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941
"
I
shall
be
exceedingly
obliged
if
you
will
look
in
on
me
here
occasionally
,
Mr
.
Lydgate
,
"
the
banker
observed
,
after
a
brief
pause
.
"
If
,
as
I
dare
to
hope
,
I
have
the
privilege
of
finding
you
a
valuable
coadjutor
in
the
interesting
matter
of
hospital
management
,
there
will
be
many
questions
which
we
shall
need
to
discuss
in
private
.
942
As
to
the
new
hospital
,
which
is
nearly
finished
,
I
shall
consider
what
you
have
said
about
the
advantages
of
the
special
destination
for
fevers
.
The
decision
will
rest
with
me
,
for
though
Lord
Medlicote
has
given
the
land
and
timber
for
the
building
,
he
is
not
disposed
to
give
his
personal
attention
to
the
object
.
"
943
"
There
are
few
things
better
worth
the
pains
in
a
provincial
town
like
this
,
"
said
Lydgate
.
"
A
fine
fever
hospital
in
addition
to
the
old
infirmary
might
be
the
nucleus
of
a
medical
school
here
,
when
once
we
get
our
medical
reforms
;
and
what
would
do
more
for
medical
education
than
the
spread
of
such
schools
over
the
country
?
A
born
provincial
man
who
has
a
grain
of
public
spirit
as
well
as
a
few
ideas
,
should
do
what
he
can
to
resist
the
rush
of
everything
that
is
a
little
better
than
common
towards
London
.
Any
valid
professional
aims
may
often
find
a
freer
,
if
not
a
richer
field
,
in
the
provinces
.
"
Отключить рекламу
944
One
of
Lydgate
s
gifts
was
a
voice
habitually
deep
and
sonorous
,
yet
capable
of
becoming
very
low
and
gentle
at
the
right
moment
.
About
his
ordinary
bearing
there
was
a
certain
fling
,
a
fearless
expectation
of
success
,
a
confidence
in
his
own
powers
and
integrity
much
fortified
by
contempt
for
petty
obstacles
or
seductions
of
which
he
had
had
no
experience
.
But
this
proud
openness
was
made
lovable
by
an
expression
of
unaffected
good
-
will
.
Mr
.
945
Bulstrode
perhaps
liked
him
the
better
for
the
difference
between
them
in
pitch
and
manners
;
he
certainly
liked
him
the
better
,
as
Rosamond
did
,
for
being
a
stranger
in
Middlemarch
.
One
can
begin
so
many
things
with
a
new
person
!
even
begin
to
be
a
better
man
.
946
"
I
shall
rejoice
to
furnish
your
zeal
with
fuller
opportunities
,
"
Mr
.
Bulstrode
answered
;
"
I
mean
,
by
confiding
to
you
the
superintendence
of
my
new
hospital
,
should
a
maturer
knowledge
favor
that
issue
,
for
I
am
determined
that
so
great
an
object
shall
not
be
shackled
by
our
two
physicians
.
Indeed
,
I
am
encouraged
to
consider
your
advent
to
this
town
as
a
gracious
indication
that
a
more
manifest
blessing
is
now
to
be
awarded
to
my
efforts
,
which
have
hitherto
been
much
with
stood
.
With
regard
to
the
old
infirmary
,
we
have
gained
the
initial
point
I
mean
your
election
.
And
now
I
hope
you
will
not
shrink
from
incurring
a
certain
amount
of
jealousy
and
dislike
from
your
professional
brethren
by
presenting
yourself
as
a
reformer
.
"
947
"
I
will
not
profess
bravery
,
"
said
Lydgate
,
smiling
,
"
but
I
acknowledge
a
good
deal
of
pleasure
in
fighting
,
and
I
should
not
care
for
my
profession
,
if
I
did
not
believe
that
better
methods
were
to
be
found
and
enforced
there
as
well
as
everywhere
else
.
"
Отключить рекламу
948
"
The
standard
of
that
profession
is
low
in
Middlemarch
,
my
dear
sir
,
"
said
the
banker
.
"
I
mean
in
knowledge
and
skill
;
not
in
social
status
,
for
our
medical
men
are
most
of
them
connected
with
respectable
townspeople
here
.
949
My
own
imperfect
health
has
induced
me
to
give
some
attention
to
those
palliative
resources
which
the
divine
mercy
has
placed
within
our
reach
.
I
have
consulted
eminent
men
in
the
metropolis
,
and
I
am
painfully
aware
of
the
backwardness
under
which
medical
treatment
labors
in
our
provincial
districts
.
"
950
"
Yes
;
with
our
present
medical
rules
and
education
,
one
must
be
satisfied
now
and
then
to
meet
with
a
fair
practitioner
.
As
to
all
the
higher
questions
which
determine
the
starting
-
point
of
a
diagnosis
as
to
the
philosophy
of
medial
evidence
any
glimmering
of
these
can
only
come
from
a
scientific
culture
of
which
country
practitioners
have
usually
no
more
notion
than
the
man
in
the
moon
.
"