The Star-Gazers Part 12
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Mrs Alleyne had announced to him, as they came towards the dining-room, that Mr Oldroyd would join them at the meal; but the sc.r.a.p of social information was covered by a film of nebular theory, till the astronomer took his place at the table, when he seemed to start out of a fit of celestial dreaming, and to come back to earth.
"Ah, Mr Oldroyd," he said, with his face lighting up and becoming quite transformed. "I had forgotten that you were to join us. Pray forgive my rudeness. I get so lost in my calculations."
"Don't mention it," said Oldroyd, nodding; and then he looked hard at his _vis-a-vis_, marvelling at the change, and the tones of his deep mellow voice, and thinking what a man this would be if he had become statesman, orator, or the like, concluding by saying mentally, "What a physique for a West End physician! Why, that presence--a little more grey, and that soft, winning, confidential voice, would be a fortune to him. But he would have to dress."
"I am sorry we have only plain boiled mutton to offer you, Mr Oldroyd,"
said Mrs Alleyne, as the covers were removed.
"I knew it was," thought Oldroyd, glancing at the livid, steaming leg of mutton. Then aloud: "One of the joints I most appreciate, madam--with its appropriate tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs, Miss Alleyne," he added smiling at Lucy.
"I'm afraid the potatoes are not good," said Lucy, colouring with vexation; "and the turnips seem very hard and stringy."
"Don't prejudge them, my dear," said Mrs Alleyne with dignity. "We have great difficulty in getting good vegetables, Mr Oldroyd," she continued, "though we are in the country. We--er--we do not keep a gardener."
"And the cottage people don't care to sell," said Oldroyd. "I have found that out. But you have a large garden here, Mrs Alleyne."
"Yes," said the lady, coldly.
"Ah," said Oldroyd, looking across at Moray Alleyne. "Now, there's your opportunity. Why not take to gardening?"
"Take to gardening?" said Alleyne, shaking off the dreamy air that had come upon him as he mechanically ate what his mother had carefully placed upon his plate, that lady selecting everything, and her son taking it without question, as a furnace fire might swallow so much coal.
"Yes; take to gardening, my good sir," said Oldroyd. "It is a very ancient occupation, and amply rewards its votaries."
"I am well rewarded by much higher studies," said Alleyne, smiling; and Oldroyd was more than ever impressed by his voice and manner.
"Exactly, but you must have change."
Alleyne shook his head.
"I do not feel the want of change," he said.
"But your body does," replied Oldroyd, "and it is crying out in revolt against the burden your mind is putting upon it."
"Why, doctor," said Alleyne, with his face lighting up more and more, "I thought you had stayed to dinner. This is quite a professional visit."
"My dear sir, pray don't call it so," said Oldroyd. "I only want to give you good advice. I want you to give me better vegetables than these--from your own garden," he added, merrily, as he turned to Lucy, who was eagerly watching her brother's face.
"Thank you, doctor," replied Alleyne shaking his head; "but I have no time."
Oldroyd hesitated for a moment or two, as he went on with his repast of very badly cooked, exceedingly tough mutton; but a glance at his hostess and Lucy showed him that his words found favour with them, and he persevered in a pleasant, half-bantering strain that had, however, a solid basis of sound shrewd sense beneath its playful tone.
"Hark at him!" he said. "Has not time! Now, look here, my dear Mr Alleyne--pray excuse my familiarity, for though we have been neighbours these past five years, we have not been intimate--I say, look here, my dear sir--potatoes! Thank you, Miss Alleyne. That one will do. I like them waxey. Now look here, my dear sir, you are an astronomer."
"Only a very humble student of a great science, Mr Oldroyd," said the other, meekly.
"Ah, well, we will not discuss that. At all events you are a mathematician, and deal in algebraic quant.i.ties, and differential calculus, and logarithms, and all that sort of thing."
"Yes--yes," said Alleyne, going on eating in his mechanical way as if he diligently took to heart the epigrammatic teaching of the old philosopher--"Live not to eat, but eat to live."
"Well then, my dear sir, I'll give you a calculation to make."
"Not now, doctor, pray," said Mrs Alleyne, quickly. "My son's digestion is very weak."
"This won't hurt his digestion, madam," said Oldroyd; "a child could do it without a slate."
"Pray ask me," said Alleyne, "and I will endeavour to answer you."
"Well, then: here is my problem," said Oldroyd; "perhaps you will try and solve it too, Miss Alleyne. Suppose two men set to work to perform a task, and the one--as you mathematicians would put it, say A, worked twenty hours a day for five years, while B worked eight hours a day for twenty years, which would do most work?"
"I know," said Lucy, quickly; "the busy B, for he would do a hundred and sixty hours' work, while A would only do a hundred hours' work."
Alleyne smiled and nodded very tenderly at his sister.
"Isn't that right?" she said quickly, and her cheeks flushed.
"Quite right as to proportion, Lucy," he said, "but in each case it would be three hundred and sixty-five times, or three hundred and thirteen times as much."
"Of course," she said. "How foolish of me."
"Well, Mr Oldroyd, what about your problem?" continued Alleyne, commencing upon a fresh piece of tough mutton.
"You have solved it," said Oldroyd. "You have shown me that the eight-hour's man does more work than the twenty-hour's man."
"Yes, but one works five years, the other twenty, according to your arrangement."
"Not my arrangement, sir, Nature's. The man who worked twenty hours per diem would be worn out mentally at the end of five years. The man who worked eight hours a day, all surroundings being reasonable, would, at the end of twenty years, be in a condition to go on working well for another ten, perhaps twenty years. Now, my dear sir, do you see my drift?"
Moray Alleyne laid down his knife and fork, placed his elbows on either side of his plate, clasped his hands together, and then seemed to cover them with his thick, dark beard, as he rested his chin.
A dead silence fell upon the little party, and, as if it were some chemical process going on, small round discs of congealed fat formed on the mutton gravy in the dish.
Mrs Alleyne was about to break the silence, but she saw that her son was ready to answer, and she refrained, sitting very upright and motionless in her chair, as she watched the furrows coming and going on his brow.
"That is bringing it home, doctor," he said, and there was a slight huskiness in his voice as he spoke. "But you are exaggerating."
"I protest, no," said Oldroyd, eagerly. "Allow me, I have made some study of animal physiology, and I have learned this: Nature strengthens the muscles, nerves and tissues, if they are well used, up to a certain point. If that mark is pa.s.sed--in other words, if you trespa.s.s on the other side--punishment comes, the deterioration is rapid and sure."
"Mother," said Alleyne, turning to her affectionately; "you have been setting the doctor to tell me this."
"Indeed, no, my dear," she cried, "I was not aware what course our conversation would take; but, believe me, Moray, I am glad, for this must be true."
"True?" cried Oldroyd. "My dear madam, the world teems with proofs."
"Yes," said Alleyne thoughtfully: and there was a far-off, dreamy look in his eyes as he gazed straight before him as if into s.p.a.ce, "it is true--it must be true; but with so much to learn--such vast discoveries to make--who can pause?"
"The man who wishes to win in the long race," said Oldroyd smiling, and again there was a minute's absolute silence, during which the young doctor caught a reconnaissant look from Lucy.
The Star-Gazers Part 12
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The Star-Gazers Part 12 summary
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