The Sibyl’s Augury
From a Physician’s Diary
by Sylvanus Cobb, Jr.
It was in ‘forty-eight that, young in my profession, I settled in Greyburn. I had spent my full term at college, and had also given almost two years of my time to studying and practicing in the hospitals of Europe; and I am pleased to be able to state that very shortly after settling in the aforementioned place I had as much business as I could conveniently attend to. In two or three cases of fearful threatening aspect I had met with happy success; and a successful man people are willing to trust. And then, again, being fresh from the very best surgical school in the world—the Academy of Louis XV., in Paris—I very quickly and emphatically made my mark upon the public mind in the result of several capital operations which I had occasion to perform.
I had been almost a year in Greyburn, and had become so well satisfied with the people, and they, in turn, had given token of being so well satisfied with me, that I had fully concluded to regard it as my permanent abiding place. It was on a clear, pleasant evening in May that I was visited by a gentleman from the neighboring town of Foxborough. He had called during the day, in my absence, and had left his card, with word that he would remain in town until he could see me. The card bore the name of “ADAM GREGORY, D.D.,” and I knew him at once for the Principal of the Theological Seminary in the town mentioned. He was a middle-aged, mild-faced gentleman, with one of those marked organizations in which no amount of intellectual or mental disturbance can overcome the inate disposition to kindliness and frankness.
Mr. Gregory took a seat in my office, and regarded me attentively before he introduced his business. I knew very well that he was measuring the outward signs of my fitness for his purpose. Presently his hands were suffered to rest easily one… Read More