”
“I am Dr. Verrinder Smith.”
Dr. Ripley was so surprised that he
dropped his hat and forgot to pick it up again.
“What!” he grasped, “the Lee Hopkins
prizeman! You!”
He had never seen a woman doctor before,
and his whole conservative soul rose up in revolt
at the idea. He could not recall any Biblical
injunction that the man should remain ever the doctor
and the woman the nurse, and yet he felt as if a blasphemy
had been committed. His face betrayed his feelings
only too clearly.
“I am sorry to disappoint you,” said the
lady drily.
“You certainly have surprised me,” he
answered, picking up his hat.
“You are not among our champions, then?”
“I cannot say that the movement has my approval.”
“And why?”
“I should much prefer not to discuss it.”
“But I am sure you will answer a lady’s
question.”
“Ladies are in danger of losing
their privileges when they usurp the place of the
other sex. They cannot claim both.”
“Why should a woman not earn her bread by her
brains?”
Dr. Ripley felt irritated by the quiet
manner in which the lady cross-questioned him.
“I should much prefer not to be led into a discussion,
Miss Smith.”
“Dr. Smith,” she interrupted.
“Well, Dr. Smith! But
if you insist upon an answer, I must say that I do
not think medicine a suitable profession for women
and that I have a personal objection to masculine
ladies.”
It was an exceedingly rude speech,
and he was ashamed of it the instant after he had
made it. The lady, however, simply raised her
eyebrows and smiled.
“It seems to me that you are
begging the question,” said she. “Of
course, if it makes women masculine that would
be a considerable deterioration.”
It was a neat little counter, and
Dr. Ripley, like a pinked fencer, bowed his acknowledgment.
“I must go,” said he.
“I am sorry that we cannot come
to some more friendly conclusion since we are to be
neighbours,” she remarked.
He bowed again, and took a step towards the door.
“It was a singular coincidence,”
she continued, “that at the instant that you
called I was reading your paper on ‘Locomotor
Ataxia,’ in the Lancet.”
“Indeed,” said he drily.
“I thought it was a very able monograph.”
“You are very good.”
“But the views which you attribute
to Professor Pitres, of Bordeaux, have been repudiated
by him.”
“I have his pamphlet of 1890,” said Dr.
Ripley angrily.
“Here is his pamphlet of 1891.”
She picked it from among a litter of periodicals.
“If you have time to glance your eye down this
passage ”
Dr. Ripley took it from her and shot
rapidly through the paragraph which she indicated.
There was no denying that it completely knocked the
bottom out of his own article. He threw it down,
and with another frigid bow he made for the door.
As he took the reins from the groom he glanced round
and saw that the lady was standing at her window, and
it seemed to him that she was laughing heartily.
All day the memory of this interview
haunted him. He felt that he had come very badly
out of it. She had showed herself to be his superior
on his own pet subject. She had been courteous
while he had been rude, self-possessed when he had
been angry. And then, above all, there was her
presence, her monstrous intrusion to rankle in his
mind. A woman doctor had been an abstract thing
before, repugnant but distant. Now she was there
in actual practice, with a brass plate up just like
his own, competing for the same patients. Not
that he feared competition, but he objected to this
lowering of his ideal of womanhood. She could
not be more than thirty, and had a bright, mobile face,
too. He thought of her humorous eyes, and of
her strong, well-turned chin. It revolted him
the more to recall the details of her education.
A man, of course, could come through such an ordeal
with all his purity, but it was nothing short of shameless
in a woman.
But it was not long before he learned
that even her competition was a thing to be feared.
The novelty of her presence had brought a few curious
invalids into her consulting rooms, and, once there,
they had been so impressed by the firmness of her
manner and by the singular, new-fashioned instruments
with which she tapped, and peered, and sounded, that
it formed the core of their conversation for weeks
afterwards. And soon there were tangible proofs
of her powers upon the country side. Farmer
Eyton, whose callous ulcer had been quietly spreading
over his shin for years back under a gentle regime
of zinc ointment, was painted round with blistering
fluid, and found, after three blasphemous nights,
that his sore was stimulated into healing. Mrs.
Crowder, who had always regarded the birthmark upon
her second daughter Eliza as a sign of the indignation
of the Creator at a third helping of raspberry tart
which she had partaken of during a critical period,
learned that, with the help of two galvanic needles,
the mischief was not irreparable. In a month
Dr. Verrinder Smith was known, and in two she was
famous.
Occasionally, Dr. Ripley met her as
he drove upon his rounds. She had started a
high dogcart, taking the reins herself, with a little
tiger behind. When they met he invariably raised
his hat with punctilious politeness, but the grim
severity of his face showed how formal was the courtesy.
In fact, his dislike was rapidly deepening into absolute
detestation. “The unsexed woman,”
was the description of her which he permitted himself
to give to those of his patients who still remained
staunch. But, indeed, they were a rapidly-decreasing
body, and every day his pride was galled by the news
of some fresh defection. The lady had somehow
impressed the country folk with almost superstitious
belief in her power, and from far and near they flocked
to her consulting room.
But what galled him most of all was,
when she did something which he had pronounced to
be impracticable. For all his knowledge he lacked
nerve as an operator, and usually sent his worst cases
up to London. The lady, however, had no weakness
of the sort, and took everything that came in her
way. It was agony to him to hear that she was
about to straighten little Alec Turner’s club
foot, and right at the fringe of the rumour came a
note from his mother, the rector’s wife, asking
him if he would be so good as to act as chloroformist.
It would be inhumanity to refuse, as there was no
other who could take the place, but it was gall and
wormwood to his sensitive nature. Yet, in spite
of his vexation, he could not but admire the dexterity
with which the thing was done. She handled the
little wax-like foot so gently, and held the tiny
tenotomy knife as an artist holds his pencil.
One straight insertion, one snick of a tendon, and
it was all over without a stain upon the white towel
which lay beneath. He had never seen anything
more masterly, and he had the honesty to say so, though
her skill increased his dislike of her. The
operation spread her fame still further at his expense,
and self-preservation was added to his other grounds
for detesting her. And this very detestation
it was which brought matters to a curious climax.
One winter’s night, just as
he was rising from his lonely dinner, a groom came
riding down from Squire Faircastle’s, the richest
man in the district, to say that his daughter had
scalded her hand, and that medical help was needed
on the instant. The coachman had ridden for
the lady doctor, for it mattered nothing to the Squire
who came as long as it were speedily. Dr. Ripley
rushed from his surgery with the determination that
she should not effect an entrance into this stronghold
of his if hard driving on his part could prevent it.
He did not even wait to light his lamps, but sprang
into his gig and flew off as fast as hoof could rattle.
He lived rather nearer to the Squire’s than
she did, and was convinced that he could get there
well before her.
And so he would but for that whimsical
element of chance, which will for ever muddle up the
affairs of this world and dumbfound the prophets.
Whether it came from the want of his lights, or from
his mind being full of the thoughts of his rival,
he allowed too little by half a foot in taking the
sharp turn upon the Basingstoke road. The empty
trap and the frightened horse clattered away into the
darkness, while the Squire’s groom crawled out
of the ditch into which he had been shot. He
struck a match, looked down at his groaning companion,
and then, after the fashion of rough, strong men when
they see what they have not seen before, he was very
sick.
The doctor raised himself a little
on his elbow in the glint of the match. He caught
a glimpse of something white and sharp bristling through
his trouser leg half way down the shin.
“Compound!” he groaned.
“A three months’ job,” and fainted.
When he came to himself the groom
was gone, for he had scudded off to the Squire’s
house for help, but a small page was holding a gig-lamp
in front of his injured leg, and a woman, with an
open case of polished instruments gleaming in the
yellow light, was deftly slitting up his trouser with
a crooked pair of scissors.
“It’s all right, doctor,”
said she soothingly. “I am so sorry about
it. You can have Dr. Horton to-morrow, but I
am sure you will allow me to help you to-night.
I could hardly believe my eyes when I saw you by
the roadside.”
“The groom has gone for help,” groaned
the sufferer.
“When it comes we can move you
into the gig. A little more light, John!
So! Ah, dear, dear, we shall have laceration
unless we reduce this before we move you. Allow
me to give you a whiff of chloroform, and I have no
doubt that I can secure it sufficiently to ”
Dr. Ripley never heard the end of
that sentence. He tried to raise a hand and
to murmur something in protest, but a sweet smell was
in his nostrils, and a sense of rich peace and lethargy
stole over his jangled nerves. Down he sank,
through clear, cool water, ever down and down into
the green shadows beneath, gently, without effort,
while the pleasant chiming of a great belfry rose
and fell in his ears. Then he rose again, up
and up, and ever up, with a terrible tightness about
his temples, until at last he shot out of those green
shadows and was in the light once more. Two
bright, shining, golden spots gleamed before his dazed
eyes. He blinked and blinked before he could
give a name to them. They were only the two
brass balls at the end posts of his bed, and he was
lying in his own little room, with a head like a cannon
ball, and a leg like an iron bar. Turning his
eyes, he saw the calm face of Dr. Verrinder Smith
looking down at him.
“Ah, at last!” said she.
“I kept you under all the way home, for I knew
how painful the jolting would be. It is in good
position now with a strong side splint. I have
ordered a morphia draught for you. Shall I tell
your groom to ride for Dr. Horton in the morning?”
“I should prefer that you should
continue the case,” said Dr. Ripley feebly,
and then, with a half hysterical laugh, “You
have all the rest of the parish as patients, you know,
so you may as well make the thing complete by having
me also.”
It was not a very gracious speech,
but it was a look of pity and not of anger which shone
in her eyes as she turned away from his bedside.
Dr. Ripley had a brother, William,
who was assistant surgeon at a London hospital, and
who was down in Hampshire within a few hours of his
hearing of the accident. He raised his brows
when he heard the details.
“What! You are pestered with one of those!”
he cried.
“I don’t know what I should have done
without her.”
“I’ve no doubt she’s an excellent
nurse.”
“She knows her work as well as you or I.”
“Speak for yourself, James,”
said the London man with a sniff. “But
apart from that, you know that the principle of the
thing is all wrong.”
“You think there is nothing to be said on the
other side?”
“Good heavens! do you?”
“Well, I don’t know.
It struck me during the night that we may have been
a little narrow in our views.”
“Nonsense, James. It’s
all very fine for women to win prizes in the lecture
room, but you know as well as I do that they are no
use in an emergency. Now I warrant that this
woman was all nerves when she was setting your leg.
That reminds me that I had better just take a look
at it and see that it is all right.”
“I would rather that you did
not undo it,” said the patient. “I
have her assurance that it is all right.”
Brother William was deeply shocked.
“Of course, if a woman’s
assurance is of more value than the opinion of the
assistant surgeon of a London hospital, there is nothing
more to be said,” he remarked.
“I should prefer that you did
not touch it,” said the patient firmly, and
Dr. William went back to London that evening in a huff.
The lady, who had heard of his coming,
was much surprised on learning his departure.
“We had a difference upon a
point of professional etiquette,” said Dr. James,
and it was all the explanation he would vouchsafe.
For two long months Dr. Ripley was
brought in contact with his rival every day, and he
learned many things which he had not known before.
She was a charming companion, as well as a most assiduous
doctor. Her short presence during the long,
weary day was like a flower in a sand waste.
What interested him was precisely what interested
her, and she could meet him at every point upon equal
terms. And yet under all her learning and her
firmness ran a sweet, womanly nature, peeping out in
her talk, shining in her greenish eyes, showing itself
in a thousand subtle ways which the dullest of men
could read. And he, though a bit of a prig and
a pedant, was by no means dull, and had honesty enough
to confess when he was in the wrong.
“I don’t know how to apologise
to you,” he said in his shame-faced fashion
one day, when he had progressed so far as to be able
to sit in an arm-chair with his leg upon another one;
“I feel that I have been quite in the wrong.”
“Why, then?”
“Over this woman question.
I used to think that a woman must inevitably lose
something of her charm if she took up such studies.”
“Oh, you don’t think they
are necessarily unsexed, then?” she cried, with
a mischievous smile.
“Please don’t recall my idiotic expression.”
“I feel so pleased that I should
have helped in changing your views. I think
that it is the most sincere compliment that I have
ever had paid me.”
“At any rate, it is the truth,”
said he, and was happy all night at the remembrance
of the flush of pleasure which made her pale face look
quite comely for the instant.
For, indeed, he was already far past
the stage when he would acknowledge her as the equal
of any other woman. Already he could not disguise
from himself that she had become the one woman.
Her dainty skill, her gentle touch, her sweet presence,
the community of their tastes, had all united to hopelessly
upset his previous opinions. It was a dark day
for him now when his convalescence allowed her to miss
a visit, and darker still that other one which he
saw approaching when all occasion for her visits would
be at an end. It came round at last, however,
and he felt that his whole life’s fortune would
hang upon the issue of that final interview.
He was a direct man by nature, so he laid his hand
upon hers as it felt for his pulse, and he asked her
if she would be his wife.
“What, and unite the practices?” said
she.
He started in pain and anger.
“Surely you do not attribute
any such base motive to me!” he cried.
“I love you as unselfishly as ever a woman was
loved.”
“No, I was wrong. It was
a foolish speech,” said she, moving her chair
a little back, and tapping her stethoscope upon her
knee. “Forget that I ever said it.
I am so sorry to cause you any disappointment, and
I appreciate most highly the honour which you do me,
but what you ask is quite impossible.”
With another woman he might have urged
the point, but his instincts told him that it was
quite useless with this one. Her tone of voice
was conclusive. He said nothing, but leaned back
in his chair a stricken man.
“I am so sorry,” she said
again. “If I had known what was passing
in your mind I should have told you earlier that I
intended to devote my life entirely to science.
There are many women with a capacity for marriage,
but few with a taste for biology. I will remain
true to my own line, then. I came down here
while waiting for an opening in the Paris Physiological
Laboratory. I have just heard that there is a
vacancy for me there, and so you will be troubled no
more by my intrusion upon your practice. I have
done you an injustice just as you did me one.
I thought you narrow and pedantic, with no good quality.
I have learned during your illness to appreciate you
better, and the recollection of our friendship will
always be a very pleasant one to me.”
And so it came about that in a very
few weeks there was only one doctor in Hoyland.
But folks noticed that the one had aged many years
in a few months, that a weary sadness lurked always
in the depths of his blue eyes, and that he was less
concerned than ever with the eligible young ladies
whom chance, or their careful country mammas, placed
in his way.