Middlemarch - Page 114/561

There was another attraction in his profession: it wanted reform, and

gave a man an opportunity for some indignant resolve to reject its

venal decorations and other humbug, and to be the possessor of genuine

though undemanded qualifications. He went to study in Paris with the

determination that when he came home again he would settle in some

provincial town as a general practitioner, and resist the

irrational severance between medical and surgical knowledge in the

interest of his own scientific pursuits, as well as of the general

advance: he would keep away from the range of London intrigues,

jealousies, and social truckling, and win celebrity, however slowly, as

Jenner had done, by the independent value of his work. For it must be

remembered that this was a dark period; and in spite of venerable

colleges which used great efforts to secure purity of knowledge by

making it scarce, and to exclude error by a rigid exclusiveness in

relation to fees and appointments, it happened that very ignorant young

gentlemen were promoted in town, and many more got a legal right to

practise over large areas in the country. Also, the high standard held

up to the public mind by the College of Physicians, which gave its peculiar

sanction to the expensive and highly rarefied medical instruction

obtained by graduates of Oxford and Cambridge, did not hinder quackery

from having an excellent time of it; for since professional practice

chiefly consisted in giving a great many drugs, the public inferred

that it might be better off with more drugs still, if they could only

be got cheaply, and hence swallowed large cubic measures of physic

prescribed by unscrupulous ignorance which had taken no degrees.

Considering that statistics had not yet embraced a calculation as to

the number of ignorant or canting doctors which absolutely must exist

in the teeth of all changes, it seemed to Lydgate that a change in the

units was the most direct mode of changing the numbers. He meant to be

a unit who would make a certain amount of difference towards that

spreading change which would one day tell appreciably upon the

averages, and in the mean time have the pleasure of making an

advantageous difference to the viscera of his own patients. But he did

not simply aim at a more genuine kind of practice than was common. He

was ambitious of a wider effect: he was fired with the possibility that

he might work out the proof of an anatomical conception and make a link

in the chain of discovery.

Does it seem incongruous to you that a Middlemarch surgeon should dream

of himself as a discoverer? Most of us, indeed, know little of the

great originators until they have been lifted up among the

constellations and already rule our fates. But that Herschel, for

example, who "broke the barriers of the heavens"--did he not once play

a provincial church-organ, and give music-lessons to stumbling

pianists? Each of those Shining Ones had to walk on the earth among

neighbors who perhaps thought much more of his gait and his garments

than of anything which was to give him a title to everlasting fame:

each of them had his little local personal history sprinkled with small

temptations and sordid cares, which made the retarding friction of his

course towards final companionship with the immortals. Lydgate was not

blind to the dangers of such friction, but he had plenty of confidence

in his resolution to avoid it as far as possible: being

seven-and-twenty, he felt himself experienced. And he was not going to

have his vanities provoked by contact with the showy worldly successes

of the capital, but to live among people who could hold no rivalry with

that pursuit of a great idea which was to be a twin object with the

assiduous practice of his profession. There was fascination in the

hope that the two purposes would illuminate each other: the careful

observation and inference which was his daily work, the use of the lens

to further his judgment in special cases, would further his thought as

an instrument of larger inquiry. Was not this the typical pre-eminence

of his profession? He would be a good Middlemarch doctor, and by that

very means keep himself in the track of far-reaching investigation. On

one point he may fairly claim approval at this particular stage of his

career: he did not mean to imitate those philanthropic models who make

a profit out of poisonous pickles to support themselves while they are

exposing adulteration, or hold shares in a gambling-hell that they may

have leisure to represent the cause of public morality. He intended to

begin in his own case some particular reforms which were quite

certainly within his reach, and much less of a problem than the

demonstrating of an anatomical conception. One of these reforms was to

act stoutly on the strength of a recent legal decision, and simply

prescribe, without dispensing drugs or taking percentage from

druggists. This was an innovation for one who had chosen to adopt the

style of general practitioner in a country town, and would be felt as

offensive criticism by his professional brethren. But Lydgate meant to

innovate in his treatment also, and he was wise enough to see that the

best security for his practising honestly according to his belief was

to get rid of systematic temptations to the contrary.