And let it not be supposed that opinion at the Tankard in Slaughter

Lane was unimportant to the medical profession: that old authentic

public-house--the original Tankard, known by the name of Dollop's--was

the resort of a great Benefit Club, which had some months before put to

the vote whether its long-standing medical man, "Doctor Gambit," should

not be cashiered in favor of "this Doctor Lydgate," who was capable of

performing the most astonishing cures, and rescuing people altogether

given up by other practitioners. But the balance had been turned

against Lydgate by two members, who for some private reasons held that

this power of resuscitating persons as good as dead was an equivocal

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recommendation, and might interfere with providential favors. In the

course of the year, however, there had been a change in the public

sentiment, of which the unanimity at Dollop's was an index.

A good deal more than a year ago, before anything was known of

Lydgate's skill, the judgments on it had naturally been divided,

depending on a sense of likelihood, situated perhaps in the pit of the

stomach or in the pineal gland, and differing in its verdicts, but not

the less valuable as a guide in the total deficit of evidence.

Patients who had chronic diseases or whose lives had long been worn

threadbare, like old Featherstone's, had been at once inclined to try

him; also, many who did not like paying their doctor's bills, thought

agreeably of opening an account with a new doctor and sending for him

without stint if the children's temper wanted a dose, occasions when

the old practitioners were often crusty; and all persons thus inclined

to employ Lydgate held it likely that he was clever. Some considered

that he might do more than others "where there was liver;"--at least

there would be no harm in getting a few bottles of "stuff" from him,

since if these proved useless it would still be possible to return to

the Purifying Pills, which kept you alive if they did not remove the

yellowness. But these were people of minor importance. Good

Middlemarch families were of course not going to change their doctor

without reason shown; and everybody who had employed Mr. Peacock did

not feel obliged to accept a new man merely in the character of his

successor, objecting that he was "not likely to be equal to Peacock."

But Lydgate had not been long in the town before there were particulars

enough reported of him to breed much more specific expectations and to

intensify differences into partisanship; some of the particulars being

of that impressive order of which the significance is entirely hidden,

like a statistical amount without a standard of comparison, but with a

note of exclamation at the end. The cubic feet of oxygen yearly

swallowed by a full-grown man--what a shudder they might have created

in some Middlemarch circles! "Oxygen! nobody knows what that may

be--is it any wonder the cholera has got to Dantzic? And yet there are

people who say quarantine is no good!"




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