<h2>CHAPTER LXXXIII.</h2>
<h4>IN WHICH THE KNIGHT OF THE SILVER SPECTACLES MAKES THE ACQUAINTANCE OF
THE SAGE 'BLACK DILLON,' AND CONFERS WITH HIM IN HIS RETREAT.</h4>
<div class="figleft"><ANTIMG src="images/img003.jpg" alt="ORNAMENTAL CAPITAL 'A'" title="ORNAMENTAL CAPITAL 'A'" /></div>
<p>t that time there had appeared in Dublin an erratic genius in the
medical craft, a young surgeon, 'Black Dillon,' they called him, the
glory and disgrace of his calling; such as are from time to time raised
up to abase the pride of intellect, and terrify the dabblers in vice. A
prodigious mind, illuminating darkness, and shivering obstacles at a
blow, with an electric force—possessing the power of a demigod, and the
lusts of a swine. Without order, without industry; defying all usages
and morality; lost for weeks together in the catacombs of vice; and
emerging to re-assert in an hour the supremacy of his intellect; without
principles or shame; laden with debt; and shattered and poisoned with
his vices; a branded and admired man.</p>
<p>In the presence of this outcast genius and prodigy of vice, stood Mr.
Dangerfield. There were two other gentlemen in the same small room, one
of whom was doggedly smoking, with his hat on, over the fire; the other
snoring in a crazy arm-chair, on the back of which hung his wig. The
window was small and dirty; the air muddy with tobacco-smoke, and
inflamed with whiskey. Singing and the clang of glasses was resounding
from the next room, together with peals of coarse laughter, and from
that on the other side, the high tones and hard swearing, and the
emphatic slapping of a heavy hand upon the table, indicating a rising
quarrel, were heard. From one door through another, across the narrow
floor on which Mr. Dangerfield stood, every now and then lounged some
neglected, dirty, dissipated looking inmate of these unwholesome
precincts. In fact, Surgeon Dillon's present residence was in that
diversorium pecatorum, the Four Courts Marshalsea in Molesworth-court.
As these gentlemen shuffled or swaggered through, they generally nodded,
winked, grunted, or otherwise saluted the medical gentleman, and stared
at his visitor. For as the writer of the Harleian tract—I forget its
name—pleasantly observes:—'In gaol they are no proud men, but will be
quickly acquainted without ceremony.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</SPAN></span>'</p>
<p>Mr. Dangerfield stood erect; all his appointments were natty, and his
dress, though quiet, rich in material, and there was that air of
reserve, and decision, and command about him, which suggests money, an
article held much in esteem in that retreat. He had a way of seeing
every thing in a moment without either staring or stealing glances, and
nobody suspected him of making a scrutiny. In the young surgeon he saw
an object in strong contrast with himself. He was lean and ungainly, shy
and savage, dressed in a long greasy silk morning gown, blotched with
wine and punch over the breast. He wore his own black hair gathered into
a knot behind, and in a neglected dusty state, as if it had not been
disturbed since he rolled out of his bed. This being placed his large,
red, unclean hands, with fingers spread, like a gentleman playing the
harpsichord, upon the table, as he stood at the side opposite to Mr.
Dangerfield, and he looked with a haggard, surly stare on his visitor,
through his great dark, deep-set prominent eyes, streaming fire, the one
feature that transfixed the attention of all who saw him. He had a great
brutal mouth, and his nose was pimply and inflamed, for Bacchus has his
fires as well as Cupid, only he applies them differently. How polished
showed Mr. Dangerfield's chin opposed to the three days' beard of Black
Dillon! how delicate his features compared with the lurid proboscis, and
huge, sensual, sarcastic mouth of the gentleman in the dirty
morning-gown and shapeless slippers, who confronted him with his glare,
an image of degradation and power!</p>
<p>'Tuppince, Docthor Dillon,' said a short, fat, dirty nymph, without
stays or hoop, setting down a 'naggin o' whiskey' between the medical
man and his visitor.</p>
<p>The doctor, to do him justice, for a second or two looked confoundedly
put out, and his eyes blazed fiercer as his face flushed.</p>
<p>'Three halfpence outside, and twopence here, Sir,' said he with an
awkward grin, throwing the money on the table; 'that's the way our
shepherd <i>deglubat oves</i>, Sir; she's brought it too soon, but no
matter.'</p>
<p>It was not one o'clock, in fact.</p>
<p>'They <i>will</i> make mistakes, Sir; but you will not suffer their blunders
long, I warrant,' said Dangerfield, lightly. 'Pray, Sir, can we have a
room for a moment to ourselves?'</p>
<p>'We can, Sir, 'tis a liberal house; we can have any thing; liberty
itself, Sir—for an adequate sum,' replied Mr. Dillon.</p>
<p>Whatever the sum was, the room was had, and the surgeon, who had
palpably left his 'naggin' uneasily in company with the gentleman in the
hat, and him without a wig, eyed Dangerfield curiously, thinking that
possibly his grand-aunt Molly had left him the fifty guineas she was
rumoured to have sewed up in her stays.</p>
<p>'There's a great deal of diversion, Sir, in five hundred guineas,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</SPAN></span> said
Mr. Dangerfield, and the spectacles dashed pleasantly upon the doctor.</p>
<p>'Ye may say that,' answered the grinning surgeon, with a quiet oath of
expectation.</p>
<p>''Tis a handsome fee, Sir, and you may have it.'</p>
<p>'Five hundred guineas!'</p>
<p>'Ah, you've heard, Sir, perhaps, of the attempted murder in the park, on
Doctor Sturk, of the Artillery; for which Mr. Nutter now lies in
prison?' said Mr. Dangerfield.</p>
<p>'That I have, Sir.'</p>
<p>'Well, you shall have the money, Sir, if you perform a simple
operation.'</p>
<p>''Tis not to hang him you want me?' said the doctor, with a gloomy
sneer.</p>
<p>'Hang him!—ha, ha—no, Sir, Doctor Sturk still lives, but insensible.
He must be brought to consciousness, and speech. Now, the trepan is the
only way to effect it; and I'll be frank with you: Doctor Pell has been
with him half a dozen times, and he says the operation would be
instantaneously fatal. I don't believe him. So also says Sir Hugh
Skelton, to whom I wrote in London—I don't believe him, either. At all
events, the man is dying, and can't last very many days longer, so
there's nothing risked. His wife wishes the operation; here's her note;
and I'll give you five hundred guineas and—what are you here for?'</p>
<p>'Only eighteen, unless some more has come in this morning,' answered the
doctor.</p>
<p>'And your liberty, Sir, <i>that</i> on the spot, if you undertake the
operation, and the fee so soon as you have done it.'</p>
<p>The doctor's face blazed with a grin of exultation; he squared his
shoulders and shook himself a little; and after a little silence, he
demanded—</p>
<p>'Can you describe the case, Sir, as you stated it to Sir Hugh Skelton?'</p>
<p>'Surely, Sir, but I rely for it and the terms, upon the description of a
village doctor, named Toole; an ignoramus, I fear.'</p>
<p>And with this preface he concisely repeated the technical description
which he had compiled from various club conversations of Dr. Toole's, to
which no person imagined he had been listening so closely.</p>
<p>'If that's the case, Sir, 'twill kill him.'</p>
<p>'Kill or cure, Sir, 'tis the only chance,' rejoined Dangerfield.</p>
<p>'What sort is the wife, Sir?' asked Black Dillon, with a very odd look,
while his eye still rested on the short note that poor Mrs. Sturk had
penned.</p>
<p>'A nervous little woman of some two or three and forty,' answered the
spectacles.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The queer look subsided. He put the note in his pocket, and looked
puzzled, and then he asked—'</p>
<p>'Is he any way related to you, Sir?'</p>
<p>'None in life, Sir. But that does not affect, I take it, the medical
question.'</p>
<p>'No, it does <i>not</i> affect the medical question—nothing <i>can</i>,' observed
the surgeon, in a sulky, sardonic way.</p>
<p>'Of course not,' answered the oracle of the silver spectacles, and both
remained silent for a while.</p>
<p>'You want to have him speak? Well, suppose there's a hundred chances to
one the trepan kills him on the spot—what then?' demanded the surgeon,
uncomfortably.</p>
<p>Dangerfield pondered, also uncomfortably for a minute, but answered
nothing; on the contrary, he demanded—</p>
<p>'And what then, Sir?'</p>
<p>'But here, in this case,' said Black Dillon, 'there's no chance at all,
do you see, there's <i>no</i> chance, good, bad, or indifferent; none at
all.'</p>
<p>'But <i>I</i> believe there <i>is</i>,' replied Dangerfield, decisively.</p>
<p>'You believe, but <i>I</i> know.'</p>
<p>'See, Sir,' said Dangerfield, darkening, and speaking with a strange
snarl; 'I know what I'm about. I've a desire, Sir, that he should speak,
if 'twere only two minutes of conscious articulate life, and then
death—'tis not a pin's point to me how soon. Left to himself he must
die; therefore, to shrink from the operation on which depends the
discovery both of his actual murderer and of his money, Sir, otherwise
lost to his family, is—is a damned affectation! <i>I</i> think it—so do
<i>you</i>, Sir; and I offer five hundred guineas as your fee, and Mrs.
Sturk's letter to bear you harmless.'</p>
<p>Then there was a pause. Dangerfield knew the man's character as well as
his skill. There were things said about him darker than we have hinted
at.</p>
<p>The surgeon looked very queer and gloomy down upon the table, and
scratched his head, and he mumbled gruffly—</p>
<p>'You see—you know—'tis a large fee, to be sure; but then—'</p>
<p>'Come, Sir,' said Dangerfield, looking as though he'd pull him by the
ear; 'it <i>is</i> a large fee, and you'll get no more—you should not stick
at trifles, when there's—a—a—justice and humanity—and, to be brief,
Sir—yes or no?'</p>
<p>'<i>Yes</i>,' answered the doctor; 'but how's the fee secured?'</p>
<p>'Hey! I'd forgot. Right, Sir—you shall be satisfied.'</p>
<p>And he took a pen, and wrote on the back of a letter—</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>'SIR—Considering the hopeless condition in which Dr. Sturk now lies,
and the vast importance of restoring him, Dr. Sturk, of the R.I.A., to
the power of speech, even for a few minutes, I beg to second Mrs.
Sturk's request to you; and when you shall have performed the critical
operation she desires, I hereby promise, whether it succeed or fail, to
give you a fee of five hundred guineas.</p>
<p><span class="smcap" style="margin-left: 20em;">Paul Dangerfield.</span></p>
<p><span style="margin-left: 2em;">'The Brass Castle, Chapelizod.'</span><br/><br/></p>
<p>And he dated it, and handed it to the surgeon, who read it through, and
then looked with a gruff hesitation at the writer.</p>
<p>'Oh, you've only to enquire—anyone who knows Chapelizod will tell you
who I am; and you'll want something—eh?—to take you out of this—how
much?'</p>
<p>'Only seven guineas. There's a little score here, and some fees.
Eighteen will cover everything, unless something has come in this
morning.'</p>
<p>So they went to 'the Hatch,' and made enquiries, and all being well, Mr.
Dangerfield dealt liberally with the surgeon, who promised to be in
attendance at Dr. Sturk's house in Chapelizod, at seven<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</SPAN></span> o'clock next
evening.</p>
<p>'And pray, Dr. Dillon, come in a coach,' said Dangerfield, 'and in
costume—you understand. They've been accustomed, you know, to see Pell
and other doctors who make a parade.'</p>
<p>And with these injunctions they parted; and the surgeon, whose luggage
was trifling, jumped into a coach with it, and jingled home to his den
and his liberty.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />