With us there was a Doctor of Physic:
In all this world ne was there none him like,
To speak of physic and of surgery.
He knew the cause of every malady,
Were it of cold, or hot, or moist, or dry,
And where engendered, and of what humor:
He was a very perfect practiser.
The cause y know, and of his harm the root,
Anon he gave to the sick man his boot.
Chaucer.
The first care of the faithful Peena
or Esther, was to seek the doctor. She found
him at home, and was instantly admitted to his presence.
“Queen Esther,” he exclaimed,
the moment he saw her, “is it thou? Welcome,
descendant of a line of kings. Would’st
like some cider?” He spoke the word “cider”
like the Indians, with a rising inflection on the
last syllable. It was an offer no Indian could
resist, and the squaw answered simply in the affirmative.
From a pitcher of the grateful beverage, which shortly
before had been brought into the room, and which,
indeed, suggested the offer, the doctor filled a foaming
glass, and the squaw was not long in draining its contents,
after which she delivered herself of her errand.
“Esther,” exclaimed the
doctor, rising and hastening to collect his instruments
and medicine pouch, “thou hast circumvented me.
Why did you not tell me before? Here have I been
pouring cider into your royal gullet, when I should
have hastened to take a bullet out of some plebeian
carcass. Can you tell me the name of the wounded
man?”
The squaw shook her head, and only
said, “Esther not know.”
By this time his preparations were
completed, which he had not allowed the conversation
to interrupt, and closely followed by the woman, he
hastened to the wharf. Here casting an eye to
the flys that waved from the masts of some of the
vessels, and observing the wind was fair, he rejected
her offer to take him in the canoe, and throwing himself
into a little sail-boat, was soon busily engaged in
untying the sails. While thus employed a voice
saluted his ears:
“Why, doctor, what is in the wind now?”
The person who thus addressed him
was a young man of probably not more than twenty-five
years of age. His dress indicated that he belonged
to the wealthier class of citizens, and there was
something pleasing in his manners and address.
“Glad to see you, William,”
said the doctor. “I want a crew; come,
ship for a cruise.”
“But where away, doctor?”
“To Holden’s island, to
visit a wounded man. Jump aboard, and tend jib-sheets.”
By this time the sails were hoisted,
and, the young man complying with the invitation,
the little craft was soon under weigh, and rapidly
proceeding down the river. The distance was only
three or four miles, and quickly passed over.
They were met on the beach by Holden, to whom the
gentlemen were both known, but he was unable to inform
them of the name of the wounded man. As soon
as the doctor beheld him, however, he exclaimed:
“It is Mr. Pownal. God
forbid the hurt should be serious.”
The countenance of the doctor’s
companion, and the few words he uttered, denoted also
recognition of the stranger.
“So, my poor fellow,”
said the doctor, as the sufferer extended a hand,
and expressed in a few words his pleasure at the coming
of the two, “that is enough, I claim a monopoly
of the talking.”
He proceeded at once to examine the
wound, which he did with great care and in silence.
He found, as Holden had said, that the charge had
only grazed the surface, tearing the flesh from the
side up to the shoulder, pretty deeply, indeed, but
making an ugly, rather than a dangerous wound.
After the task was completed, and lint and fresh bandages
were applied, the doctor sunk with a sigh, as of relief,
upon a chair, and assured the young man that he only
needed rest for the present, and in a day or two might
return to his friends.
“I would rather lose six ordinary
patients than you, Tom Pownal,” he said.
“Why you are my beau ideal of a merchant, the
Ionic capital of the pillar of trade. Now, let
not your mind be
’Tossing
on the ocean;
There, where your argosies with portly
sail,
Like signiors and rich burghers on the
flood;
Or, as it were the pageants of the sea,
Do overpower the petty traffickers.’
Quiet, my dear boy, both of mind and
body, are your indispensables. I want you
to understand that:
’I
tell thee what, Antonio
love thee, and It is my love that speaks.’”
Pownal promised to be very obedient,
in consideration whereof the doctor guaranteed he
should receive great satisfaction from his wound.
“You shall see for yourself,” he said,
“how beautifully it will heal. To a scientific
eye, and under my instruction you shall get one, there
is something delightful in witnessing the granulations.
We may say of Nature, as Dr. Watts sings of the honey-bee:
’How skillfully she builds her cell,
How neat she stores the wax!’
I consider you a fortunate fellow.”
The young men were obliged to smile
at the doctor’s way of viewing the subject;
but he paid little attention to their mirth.
“And I will remain, meanwhile,
with you,” said William Bernard, which was the
name of the gentleman who had accompanied the physician,
addressing himself to Pownal, “if our good friend,” and
here he looked at Holden “has no
objection.”
The Recluse signified his assent;
and Pownal, thanking his friend, the doctor gave his
sanction to the arrangement.
“It will do you no harm, William,”
he said, “to rough it for a night or two, and
you will prove yourself thereby of a different stamp
from Timon’s friends.” And here the
doctor, who loved to quote poetry, especially Shakspeare’s,
better than to administer medicine, indulged again
in his favorite habit:
“’As
we do turn our backs
From our companion thrown into his grave,
So his familiars, to his buried fortunes,
Slink all away; leave their false vows
with him,
Like empty purses picked, and his poor
self
A dedicated beggar to the air.’
But, Mr. Holden, lend me thy ears
a moment, and thy tongue, too, if you please, for
you must tell me how this happened. I do not care
to disturb Pownal with the inquiry.”
So saying, he walked out of the chamber,
followed by the Recluse.
“Tell me first,” said
Holden, as they stood in the open air, “what
thou thinkest of the wound.”
“Ha!” cried the doctor,
“’tis not so deep as a well nor so wide
as a church door; but ’tis enough ’twill
serve.”
“What!” exclaimed the
Recluse, “hast thou been deceiving the boy!
But no, thou art incapable of that; and, besides,
I have seen too many wounds to apprehend danger from
this.”
“I see, friend, you have read
Shakspeare to some purpose,” cried the doctor;
“but know that I spoke not in the sense in which
Mercutio speaks of the wound that Tybalt gave him.
My mirth is not so grave as poor Mercutio’s.
Look you, now, I told you but the simple truth, and
what your own eyes have seen. The wound is
not so deep as a well, nor so wide as a church
door. If it were admitting the physical
possibility Pownal would be a monster to
look at, and no dressings of mine would be of any
use. And it is enough, too. You would not
have it more. Besides, ’twill serve; that
is, to keep him a day or two in your cabin. And
herein consists one of the innumerable excellences
of Shakspeare. Every sentence is as full of matter
as my saddle-bags of medicine. Why, I will engage
to pick out as many meanings in each as there are
plums in a pudding. But, friend, I am sure you
must have a copy. Let me see it.”
“I know little of these vanities,”
replied Holden. “In my giddy youth, I drank
such follies, even as the ass sucketh up the east wind.
But it pleased the Lord to open mine eyes. In
thoughts from the visions of the night,” he
continued and his eyes shone brighter, and
his stature seemed to increase “when
deep sleep falleth on men, fear came upon me and trembling,
which made all my bones to shake. Then a vision
passed before me, and the hair of my flesh stood up.
It stood still, but I could not discern the form thereof:
an image was before mine eyes there was
silence, and then I heard a voice saying, ’Behold,
I come quickly; watch and pray, for thou knowest not
the day nor the hour!’ I was not disobedient
to the heavenly warning, and thenceforth the pomps
and vanities of the world have been as the dust beneath
my feet.”
This was not the first time that the
doctor heard the Recluse speak of his peculiar opinions;
but, although always ready to avow and dilate upon
them when others were willing to listen, he had uniformly
manifested an unwillingness to allude to himself or
the incidents of his life. Whenever, heretofore,
as sometimes happened, the curiosity of his auditors
led the conversation in that direction, he had invariably
evaded all hints and repulsed every inquiry. But
his mood seemed different to-day. Elmer was a
friend whom Holden highly prized, and he could therefore
speak the more freely in his presence; but this is
not sufficient to account for the dropping of his reserve.
We know no other explanation than that there are times
when the heart of every one is opened, and longs to
unburden itself, and this was one of them that unsealed
the lips of the Solitary.
“Is it long since the revelation?” inquired
the doctor.
“Too long,” said Holden,
“did I wander in the paths of sin, and in forgetfulness
of my God, and my youth was wasted in that which satisfieth
not, neither doth it profit. My heart was very
hard, and it rose up in rebellion against the Lord.
Then it pleased Him (blessed be His holy name) to
bray me in the mortar of affliction, and to crush
me between the upper and the nether millstone.
Yet I heeded not; and, like Nebuchadnezzar, my mind
was hardened in pride, continually. Then, as
the King of Babylon was driven forth from the sons
of men, and his heart made like the beasts’,
and his dwelling was with the wild asses, and they
fed him with grass, like oxen, and his body was wet
with the dew of heaven, even so did the Spirit drive
me forth into the tabernacles of the wild men of the
forest and the prairie, and I sojourned with them
many days. But He doth not always chide, neither
keepeth He His anger for ever. In His own good
time, He snatched me from the fiery furnace, and bade
me here wait for His salvation; and here, years, long
years, have I looked for His promise. O, Lord,
how long!”
The doctor’s question was unanswered,
either because Holden forgot it, in his excitement,
or that he was incapable of giving any accurate account
of the passage of time. But thus much the doctor
could gather from his incoherent account, that, at
some period of his life, he had suffered a great calamity,
which had affected his reason. In this condition,
he had probably joined the Indians, and passed several
years among them, and afterwards, upon a partial restoration
of intellect, adopted the wild notions he professed.
What had passed during those years, was a secret known
only to himself, if, indeed, the events had not disappeared
from his memory.
“You have suffered bitterly,” said the
doctor.
“Talk not of suffering,”
exclaimed Holden. “I reckon all that man
can endure as not to be compared with the crown of
glory that awaits him who shall gain entrance into
the Kingdom. What is this speck we call life?
Mark,” he continued, taking up a pebble and dropping
it into the water, “it is like the bubble that
rises to burst, or the sound of my voice that dies
as soon away. Thereon waste I not a thought, except
to prepare me for the coming of my Lord.”
“You think, then, this solitary
life the best preparation you can make for the next?”
“Yes,” said Holden; “I
work not my own will. Can the clay say to the
potter, what doest thou? Behold, I am in the hand
of One wiser and mightier than I. Nor hath he left
me without duties to perform. I am one crying
in the wilderness, and though the people heed not,
yet must the faithful witness cry. I have a work
to perform, and how is my soul straitened until it
be done? Canst thou not thyself see, by what
hath happened to-day, some reason why the solitary
is upon his lonely island? Had he loved the crowded
haunts of men, a fellow-being had, perhaps, perished.”
The allusion to the occurrence of
the morning recalled the doctor’s attention
to the purpose for which he had left the chamber, and
which he had forgotten, in listening to the talk of
the enthusiast. He now directed the conversation
to the subject of the wound, and heard Holden’s
account. He became convinced, both from his statement,
and from a few words Pownal himself had dropped, as
well as from the sight of the gun which Holden had
picked up, and found just discharged, that the wounding
was accidental, and occasioned by the young man’s
own fowling-piece. Having satisfied himself on
this point, the doctor, with his companion, re-entered
the hut. It was only to give a few parting directions
to Bernard, to enjoin quiet upon his patient, and
to take leave of him, which he did, in the words of
his favorite
“Fare thee well!
The elements be kind to thee, and make
Thy spirits all of comfort.”