anxious eyes and
faintly propitiatory manner suggested an
impending appeal.
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey had the savoir-faire of a successful
consultant; he prided himself on being all things to all men; but
just for an
instant he was at a loss what sort of thing he had to
be here. Then he adopted the
genial, kindly, but by no means
lavishly
generous tone
advisable in the case of a man who has
suffered
considerable social deterioration without being very
seriously to blame.
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey was a little round-faced man with
defective eyesight and an unsuitable nose for the glasses he
wore, and he flaunted--God knows why--enormous side-whiskers.
"Well," he said, balancing the glasses skilfully by throwing
back his head, "and how are you? And what can I do for you?
There's no
external evidence of trouble. You're looking lean and
a little pale, but
thoroughly fit."
"Yes," said the late
bishop, "I'm fairly fit--"
"Only--?" said the doctor, smiling his teeth, with something of
the manner of an old bathing woman who tells a child to jump.
"Well, I'm run down and--worried."
"We'd better sit down," said the great doctor professionally,
and looked hard at him. Then he pulled at the arm of a chair.
The ex-
bishop sat down, and the doctor placed himself between
his patient and the light.
"This business of resigning my
bishopric and so forth has
involved very
considerable strains," Scrope began. "That I think
is the
essence of the trouble. One cuts so many associations....
I did not realize how much feeling there would be....
Difficulties too of readjusting one's position."
"Zactly. Zactly. Zactly," said the doctor, snapping his face
and making his glasses
vibrate. "Run down. Want a tonic or a
change?"
"Yes. In fact--I want a particular tonic."
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey made his eyes and mouth round and
interrogative.
"While you were away last spring--"
"Had to go," said the doctor, "unavoidable. Gas gangrene.
Certain enquiries. These young investigators all very well in
their way. But we older reputations--Experience. Maturity of
judgment. Can't do without us. Yes?"
"Well, I came here last spring and saw, an
assistant I suppose
he was, or a supply,--do you call them supplies in your
profession?--named, I think--Let me see--D--?"
"Dale!"
The doctor as he uttered this word set his face to the
unaccustomed exercise of expressing malignity. His round blue
eyes sought to blaze, small cherubic muscles exerted themselves
to pucker his brows. His colour became a
violent pink. "Lunatic!"
he said. "Dangerous Lunatic! He didn't do anything--anything
bad in your case, did he?"
He was
evidently highly charged with
grievance in this matter.
"That man was sent to me from Cambridge with the highest
testimonials. The very highest. I had to go at twenty-four hours'
notice. Enquiry--gas gangrene. There was nothing for it but to
leave things in his hands."
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey disavowed
responsibility with an open,
stumpy-fingered hand.
"He did me no particular harm," said Scrope.
"You are the first he spared," said Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey.
"Did he--? Was he unskilful?"
"Unskilful is hardly the word."
"Were his methods peculiar?"
The little doctor
sprang to his feet and began to pace about
the room. "Peculiar!" he said. "It was
abominable that they
should send him to me. Abominable!"
He turned, with all the round knobs that constituted his face,
aglow. His side-whiskers waved apart like wings about to flap. He
protruded his face towards his seated patient. "I am glad that he
has been killed," he said. "Glad! There!"
His glasses fell off--shocked beyond
measure. He did not heed
them. They swnng about in front of him as if they sought to
escape while he poured out his feelings.
"Fool!" he spluttered with demonstrative gestures. "Dangerous
fool! His one idea--to upset everybody. Drugs, Sir! The most
terrible drugs! I come back. Find ladies. High social position.
Morphine-maniacs. Others. Reckless use of the most dangerous
expedients.... Cocaine not in it. Stimulants--
violentstimulants. In the highest quarters. Terrible. Exalted persons.
Royalty! Anxious to be given war work and become anonymous....
Horrible! He's been a terrible influence. One idea--to disturb
soul and body. Minds unhinged. Personal relations deranged.
Shattered the practice of years. The harm he has done! The harm!"
He looked as though he was
trying to burst--as a final
expression of wrath. He failed. His hands felt trembling to
recover his pince-nez. Then from his tail pocket he produced a
large silk
handkerchief and wiped the glasses. Replaced them.
Wriggled his head in his
collar,
running his fingers round his
neck. Patted his tie.
"Excuse this outbreak!" he said. "But Dr. Dale has inflicted
injuries "
Scrope got up, walked slowly to the window, clasping his hands
behind his back, and turned. His manner still retained much of
his
episcopaldignity. "I am sorry. But still you can no doubt
tell from your books what it was he gave me. It was a tonic that
had a very great effect on me. And I need it badly now."
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey was quietly
malignant. "He kept no diary
at all," he said. "No diary at all."
"But
"If he did," said Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey,
holding up a flat hand
and wagging it from side to side, "I wouldn't follow his
treatment." He intensified with the hand going faster. "I
wouldn't follow his
treatment. Not under any circumstances."
"Naturally," said Scrope, "if the results are what you say. But
in my case it wasn't a
treatment. I was
sleepless, confused in my
mind,
wretched and demoralized; I came here, and he just produced
the stuff--It clears the head, it clears the mind. One seems to
get away from the cloud of things, to get through to essentials
and fundamentals. It straightened me out.... You must know such a
stuff. Just now, confronted with all sorts of problems arising
out of my
resignation, I want that tonic effect again. I must
have it. I have matters to decide--and I can't decide. I find
myself
uncertain,
changeable from hour to hour. I don't ask you
to take up anything of this man Dale's. This is a new occasion.
But I want that drug."
At the
beginning of this speech Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey's hands
had fallen to his hips. As Scrope went on the doctor's pose had
stiffened. His head had gone a little on one side; he had begun
to play with his glasses. At the end he gave vent to one or two
short coughs, and then
pointed his words with his glasses held
out.
"Tell me," he said, "tell me." (Cough.) "Had this drug that
cleared your head--anything to do with your
resignation?"
And he put on his glasses disconcertingly, and threw his head
back to watch the reply.
"It did help to clear up the situation."
"Exactly," said Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey in a tone that defined his
own position with remorseless
clearness. "Exactly." And he held
up a flat, arresting hand. .
"My dear Sir," he said. "How can you expect me to help you to a
drug so
disastrous?--even if I could tell you what it is."
"But it was not
disastrous to me," said Scrope.
"Your
extraordinaryresignation--your still more
extraordinary way of proclaiming it!"
"I don't think those were disasters."
"But my dear Sir!"
"You don't want to discuss
theology with me, I know. So let me
tell you simply that from my point of view the
illumination that
came to me--this drug of Dr. Dale's helping--has been the
great
release of my life. It crystallized my mind. It swept aside
the confusing
commonplace things about me. Just for a time I saw
truth clearly.... I want to do so again."
"Why?"
"There is a
crisis in my affairs--never mind what. But I
cannot see my way clear."
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey was meditating now with his eyes on his
carpet and the corners of his mouth tucked in. He was swinging
his glasses pendulum-wise. "Tell me," he said, looking sideways
at Scrope, "what were the effects of this drug? It may have been
anything. How did it give you this--this
vision of the truth--
that led to your
resignation?"
Scrope felt a sudden shyness. But he wanted Dale's drug again
so badly that he obliged himself to describe his previous
experiences to the best of his ability.
"It was," he said in a
matter-of-fact tone, "a golden,
transparentliquid. Very golden, like a warm-tinted Chablis. When
water was added it became streaked and opalescent, with a kind of
living
quiver in it. I held it up to the light."
"Yes? And when you took it?"
"I felt suddenly clearer. My mind--I had a kind of exaltation
and assurance."
"Your mind," Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey assisted, "began to go
twenty-nine to the dozen."
"It felt stronger and clearer," said Scrope, sticking to his
quest.
"And did things look as usual?" asked the doctor, protruding
his knobby little face like a clenched fist.
"No," said Scrope and regarded him. How much was it possible to
tell a man of this type?
"They differed?" said the doctor, relaxing.
"Yes.... Well, to be plain.... I had an immediate sense of God.
I saw the world--as if it were a
transparent curtain, and then
God became--evident.... Is it possible for that to determine
the drug?"
"God became--evident," the doctor said with some distaste,
and shook his head slowly. Then in a sudden sharp cross-examining
tone: "You mean you had a
vision? Actually saw 'um?"
"It was in the form of a
vision." Scrope was now mentally very
uncomfortable indeed.
The doctor's lips
repeated these words
noiselessly, with an
effect of
contempt. "He must have given you something--It's a
little like morphia. But golden--opalescent? And it was this
vision made you
astonish us all with your
resignation?"
"That was part of a larger process," said Scrope
patiently. "I
had been drifting into a complete repudiation of the Anglican
positions long before that. All that this drug did was to make
clear what was already in my mind. And give it value. Act as a
developer."
The doctor suddenly gave way to a botryoidal hilarity. "To
think that one should be consulted about
visions of God--in
Mount Street!" he said. "And you know, you know you half want to
believe that
vision was real. You know you do."
So far Scrope had been resisting his
realization of failure.
Now he gave way to an exasperation that made him
reckless of
Brighton-Pomfrey's opinion. "I do think," he said, "that that
drug did in some way make God real to me. I think I saw God."
Dr. Brighton-Pomfrey shook his head in a way that made Scrope
want to hit him.
"I think I saw God," he
repeated more
firmly. "I had a sudden
realization of how great he was and how great life was, and how
timid and mean and
sordid were all our
genteel, professional
lives. I was seized upon, for a time I was
altogether possessed