Bella Donna eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 668 pages of information about Bella Donna.

Bella Donna eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 668 pages of information about Bella Donna.

Bella Donna

A NOVEL

By Robert Hichens

Author of “The Call of The Blood,” “The Fruitful
Vine,” “A Spirit in Prison.”

A. L. BURT COMPANY Publishers New York

Copyright, 1908 By J. B. Lippincott Company

Published October, 1908.

BELLA DONNA

I

Doctor Meyer Isaacson had got on as only a modern Jew whose home is London can get on, with a rapidity that was alarming.  He seemed to have arrived as a bullet arrives in a body.  He was not in the heart of success, and lo! he was in the heart of success.  And no one had marked his journey.  Suddenly every one was speaking of him—­was talking of the cures he had made, was advising every one else to go to him.  For some mysterious reason his name—­a name not easily to be forgotten once it had been heard—­began to pervade the conversations that were held in the smart drawing-rooms of London.  Women who were well, but had not seen him, abruptly became sufficiently unwell to need a consultation.  “Where does he live?  In Harley Street, I suppose?” was a constant question.

But he did not live in Harley Street.  He was not the man to lose himself in an avenue of brass plates of fellow practitioners.  “Cleveland Square, St. James’s,” was the startling reply; and his house was detached, if you please, and marvellously furnished.

The winged legend flew that he was rich, and that he had gone into practice as a doctor merely because he was intellectually interested in disease.  His gift for diagnosis was so remarkable that he was morally forced to exercise it.  And he had a greedy passion for studying humanity.  And who has such opportunities for the study of humanity as the doctor and the priest?  Patients who had been to him spoke enthusiastically of his observant eyes.  His personality always made a great impression.  “There’s no one just like him,” was a frequent comment upon Doctor Meyer Isaacson.  And that phrase is a high compliment upon the lips of London, the city of parrots and of monkeys.

His age was debated, and so was his origin.  Most people thought he was “about forty”; a very safe age, young enough to allow of almost unlimited expectation, old enough to make results achieved not quite unnatural, though possibly startling.  Yes, he must be “about forty.”  And his origin?  “Meyer” suggested Germany.  As to “Isaacson,” it allowed the ardent imagination free play over denationalized Israel.  Someone said that he “looked as if he came from the East,” to which a cynic made answer, “The East End.”  There was, perhaps, a hint of both in the Doctor of Cleveland Square.  Certain it is that in the course of a walk down Brick Lane, or the adjacent thoroughfares, one will encounter men

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Bella Donna from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.