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"
Not
they
,
Mr
.
Jonas
!
"
said
Mrs
Dollop
,
emphatically
.
"
I
know
what
doctors
are
.
They
’
re
a
deal
too
cunning
to
be
found
out
.
And
this
Doctor
Lydgate
that
’
s
been
for
cutting
up
everybody
before
the
breath
was
well
out
o
’
their
body
—
it
’
s
plain
enough
what
use
he
wanted
to
make
o
’
looking
into
respectable
people
’
s
insides
.
He
knows
drugs
,
you
may
be
sure
,
as
you
can
neither
smell
nor
see
,
neither
before
they
’
re
swallowed
nor
after
.
Why
,
I
’
ve
seen
drops
myself
ordered
by
Doctor
Gambit
,
as
is
our
club
doctor
and
a
good
charikter
,
and
has
brought
more
live
children
into
the
world
nor
ever
another
i
’
Middlemarch
—
I
say
I
’
ve
seen
drops
myself
as
made
no
difference
whether
they
was
in
the
glass
or
out
,
and
yet
have
griped
you
the
next
day
.
So
I
’
ll
leave
your
own
sense
to
judge
.
Don
’
t
tell
me
!
All
I
say
is
,
it
’
s
a
mercy
they
didn
’
t
take
this
Doctor
Lydgate
on
to
our
club
.
There
’
s
many
a
mother
’
s
child
might
ha
’
rued
it
.
"
The
heads
of
this
discussion
at
"
Dollop
’
s
"
had
been
the
common
theme
among
all
classes
in
the
town
,
had
been
carried
to
Lowick
Parsonage
on
one
side
and
to
Tipton
Grange
on
the
other
,
had
come
fully
to
the
ears
of
the
Vincy
family
,
and
had
been
discussed
with
sad
reference
to
"
poor
Harriet
"
by
all
Mrs
.
Bulstrode
’
s
friends
,
before
Lydgate
knew
distinctly
why
people
were
looking
strangely
at
him
,
and
before
Bulstrode
himself
suspected
the
betrayal
of
his
secrets
.
He
had
not
been
accustomed
to
very
cordial
relations
with
his
neighbors
,
and
hence
he
could
not
miss
the
signs
of
cordiality
;
moreover
,
he
had
been
taking
journeys
on
business
of
various
kinds
,
having
now
made
up
his
mind
that
he
need
not
quit
Middlemarch
,
and
feeling
able
consequently
to
determine
on
matters
which
he
had
before
left
in
suspense
.
"
We
will
make
a
journey
to
Cheltenham
in
the
course
of
a
month
or
two
,
"
he
had
said
to
his
wife
.
"
There
are
great
spiritual
advantages
to
be
had
in
that
town
along
with
the
air
and
the
waters
,
and
six
weeks
there
will
be
eminently
refreshing
to
us
.
"
He
really
believed
in
the
spiritual
advantages
,
and
meant
that
his
life
henceforth
should
be
the
more
devoted
because
of
those
later
sins
which
he
represented
to
himself
as
hypothetic
,
praying
hypothetically
for
their
pardon
:
—
"
if
I
have
herein
transgressed
.
"
as
to
the
Hospital
,
he
avoided
saying
anything
further
to
Lydgate
,
fearing
to
manifest
a
too
sudden
change
of
plans
immediately
on
the
death
of
Raffles
.
In
his
secret
soul
he
believed
that
Lydgate
suspected
his
orders
to
have
been
intentionally
disobeyed
,
and
suspecting
this
he
must
also
suspect
a
motive
.
But
nothing
had
been
betrayed
to
him
as
to
the
history
of
Raffles
,
and
Bulstrode
was
anxious
not
to
do
anything
which
would
give
emphasis
to
his
undefined
suspicions
.
As
to
any
certainty
that
a
particular
method
of
treatment
would
either
save
or
kill
,
Lydgate
himself
was
constantly
arguing
against
such
dogmatism
;
he
had
no
right
to
speak
,
and
he
had
every
motive
for
being
silent
.
Hence
Bulstrode
felt
himself
providentially
secured
.
The
only
incident
he
had
strongly
winced
under
had
been
an
occasional
encounter
with
Caleb
Garth
,
who
,
however
,
had
raised
his
hat
with
mild
gravity
.
Meanwhile
,
on
the
part
of
the
principal
townsmen
a
strong
determination
was
growing
against
him
.
A
meeting
was
to
be
held
in
the
Town
-
Hall
on
a
sanitary
question
which
had
risen
into
pressing
importance
by
the
occurrence
of
a
cholera
case
in
the
town
.
Since
the
Act
of
Parliament
,
which
had
been
hurriedly
passed
,
authorizing
assessments
for
sanitary
measures
,
there
had
been
a
Board
for
the
superintendence
of
such
measures
appointed
in
Middlemarch
,
and
much
cleansing
and
preparation
had
been
concurred
in
by
Whigs
and
Tories
.
The
question
now
was
,
whether
a
piece
of
ground
outside
the
town
should
be
secured
as
a
burial
-
ground
by
means
of
assessment
or
by
private
subscription
.
The
meeting
was
to
be
open
,
and
almost
everybody
of
importance
in
the
town
was
expected
to
be
there
.
Mr
.
Bulstrode
was
a
member
of
the
Board
,
and
just
before
twelve
o
’
clock
he
started
from
the
Bank
with
the
intention
of
urging
the
plan
of
private
subscription
.
Under
the
hesitation
of
his
projects
,
he
had
for
some
time
kept
himself
in
the
background
,
and
he
felt
that
he
should
this
morning
resume
his
old
position
as
a
man
of
action
and
influence
in
the
public
affairs
of
the
town
where
he
expected
to
end
his
days
.
Among
the
various
persons
going
in
the
same
direction
,
he
saw
Lydgate
;
they
joined
,
talked
over
the
object
of
the
meeting
,
and
entered
it
together
.
It
seemed
that
everybody
of
mark
had
been
earlier
than
they
.
But
there
were
still
spaces
left
near
the
head
of
the
large
central
table
,
and
they
made
their
way
thither
.
Mr
.
Farebrother
sat
opposite
,
not
far
from
Mr
.
Hawley
;
all
the
medical
men
were
there
;
Mr
.