第 3 节
作者:冰点沸点      更新:2021-02-21 16:40      字数:9322
  was only going according to the ritual; and as she had a printed card; with
  blanks     in  it  ready   to  be  filled  out   with   details   regarding    the   remote
  members of the family connection; I humored her along。
  When      I   could    not   remember       something      she    wished     to   know
  concerning an ancestor I supplied her with thrilling details culled from the
  field of fancy。      When the card was entirely filled up she sent me back to
  my old place to wait。        I waited and waited; breeding fresh ailments all the
  time。    I   had   started   out   with   one   symptom;   now   if   I   had   one   I   had   a
  million and a half。       I could feel goose flesh sprouting out all over me。             If
  I had been taller I might have had more; but not otherwise。                   Such is the
  power of the human imagination when the surroundings are favorable to
  its development。
  Time   passed;   to   me   it   appeared   that   nearly   all   the   time   there   was
  passed     and   that  we    were   getting    along   toward     the  shank…end     of   the
  Christian   era   mighty   fast。    I   was   afraid   my   turn   would   come   next   and
  afraid it would not。       Perhaps you know this sensation。             You get it at the
  dentist's; and when you are on the list of after…dinner speakers at a large
  banquet; and when you are waiting for the father of the Only Girl in the
  World to make up his mind whether he is willing to try to endure you as a
  son…in…law。
  Then some more time passed。
  One by one my companions; obeying a command; passed out through
  the   door   at   the   back;   vanishing   out   of   my   life   forever。 None   of   them
  returned。     I was vaguely wondering whether Doctor Z buried his dead on
  the   premises   or   had   them   removed   by   a   secret   passageway   in   the   rear;
  when   a   young   woman   in   a   nurse's   costume   tapped   me   on   the   shoulder
  from behind。
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  I jumped。      She hid a compassionate smile with her hand and told me
  that the doctor would see me now。
  As I rose to follow herstill clinging with the drowning man's grip of
  desperation   to   my   hat   and   my   umbrellaI   was   astonished   to   note   by   a
  glance at the calendar on the wall that this was still the present date。                   I
  thought it would be Thursday of next week at the very least。
  Doctor Z also wore whiskers; carefully pointed up by an expert hedge
  trimmer。      He    sat  at  his   desk;   surrounded     by   freewill   offerings    from
  grateful patients and by glass cases containing other things he had taken
  away   from   them   when   they   were   not   in   a   condition   to   object。    I   had
  expected; after all the preliminary ceremonies and delays; that we should
  have a long skance together。           Not so; not at all。       The modern expert in
  surgery charges as much for remembering your name between visits as the
  family doctor used to expect for staying up all night with you; but he does
  not waste any time when you are in his presence。
  I was about to find that out。         And a little later on I was to find out a
  lot of other things; in fact; that whole week was of immense educational
  value to me。
  I   presume   it   was   because   he   stood   high   in   his   profession;   and   was
  almost constantly engaged in going into the best society that Doctor Z did
  not appear  to   be  the least   bit   excited   over  my having picked   him  out   to
  look into me。      In the most perfunctory manner he shook the hand that has
  shaken the hands of Jess Willard; George M。 Cohan and Henry Ford; and
  bade me be seated in a chair which was drawn up in a strong light; where
  he might gaze directly at me as we conversed and so get the full values of
  the composition。        But if I was a treat for him to look at he concealed his
  feelings very effectually。
  He   certainly   had   his   emotions   under   splendid   control。    But   then;   of
  course;     you    must    remember       that   he   probably     had    traveled    about
  extensively and was used to sight…seeing。
  From     this  point   on   everything     passed    off  in  a  most    businesslike
  manner。      He reached into a filing cabinet and took out an exhibit; which I
  recognized as the same one his secretary had filled out in the early part of
  the century。      So I was already in the card…index class。             Then briefly he
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  looked over the manifest that Doctor X had   sent him。                  It   may not   have
  been a manifestit may have been an invoice or a bill of lading。                 Anyhow
  I was in the assignee's hands。 I could only hope it would not eventually
  become necessary to call in a receiver。            Then he spoke:
  〃Yes;    yes…yes;〃    he   said;   〃yes…yes…yes!     Operation     required。     Small
  matterhum;   hum!   Let's   seethis   is   Tuesday?   Quite   so。       Do   it   Friday!
  Friday at〃he glanced toward a scribbled pad of engagement dates at his
  elbow〃Friday        at   seven    A。   M。     No;     make    it  seven…fifteen。     Have
  important tumor case at seven。            St。 Germicide's Hospital。 You know the
  placeup     on   Umpty…umph         Street。   Go'    day!   Miss    Whoziz;     call   next
  visitor。〃
  And before I realized that practically the whole affair had been settled
  I   was   outside    the  consultation…room        in  a  small   private    hall;  and   the
  secretary was telling me further details would be conveyed to me by mail。
  I went home in a dazed state。           For the first time I was beginning to learn
  something       about    an   industry    in  which    heretofore     I  had   never    been
  interested。     Especially was I struck by the difference now revealed to me
  in the preliminary stages of the surgeons' business as compared with their
  fellow   experts   in   the   allied   cutting   tradestailors;   for   instance;   not   to
  mention barbers。        Every barber; you know; used to be a surgeon; only he
  spelled   it   chirurgeon。     Since   then   the   two   professions   have   drifted   far
  apart。    Even a half…witted barberthe kind who always has the first chair
  as   you   come   into   the   shopcan   easily   spend   ten   minutes   of   your   time
  thinking of things he thinks you should have and mentioning them to you
  one by one; whereas any good; live surgeon knows what you have almost
  instantly。
  As for the tailorconsider how wearisome are his methods when you
  parallel them alongside the tremendous advances in this direction made by
  the   surgeonhow   cumbersome   and   old…fashioned   and   tedious!   Why;   an
  experienced surgeon has you all apart in half the time the tailor takes up in
  deciding whether the vest shall fasten with five buttons or six。                  Our own
  domestic tailors are bad enough in this regard and the Old World tailors
  are even worse。
  I remember a German tailor in Aix…la…Chapelle in the fall of 1914 who
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  undertook      to  build   for   me   a  suit  suitable   for   visiting   the  battle  lines
  informally。      He   was   the   most   literary   tailor   I   ever   met   anywhere。   He
  would drape the material over my person and then take a piece of chalk
  and write quite a nice long piece on me。               Then he would rub it out and
  write   it   all   over   again;   but   more   fully。 He   kept   this   up   at   intervals   of
  every other day until he had writer's cramp。              After that he used pins。        He
  would pin the seams together; uttering little soothing; clucking sounds in
  German       whenever      a  pin  went    through    the   goods    and   into   me。    The
  German   cluck   is   not   so   soothing   as   the   cluck   of   the   English…speaking
  peoples; I find。
  At the end of two long and trying weeks; which wore both of us down
  noticeably; he had the job done。            It was not an unqualified success。            He
  regarded is as a suit of clothes; but I knew better; it was a set of slip covers;
  and   if   only   I   had   been   a   two…seated   runabout   it   would   have   proved   a
  perfect fit; I am sure; but I am a single…seated design and it did not answer。
  I wore it to the war because I had nothing else to wear that would stamp
  me as a regular war correspondent; except; of course; my wrist watch; but
  I