The Adventures of Gil Blas of Santillane - Alain René le Sage (best fiction books of all time .txt) 📗
- Author: Alain René le Sage
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compounds.
In vain did he crack off his water, and teach me the secret of
composing delicious messes. I was so abstemious, that, remarking
my moderation, he said — In good sooth, Gil Blas, I marvel not
that you are no better than you are; you do not drink enough, my
friend. Water taken in a small quantity serves only to separate
the particles of bile and set them in action; but our practice is
to drown them in a copious drench, Fear not, my good lad, lest a
superabundance of liquid should either weaken or chill your
stomach; far from thy better judgment be that silly fear of
unadulterated drink. I will ensure you against all consequences;
and if my authority will not serve your turn, read Celsus. That
oracle of the ancients makes an admirable panegyric on water; in
short, he says in plain terms that those who plead an inconstant
stomach in favour of wine, publish a libel on their own bowels,
and make their organization a pretence for their sensuality.
As it would have been ungenteel in me to have run riot on my
entrance into the career of practice, I affected thorough
conviction; indeed, I thought there was something in it. I
therefore went on drinking water on the authority of Celsus, or,
to speak in scientific terms, I began to drown the bile in
copious drenches of that unadulterated liquor; and though I felt
myself more out of order from day to day, prejudice won the cause
against experience. It is evident, therefore, that I was in the
right road to the practice of physic. Yet I could not always be
insensible to the qualms which increased in my frame, to that
degree, as to determine me on quitting Doctor Sangrado. But he
invested me with a new office which changed my tone. Hark you, my
child, said he to me one day, I am not one of those hard and
ungrateful masters, who leave their household to grow grey in
service without a suitable reward. I am well pleased with you, I
have a regard for you, and without waiting till you have served
your time, I will make your fortune. Without more ado, I will
initiate you in the healing art, of which I have for so many
years been at the head. Other physicians make the science to
consist of various unintelligible branches; but I will shorten
the road for you, and dispense with the drudgery of studying
natural philosophy, pharmacy, botany, and anatomy. Remember, my
friend, that bleeding and drinking warm water are the two grand
principles; the true secret of curing all the distempers incident
to humanity. Yes, this marvellous secret which I reveal to you,
and which nature, beyond the reach of my colleagues, has failed
in rescuing from my pen, is comprehended in these two articles —
namely, bleeding and drenching. Here you have the sum total of my
philosophy; you are thoroughly bottomed in medicine, and may
raise yourself to the summit of fame on the shoulders of my long
experience. You may enter into partnership at once, by keeping
the books in the morning, and going out to visit patients in the
afternoon. While I dose the nobility and clergy, you shall labour
in your vocation among the lower orders; and when you have felt
your ground a little, I will get you admitted into our body. You
are a philosopher, Gil Blas, though you have never graduated; the
common herd of them, though they have graduated in due form and
order, are likely to run out the length of their tether without
knowing their right hand from their left.
I thanked the doctor for having so speedily enabled me to serve
as his deputy; and, by way of acknowledging his goodness,
promised to follow his system to the end of my career, with a
magnanimous indifference about the aphorisms of Hippocrates. But
that engagement was not to be taken to the letter. This tender
attachment to water went against the grain, and I had a scheme
for drinking wine every day snugly among the patients. I left off
wearing my own suit a second time, to take up one of my master’s,
and look like an inveterate practitioner. After which I brought
my medical theories into play, leaving them to look to the event
whom it might concern. I began on an alguazil in a pleurisy; he
was condemned to be bled with the utmost rigour of the law, at
the same time that the system was to be replenished copiously
with water. Next I made a lodgment in the veins of a gouty
pastry-cook, who roared like a lion by reason of gouty spasms. I
stood on no more ceremony with his blood than with that of the
alguazil, and laid no restriction on his taste for simple
liquids. My prescriptions brought me in twelve rials; an incident
so auspicious in my professional career, that I only wished for
the plagues of Egypt on all the hale subjects of Valladolid. As I
was coming out of the pastry-cook’s whom should I meet but
Fabricio, a total stranger since the death of the licentiate
S�dillo! He looked at me with astonishment for some seconds; then
set up a laugh with all his might, and held his sides. He had no
reason to be grave, for I had a cloak trailing on the ground,
with a doublet and breeches of four times my natural dimensions.
I was certainly a complete original. I suffered him to make merry
as long as he liked, and could scarcely help joining in the
ridicule; but I kept a guard on my muscles to preserve a becoming
dignity in public, and the better to enact the physician, whose
part in society is not that of a buffoon. If the absurdity of my
appearance excited Fabricio’s merriment, my affected gravity
added zest to it; and when he had nearly exhausted his lungs —
By all the powers, Gil Blas, quoth he, thou art in complete
masquerade. Who the devil has dressed you up in this manner? Fair
and softly, my friend, replied I, fair and softly, be a little on
your good behaviour with a modern Hippocrates. Understand me to
be the substitute of Doctor Sangrado, the most eminent physician
in Valladolid. I have lived with him these three weeks. He has
bottomed me thoroughly in medicine; and, as he cannot perform the
obsequies of all the patients who send for him, I visit a part of
them to take the burden off his conscience. He does execution in
great families, I among the vulgar. Vastly well, replied
Fabricio; that is to say, he grants you a lease on the blood of
the commonalty, but keeps to himself the fee-simple of the
fashionable world. I wish you joy of your lot; it is a pleasanter
line of practice among the populace than among great folk. Long
live a snug connection in the suburbs! a man’s mistakes are
easily buried, and his murders elude all but God’s revenge. Yes,
my brave boy, your destiny is truly enviable; in the language of
Alexander, were I not Fabricio, I could wish to be Gil Blas.
To show the son of Nunez, the barber, that he was not much out in
his reckoning on my present happiness, I chinked the fees of the
alguazil and the pastry-cook; and this was followed by an
adjournment to a tavern, to drink to their perfect recovery. The
wine was very fair, and my impatience for the well-known smack
made me think it better than it was. I took some good long
draughts, and without gainsaying the Latin oracle, in proportion
as I poured it into its natural reservoir, I felt my
accommodating entrails to owe me no grudge for the hard service
into which I pressed them. As for Fabricio and myself, we sat
some time in the tavern, making merry at the expense of our
masters, as servants are too much accustomed to do. At last,
seeing the night approach, we parted, after engaging to meet at
the same place on the following day after dinner.
CH. IV. — Gil Blas goes on practising physic with equal success
and ability. Adventure of the recovered ring.
I WAS no sooner at home than Doctor Sangrado came in. I talked to
him about the patients I had seen, and paid into his hands eight
remaining rials of the twelve I had received for my
prescriptions. Eight rials! said he, as he counted them, mighty
little for two visits! But we must take things as we find them.
In the spirit of taking things as he found them, he laid violent
hands on six, giving me the other two — Here, Gil Blas,
continued he, see what a foundation to build upon. I make over to
you the fourth of all you may bring me. You will soon feather
your nest, my friend; for, by the blessing of Providence, there
will be a great deal of ill health this year.
I had reason to be content with my dividend; since, having
determined to keep back the third part of what I received in my
rounds, and afterwards touching another fourth of the remainder,
half of the whole, if arithmetic is anything more than a
deception, would become my perquisite. This inspired me with new
zeal for my profession. The next day, as soon as I had dined, I
resumed my medical paraphernalia, and took the field once more. I
visited several patients on the list, and treated their several
complaints in one invariable routine. Hitherto things went on
under the rose, and no individual, thank heaven, had risen up in
rebellion against my prescriptions. But let a physician’s cures
be as
extraordinary as they will, some quack or other is always ready
to rip up his reputation. I was called in to a grocer’s son in a
dropsy. Whom should I find there before me but a little black-looking physician, by name Doctor Cuchillo, introduced by a
relation of the family. I bowed round most profoundly, but dipped
lowest to the personage whom I took to have been invited to a
consultation with me. He returned my compliment with a distant
air; then, having stared me in the face for a few seconds —
Signor Doctor, said he, I beg pardon for being inquisitive, I
thought I had been acquainted with all my brethren in Valladolid,
but I confess your physiognomy is altogether new. You must have
been settled but a short time in town. I avowed myself a young
practitioner, acting as yet under the direction of Doctor
Sangrado. I wish you joy, replied he politely, you are studying
under a great man. You must doubtless have seen a vast deal of
sound practice, young as you appear to be, He spoke this with so
easy an assurance, that I was at a loss whether he meant it
seriously, or was laughing at me. While I was conning over my
reply, the grocer, seizing on the opportunity, said —
Gentlemen, I am persuaded of your both being perfectly competent
in your art; have the goodness without ado to take the case in
hand, and devise some effectual means for the restoration of my
son’s health.
Thereupon the little pulse-counter set himself about reviewing
the patient’s situation; and after having dilated to me on all
the symptoms, asked me what I thought the fittest method of
treatment. I am of opinion, replied I, that he should be bled
once a day, and drink as much warm water as he can swallow. At
these words, our diminutive doctor said to me with a malicious
simper — And so you think such a course will save the patient?
Never doubt it, exclaimed I in a confident
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