[Fenton’s Quest by M. E. Braddon]@TWC D-Link book
Fenton’s Quest

CHAPTER XXX
13/23

If this illness should end in death, I may never know Marian's fate." He sat in the sick man's room all through that long dismal afternoon, waiting to see the doctor, and with the same hopeless thoughts repeating themselves perpetually in his mind.
It was nearly eight o'clock when Mr.Mew at last made his evening visit.
He was a grave gray-haired little man, with a shrewd face and a pleasant manner; a man who inspired Gilbert with confidence, and whose presence was cheering in a sick-room; but he did not speak very hopefully of John Saltram.
"It is a bad case, sir--a very bad case," he said gravely, after he had made his careful examination of the patient's condition.

"There has been a violent cold caught, you see, through our poor friend's recklessness in neglecting to change his damp clothes, and rheumatic fever has set in.
But it appears to me that there are other causes at work--mental disturbance, and so on.

Our friend has been taxing his brain a little too severely, I gather from Mrs.Pratt's account of him; and these things will tell, sir; sooner or later they have their effect." "Then you apprehend danger ?" "Well, yes; I dare not tell you that there is an absence of danger.

Mr.
Saltram has a fine constitution, a noble frame; but the strain is a severe one, especially upon the mind." "You spoke just now of over-work as a cause for this mental disturbance.
Might it not rather proceed from some secret trouble of mind, some hidden care ?" Gilbert asked anxiously.
"That, sir, is an open question.

The mind is unhinged; there is no doubt of that.


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