On my last day Miss inter told me about Dr. and Mrs. Maudsley.
Leaving gates open and o ots pram e anot t t o be none ts temporary disappearance . t out of ion was called for.
t feel able to approacly about it. tood t trange at to go t encouraged to keep tance is o say. Instead, t tor ly may or may not a ne time.
Dr. Maudsley young, yet ties tall, nor really very muscular, but ality, of vigor about o stride along at a great pace, effort. er to finding alking into turning to find ing of keeping up. tc mental liveliness. You could but quick, y for finding t person at t time. You could see it in , intent, rong, neat eyebrows above.
Maudsley ’s no bad tor. ep on t tients art feeling better already. And not least, tonic in ’s made a difference to ients lived or died, and tered hey lived.
Dr. Maudsley love of intellectual activity. Illness o rest until . Patients got used to urning up at t t t puzzling over toms, to ask one more question. And once a diagnosis, treatment to resolve. ed t of all treatments, but kept coming back to somet from a different angle, constantly casting about for tiny fragment of kno o get rid of t but to understand t in an entirely neelligent and amiable, ionally good doctor and a better t.
tion of village men included t like to be left out of anytrio and listened attentively as ted tale. tes left open, on to ter some minutes at tory: t in tor.
‘the younger Fred Jameson said finally.
‘Out of control,“ added the older Fred Jameson.
‘And anding to one side, il no.
Mr. Bonner took ling breat it seems to me t rig got apped imes.
All t their shoes.
‘Leave it or. ”I’ll speak to the family.“
And t. t. It o tor, the village elder, now.
to t tor actually did o his wife.
‘I doubt t any ,“ selling tory. ”You kno ill, t be told not to do it again. Poor Mary.“ And sed urned o her husband.
Mrs. Maudsley tractive tily, and a trace of gray in it yle of sucy t only a true beauty be made plain by it. hen she moved, her form had a rounded, womanly grace.
tor kne too long for it to make any difference to him.
‘t tally retarded.“
‘Surely not!“
‘It’s least.“
S. “ is just old-fasion is more understanding.”
tor atistically unlikely t tal abnormality in t out until did not surprise o believe ill of any-me, ake for granted t the rumor was ill-founded gossip.
‘I’m sure you are rig meant rying to get o believe only rue; so t could admit no difference betrue and w was good.
‘ hen?“ she asked him.
‘Go and see t of a , but o see me if I go.“
Mrs. Maudsley nodded, . “ about t do you know of her?”
‘Very little.“
And tor continued to tinued er a quarter of an or said, “Per go, t sooner see anot do you say?”
And so ter Mrs. Maudsley arrived at t t door. Astoniso get no anse to say so tc in. No one able, broarting to collapse upon t to a sink piled y plates, and t inside you could ell day from nigy told o knoigortoises off on from room to room looking for Isabelle, but on taking in tness t lurked everywhere.
tired easily, and s manage tairs very s, or meant to clean t, and to be , sly concentrated on feeding t mucy, and it y, and stayed udy, dropped to to be, and it soon occurred to it o c out once a year to do it once a week.
Mrs. Maudsley didn’t like ains, and sig tarnis at tairs and t music t tered all over t doomatically to retrieve a playing card, t a loss, so great t covering it and, being a fastidious, it doorn beto end tact bety, faintly sticky playing card, and o put t t one. Eventually, ible s on t of the room.
tter. It y, certainly, and t t even in t tic family, s bed. tucked into a dark corner bets of s a flea-ridden blanket and a filt first sook it for a cat’s bed. tted t out. It was Jane Eyre.
From to ture o facilitate turned to face a s place under t be inctly. On tained blackened, brittle stems, and around it a neat circle of papery petals like aso up; it crumbled, leaving a nasty yelloain between e-gloved fingers.
Mrs. Maudsley seemed to slump doo tool.
tor’s a bad o believe t God actually did cen to everytoo taken up ing out to feeling in o notice any ot all t realizing it.
ool, staring into space? t keep topped up. No ent of to o racted, absent fas she piano.
t resounded in t, most un-pianolike noise imaginable. t because ted, unplayed and untuned, for many years. It ion of trument’s strings antly accompanied by anot ed, of a screec of a cat .
Mrs. Maudsley of . On ared at tood up, o s moment to register t s alone.
t figure in we—