第 48 节
作者:津夏      更新:2021-04-30 15:57      字数:9322
  enormous        nervous      energy     with    which     you     have    drenched      him。
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  Electricity     is  life;  and  you   have    charged    him    with   it  to  the  utmost。
  Perhaps in fifty years you might execute him; but I am not sanguine about
  it。〃
  〃Great Scott!      What shall I do with him?〃 cried the unhappy Marshal。
  Peter Stulpnagel shrugged his shoulders。
  〃It seems   to   me   that   it does   not   much   matter  what   you do   with   him
  now;〃 said he。
  〃Maybe we could drain the electricity out of him again。                 Suppose we
  hang him up by the heels?〃
  〃No; no; it's out of the question。〃
  〃Well;  well;   he   shall   do   no   more   mischief  in   Los Amigos;   anyhow;〃
  said the Marshal;  with decision。           〃He shall go into the  new gaol。           The
  prison will wear him out。〃
  〃On the contrary;〃 said Peter Stulpnagel; 〃I think that it is much more
  probable that he will wear out the prison。〃
  It was rather a fiasco and for years we didn't talk more about it than we
  could help; but it's no secret now and I thought you might like to jot down
  the facts in your case…book。
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  THE DOCTORS OF HOYLAND。
  Dr。 James Ripley  was always   looked upon as   an exceedingly  lucky
  dog by all of the profession who knew him。                His father had preceded him
  in a practice in the village of Hoyland; in the north of Hampshire; and all
  was ready for him on the very first day that the law allowed him to put his
  name   at   the   foot   of   a   prescription。  In   a   few   years   the   old   gentleman
  retired;   and   settled   on   the   South   Coast;   leaving   his   son   in   undisputed
  possession      of   the   whole    country     side。   Save     for   Dr。   Horton;    near
  Basingstoke;   the   young   surgeon   had   a   clear   run   of   six   miles   in   every
  direction; and took his fifteen hundred pounds a year; though; as is usual
  in country practices; the stable swallowed up most of what the consulting…
  room earned。
  Dr。 James   Ripley was   two…and…thirty  years   of age;  reserved;  learned;
  unmarried; with set; rather stern features; and a thinning of the dark hair
  upon the top of his head; which was worth quite a hundred a year to him。
  He was particularly happy in his management of ladies。                    He had caught
  the tone of bland sternness and decisive suavity which dominates without
  offending。        Ladies;      however;      were     not    equally     happy     in   their
  management        of   him。    Professionally;      he  was    always    at  their  service。
  Socially;   he   was   a   drop   of   quicksilver。    In   vain   the   country   mammas
  spread out their simple lures   in   front of him。           Dances   and picnics   were
  not to his taste; and he preferred during his scanty leisure to shut himself
  up    in  his  study;   and   to  bury    himself    in  Virchow's     Archives     and   the
  professional journals。
  Study   was   a   passion   with   him;   and   he   would   have   none   of   the   rust
  which often gathers round a country practitioner。                It was his ambition to
  keep   his   knowledge   as   fresh   and   bright   as   at   the   moment   when   he   had
  stepped out of the examination hall。            He prided himself on being able at a
  moment's   notice   to   rattle   off   the   seven   ramifications   of   some   obscure
  artery;   or   to   give   the   exact   percentage   of   any   physiological   compound。
  After    a  long    day's   work    he   would    sit  up   half  the   night   performing
  iridectomies and extractions upon the sheep's eyes sent in by the village
  butcher; to the horror   of his housekeeper; who   had to remove the   debris
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  next morning。        His love for his work was the one fanaticism which found
  a place in his dry; precise nature。
  It   was   the   more   to   his   credit   that   he   should   keep   up   to   date   in   his
  knowledge; since he had no competition to force him to exertion。                         In the
  seven   years   during   which   he   had   practised   in   Hoyland   three   rivals   had
  pitted   themselves   against   him;   two   in   the   village   itself   and   one   in   the
  neighbouring hamlet of Lower Hoyland。                   Of these one had sickened and
  wasted; being; as it was said; himself the only patient whom he had treated
  during his eighteen months of ruralising。                A second had bought a fourth
  share   of   a   Basingstoke   practice;   and   had   departed   honourably;   while   a
  third   had   vanished   one   September   night;   leaving   a   gutted   house   and   an
  unpaid      drug   bill  behind     him。    Since     then    the  district   had    become     a
  monopoly;        and    no   one    had    dared     to  measure       himself    against     the
  established fame of the Hoyland doctor。
  It was; then; with a feeling of some surprise and considerable curiosity
  that on driving through Lower Hoyland one morning he perceived that the
  new house at the end of the village was occupied; and that a virgin brass
  plate   glistened   upon   the   swinging   gate   which   faced   the   high   road。        He
  pulled     up   his  fifty   guinea   chestnut     mare    and   took    a  good    look   at  it。
  〃Verrinder       Smith;    M。   D。;〃    was   printed    across    it  in  very    neat;   small
  lettering。     The last man had had letters half a foot long; with a lamp like a
  fire… station。     Dr。 James Ripley noted the difference; and deduced from it
  that   the   new…comer   might   possibly   prove   a   more   formidable   opponent。
  He was convinced of it that evening when he came to consult the current
  medical   directory。       By   it   he   learned   that   Dr。   Verrinder   Smith   was   the
  holder of superb degrees; that he had studied with distinction at Edinburgh;
  Paris;   Berlin;   and   Vienna;   and   finally   that   he   had   been   awarded   a   gold
  medal      and    the    Lee    Hopkins      scholarship       for   original    research;     in
  recognition   of   an   exhaustive   inquiry   into   the   functions   of   the   anterior
  spinal nerve roots。         Dr。 Ripley passed his fingers through his thin hair in
  bewilderment        as   he   read   his  rival's   record。    What      on   earth   could    so
  brilliant a man mean by putting up his plate in a little Hampshire hamlet。
  But   Dr。   Ripley   furnished   himself   with   an   explanation   to   the   riddle。
  No   doubt   Dr。   Verrinder   Smith   had   simply   come   down   there   in   order   to
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  pursue some scientific research in peace and quiet。                 The plate was up as
  an address rather than as an invitation to patients。               Of course; that must
  be    the  true   explanation。      In   that   case   the   presence    of   this  brilliant
  neighbour would be a splendid thing for his own studies。                    He had often
  longed   for some   kindred   mind;  some   steel   on  which   he   might   strike   his
  flint。   Chance had brought it to him; and he rejoiced exceedingly。
  And this joy it was which led him to take a step which was quite at
  variance with his usual habits。           It is the custom for a new…comer among
  medical men to call first upon the older; and the etiquette upon the subject
  is   strict。 Dr。   Ripley   was   pedantically   exact   on   such   points;   and   yet   he
  deliberately   drove   over   next   day   and   called   upon   Dr。   Verrinder   Smith。
  Such a waiving of ceremony was; he felt; a gracious act upon his part; and
  a fit prelude to the intimate relations which he hoped to establish with his
  neighbour。
  The house was neat and well appointed; and Dr。 Ripley was shown by
  a   smart   maid   into   a   dapper   little   consulting   room。  As   he   passed   in   he
  noticed two or three parasols and a lady's sun bonnet hanging in the hall。
  It was a pity that his colleague should be a married man。                    It would put
  them upon a different   footing; and interfere with   those long evenings   of
  high scientific talk which he had pictured to himself。               On the other hand;
  there    was    much     in  the   consulting     room    t