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travels through france and italy-第9章

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tury for its  schools of Law and Physic; it had been incorporated definitely  with France since 1382; and its name recurs in French history  both as the home of famous men in great number and as; before and  after the brief pre…eminence of La Rochelle; the rival of Nimes  as capital of Protestantism in the South。 Evelyn; Burnet; the two  Youngs; Edward and Arthur; and Sterne have all left us an  impression of the city。 Prevented by snow from crossing the Mont  Cenis; John Locke spent two winters there in the days of Charles  II。 (1675…77); and may have pondered a good many of the problems  of Toleration on a soil under which the heated lava of religious  strife was still unmistakeable。 And Smollett must almost have  jostled en route against the celebrated author of The Wealth of  Nations; who set out with his pupil for Toulouse in February  1764。 A letter to Hume speaks of the number of English in the  neighbourhood just a month later。 Lomenie de Brienne was then in  residence as archbishop。 In the following November; Adam Smith  and his charge paid a visit to Montpellier to witness a pageant  and memorial; as it was supposed; of a freedom that was gone for  ever; the opening of the States of Languedoc。 Antiquaries and  philosophers went to moralise on the spectacle in the spirit in  which Freeman went to Andorra; Byron to the site of Troy; or De  Tocqueville to America。 It was there that the great economist met  Horne Tooke。

Smollett's more practical and immediate object in making this  pilgrimage was to interview the great lung specialist; known  locally to his admiring compatriots as the Boerhaave of  Montpellier; Dr。 Fizes。 The medical school of Montpellier was  much in evidence during the third quarter of the eighteenth  century; and for the history of its various branches there are  extant numerous Memoires pour Servir; by Prunelle; Astruc; and  others。 Smollett was only just in time to consult the reigning  oracle; for the 〃illustrious〃 Dr。 Fizes died in the following  year。 He gives us a very unfavourable picture of this 〃great  lanthorn of medicine;〃 who; notwithstanding his prodigious age;  his stoop; and his wealth; could still scramble up two pairs for  a fee of six livres。 More than is the case with most medical  patients; however; should we suspect Smollett of being unduly  captious。 The point as to how far his sketch of the French doctor  and his diagnosis was a true one; and how far a mere caricature;  due to ill health and prejudice; has always piqued my curiosity。  But how to resolve a question involving so many problems not of  ordinary therapeutic but of historical medicine! In this  difficulty I bethought me most fortunately of consulting an authority probably without a rival in this special branch of  medical history; Dr。 Norman Moore; who with his accustomed  generosity has given me the following most instructive diagnosis  of the whole situation。

〃I have read Smollett's account of his illness as it appears in  several passages in his travels and in the statement which he  drew up for Professor 'F。' at Montpellier。

〃Smollett speaks of his pulmonic disorder; his 'asthmatical  disorder;' and uses other expressions which show that his lungs  were affected。 In his statement he mentions that he has cough;  shortness of breath; wasting; a purulent expectoration; loss of  appetite at times; loss of strength; fever; a rapid pulse;  intervals of slight improvement and subsequent exacerbations。 

〃This shortness of breath; he says; has steadily increased。 This  group of symptoms makes it certain that he had tuberculosis of  the lungs; in other words; was slowly progressing in consumption。

〃His darting pains in his side were due to the pleurisy which  always occurs in such an illness。

〃His account shows also the absence of hopelessness which is a  characteristic state of mind in patients with pulmonary  tuberculosis。

〃I do not think that the opinion of the Montpellier professor  deserves Smollett's condemnation。 It seems to me both careful and  sensible and contains all the knowledge of its time。 Smollett;  with an inconsistency not uncommon in patients who feel that they  have a serious disease; would not go in person to the Professor;  for he felt that from his appearance the Professor would be sure  to tell him he had consumption。 He half hoped for some other view  of the written case in spite of its explicit statements; and when  Professor F wrote that the patient had tubercles in his lungs;  this was displeasing to poor Smollett; who had hoped against hope  to receivesome other opinion than the only possible one; viz。;  that he undoubtedly had a consumption certain to prove fatal。〃

The cruel truth was not to be evaded。 Smollett had tuberculosis;  though not probably of the most virulent kind; as he managed to  survive another seven years; and those for the most part years of  unremitting labour。 He probably gained much by substituting Nice  for Montpellier as a place to winter in; for although the climate  of Montpellier is clear and bright in the highest degree; the  cold is both piercing and treacherous。 Days are frequent during  the winter in which one may stand warmly wrapped in the brilliant  sun and feel the protection of a greatcoat no more than that of a  piece of gauze against the icy and penetrating blast that comes  from 〃tile roof of France。〃

Unable to take the direct route by Arles as at present; the  eastward…bound traveller from Montpellier in 1764 had to make a  northerly detour。 The first stone bridge up the Rhone was at  Avignon; but there was a bridge of boats connecting Beaucaire  with Tarascon。 Thence; in no very placable mood; Smollett set out  in mid…November by way of Orgon 'Aix'; Brignolles and le Muy;  striking the Mediterranean at Frejus。 En route he was inveigled  into a controversy of unwonted bitterness with an innkeeper at le  Muy。 The scene is conjured up for us with an almost disconcerting  actuality; no single detail of the author's discomfiture is  omitted。 The episode is post…Flaubertian in its impersonal  detachment; or; as Coleridge first said; 〃aloofness。〃 On crossing  the Var; the sunny climate; the romantic outline of the  Esterelles; the charms of the 〃neat village〃 of Cannes; and the  first prospect of Nice began gradually and happily to effect a  slight mitigation in our patient's humour。 Smollett was  indubitably one of the pioneers of the Promenade des Anglais。  Long before the days of 〃Dr。 Antonio〃 or Lord Brougham; he  described for his countrymen the almost incredible dolcezza of  the sunlit coast from Antibes to Lerici。 But how much better  than the barren triumph of being the unconscious fugleman of so  glittering a popularity must have been the sense of being one of  the first that ever burst from our rude island upon that secluded  little Piedmontese town; as it then was; of not above twelve  thousand souls; with its wonderful situation; noble perspective  and unparalleled climate。 Well might our travel…tost doctor  exclaim; 〃When I stand on the rampart and look around I can  scarce help thinking myself enchanted。〃 It was truly a garden of  Armida for a native of one of the dampest corners of North  Britain。

〃Forty or fifty years ago
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