<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1> THE DOCTOR'S DILEMMA </h1>
<h2> By Bernard Shaw </h2>
<p><br/><br/></p>
<h3> 1906 </h3>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN></p>
<h2> ACT I </h2>
<p>On the 15th June 1903, in the early forenoon, a medical student, surname
Redpenny, Christian name unknown and of no importance, sits at work in a
doctor's consulting-room. He devils for the doctor by answering his
letters, acting as his domestic laboratory assistant, and making himself
indispensable generally, in return for unspecified advantages involved by
intimate intercourse with a leader of his profession, and amounting to an
informal apprenticeship and a temporary affiliation. Redpenny is not
proud, and will do anything he is asked without reservation of his
personal dignity if he is asked in a fellow-creaturely way. He is a
wide-open-eyed, ready, credulous, friendly, hasty youth, with his hair and
clothes in reluctant transition from the untidy boy to the tidy doctor.</p>
<p>Redpenny is interrupted by the entrance of an old serving-woman who has
never known the cares, the preoccupations, the responsibilities,
jealousies, and anxieties of personal beauty. She has the complexion of a
never-washed gypsy, incurable by any detergent; and she has, not a regular
beard and moustaches, which could at least be trimmed and waxed into a
masculine presentableness, but a whole crop of small beards and
moustaches, mostly springing from moles all over her face. She carries a
duster and toddles about meddlesomely, spying out dust so diligently that
whilst she is flicking off one speck she is already looking elsewhere for
another. In conversation she has the same trick, hardly ever looking at
the person she is addressing except when she is excited. She has only one
manner, and that is the manner of an old family nurse to a child just
after it has learnt to walk. She has used her ugliness to secure
indulgences unattainable by Cleopatra or Fair Rosamund, and has the
further great advantage over them that age increases her qualification
instead of impairing it. Being an industrious, agreeable, and popular old
soul, she is a walking sermon on the vanity of feminine prettiness. Just
as Redpenny has no discovered Christian name, she has no discovered
surname, and is known throughout the doctors' quarter between Cavendish
Square and the Marylebone Road simply as Emmy.</p>
<p>The consulting-room has two windows looking on Queen Anne Street. Between
the two is a marble-topped console, with haunched gilt legs ending in
sphinx claws. The huge pier-glass which surmounts it is mostly disabled
from reflection by elaborate painting on its surface of palms, ferns,
lilies, tulips, and sunflowers. The adjoining wall contains the fireplace,
with two arm-chairs before it. As we happen to face the corner we see
nothing of the other two walls. On the right of the fireplace, or rather
on the right of any person facing the fireplace, is the door. On its left
is the writing-table at which Redpenny sits. It is an untidy table with a
microscope, several test tubes, and a spirit lamp standing up through its
litter of papers. There is a couch in the middle of the room, at right
angles to the console, and parallel to the fireplace. A chair stands
between the couch and the windowed wall. The windows have green Venetian
blinds and rep curtains; and there is a gasalier; but it is a convert to
electric lighting. The wall paper and carpets are mostly green, coeval
with the gasalier and the Venetian blinds. The house, in fact, was so well
furnished in the middle of the XIXth century that it stands unaltered to
this day and is still quite presentable.</p>
<p>EMMY [entering and immediately beginning to dust the couch] Theres a lady
bothering me to see the doctor.</p>
<p>REDPENNY [distracted by the interruption] Well, she cant see the doctor.
Look here: whats the use of telling you that the doctor cant take any new
patients, when the moment a knock comes to the door, in you bounce to ask
whether he can see somebody?</p>
<p>EMMY. Who asked you whether he could see somebody?</p>
<p>REDPENNY. You did.</p>
<p>EMMY. I said theres a lady bothering me to see the doctor. That isnt
asking. Its telling.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. Well, is the lady bothering you any reason for you to come
bothering me when I'm busy?</p>
<p>EMMY. Have you seen the papers?</p>
<p>REDPENNY. No.</p>
<p>EMMY. Not seen the birthday honors?</p>
<p>REDPENNY [beginning to swear] What the—</p>
<p>EMMY. Now, now, ducky!</p>
<p>REDPENNY. What do you suppose I care about the birthday honors? Get out of
this with your chattering. Dr Ridgeon will be down before I have these
letters ready. Get out.</p>
<p>EMMY. Dr Ridgeon wont never be down any more, young man.</p>
<p>She detects dust on the console and is down on it immediately.</p>
<p>REDPENNY [jumping up and following her] What?</p>
<p>EMMY. He's been made a knight. Mind you dont go Dr Ridgeoning him in them
letters. Sir Colenso Ridgeon is to be his name now.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. I'm jolly glad.</p>
<p>EMMY. I never was so taken aback. I always thought his great discoveries
was fudge (let alone the mess of them) with his drops of blood and tubes
full of Maltese fever and the like. Now he'll have a rare laugh at me.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. Serve you right! It was like your cheek to talk to him about
science. [He returns to his table and resumes his writing].</p>
<p>EMMY. Oh, I dont think much of science; and neither will you when youve
lived as long with it as I have. Whats on my mind is answering the door.
Old Sir Patrick Cullen has been here already and left first
congratulations—hadnt time to come up on his way to the hospital,
but was determined to be first—coming back, he said. All the rest
will be here too: the knocker will be going all day. What Im afraid of is
that the doctor'll want a footman like all the rest, now that he's Sir
Colenso. Mind: dont you go putting him up to it, ducky; for he'll never
have any comfort with anybody but me to answer the door. I know who to let
in and who to keep out. And that reminds me of the poor lady. I think he
ought to see her. Shes just the kind that puts him in a good temper. [She
dusts Redpenny's papers].</p>
<p>REDPENNY. I tell you he cant see anybody. Do go away, Emmy. How can I work
with you dusting all over me like this?</p>
<p>EMMY. I'm not hindering you working—if you call writing letters
working. There goes the bell. [She looks out of the window]. A doctor's
carriage. Thats more congratulations. [She is going out when Sir Colenso
Ridgeon enters]. Have you finished your two eggs, sonny?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yes.</p>
<p>EMMY. Have you put on your clean vest?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yes.</p>
<p>EMMY. Thats my ducky diamond! Now keep yourself tidy and dont go messing
about and dirtying your hands: the people are coming to congratulate you.
[She goes out].</p>
<p>Sir Colenso Ridgeon is a man of fifty who has never shaken off his youth.
He has the off-handed manner and the little audacities of address which a
shy and sensitive man acquires in breaking himself in to intercourse with
all sorts and conditions of men. His face is a good deal lined; his
movements are slower than, for instance, Redpenny's; and his flaxen hair
has lost its lustre; but in figure and manner he is more the young man
than the titled physician. Even the lines in his face are those of
overwork and restless scepticism, perhaps partly of curiosity and
appetite, rather than of age. Just at present the announcement of his
knighthood in the morning papers makes him specially self-conscious, and
consequently specially off-hand with Redpenny.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Have you seen the papers? Youll have to alter the name in the
letters if you havnt.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. Emmy has just told me. I'm awfully glad. I—</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Enough, young man, enough. You will soon get accustomed to it.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. They ought to have done it years ago.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. They would have; only they couldnt stand Emmy opening the door, I
daresay.</p>
<p>EMMY [at the door, announcing] Dr Shoemaker. [She withdraws].</p>
<p>A middle-aged gentleman, well dressed, comes in with a friendly but
propitiatory air, not quite sure of his reception. His combination of soft
manners and responsive kindliness, with a certain unseizable reserve and a
familiar yet foreign chiselling of feature, reveal the Jew: in this
instance the handsome gentlemanly Jew, gone a little pigeon-breasted and
stale after thirty, as handsome young Jews often do, but still decidedly
good-looking.</p>
<p>THE GENTLEMAN. Do you remember me? Schutzmacher. University College school
and Belsize Avenue. Loony Schutzmacher, you know.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. What! Loony! [He shakes hands cordially]. Why, man, I thought you
were dead long ago. Sit down. [Schutzmacher sits on the couch: Ridgeon on
the chair between it and the window]. Where have you been these thirty
years?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. In general practice, until a few months ago. I've retired.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Well done, Loony! I wish I could afford to retire. Was your
practice in London?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. No.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Fashionable coast practice, I suppose.</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. How could I afford to buy a fashionable practice? I hadnt a
rap. I set up in a manufacturing town in the midlands in a little surgery
at ten shillings a week.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. And made your fortune?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. Well, I'm pretty comfortable. I have a place in
Hertfordshire besides our flat in town. If you ever want a quiet Saturday
to Monday, I'll take you down in my motor at an hours notice.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Just rolling in money! I wish you rich g.p.'s would teach me how
to make some. Whats the secret of it?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. Oh, in my case the secret was simple enough, though I
suppose I should have got into trouble if it had attracted any notice. And
I'm afraid you'll think it rather infra dig.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Oh, I have an open mind. What was the secret?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. Well, the secret was just two words.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Not Consultation Free, was it?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER [shocked] No, no. Really!</p>
<p>RIDGEON [apologetic] Of course not. I was only joking.</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. My two words were simply Cure Guaranteed.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [admiring] Cure Guaranteed!</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. Guaranteed. After all, thats what everybody wants from a
doctor, isnt it?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. My dear loony, it was an inspiration. Was it on the brass plate?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. There was no brass plate. It was a shop window: red, you
know, with black lettering. Doctor Leo Schutzmacher, L.R.C.P.M.R.C.S.
Advice and medicine sixpence. Cure Guaranteed.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. And the guarantee proved sound nine times out of ten, eh?</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER [rather hurt at so moderate an estimate] Oh, much oftener
than that. You see, most people get well all right if they are careful and
you give them a little sensible advice. And the medicine really did them
good. Parrish's Chemical Food: phosphates, you know. One tablespoonful to
a twelve-ounce bottle of water: nothing better, no matter what the case
is.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Redpenny: make a note of Parrish's Chemical Food.</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. I take it myself, you know, when I feel run down. Good-bye.
You dont mind my calling, do you? Just to congratulate you.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Delighted, my dear Loony. Come to lunch on Saturday next week.
Bring your motor and take me down to Hertford.</p>
<p>SCHUTZMACHER. I will. We shall be delighted. Thank you. Good-bye. [He goes
out with Ridgeon, who returns immediately].</p>
<p>REDPENNY. Old Paddy Cullen was here before you were up, to be the first to
congratulate you.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Indeed. Who taught you to speak of Sir Patrick Cullen as old
Paddy Cullen, you young ruffian?</p>
<p>REDPENNY. You never call him anything else.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Not now that I am Sir Colenso. Next thing, you fellows will be
calling me old Colly Ridgeon.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. We do, at St. Anne's.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yach! Thats what makes the medical student the most disgusting
figure in modern civilization. No veneration, no manners—no—</p>
<p>EMMY [at the door, announcing]. Sir Patrick Cullen. [She retires].</p>
<p>Sir Patrick Cullen is more than twenty years older than Ridgeon, not yet
quite at the end of his tether, but near it and resigned to it. His name,
his plain, downright, sometimes rather arid common sense, his large build
and stature, the absence of those odd moments of ceremonial servility by
which an old English doctor sometimes shews you what the status of the
profession was in England in his youth, and an occasional turn of speech,
are Irish; but he has lived all his life in England and is thoroughly
acclimatized. His manner to Ridgeon, whom he likes, is whimsical and
fatherly: to others he is a little gruff and uninviting, apt to substitute
more or less expressive grunts for articulate speech, and generally
indisposed, at his age, to make much social effort. He shakes Ridgeon's
hand and beams at him cordially and jocularly.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Well, young chap. Is your hat too small for you, eh?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Much too small. I owe it all to you.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Blarney, my boy. Thank you all the same. [He sits in one of
the arm-chairs near the fireplace. Ridgeon sits on the couch]. Ive come to
talk to you a bit. [To Redpenny] Young man: get out.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. Certainly, Sir Patrick [He collects his papers and makes for the
door].</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Thank you. Thats a good lad. [Redpenny vanishes]. They all
put up with me, these young chaps, because I'm an old man, a real old man,
not like you. Youre only beginning to give yourself the airs of age. Did
you ever see a boy cultivating a moustache? Well, a middle-aged doctor
cultivating a grey head is much the same sort of spectacle.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Good Lord! yes: I suppose so. And I thought that the days of my
vanity were past. Tell me at what age does a man leave off being a fool?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Remember the Frenchman who asked his grandmother at what age
we get free from the temptations of love. The old woman said she didn't
know. [Ridgeon laughs]. Well, I make you the same answer. But the world's
growing very interesting to me now, Colly.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. You keep up your interest in science, do you?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Lord! yes. Modern science is a wonderful thing. Look at your
great discovery! Look at all the great discoveries! Where are they leading
to? Why, right back to my poor dear old father's ideas and discoveries.
He's been dead now over forty years. Oh, it's very interesting.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Well, theres nothing like progress, is there?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Dont misunderstand me, my boy. I'm not belittling your
discovery. Most discoveries are made regularly every fifteen years; and
it's fully a hundred and fifty since yours was made last. Thats something
to be proud of. But your discovery's not new. It's only inoculation. My
father practised inoculation until it was made criminal in eighteen-forty.
That broke the poor old man's heart, Colly: he died of it. And now it
turns out that my father was right after all. Youve brought us back to
inoculation.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I know nothing about smallpox. My line is tuberculosis and
typhoid and plague. But of course the principle of all vaccines is the
same.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Tuberculosis? M-m-m-m! Youve found out how to cure
consumption, eh?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I believe so.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Ah yes. It's very interesting. What is it the old cardinal
says in Browning's play? "I have known four and twenty leaders of revolt."
Well, Ive known over thirty men that found out how to cure consumption.
Why do people go on dying of it, Colly? Devilment, I suppose. There was my
father's old friend George Boddington of Sutton Coldfield. He discovered
the open-air cure in eighteen-forty. He was ruined and driven out of his
practice for only opening the windows; and now we wont let a consumptive
patient have as much as a roof over his head. Oh, it's very VERY
interesting to an old man.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. You old cynic, you dont believe a bit in my discovery.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. No, no: I dont go quite so far as that, Colly. But still, you
remember Jane Marsh?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Jane Marsh? No.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. You dont!</p>
<p>RIDGEON. No.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. You mean to tell me you dont remember the woman with the
tuberculosis ulcer on her arm?</p>
<p>RIDGEON [enlightened] Oh, your washerwoman's daughter. Was her name Jane
Marsh? I forgot.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Perhaps youve forgotten also that you undertook to cure her
with Koch's tuberculin.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. And instead of curing her, it rotted her arm right off. Yes: I
remember. Poor Jane! However, she makes a good living out of that arm now
by shewing it at medical lectures.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Still, that wasnt quite what you intended, was it?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I took my chance of it.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Jane did, you mean.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Well, it's always the patient who has to take the chance when an
experiment is necessary. And we can find out nothing without experiment.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. What did you find out from Jane's case?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I found out that the inoculation that ought to cure sometimes
kills.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. I could have told you that. Ive tried these modern
inoculations a bit myself. Ive killed people with them; and Ive cured
people with them; but I gave them up because I never could tell which I
was going to do.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [taking a pamphlet from a drawer in the writing-table and handing
it to him] Read that the next time you have an hour to spare; and youll
find out why.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK [grumbling and fumbling for his spectacles] Oh, bother your
pamphlets. Whats the practice of it? [Looking at the pamphlet] Opsonin?
What the devil is opsonin?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Opsonin is what you butter the disease germs with to make your
white blood corpuscles eat them. [He sits down again on the couch].</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Thats not new. Ive heard this notion that the white
corpuscles—what is it that whats his name?—Metchnikoff—calls
them?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Phagocytes.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Aye, phagocytes: yes, yes, yes. Well, I heard this theory
that the phagocytes eat up the disease germs years ago: long before you
came into fashion. Besides, they dont always eat them.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. They do when you butter them with opsonin.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Gammon.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. No: it's not gammon. What it comes to in practice is this. The
phagocytes wont eat the microbes unless the microbes are nicely buttered
for them. Well, the patient manufactures the butter for himself all right;
but my discovery is that the manufacture of that butter, which I call
opsonin, goes on in the system by ups and downs—Nature being always
rhythmical, you know—and that what the inoculation does is to
stimulate the ups or downs, as the case may be. If we had inoculated Jane
Marsh when her butter factory was on the up-grade, we should have cured
her arm. But we got in on the downgrade and lost her arm for her. I call
the up-grade the positive phase and the down-grade the negative phase.
Everything depends on your inoculating at the right moment. Inoculate when
the patient is in the negative phase and you kill: inoculate when the
patient is in the positive phase and you cure.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. And pray how are you to know whether the patient is in the
positive or the negative phase?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Send a drop of the patient's blood to the laboratory at St.
Anne's; and in fifteen minutes I'll give you his opsonin index in figures.
If the figure is one, inoculate and cure: if it's under point eight,
inoculate and kill. Thats my discovery: the most important that has been
made since Harvey discovered the circulation of the blood. My tuberculosis
patients dont die now.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. And mine do when my inoculation catches them in the negative
phase, as you call it. Eh?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Precisely. To inject a vaccine into a patient without first
testing his opsonin is as near murder as a respectable practitioner can
get. If I wanted to kill s man I should kill him that way.</p>
<p>EMMY [looking in] Will you see a lady that wants her husband's lungs
cured?</p>
<p>RIDGEON [impatiently] No. Havnt I told you I will see nobody?[To Sir
Patrick] I live in a state of siege ever since it got about that I'm a
magician who can cure consumption with a drop of serum. [To Emmy] Dont
come to me again about people who have no appointments. I tell you I can
see nobody.</p>
<p>EMMY. Well, I'll tell her to wait a bit.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [furious] Youll tell her I cant see her, and send her away: do you
hear?</p>
<p>EMMY [unmoved] Well, will you see Mr Cutler Walpole? He dont want a cure:
he only wants to congratulate you.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Of course. Shew him up. [She turns to go]. Stop. [To Sir Patrick]
I want two minutes more with you between ourselves. [To Emmy] Emmy: ask
Mr. Walpole to wait just two minutes, while I finish a consultation.</p>
<p>EMMY. Oh, he'll wait all right. He's talking to the poor lady. [She goes
out].</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Well? what is it?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Dont laugh at me. I want your advice.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Professional advice?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yes. Theres something the matter with me. I dont know what it is.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Neither do I. I suppose youve been sounded.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yes, of course. Theres nothing wrong with any of the organs:
nothing special, anyhow. But I have a curious aching: I dont know where: I
cant localize it. Sometimes I think it's my heart: sometimes I suspect my
spine. It doesnt exactly hurt me; but it unsettles me completely. I feel
that something is going to happen. And there are other symptoms. Scraps of
tunes come into my head that seem to me very pretty, though theyre quite
commonplace.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Do you hear voices?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. No.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. I'm glad of that. When my patients tell me that theyve made a
greater discovery than Harvey, and that they hear voices, I lock them up.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. You think I'm mad! Thats just the suspicion that has come across
me once or twice. Tell me the truth: I can bear it.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Youre sure there are no voices?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Quite sure.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Then it's only foolishness.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Have you ever met anything like it before in your practice?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Oh, yes: often. It's very common between the ages of
seventeen and twenty-two. It sometimes comes on again at forty or
thereabouts. Youre a bachelor, you see. It's not serious—if youre
careful.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. About my food?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. No: about your behavior. Theres nothing wrong with your
spine; and theres nothing wrong with your heart; but theres something
wrong with your common sense. Youre not going to die; but you may be going
to make a fool of yourself. So be careful.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I sec you dont believe in my discovery. Well, sometimes I dont
believe in it myself. Thank you all the same. Shall we have Walpole up?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Oh, have him up. [Ridgeon rings]. He's a clever operator, is
Walpole, though he's only one of your chloroform surgeons. In my early
days, you made your man drunk; and the porters and students held him down;
and you had to set your teeth and finish the job fast. Nowadays you work
at your ease; and the pain doesn't come until afterwards, when youve taken
your cheque and rolled up your bag and left the house. I tell you, Colly,
chloroform has done a lot of mischief. It's enabled every fool to be a
surgeon.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [to Emmy, who answers the bell] Shew Mr Walpole up.</p>
<p>EMMY. He's talking to the lady.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [exasperated] Did I not tell you—</p>
<p>Emmy goes out without heeding him. He gives it up, with a shrug, and
plants himself with his back to the console, leaning resignedly against
it.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. I know your Cutler Walpoles and their like. Theyve found out
that a man's body's full of bits and scraps of old organs he has no mortal
use for. Thanks to chloroform, you can cut half a dozen of them out
without leaving him any the worse, except for the illness and the guineas
it costs him. I knew the Walpoles well fifteen years ago. The father used
to snip off the ends of people's uvulas for fifty guineas, and paint
throats with caustic every day for a year at two guineas a time. His
brother-in-law extirpated tonsils for two hundred guineas until he took up
women's cases at double the fees. Cutler himself worked hard at anatomy to
find something fresh to operate on; and at last he got hold of something
he calls the nuciform sac, which he's made quite the fashion. People pay
him five hundred guineas to cut it out. They might as well get their hair
cut for all the difference it makes; but I suppose they feel important
after it. You cant go out to dinner now without your neighbor bragging to
you of some useless operation or other.</p>
<p>EMMY [announcing] Mr Cutler Walpole. [She goes out].</p>
<p>Cutler Walpole is an energetic, unhesitating man of forty, with a cleanly
modelled face, very decisive and symmetrical about the shortish, salient,
rather pretty nose, and the three trimly turned corners made by his chin
and jaws. In comparison with Ridgeon's delicate broken lines, and Sir
Patrick's softly rugged aged ones, his face looks machine-made and
beeswaxed; but his scrutinizing, daring eyes give it life and force. He
seems never at a loss, never in doubt: one feels that if he made a mistake
he would make it thoroughly and firmly. He has neat, well-nourished hands,
short arms, and is built for strength and compactness rather than for
height. He is smartly dressed with a fancy waistcoat, a richly colored
scarf secured by a handsome ring, ornaments on his watch chain, spats on
his shoes, and a general air of the well-to-do sportsman about him. He
goes straight across to Ridgeon and shakes hands with him.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. My dear Ridgeon, best wishes! heartiest congratulations! You
deserve it.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Thank you.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. As a man, mind you. You deserve it as a man. The opsonin is
simple rot, as any capable surgeon can tell you; but we're all delighted
to see your personal qualities officially recognized. Sir Patrick: how are
you? I sent you a paper lately about a little thing I invented: a new saw.
For shoulder blades.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK [meditatively] Yes: I got it. It's a good saw: a useful, handy
instrument.</p>
<p>WALPOLE [confidently] I knew youd see its points.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Yes: I remember that saw sixty-five years ago.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. What!</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. It was called a cabinetmaker's jimmy then.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. Get out! Nonsense! Cabinetmaker be—</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Never mind him, Walpole. He's jealous.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. By the way, I hope I'm not disturbing you two in anything
private.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. No no. Sit down. I was only consulting him. I'm rather out of
sorts. Overwork, I suppose.</p>
<p>WALPOLE [swiftly] I know whats the matter with you. I can see it in your
complexion. I can feel it in the grip of your hand.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. What is it?</p>
<p>WALPOLE. Blood-poisoning.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Blood-poisoning! Impossible.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. I tell you, blood-poisoning. Ninety-five per cent of the human
race suffer from chronic blood-poisoning, and die of it. It's as simple as
A.B.C. Your nuciform sac is full of decaying matter—undigested food
and waste products—rank ptomaines. Now you take my advice, Ridgeon.
Let me cut it out for you. You'll be another man afterwards.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Dont you like him as he is?</p>
<p>WALPOLE. No I dont. I dont like any man who hasnt a healthy circulation. I
tell you this: in an intelligently governed country people wouldnt be
allowed to go about with nuciform sacs, making themselves centres of
infection. The operation ought to be compulsory: it's ten times more
important than vaccination.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Have you had your own sac removed, may I ask?</p>
<p>WALPOLE [triumphantly] I havnt got one. Look at me! Ive no symptoms. I'm
as sound as a bell. About five per cent of the population havnt got any;
and I'm one of the five per cent. I'll give you an instance. You know Mrs
Jack Foljambe: the smart Mrs Foljambe? I operated at Easter on her
sister-in-law, Lady Gorran, and found she had the biggest sac I ever saw:
it held about two ounces. Well, Mrs. Foljambe had the right spirit—the
genuine hygienic instinct. She couldnt stand her sister-in-law being a
clean, sound woman, and she simply a whited sepulchre. So she insisted on
my operating on her, too. And by George, sir, she hadnt any sac at all.
Not a trace! Not a rudiment!! I was so taken aback—so interested,
that I forgot to take the sponges out, and was stitching them up inside
her when the nurse missed them. Somehow, I'd made sure she'd have an
exceptionally large one. [He sits down on the couch, squaring his
shoulders and shooting his hands out of his cuffs as he sets his knuckles
akimbo].</p>
<p>EMMY [looking in] Sir Ralph Bloomfield Bonington.</p>
<p>A long and expectant pause follows this announcement. All look to the
door; but there is no Sir Ralph.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [at last] Were is he?</p>
<p>EMMY [looking back] Drat him, I thought he was following me. He's stayed
down to talk to that lady.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [exploding] I told you to tell that lady—[Emmy vanishes].</p>
<p>WALPOLE [jumping up again] Oh, by the way, Ridgeon, that reminds me. Ive
been talking to that poor girl. It's her husband; and she thinks it's a
case of consumption: the usual wrong diagnosis: these damned general
practitioners ought never to be allowed to touch a patient except under
the orders of a consultant. She's been describing his symptoms to me; and
the case is as plain as a pikestaff: bad blood-poisoning. Now she's poor.
She cant afford to have him operated on. Well, you send him to me: I'll do
it for nothing. Theres room for him in my nursing home. I'll put him
straight, and feed him up and make him happy. I like making people happy.
[He goes to the chair near the window].</p>
<p>EMMY [looking in] Here he is.</p>
<p>Sir Ralph Bloomfield Bonington wafts himself into the room. He is a tall
man, with a head like a tall and slender egg. He has been in his time a
slender man; but now, in his sixth decade, his waistcoat has filled out
somewhat. His fair eyebrows arch good-naturedly and uncritically. He has a
most musical voice; his speech is a perpetual anthem; and he never tires
of the sound of it. He radiates an enormous self-satisfaction, cheering,
reassuring, healing by the mere incompatibility of disease or anxiety with
his welcome presence. Even broken bones, it is said, have been known to
unite at the sound of his voice: he is a born healer, as independent of
mere treatment and skill as any Christian scientist. When he expands into
oratory or scientific exposition, he is as energetic as Walpole; but it is
with a bland, voluminous, atmospheric energy, which envelops its subject
and its audience, and makes interruption or inattention impossible, and
imposes veneration and credulity on all but the strongest minds. He is
known in the medical world as B. B.; and the envy roused by his success in
practice is softened by the conviction that he is, scientifically
considered, a colossal humbug: the fact being that, though he knows just
as much (and just as little) as his contemporaries, the qualifications
that pass muster in common men reveal their weakness when hung on his
egregious personality.</p>
<p>B. B. Aha! Sir Colenso. Sir Colenso, eh? Welcome to the order of
knighthood.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [shaking hands] Thank you, B. B.</p>
<p>B. B. What! Sir Patrick! And how are we to-day? a little chilly? a little
stiff? but hale and still the cleverest of us all. [Sir Patrick grunts].
What! Walpole! the absent-minded beggar: eh?</p>
<p>WALPOLE. What does that mean?</p>
<p>B. B. Have you forgotten the lovely opera singer I sent you to have that
growth taken off her vocal cords?</p>
<p>WALPOLE [springing to his feet] Great heavens, man, you dont mean to say
you sent her for a throat operation!</p>
<p>B. B. [archly] Aha! Ha ha! Aha! [trilling like a lark as he shakes his
finger at Walpole]. You removed her nuciform sac. Well, well! force of
habit! force of habit! Never mind, ne-e-e-ver mind. She got back her voice
after it, and thinks you the greatest surgeon alive; and so you are, so
you are, so you are.</p>
<p>WALPOLE [in a tragic whisper, intensely serious] Blood-poisoning. I see. I
see. [He sits down again].</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. And how is a certain distinguished family getting on under
your care, Sir Ralph?</p>
<p>B. B. Our friend Ridgeon will be gratified to hear that I have tried his
opsonin treatment on little Prince Henry with complete success.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [startled and anxious] But how—</p>
<p>B. B. [continuing] I suspected typhoid: the head gardener's boy had it; so
I just called at St Anne's one day and got a tube of your very excellent
serum. You were out, unfortunately.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I hope they explained to you carefully—</p>
<p>B. B. [waving away the absurd suggestion] Lord bless you, my dear fellow,
I didnt need any explanations. I'd left my wife in the carriage at the
door; and I'd no time to be taught my business by your young chaps. I know
all about it. Ive handled these anti-toxins ever since they first came
out.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. But theyre not anti-toxins; and theyre dangerous unless you use
them at the right time.</p>
<p>B. B. Of course they are. Everything is dangerous unless you take it at
the right time. An apple at breakfast does you good: an apple at bedtime
upsets you for a week. There are only two rules for anti-toxins. First,
dont be afraid of them: second, inject them a quarter of an hour before
meals, three times a day.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [appalled] Great heavens, B. B., no, no, no.</p>
<p>B. B. [sweeping on irresistibly] Yes, yes, yes, Colly. The proof of the
pudding is in the eating, you know. It was an immense success. It acted
like magic on the little prince. Up went his temperature; off to bed I
packed him; and in a week he was all right again, and absolutely immune
from typhoid for the rest of his life. The family were very nice about it:
their gratitude was quite touching; but I said they owed it all to you,
Ridgeon; and I am glad to think that your knighthood is the result.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I am deeply obliged to you. [Overcome, he sits down on the chair
near the couch].</p>
<p>B. B. Not at all, not at all. Your own merit. Come! come! come! dont give
way.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. It's nothing. I was a little giddy just now. Overwork, I suppose.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. Blood-poisoning.</p>
<p>B. B. Overwork! Theres no such thing. I do the work of ten men. Am I
giddy? No. NO. If youre not well, you have a disease. It may be a slight
one; but it's a disease. And what is a disease? The lodgment in the system
of a pathogenic germ, and the multiplication of that germ. What is the
remedy? A very simple one. Find the germ and kill it.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Suppose theres no germ?</p>
<p>B. B. Impossible, Sir Patrick: there must be a germ: else how could the
patient be ill?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Can you shew me the germ of overwork?</p>
<p>B. B. No; but why? Why? Because, my dear Sir Patrick, though the germ is
there, it's invisible. Nature has given it no danger signal for us. These
germs—these bacilli—are translucent bodies, like glass, like
water. To make them visible you must stain them. Well, my dear Paddy, do
what you will, some of them wont stain. They wont take cochineal: they
wont take methylene blue; they wont take gentian violet: they wont take
any coloring matter. Consequently, though we know, as scientific men, that
they exist, we cannot see them. But can you disprove their existence? Can
you conceive the disease existing without them? Can you, for instance,
shew me a case of diphtheria without the bacillus?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. No; but I'll shew you the same bacillus, without the disease,
in your own throat.</p>
<p>B. B. No, not the same, Sir Patrick. It is an entirely different bacillus;
only the two are, unfortunately, so exactly alike that you cannot see the
difference. You must understand, my dear Sir Patrick, that every one of
these interesting little creatures has an imitator. Just as men imitate
each other, germs imitate each other. There is the genuine diphtheria
bacillus discovered by Loeffler; and there is the pseudo-bacillus, exactly
like it, which you could find, as you say, in my own throat.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. And how do you tell one from the other?<br/></p>
<p>B. B. Well, obviously, if the bacillus is the genuine Loeffler, you have
diphtheria; and if it's the pseudobacillus, youre quite well. Nothing
simpler. Science is always simple and always profound. It is only the
half-truths that are dangerous. Ignorant faddists pick up some superficial
information about germs; and they write to the papers and try to discredit
science. They dupe and mislead many honest and worthy people. But science
has a perfect answer to them on every point.</p>
<p>A little learning is a dangerous thing;<br/>
Drink deep; or taste not the Pierian spring.<br/></p>
<p>I mean no disrespect to your generation, Sir Patrick: some of you old
stagers did marvels through sheer professional intuition and clinical
experience; but when I think of the average men of your day, ignorantly
bleeding and cupping and purging, and scattering germs over their patients
from their clothes and instruments, and contrast all that with the
scientific certainty and simplicity of my treatment of the little prince
the other day, I cant help being proud of my own generation: the men who
were trained on the germ theory, the veterans of the great struggle over
Evolution in the seventies. We may have our faults; but at least we are
men of science. That is why I am taking up your treatment, Ridgeon, and
pushing it. It's scientific. [He sits down on the chair near the couch].</p>
<p>EMMY [at the door, announcing] Dr Blenkinsop.</p>
<p>Dr Blenkinsop is a very different case from the others. He is clearly not
a prosperous man. He is flabby and shabby, cheaply fed and cheaply
clothed. He has the lines made by a conscience between his eyes, and the
lines made by continual money worries all over his face, cut all the
deeper as he has seen better days, and hails his well-to-do colleagues as
their contemporary and old hospital friend, though even in this he has to
struggle with the diffidence of poverty and relegation to the poorer
middle class.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. How are you, Blenkinsop?</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. Ive come to offer my humble congratulations. Oh dear! all the
great guns are before me.</p>
<p>B. B. [patronizing, but charming] How d'ye do Blenkinsop? How d'ye do?</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. And Sir Patrick, too [Sir Patrick grunts].</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Youve met Walpole, of course?</p>
<p>WALPOLE. How d'ye do?</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. It's the first time Ive had that honor. In my poor little
practice there are no chances of meeting you great men. I know nobody but
the St Anne's men of my own day. [To Ridgeon] And so youre Sir Colenso.
How does it feel?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Foolish at first. Dont take any notice of it.</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. I'm ashamed to say I havnt a notion what your great discovery
is; but I congratulate you all the same for the sake of old times.</p>
<p>B. B. [shocked] But, my dear Blenkinsop, you used to be rather keen on
science.</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. Ah, I used to be a lot of things. I used to have two or three
decent suits of clothes, and flannels to go up the river on Sundays. Look
at me now: this is my best; and it must last till Christmas. What can I
do? Ive never opened a book since I was qualified thirty years ago. I used
to read the medical papers at first; but you know how soon a man drops
that; besides, I cant afford them; and what are they after all but trade
papers, full of advertisements? Ive forgotten all my science: whats the
use of my pretending I havnt? But I have great experience: clinical
experience; and bedside experience is the main thing, isn't it?</p>
<p>B. B. No doubt; always provided, mind you, that you have a sound
scientific theory to correlate your observations at the bedside. Mere
experience by itself is nothing. If I take my dog to the bedside with me,
he sees what I see. But he learns nothing from it. Why? Because he's not a
scientific dog.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. It amuses me to hear you physicians and general practitioners
talking about clinical experience. What do you see at the bedside but the
outside of the patient? Well: it isnt his outside thats wrong, except
perhaps in skin cases. What you want is a daily familiarity with people's
insides; and that you can only get at the operating table. I know what I'm
talking about: Ive been a surgeon and a consultant for twenty years; and
Ive never known a general practitioner right in his diagnosis yet. Bring
them a perfectly simple case; and they diagnose cancer, and arthritis, and
appendicitis, and every other itis, when any really experienced surgeon
can see that it's a plain case of blood-poisoning.</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. Ah, it's easy for you gentlemen to talk; but what would you
say if you had my practice? Except for the workmen's clubs, my patients
are all clerks and shopmen. They darent be ill: they cant afford it. And
when they break down, what can I do for them? You can send your people to
St Moritz or to Egypt, or recommend horse exercise or motoring or
champagne jelly or complete change and rest for six months. I might as
well order my people a slice of the moon. And the worst of it is, I'm too
poor to keep well myself on the cooking I have to put up with. Ive such a
wretched digestion; and I look it. How am I to inspire confidence? [He
sits disconsolately on the couch].</p>
<p>RIDGEON [restlessly] Dont, Blenkinsop: its too painful. The most tragic
thing in the world is a sick doctor.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. Yes, by George: its like a bald-headed man trying to sell a hair
restorer. Thank God I'm a surgeon!</p>
<p>B. B. [sunnily] I am never sick. Never had a day's illness in my life.
Thats what enables me to sympathize with my patients.</p>
<p>WALPOLE [interested] What! youre never ill?</p>
<p>B. B. Never.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. Thats interesting. I believe you have no nuciform sac. If you
ever do feel at all queer, I should very much like to have a look.</p>
<p>B. B. Thank you, my dear fellow; but I'm too busy just now.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I was just telling them when you came in, Blenkinsop, that I have
worked myself out of sorts.</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. Well, it seems presumptuous of me to offer a prescription to a
great man like you; but still I have great experience; and if I might
recommend a pound of ripe greengages every day half an hour before lunch,
I'm sure youd find a benefit. Theyre very cheap.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. What do you say to that B. B.?</p>
<p>B. B. [encouragingly] Very sensible, Blenkinsop: very sensible indeed. I'm
delighted to see that you disapprove of drugs.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK [grunts]!</p>
<p>B. B. [archly] Aha! Haha! Did I hear from the fireside armchair the
bow-wow of the old school defending its drugs? Ah, believe me, Paddy, the
world would be healthier if every chemist's shop in England were
demolished. Look at the papers! full of scandalous advertisements of
patent medicines! a huge commercial system of quackery and poison. Well,
whose fault is it? Ours. I say, ours. We set the example. We spread the
superstition. We taught the people to believe in bottles of doctor's
stuff; and now they buy it at the stores instead of consulting a medical
man.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. Quite true. Ive not prescribed a drug for the last fifteen years.</p>
<p>B. B. Drugs can only repress symptoms: they cannot eradicate disease. The
true remedy for all diseases is Nature's remedy. Nature and Science are at
one, Sir Patrick, believe me; though you were taught differently. Nature
has provided, in the white corpuscles as you call them—in the
phagocytes as we call them—a natural means of devouring and
destroying all disease germs. There is at bottom only one genuinely
scientific treatment for all diseases, and that is to stimulate the
phagocytes. Stimulate the phagocytes. Drugs are a delusion. Find the germ
of the disease; prepare from it a suitable anti-toxin; inject it three
times a day quarter of an hour before meals; and what is the result? The
phagocytes are stimulated; they devour the disease; and the patient
recovers—unless, of course, he's too far gone. That, I take it, is
the essence of Ridgeon's discovery.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK [dreamily] As I sit here, I seem to hear my poor old father
talking again.</p>
<p>B. B. [rising in incredulous amazement] Your father! But, Lord bless my
soul, Paddy, your father must have been an older man than you.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Word for word almost, he said what you say. No more drugs.
Nothing but inoculation.</p>
<p>B. B. [almost contemptuously] Inoculation! Do you mean smallpox
inoculation?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Yes. In the privacy of our family circle, sir, my father used
to declare his belief that smallpox inoculation was good, not only for
smallpox, but for all fevers.</p>
<p>B. B. [suddenly rising to the new idea with immense interest and
excitement] What! Ridgeon: did you hear that? Sir Patrick: I am more
struck by what you have just told me than I can well express. Your father,
sir, anticipated a discovery of my own. Listen, Walpole. Blenkinsop:
attend one moment. You will all be intensely interested in this. I was put
on the track by accident. I had a typhoid case and a tetanus case side by
side in the hospital: a beadle and a city missionary. Think of what that
meant for them, poor fellows! Can a beadle be dignified with typhoid? Can
a missionary be eloquent with lockjaw? No. NO. Well, I got some typhoid
anti-toxin from Ridgeon and a tube of Muldooley's anti-tetanus serum. But
the missionary jerked all my things off the table in one of his paroxysms;
and in replacing them I put Ridgeon's tube where Muldooley's ought to have
been. The consequence was that I inoculated the typhoid case for tetanus
and the tetanus case for typhoid. [The doctors look greatly concerned. B.
B., undamped, smiles triumphantly]. Well, they recovered. THEY RECOVERED.
Except for a touch of St Vitus's dance the missionary's as well to-day as
ever; and the beadle's ten times the man he was.</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. Ive known things like that happen. They cant be explained.</p>
<p>B. B. [severely] Blenkinsop: there is nothing that cannot be explained by
science. What did I do? Did I fold my hands helplessly and say that the
case could not be explained? By no means. I sat down and used my brains. I
thought the case out on scientific principles. I asked myself why didnt
the missionary die of typhoid on top of tetanus, and the beadle of tetanus
on top of typhoid? Theres a problem for you, Ridgeon. Think, Sir Patrick.
Reflect, Blenkinsop. Look at it without prejudice, Walpole. What is the
real work of the anti-toxin? Simply to stimulate the phagocytes. Very
well. But so long as you stimulate the phagocytes, what does it matter
which particular sort of serum you use for the purpose? Haha! Eh? Do you
see? Do you grasp it? Ever since that Ive used all sorts of anti-toxins
absolutely indiscriminately, with perfectly satisfactory results. I
inoculated the little prince with your stuff, Ridgeon, because I wanted to
give you a lift; but two years ago I tried the experiment of treating a
scarlet fever case with a sample of hydrophobia serum from the Pasteur
Institute, and it answered capitally. It stimulated the phagocytes; and
the phagocytes did the rest. That is why Sir Patrick's father found that
inoculation cured all fevers. It stimulated the phagocytes. [He throws
himself into his chair, exhausted with the triumph of his demonstration,
and beams magnificently on them].</p>
<p>EMMY [looking in] Mr Walpole: your motor's come for you; and it's
frightening Sir Patrick's horses; so come along quick.</p>
<p>WALPOLE [rising] Good-bye, Ridgeon.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Good-bye; and many thanks.</p>
<p>B. B. You see my point, Walpole?</p>
<p>EMMY. He cant wait, Sir Ralph. The carriage will be into the area if he
dont come.</p>
<p>WALPOLE. I'm coming. [To B. B.] Theres nothing in your point: phagocytosis
is pure rot: the cases are all blood-poisoning; and the knife is the real
remedy. Bye-bye, Sir Paddy. Happy to have met you, Mr. Blenkinsop. Now,
Emmy. [He goes out, followed by Emmy].</p>
<p>B. B. [sadly] Walpole has no intellect. A mere surgeon. Wonderful
operator; but, after all, what is operating? Only manual labor. Brain—BRAIN
remains master of the situation. The nuciform sac is utter nonsense:
theres no such organ. It's a mere accidental kink in the membrane,
occurring in perhaps two-and-a-half per cent of the population. Of course
I'm glad for Walpole's sake that the operation is fashionable; for he's a
dear good fellow; and after all, as I always tell people, the operation
will do them no harm: indeed, Ive known the nervous shake-up and the
fortnight in bed do people a lot of good after a hard London season; but
still it's a shocking fraud. [Rising] Well, I must be toddling. Good-bye,
Paddy [Sir Patrick grunts] good-bye, goodbye. Good-bye, my dear
Blenkinsop, good-bye! Goodbye, Ridgeon. Dont fret about your health: you
know what to do: if your liver is sluggish, a little mercury never does
any harm. If you feel restless, try bromide, If that doesnt answer, a
stimulant, you know: a little phosphorus and strychnine. If you cant
sleep, trional, trional, trion—</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK [drily] But no drugs, Colly, remember that.</p>
<p>B. B. [firmly] Certainly not. Quite right, Sir Patrick. As temporary
expedients, of course; but as treatment, no, No. Keep away from the
chemist's shop, my dear Ridgeon, whatever you do.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [going to the door with him] I will. And thank you for the
knighthood. Good-bye.</p>
<p>B. B. [stopping at the door, with the beam in his eye twinkling a little]
By the way, who's your patient?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Who?</p>
<p>B. B. Downstairs. Charming woman. Tuberculous husband.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Is she there still?</p>
<p>Emmy [looking in] Come on, Sir Ralph: your wife's waiting in the carriage.</p>
<p>B. B. [suddenly sobered] Oh! Good-bye. [He goes out almost precipitately].</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Emmy: is that woman there still? If so, tell her once for all
that I cant and wont see her. Do you hear?</p>
<p>EMMY. Oh, she aint in a hurry: she doesnt mind how long she waits. [She
goes out].</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. I must be off, too: every half-hour I spend away from my work
costs me eighteenpence. Good-bye, Sir Patrick.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Good-bye. Good-bye.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Come to lunch with me some day this week.</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. I cant afford it, dear boy; and it would put me off my own
food for a week. Thank you all the same.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [uneasy at Blenkinsop's poverty] Can I do nothing for you?</p>
<p>BLENKINSOP. Well, if you have an old frock-coat to spare? you see what
would be an old one for you would be a new one for me; so remember the
next time you turn out your wardrobe. Good-bye. [He hurries out].</p>
<p>RIDGEON [looking after him] Poor chap! [Turning to Sir Patrick] So thats
why they made me a knight! And thats the medical profession!</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. And a very good profession, too, my lad. When you know as
much as I know of the ignorance and superstition of the patients, youll
wonder that we're half as good as we are.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. We're not a profession: we're a conspiracy.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. All professions are conspiracies against the laity. And we
cant all be geniuses like you. Every fool can get ill; but every fool cant
be a good doctor: there are not enough good ones to go round. And for all
you know, Bloomfield Bonington kills less people than you do.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Oh, very likely. But he really ought to know the difference
between a vaccine and an anti-toxin. Stimulate the phagocytes! The vaccine
doesnt affect the phagocytes at all. He's all wrong: hopelessly,
dangerously wrong. To put a tube of serum into his hands is murder: simple
murder.</p>
<p>EMMY [returning] Now, Sir Patrick. How long more are you going to keep
them horses standing in the draught?</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK. Whats that to you, you old catamaran?</p>
<p>EMMY. Come, come, now! none of your temper to me. And it's time for Colly
to get to his work.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Behave yourself, Emmy. Get out.</p>
<p>EMMY. Oh, I learnt how to behave myself before I learnt you to do it. I
know what doctors are: sitting talking together about themselves when they
ought to be with their poor patients. And I know what horses are, Sir
Patrick. I was brought up in the country. Now be good; and come along.</p>
<p>SIR PATRICK [rising] Very well, very well, very well. Good-bye, Colly. [He
pats Ridgeon on the shoulder and goes out, turning for a moment at the
door to look meditatively at Emmy and say, with grave conviction] You are
an ugly old devil, and no mistake.</p>
<p>EMMY [highly indignant, calling after him] Youre no beauty yourself. [To
Ridgeon, much flustered] Theyve no manners: they think they can say what
they like to me; and you set them on, you do. I'll teach them their
places. Here now: are you going to see that poor thing or are you not?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I tell you for the fiftieth time I wont see anybody. Send her
away.</p>
<p>EMMY. Oh, I'm tired of being told to send her away. What good will that do
her?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Must I get angry with you, Emmy?</p>
<p>EMMY [coaxing] Come now: just see her for a minute to please me: theres a
good boy. She's given me half-a-crown. She thinks it's life and death to
her husband for her to see you.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Values her husband's life at half-a-crown!</p>
<p>EMMY. Well, it's all she can afford, poor lamb. Them others think nothing
of half-a-sovereign just to talk about themselves to you, the sluts!
Besides, she'll put you in a good temper for the day, because it's a good
deed to see her; and she's the sort that gets round you.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Well, she hasnt done so badly. For half-a-crown she's had a
consultation with Sir Ralph Bloomfield Bonington and Cutler Walpole. Thats
six guineas' worth to start with. I dare say she's consulted Blenkinsop
too: thats another eighteenpence.</p>
<p>EMMY. Then youll see her for me, wont you?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Oh, send her up and be hanged. [Emmy trots out, satisfied.
Ridgeon calls] Redpenny!</p>
<p>REDPENNY [appearing at the door] What is it?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Theres a patient coming up. If she hasnt gone in five minutes,
come in with an urgent call from the hospital for me. You understand:
she's to have a strong hint to go.</p>
<p>REDPENNY. Right O! [He vanishes].</p>
<p>Ridgeon goes to the glass, and arranges his tie a little.</p>
<p>EMMY [announcing] Mrs Doobidad [Ridgeon leaves the glass and goes to the
writing-table].</p>
<p>The lady comes in. Emmy goes out and shuts the door. Ridgeon, who has put
on an impenetrable and rather distant professional manner, turns to the
lady, and invites her, by a gesture, to sit down on the couch.</p>
<p>Mrs Dubedat is beyond all demur an arrestingly good-looking young woman.
She has something of the grace and romance of a wild creature, with a good
deal of the elegance and dignity of a fine lady. Ridgeon, who is extremely
susceptible to the beauty of women, instinctively assumes the defensive at
once, and hardens his manner still more. He has an impression that she is
very well dressed, but she has a figure on which any dress would look
well, and carries herself with the unaffected distinction of a woman who
has never in her life suffered from those doubts and fears as to her
social position which spoil the manners of most middling people. She is
tall, slender, and strong; has dark hair, dressed so as to look like hair
and not like a bird's nest or a pantaloon's wig (fashion wavering just
then between these two models); has unexpectedly narrow, subtle,
dark-fringed eyes that alter her expression disturbingly when she is
excited and flashes them wide open; is softly impetuous in her speech and
swift in her movements; and is just now in mortal anxiety. She carries a
portfolio.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [in low urgent tones] Doctor—</p>
<p>RIDGEON [curtly] Wait. Before you begin, let me tell you at once that I
can do nothing for you. My hands are full. I sent you that message by my
old servant. You would not take that answer.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. How could I?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. You bribed her.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. I—</p>
<p>RIDGEON. That doesnt matter. She coaxed me to see you. Well, you must take
it from me now that with all the good will in the world, I cannot
undertake another case.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Doctor: you must save my husband. You must. When I explain to
you, you will see that you must. It is not an ordinary case, not like any
other case. He is not like anybody else in the world: oh, believe me, he
is not. I can prove it to you: [fingering her portfolio] I have brought
some things to shew you. And you can save him: the papers say you can.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Whats the matter? Tuberculosis?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Yes. His left lung—</p>
<p>RIDGEON Yes: you neednt tell me about that.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. You can cure him, if only you will. It is true that you can,
isnt it? [In great distress] Oh, tell me, please.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [warningly] You are going to be quiet and self-possessed, arnt
you?</p>
<p>MRs DUBEDAT. Yes. I beg your pardon. I know I shouldnt—[Giving way
again] Oh, please, say that you can; and then I shall be all right.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [huffily] I am not a curemonger: if you want cures, you must go to
the people who sell them. [Recovering himself, ashamed of the tone of his
own voice] But I have at the hospital ten tuberculous patients whose lives
I believe I can save.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Thank God!</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Wait a moment. Try to think of those ten patients as ten
shipwrecked men on a raft—a raft that is barely large enough to save
them—that will not support one more. Another head bobs up through
the waves at the side. Another man begs to be taken aboard. He implores
the captain of the raft to save him. But the captain can only do that by
pushing one of his ten off the raft and drowning him to make room for the
new comer. That is what you are asking me to do.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. But how can that be? I dont understand. Surely—</p>
<p>RIDGEON. You must take my word for it that it is so. My laboratory, my
staff, and myself are working at full pressure. We are doing our utmost.
The treatment is a new one. It takes time, means, and skill; and there is
not enough for another case. Our ten cases are already chosen cases. Do
you understand what I mean by chosen?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Chosen. No: I cant understand.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [sternly] You must understand. Youve got to understand and to face
it. In every single one of those ten cases I have had to consider, not
only whether the man could be saved, but whether he was worth saving.
There were fifty cases to choose from; and forty had to be condemned to
death. Some of the forty had young wives and helpless children. If the
hardness of their cases could have saved them they would have been saved
ten times over. Ive no doubt your case is a hard one: I can see the tears
in your eyes [she hastily wipes her eyes]: I know that you have a torrent
of entreaties ready for me the moment I stop speaking; but it's no use.
You must go to another doctor.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. But can you give me the name of another doctor who
understands your secret?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I have no secret: I am not a quack.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. I beg your pardon: I didnt mean to say anything wrong. I dont
understand how to speak to you. Oh, pray dont be offended.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [again a little ashamed] There! there! never mind. [He relaxes and
sits down]. After all, I'm talking nonsense: I daresay I AM a quack, a
quack with a qualification. But my discovery is not patented.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Then can any doctor cure my husband? Oh, why dont they do it?
I have tried so many: I have spent so much. If only you would give me the
name of another doctor.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Every man in this street is a doctor. But outside myself and the
handful of men I am training at St Anne's, there is nobody as yet who has
mastered the opsonin treatment. And we are full up? I'm sorry; but that is
all I can say. [Rising] Good morning.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [suddenly and desperately taking some drawings from her
portfolio] Doctor: look at these. You understand drawings: you have good
ones in your waiting-room. Look at them. They are his work.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. It's no use my looking. [He looks, all the same] Hallo! [He takes
one to the window and studies it]. Yes: this is the real thing. Yes, yes.
[He looks at another and returns to her]. These are very clever. Theyre
unfinished, arnt they?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. He gets tired so soon. But you see, dont you, what a genius
he is? You see that he is worth saving. Oh, doctor, I married him just to
help him to begin: I had money enough to tide him over the hard years at
the beginning—to enable him to follow his inspiration until his
genius was recognized. And I was useful to him as a model: his drawings of
me sold quite quickly.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Have you got one?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [producing another] Only this one. It was the first.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [devouring it with his eyes] Thats a wonderful drawing. Why is it
called Jennifer?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. My name is Jennifer.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. A strange name.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Not in Cornwall. I am Cornish. It's only what you call
Guinevere.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [repeating the names with a certain pleasure in them] Guinevere.
Jennifer. [Looking again at the drawing] Yes: it's really a wonderful
drawing. Excuse me; but may I ask is it for sale? I'll buy it.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Oh, take it. It's my own: he gave it to me. Take it. Take
them all. Take everything; ask anything; but save him. You can: you will:
you must.</p>
<p>REDPENNY [entering with every sign of alarm] Theyve just telephoned from
the hospital that youre to come instantly—a patient on the point of
death. The carriage is waiting.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [intolerantly] Oh, nonsense: get out. [Greatly annoyed] What do
you mean by interrupting me like this?</p>
<p>REDPENNY. But—</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Chut! cant you see I'm engaged? Be off.</p>
<p>Redpenny, bewildered, vanishes.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [rising] Doctor: one instant only before you go—</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Sit down. It's nothing.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. But the patient. He said he was dying.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Oh, he's dead by this time. Never mind. Sit down.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [sitting down and breaking down] Oh, you none of you care. You
see people die every day.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [petting her] Nonsense! it's nothing: I told him to come in and
say that. I thought I should want to get rid of you.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [shocked at the falsehood] Oh! RIDGEON [continuing] Dont look
so bewildered: theres nobody dying.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. My husband is.</p>
<p>RIDGEON [pulling himself together] Ah, yes: I had forgotten your husband.
Mrs Dubedat: you are asking me to do a very serious thing?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. I am asking you to save the life of a great man.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. You are asking me to kill another man for his sake; for as surely
as I undertake another case, I shall have to hand back one of the old ones
to the ordinary treatment. Well, I dont shrink from that. I have had to do
it before; and I will do it again if you can convince me that his life is
more important than the worst life I am now saving. But you must convince
me first.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. He made those drawings; and they are not the best—nothing
like the best; only I did not bring the really best: so few people like
them. He is twenty-three: his whole life is before him. Wont you let me
bring him to you? wont you speak to him? wont you see for yourself?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Is he well enough to come to a dinner at the Star and Garter at
Richmond?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Oh yes. Why?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I'll tell you. I am inviting all my old friends to a dinner to
celebrate my knighthood—youve seen about it in the papers, havnt
you?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Yes, oh yes. That was how I found out about you.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. It will be a doctors' dinner; and it was to have been a
bachelors' dinner. I'm a bachelor. Now if you will entertain for me, and
bring your husband, he will meet me; and he will meet some of the most
eminent men in my profession: Sir Patrick Cullen, Sir Ralph Bloomfield
Bonington, Cutler Walpole, and others. I can put the case to them; and
your husband will have to stand or fall by what we think of him. Will you
come?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Yes, of course I will come. Oh, thank you, thank you. And may
I bring some of his drawings—the really good ones?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yes. I will let you know the date in the course of to-morrow.
Leave me your address.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Thank you again and again. You have made me so happy: I know
you will admire him and like him. This is my address. [She gives him her
card].</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Thank you. [He rings].</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT [embarrassed] May I—is there—should I—I mean—[she
blushes and stops in confusion].</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Whats the matter?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. Your fee for this consultation?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Oh, I forgot that. Shall we say a beautiful drawing of his
favorite model for the whole treatment, including the cure?</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. You are very generous. Thank you. I know you will cure him.
Good-bye.</p>
<p>RIDGEON. I will. Good-bye. [They shake hands]. By the way, you know, dont
you, that tuberculosis is catching. You take every precaution, I hope.</p>
<p>MRS DUBEDAT. I am not likely to forget it. They treat us like lepers at
the hotels.</p>
<p>EMMY [at the door] Well, deary: have you got round him?</p>
<p>RIDGEON. Yes. Attend to the door and hold your tongue.</p>
<p>EMMY. Thats a good boy. [She goes out with Mrs Dubedat].</p>
<p>RIDGEON [alone] Consultation free. Cure guaranteed. [He heaves a great
sigh].</p>
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