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"
Medical
knowledge
is
at
a
low
ebb
among
us
,
"
said
Mr
.
Bulstrode
,
who
spoke
in
a
subdued
tone
,
and
had
rather
a
sickly
wir
"
I
,
for
my
part
,
hail
the
advent
of
Mr
.
Lydgate
.
I
hope
to
find
good
reason
for
confiding
the
new
hospital
to
his
management
.
"
"
That
is
all
very
fine
,
"
replied
Mr
.
Standish
,
who
was
not
fond
of
Mr
.
Bulstrode
;
"
if
you
like
him
to
try
experiments
on
your
hospital
patients
,
and
kill
a
few
people
for
charity
I
have
no
objection
.
But
I
am
not
going
to
hand
money
out
of
my
purse
to
have
experiments
tried
on
me
.
I
like
treatment
that
has
been
tested
a
little
.
"
"
Well
,
you
know
,
Standish
,
every
dose
you
take
is
an
experiment
-
an
experiment
,
you
know
,
"
said
Mr
.
Brooke
,
nodding
towards
the
lawyer
.
"
Oh
,
if
you
talk
in
that
sense
!
"
said
Mr
.
Standish
,
with
as
much
disgust
at
such
non
-
legal
quibbling
as
a
man
can
well
betray
towards
a
valuable
client
.
"
I
should
be
glad
of
any
treatment
that
would
cure
me
without
reducing
me
to
a
skeleton
,
like
poor
Grainger
,
"
said
Mr
.
Vincy
,
the
mayor
,
a
florid
man
,
who
would
have
served
for
a
study
of
flesh
in
striking
contrast
with
the
Franciscan
tints
of
Mr
.
Bulstrode
.
"
It
’
s
an
uncommonly
dangerous
thing
to
be
left
without
any
padding
against
the
shafts
of
disease
,
as
somebody
said
—
and
I
think
it
a
very
good
expression
myself
.
"
Mr
.
Lydgate
,
of
course
,
was
out
of
hearing
.
He
had
quitted
the
party
early
,
and
would
have
thought
it
altogether
tedious
but
for
the
novelty
of
certain
introductions
,
especially
the
introduction
to
Miss
Brooke
,
whose
youthful
bloom
,
with
her
approaching
marriage
to
that
faded
scholar
,
and
her
interest
in
matters
socially
useful
,
gave
her
the
piquancy
of
an
unusual
combination
.
"
She
is
a
good
creature
—
that
fine
girl
—
but
a
little
too
earnest
,
"
he
thought
.
"
It
is
troublesome
to
talk
to
such
women
.
They
are
always
wanting
reasons
,
yet
they
are
too
ignorant
to
understand
the
merits
of
any
question
,
and
usually
fall
hack
on
their
moral
sense
to
settle
things
after
their
own
taste
.
"
Evidently
Miss
Brooke
was
not
Mr
Lydgate
’
s
style
of
woman
any
more
than
Mr
.
Chichely
’
s
.
Considered
,
indeed
,
in
relation
to
the
latter
,
whose
mied
was
matured
,
she
was
altogether
a
mistake
,
and
calculated
to
shock
his
trust
in
final
causes
,
including
the
adaptation
of
fine
young
women
to
purplefaced
bachelors
.
But
Lydgate
was
less
ripe
,
and
might
possibly
have
experience
before
him
which
would
modify
his
opinion
as
to
the
most
excellent
things
in
woman
.