Paying the doctor.
After a day of unusual anxiety
and fatigue, Dr. Elton found himself snugly wrapped
up in a liberal quantity of blankets and bed-quilts,
just as the clock struck twelve one stormy night in
February. For over half an hour he had lain awake,
racking his brain in reference to two or three critical
cases which were on his hands; but tired nature could
keep up no longer, and the sweet oblivion of sleep
was stealing over his senses. But just as he
had lost himself, the bell over his head began to
ring furiously, and brought him into the middle of
the floor in an instant. Pushing his head out
of the window, he interrogated the messenger below,
just too late to save that individual the trouble
of giving the bell-rope another violent demonstration
of his skill.
“Mr. Marvel wants you to come
and see Charley immediately,” replied the messenger.
“What’s the matter with Charley?”
“He’s got the croup, I believe.”
“Tell him I’ll be there
in a moment,” said Dr. Elton, drawing in his
head. Hurrying on his clothes, he descended to
his office, and, possessing himself of some necessary
medicines, it being too late for the family to send
out a prescription, wrapped his cloak around him,
and turned out into the storm.
It was at least half a mile to the
residence of Mr. Marvel, and by, the time the doctor
arrived there, he was cold, wet, and uncomfortable
both in mind and body. Ascending to the chamber,
he was not a little surprised to find Charley, a bright
little fellow of some two years old, sitting up in
his crib as lively as a cricket.
“O doctor! we’ve been
so frightened!” said Mrs. Marvel, as Dr.
Elton entered. “We thought Charley had the
croup, he breathed so loud. But he don’t
seem to get any worse. What do you think of him,
doctor?”
Dr. Elton felt his pulse, listened
to his respiration, examined the appearance of his
skin, and then said, emphatically—
“I think you’d better all be in bed!”
“It’s better to be scared than hurt, doctor,”
responded Mr. Marvel.
“Humph!” ejaculated Dr. Elton.
“Don’t you think you’d
better give him something, doctor?” said Mrs.
Marvel.
“What for, ma’am?”
“To keep him from having the
croup. Don’t you think he’s threatened
with it?”
“Not half as much as I am,”
replied the doctor, who made a quick retreat, fearing
that he would give way too much to his irritated feelings,
and offend a family who were able to pay.
Next morning, on the debtor side of
his ledger, under the name of Mr. Marvel, Dr. Elton
made this entry; To one night-visit to son,
$5. “And it’s well for me that he’s
able to pay,” added the doctor, mentally, as
he replaced the book in the drawer from which he had
taken it. Scarcely had this necessary part of
the business been performed, when the same messenger
who had summoned him the night before, came post-haste
into the office, with the announcement that Mrs. Marvel
wanted him to come there immediately, as Charley had
got a high fever.
Obedient to the summons, Dr. Elton
soon made his appearance, and found both Mr. and Mrs.
Marvel greatly concerned about their little boy.
“I’m so ’fraid
of the scarlet fever, doctor!” said Mrs. Marvel.
“Do you think it’s any thing like that?”
she continued with much anxiety, turning upon Charley
a look of deep maternal affection.
Dr. Elton felt of Charley’s
pulse, and looked at his tongue, and then wrote a
prescription in silence.
“What do you think of him, doctor?”
asked the father, much concerned.
“He’s not dangerous, sir.
Give him this, and if he should grow worse, send for
me.”
The doctor bowed and departed, and
the fond parents sent off for the medicine. It
was in the form of a very small dose of rhubarb, and
poor Charley had to have his nose held tight, and the
nauseous stuff poured down his throat. In the
afternoon, when the doctor called, on being sent for,
there were some slight febrile symptoms, consequent
upon excitement and loss of rest. The medicine,
contrary to his expectation, heightened, instead of
allaying these; and long before nightfall he was summoned
again to attend his little patient. Much to his
surprise, he found him with a hot skin, flushed face,
and quickened pulse. Mrs. Marvel was in a state
of terrible alarm.
“I knew there was more the matter
with him than you thought for, doctor!” said
the mother, while Dr. Elton examined his patient.
“You thought it was nothing, but I knew better.
If you’d only prescribed last night, as I wanted
you to, all this might have been saved.”
“Don’t be alarmed, madam,”
said the doctor, “there is nothing serious in
this fever. It will soon subside.”
Mrs. Marvel shook her head.
“It’s the scarlet fever,
doctor, I know it is!” said she, passionately,
bursting into tears.
“Let me beg of you, madam, not
to distress yourself. I assure you there is no
danger!”
“So you said last night, doctor;
and just see how much worse he is getting!”
As Dr. Elton was generally a man of
few words, he said no more, but wrote a prescription,
and went away, promising, however, at the earnest
request of Mrs. Marvel, to call again that night.
About nine o’clock he called
in, and found Charley’s fever in no degree abated.
Mrs. Marvel was in tears, and her husband pacing the
floor in a state of great uneasiness.
“O doctor, he’ll die,
I’m sure he’ll die!” said Mrs. Marvel,
weeping bitterly.
“Don’t be alarmed, my
dear madam,” replied the doctor. “I
assure you it is nothing serious.”
“Oh, I’m ’sure it’s
the scarlet fever! It’s all about now.”
“No, madam, I am in earnest
when I tell you it is nothing of the kind. His
throat is not in the least sore.”
“Yes, doctor, it is sore!”
“How do you know?” responded
the doctor, examining Charley’s mouth and throat,
which showed not the least symptom of any irritation
of the mucous membrane. “It can’t
be sore from any serious cause. Some trifling
swelling of the glands is all that can occasion it,
if any exist.”
Thus assured, and in a positive manner,
Mrs. Marvel’s alarm in some degree abated, and
after ordering a warm bath, the doctor retired.
About three o’clock the doctor
was again sent for in great haste. On entering
the chamber of his little patient, he found his fever
all gone, and he in a pleasant sleep.
“What do you think of him, doctor?”
asked Mrs. Marvel, in a low, anxious whisper.
“I think he’s doing as well as he can.”
“But a’n’t it strange,
doctor, that he should breathe so low? He looks
so pale, and lays so quiet! Are you sure he’s
not dying?”
“Dying!” exclaimed Dr.
Elton,—“he’s no more dying than
you are! Really, Mrs. Marvel, yon torment yourself
with unnecessary fears! Nature is only a little
exhausted from struggling with the fever, he will
be like a new person by morning.”
“Do not mistake the case, doctor,
for we are very much concerned,” said Mr. Marvel.
“I do assure you, sir, that
I understand the case precisely; and you must believe
me, when I tell you that no patient was ever in a
better way than your little boy.”
Next morning, among other charges
made by Dr. Elton, were two against Mr. Marvel, as
follows: To four visits to son, $4. To
one night-visit to son, $5.
“Not a bad customer!”
said the doctor, with a smile, as he ran up the whole
account, and then closed the book.
In the constant habit of sending for
the doctor on every trifling occasion, whether it
occurred at noonday or midnight, it is not to be wondered
at that a pretty large bill should find its way to
Mr. Marvel at the end of the year. And this was
not the worst of it; the health of his whole family
suffered in no slight degree from the fact of each
individual being so frequently under the influence
of medicine. Poor Charley was victimized almost
every week; and, instead of being a fresh, hearty
boy, began to show a pale, thin face, and every indication
of a weakened vital action. This appearance only
increased the evil, for both parents, growing more
anxious in consequence, were more urgent to have him
placed under treatment. Dr. Elton sometimes remonstrated
with them, but to no purpose; and yielding to their
ignorance and their anxiety, became a party in the
destruction of the boy’s health.
“What is that, my dear?”
asked Mrs. Marvel of her husband, some ten months
after their introduction to the reader, as the latter
regarded, with no pleasant countenance, a small piece
of paper which he held in his hand.
“Why, it’s Dr. Elton’s bill.”
“Indeed! How much is it?”
“One hundred and fifty dollars!”
“Oh, husband!”
“Did you ever hear of such a thing?”
“One hundred and fifty dollars, did you say?”
“Yes, one hundred and fifty dollars. A’n’t
it outrageous?”
“It’s scandalous!
It’s downright swindling! I’d never
pay it in the world! Who ever heard of such a
thing! One hundred and fifty dollars for one
year’s attendance! Good gracious!”—and
Mrs. Marvel held up her hands, and lifted her eyes
in profound astonishment.
“I can’t understand it!”
said Mr. Marvel. “Why, nobody’s had
a spell of sickness in the family for the whole year.
Charley’s been a little sick once or twice;
but nothing of much consequence. There must be
something wrong about it. I’ll go right
off and see him, and have an understanding about it
at once.”
Carrying out his resolution on the
instant, Mr. Marvel left the house and proceeded with
rapid steps toward the office of Dr. Elton. He
found that individual in.
“Good morning Mr. Marvel!
How do you do to-day?” said the doctor, who
understood from his countenance that something was
wrong, and had an instinctive perception of its nature.
“Good morning, doctor! I got your bill
to-day.”
“Yes, sir; I sent it out.”
“But a’n’t there something wrong
about it, doctor?”
“No, I presume not. I make
my charges carefully, and draw off my bills in exact
accordance with them.”
“But there must be, doctor.
How in the world could you make a bill of one hundred
and fifty dollars against me? I’ve had no
serious sickness in my family.”
“And yet, Mr. Marvel, I have
been called in almost every week, and sometimes three
or four times in as many days.”
“Impossible!”
“I’ll show you my ledger,
if that will satisfy you, where every visit is entered.”
“No, it’s no use to do
that. I know that you have been called in pretty
often, but not frequently enough to make a bill like
this.”
“How many night-visits do you
suppose I have made to your family, during the year?”
“I’m sure I don’t know. Not
more than three or four.”
“I’ve made ten!”
“You must be mistaken, doctor.”
“Do you remember that I was
called in last February, when you thought Charley
had the croup?”
“Yes.”
“And the night after?”
“Yes. That’s but two.”
“And the night you thought he had the measles?”
“Yes.”
“And the night after?”
“Yes. But that’s only four.”
“And the three times he fell out of bed?”
“Not three times, doctor!”
“Yes, it was three times. Don’t you
recollect the knob on his head?”
“Yes, indeed!”
“And the sprained finger?”
“Yes.”
“And the bruised cheek?”
“Well, I believe you are right
about that, doctor. But that don’t make
ten times.”
“You have not forgotten, of
course, the night he told you he had swallowed a pin?”
“No, indeed,” said the
father, turning pale. “Do you think there
is any danger to be apprehended from its working its
way into the heart, doctor?”
“None at, all, I should think. And you
remember”—
“Never mind, doctor, I suppose
you are right about that. But how can ten visits
make one hundred and fifty dollars?”
“They will make fifty, though, and that is one-third
of the bill.”
“You don’t pretend to charge five dollars
a visit, though, doctor?”
“For all visits after ten o’clock
at night, we are allowed by law to charge five dollars.”
“Outrageous!”
“Would you get up out of your
warm bed after midnight, turn out in a December storm,
and walk half a mile for five dollars?”
“I can’t say that I would. But then
it’s your business.”
“Of course it is, and I must be paid for it.”
“Any how, doctor, that don’t
account for the whole of this exorbitant bill.”
“But one hundred day and evening
visits here on my ledger will, though.”
“You don’t pretend to
say you have paid my family a hundred visits, certainly?”
“I will give you day and date for them, if necessary.”
“No, it’s no use to do
that,” said Mr. Marvel, whose memory began to
be a little more active. “I’ll give
you a hundred dollars, and say no more about it; that
is enough, in all conscience.”
“I can’t do any such thing,
Mr. Marvel. I have charged you what was right,
and can take nothing off. What would you think
of a man who had made a bill at your store of one
hundred and fifty dollars, if he were to offer you
one hundred when he came to pay, and ask for a receipt
in full?”
“But that a’n’t to the point.”
“A’n’t it, though?
I should like to hear of a case more applicable.
But it’s no use to multiply words about the matter.
My bill is correct, and I cannot take a dollar off
of it.”
“It’s the last bill you
ever make out of me, remember that, doctor!”
said Mr. Marvel, rising, and leaving the office in
a state of angry excitement.
“Well, what does he say?”
asked Mrs. Marvel, who had waited for her husband’s
return with some interest.
“He tried to beat me down that
the bill was all right; but I’m too old a child
for that. Why, would you believe it?—he
has charged five dollars for every night-visit.”
“That’s no better than highway robbery.”
“Not a bit. But it’s the last money
he ever gets out of me.”
“I’d never call him in, I know. He
must think we’re made of money.”
“Oh, I suppose we’re the
first family he’s had who wasn’t poor,
and he wanted to dig as deep as possible. I hate
such swindling, and if it wasn’t for having
a fuss I’d never pay him a dollar.”
“He’s charged us for every
poor family in the neighbourhood, I suppose.”
“No doubt of it. I’ve
heard of these tricks before; but it’s the last
time I’ll submit to have them played off upon
me.”
The visit of Mr. Marvel somewhat discomposed
the feelings of Dr. Elton, and he had begun to moralize
upon the unthankful position he held in the community,
when he was aroused from his reverie by the entrance
of a servant from one of the principal hotels, with
a summons to attend immediately a young lady who was
thought to be exceedingly ill.
“Who is she?” asked the doctor.
“She is the daughter of Mr. Smith, a merchant
from the East.”
“Is any one with her?”
“Yes, her father.”
“Tell him I will be there immediately.”
In the course of fifteen minutes Dr.
Elton’s carriage drove up to the door of the
hotel. He found his patient to be a young lady
of about seventeen, accompanied by her father, a middle-aged
man, whose feelings were much, and anxiously excited.
At a glance, his practised eye detected
symptoms of a serious nature, and a closer examination
of the case convinced him that all his skill would
be called into requisition. With a hot, dry skin,
slightly flushed face, parched lips, and slimy, furred
tongue, there was a dejection, languor, and slight
indication of delirium—and much apparent
confusion of mind. Prescribing as he thought the
case required, he left the room, accompanied with
the father.
“Well, doctor, what do you think
of her?” said Mr. Smith, with a heavy, oppressed
expiration.
“She is ill, sir, and will require attention.”
“But, doctor, you don’t
think my child dangerous, do you?” said the
father with an alarmed manner.
“It is right that you should
know, sir, that your daughter is, to all appearance,
threatened with the typhus fever. But I don’t
think there is any cause for alarm, only for great
care in her physician and attendants.”
“O doctor, can I trust her in
your hands? But I am foolish; I know that there
is no one in this city of more acknowledged skill than
yourself. You must pardon a father’s fears.
Spare no attentions, doctor—visit her at
least twice every day, and you shall be well paid
for your attentions. Save my child for me, and
I will owe you eternal gratitude.”
“All that I can do for her,
shall be done, sir,” said Dr. Elton.
Just relieved from the care of a dangerous
case, in its healthy change, Dr. Elton’s mind
had relaxed from the anxiety which too frequently
burdened it; for a physician’s mind is always
oppressed while the issue, of life or death hangs
upon his power to subdue a disease, which may be too
deeply seated to yield to the influence of medicine.
Now, all the oppressive sense of responsibility, the
care, the anxiety, were to be renewed, and felt with
even a keener concern.
In the evening he called in, but there
was no perceptible change, except a slight aggravation
of all the symptoms. The medicine had produced
no visible salutary effect. During the second
day, there was exhibited little alteration, but on
the morning of the third day, symptoms of a more decided
character had supervened—such as suffused
and injected eyes, painful deglutition, an oppression
in the chest, accompanied with a short, dry cough,
pains in the back, loins, and extremities; and a soreness
throughout the whole body. These had not escaped
the father’s observation, and with the most
painful anxiety did he watch the countenance of the
physician while he examined the case in its new presentation.
Much as he tried to control the expression of his
face, he found it impossible. He felt too deeply
concerned, and was too conscious of the frequent impotence
of medicine, when administered with the most experienced
skill.
In the afternoon he called again,
and found the father, as usual, by the bedside.
His patient seemed to be in a narcotic sleep, and when
roused from it, complained of much giddiness, and soon
sunk down again into a state of torpor.
“What do you think of her now,
doctor?” asked the father, in a hoarse whisper,
on the physician’s leaving the chamber of his
patient.
“It is impossible to form any
correct idea respecting a case like this. I have
seen many much worse recover, and have no doubt, as
far as human calculation will go, that your daughter
will get well. But the fever is a tedious one,
usually defying all attempts at breaking it.
It must run its course, which is usually some ten or
fifteen days. All we can do is to palliate, and
then assist nature, when the disease has abated its
violence.”
It is not necessary to trace the progress
of the disease from day to day, until it reached its
climax. When the fever did break, and a soft,
gentle moisture penetrated the skin, the patient had
but a spark of life remaining.
At the close of the fifteenth day,
when every symptom indicated that convalescence or
death would soon ensue, no one but a physician can
imagine the painful, restless anxiety, which was felt
by Dr. Elton. He took but little food, and slept
hardly any during the whole night, frequently starting
from his brief periods of troubled slumber, in consequence
of great nervous excitement.
Early in the morning he called at
the room of his patient, trembling, lest a first glance
should dash every hope to the ground. He entered
softly, and perceived the father bending over her with
a pale anxious face. She was asleep. He
took her hand, but let it drop instantly.
“What is the matter?”
asked the father in an alarmed whisper, his face growing
paler.
“She is safe?” responded
the doctor, in a low whisper, every pulse thrilling
with pleasant excitement.
The father clasped his hands, looked
upward a moment, and then burst into tears.
“How can I ever repay you for
your skill in saving my child!” he said, after
his feelings had grown calmer.
It was nearly a month before the daughter
was well enough to return home, during most of which
time Dr. Elton was in attendance. For fifteen
days he had attended twice a day regularly, and for
nearly as long a period once a day.
While sitting in his office one day
about three o’clock, waiting for his carriage
to come up to the door, Mr. Smith entered, and asked
for his bill, as he was about to leave. On examining
his account-book, Dr. Elton found that he had made
about fifty visits, and accordingly he made out his
bill fifty dollars.
“How much is this, doctor?”
said Mr. Smith, eyeing the bill with something of
doubt in the expression of his countenance.
“Fifty dollars, sir.”
“Fifty dollars! Why, surely,
doctor, you are not going to take advantage of me
in that way?”
“I don’t understand you, sir.”
“Why, I never heard of such
an extravagant bill in my life. I have my whole
family attended at home for fifty dollars a year, and
you have not been visiting one of them much over a
month.”
“Such as the bill is, you will
have to pay it, sir. It is just, and I shall
not abate one dollar,” responded Dr. Elton, considerably
irritated.
Mr. Smith drew out his pocket-book
slowly, selected a fifty-dollar bill from a large
package, handed it to the doctor, took his receipt,
and rising to his feet, said emphatically—
“I am a stranger, and you have
taken advantage of me. But remember, the gains
of dishonesty will never prosper!” and turning
upon his heel, left the office.
“Who would be a doctor?”
murmured Dr. Elton, forcing the unpleasant thoughts
occasioned by the incident from his mind, and endeavouring
to fix it upon a case of more than usual interest which
he had been called to that day.
A word to the wise is sufficient;
it is therefore needless to multiply scenes illustrative
of the manner in which too many people pay the doctor.
When any one is sick, the doctor is
sent for, and the family are all impatient until he
arrives. If the case is a bad one, he is looked
upon as a ministering angel; the patient’s eye
brightens when he comes, and all in the house feel
more cheerful for hours after. Amid all kinds
of weather, at all hours in the day or night, he obeys
the summons, and brings all his skill, acquired by
long study, and by much laborious practice, to bear
upon the disease. But when the sick person gets
well, the doctor is forgotten; and when the bill appears,
complaint at its amount is almost always made; and
too frequently, unless he proceed to legal measures,
it is entirely withheld from him. These things
ought not so to be. Of course, there are many
honourable exceptions; but every physician can exclaim—“Would
that their number was greater!”