[Doctor Therne by H. Rider Haggard]@TWC D-Link bookDoctor Therne CHAPTER V 11/21
Doubtless, being human, he was not pleased at the advent of a brilliant young rival, who very shortly proceeded to prove him in the wrong in the instance of one of his own patients, but that he had conquered this feeling, as a man of generous impulses would naturally do, appeared to be clear from the fact that he had volunteered to attend upon that rival's wife in her illness. From all these facts the jury would draw what inferences seemed just to them, but he for one found it difficult to ask them to include among these the inference that a man who for more than a generation had occupied a very high position among them, whose reputation, both in and out of his profession, was great, and who had received a special mark of favour from the Crown, was in truth an evil-minded and most malevolent perjurer.
Yet, if the statement of the accused was to be accepted, that would appear to be the case.
Of course, however, there remained the possibility that in the confusion of a hurried interview I might have misunderstood Sir John Bell's words, or that he might have misunderstood mine, or, lastly, as had been suggested, that having come to the conclusion that Sir John could not possibly form a trustworthy opinion on the nature of my wife's symptoms without awaiting their further development, I had determined to neglect advice, in which, as a doctor myself, I had no confidence. This was the gist of his summing up, but, of course, there was a great deal more which I have not set down.
The jury, wishing to consider their verdict, retired, an example that was followed by the judge.
His departure was the signal for an outburst of conversation in the crowded court, which hummed like a hive of startled bees.
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