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    Let Sleeping Vets Lie


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      Let Sleeping Vets Lie [112-066-4.8]

      By: JAMES herriot

      Synopsis:

      To my Wife with love

      Chapter One.

      As the faint rumbling growl rolled up from the rib cage into the ear

      pieces of my stethoscope the realisation burst upon me with

      uncomfortable clarity that this was probably the biggest dog I had ever

      seen. In my limited past experience some Irish Wolfhounds had

      undoubtedly been taller and a certain number of Bull Mastiffs had

      possibly been broader, but for sheer gross poundage this one had it. His

      name was Clancy.

      It was a good name for an Irishman's dog and Joe Mulligan was very Irish

      despite his many years in Yorkshire. Joe had brought him in to the

      afternoon surgery and as the huge hairy form ambled along, almost

      filling the passage, I was reminded of the times I had seen him out in

      the fields around Darrowby enduring the frisking attentions of smaller

      animals with massive benignity. He looked like a nice friendly dog.

      But now there was this ominous sound echoing round the great thorax like

      a distant drum roll in a subterranean cavern, and as the chest piece of

      the stethoscope bumped along the ribs the sound swelled in volume and

      the lips fluttered over the enormous teeth as though a gentle breeze had

      stirred them. It was then that I became aware not only that Clancy was

      very big indeed but that my position, kneeling on the floor with my

      right ear a few inches from his mouth, was infinitely vulnerable.

      I got to my feet and as I dropped the stethoscope into my pocket the dog

      gave me a cold look - a sideways glance without moving his head; and

      there was a chilling menace in his very immobility. I didn't mind my

      patients snapping at me but this one, I felt sure, wouldn't snap. If he

      started something it would be on a spectacular scale.

      I stepped back a pace. "Now what did you say his symptoms were, Mr.

      Mulligan ?"

      "Phwaat's that?" Joe cupped his ear with his hand. I took a deep breath.

      "What's the trouble with him?" I shouted.

      The old man looked at me with total incomprehension from beneath the

      straightly adjusted cloth cap. He fingered the muffler knotted

      immediately over his larynx and the pipe which grew from the dead centre

      of his mouth puffed blue wisps of puzzlement.

      Then, remembering something of Clancy's past history, I moved close to

      Mr. Mulligan and bawled with all my power into his face. "Is he

      vomiting?"

      The response was immediate. Joe smiled in great relief and removed his

      pipe. "Oh aye, he's womitin" sorr. He's womitin" bad." Clearly he was on

      familiar ground.

      Over the years Clancy's treatment had all been at long range. My young

      boss, Siegfried Farnon, had told me on the first day I had arrived in

      Darrowby two years ago that there was nothing wrong with the dog which

      he had described as a cross between an Airedale and a donkey, but his

      penchant for eating every bit of rubbish in his path had the inevitable

      result. A large bottle of bismuth, mag carte mixture had been dispensed

      at regular intervals. He had also told me that Clancy, when bored, used

      occasionally to throw Joe to the ground and worry him like a rat just

      for a bit of light relief. But his master still adored him.

      Prickings of conscience told me I should carry out a full examination.

      Take his temperature, for instance. All I had to do was to grab hold of

      that tail, lift it and push a thermometer into his rectum. The dog

      turned his head and met my eye with a blank stare; again I heard the low

      booming drum roll and the upper lip lifted a fraction to show a quick

      gleam of white.

      "Yes, yes, right, Mr. Mulligan," I said briskly. "I'll get you a bottle

      of the usual."

      In the dispensary, under the rows of bottles with their Latin names and

      glass stoppers I shook up the mixture in a ten ounce bottle, corked it,

      stuck on a label and wrote the directions. Joe seemed well satisfied as

      he pocketed the familiar white medicine but as he turned to go my

      conscience smote me again. The dog did look perfectly fit but maybe he

      ought to be seen again.

      "Bring him back again on Thursday afternoon at two o'clock," I yelled

      into the old man's ear. "And please come on time if you can. You were a

      bit late today."

      I watched Mr. Mulligan going down the street, preceded by his pipe from

      which regular puffs rose upwards as though from a departing railway

      engine. Behind him ambled Clancy, a picture of massive calm. With his

      all-over covering of tight brown curls he did indeed look like a

      gigantic Airedale.

      Thursday afternoon, I ruminated. That was my half day and at two o'clock

      I'd probably be watching the afternoon cinema show in Brawton.

      The following Friday morning Siegfried was sitting behind his desk,

      working out the morning rounds. He scribbled a list of visits on a pad,

      tore out the sheet and handed it to me.

      "Here you are, James, I think that'll just about keep you out of

      mischief till lunch time." Then something in the previous day's entries

      caught his eye and he turned to his younger brother who was at his

      morning task of stoking the fire.

      "Tristan, I see Joe Mulligan was in yesterday afternoon with his dog and

      you saw it. What did you make of it?"

      Tristan put down his bucket. "Oh, I gave him some of the bismuth

      mixture."

      "Yes, but what did your examination of the patient disclose?"

      "Well now, let's see." Tristan rubbed his chin. "He looked pretty

      lively. really."

      "Is that all?"

      "Yes ... yes ... I think so."

      Siegfried turned back to me. "And how about you, James? You saw the dog

      the day before. What were your findings?"

      "Well it was a bit difficult," I said. "That dog's as big as an elephant

      and; there's something creepy about him. He seemed to me to be just

      waiting his chance and there was only old Joe to hold him. I'm afraid I

      wasn't able to make a close examination but I must say I thought the

      same as Tristan - he did look pretty lively."

      Siegfried put down his pen wearily. On the previous night, fate had

      dealt him one of the shattering blows which it occasionally reserves for

      vets - a call at each end of his sleeping time. He had been dragged from

      his bed at 1 a.m. and again at 6 a.m. and the fires of his personality

      were temporarily damped.

      He passed a hand across his eyes. "Well God help us. You, James, a

      veterinary surgeon of two years experience and you, Tristan, a final

      year student can't come up with anything better between you than the

      phrase "pretty lively". It's a bloody poor thing! Hardly a worthy

      description of clinical findings is it? When an animal comes in here I

      expect you to record pulse, temperature and respiratory rate. To

      auscultate the chest and thoroughly palpate the abdomen. To open his


      mouth and examine teeth, gums and pharynx. To check the condition of the

      skin. To catheterise him and examine the urine if necessary."

      "Right," I said.

      "OK," said Tristan.

      My employer rose from his seat. "Have you fixed another appointment?"

      "I have, yes." Tristan drew his packet of Woodbines from his pocket.

      "For Monday. And since Mr. Mulligan's always late for the surgery I said

      we'd visit the dog at his home in the evening."

      "I see." Siegfried made a note on the pad, then he looked up suddenly.

      "That's when you and James are going to the young farmers" meeting,

      isn't it?"

      The young man drew on his cigarette. "That's right. Good for the

      practice for us to mix with the young clients."

      "Very well," Siegfried said as he walked to the door. "I'll see the dog

      myself."

      On the following Tuesday I was fairly confident that Siegfried would

      have something to say about Mulligan's dog, if only to point out the

      benefits of a thorough clinical examination. But he was silent on the

      subject.

      It happened that I came upon old Joe in the market place sauntering over

      the cobbles with Clancy inevitably trotting at his heels.

      I went up to him and shouted in his ear. "How's your dog?"

      Mr. Mulligan removed his pipe and smiled with slow benevolence. "Oh

      foine, sorr, foine. Still womitin" a bit, but not bad."

      "Mr. Farnon fixed him up, then?"

      "Aye, gave him some more of the white medicine. It's wonderful stuff,

      sorr, wonderful stuff."

      "Good, good," I said. "He didn't find anything else when he examined

      him?"

      Joe took another suck at his pipe. "No he didn't now, he didn't. He's a

      clever man, Mr. Farnon - I've niver seen a man work as fast, no I

      haven't."

      "What do you mean?"

      "Well now he saw all he wanted in tree seconds, so he did."

      I was mystified. "Three seconds?"

      "Yis," said Mr. Mulligan firmly. "Not a moment more."

      "Amazing. What happened?"

      Joe tapped out his pipe on his heel and without haste took out a knife

      and began to carve a refill from an evil looking coil of black twist.

      "Well now I'll tell ye. Mr. Farnon is a man who moves awful sudden, and

      that night he banged on our front door and jumped into the room." (I

      knew those cottages. There was no hall or lobby - you walked straight

      from the street into the living room.) "And as he came in he" was

      pullin" his thermometer out of its case. Well now Clancy was lyin" by

      the fire and he rose up in a flash and he gave a bit of a wuff, so he

      did."

      "A bit of a wuff, eh?" I could imagine the hairy monster leaping up and

      baying into Siegfried's face. I could see the gaping jaws, the gleaming

      teeth.

      "Aye, just a bit of a wuff. Well, Mr. Farnon just put the thermometer

      straight back in its case turned round and went out the door."

      "Didn't he say anything?" I asked.

      "No, civil a word. Just turned about like a soldier and marched out the

      door, so he did."

      It sounded authentic. Siegfried was a man of instant decision. I put my

      hand out to pat Clancy but something in his eyes made me change my mind.

      "Well, I'm glad he's better," I shouted.

      The old man ignited his pipe with an ancient brass lighter, puffed a

      cloud of choking blue smoke into my face and tapped a little metal lid

      on to the bowl.

      "Aye, Mr. Farnon sent round a big bottle of the white stuff and it's

      done 'im good. Mind you,", he gave a beatific smile, "Clancy's allus

      been one for the womitin", so he has."

      Nothing more was said about the big dog for over a week, but Siegfried's

      professional conscience must have been niggling at him because he came

      into the dispensary one afternoon when Tristan and I were busy at the

      tasks which have" passed into history - making up fever drinks, stomach

      powders, boric acid pessaries. He was elaborately casual.

      "Oh by the way, I dropped a note to Joe Mulligan. I'm not entirely

      convinced that we have adequately explored the causes of his dog's

      symptoms. This womiting ... er, vomiting is almost certainly due to

      depraved appetite but I just want to make sure. So I have asked him to

      bring him round tomorrow afternoon between two and two thirty when we'll

      all be here."

      No cries of joy greeted his statement, so he continued. "I suppose you

      could say that this dog is to some degree a difficult animal and I think

      we should plan accordingly." He turned to me. "James, when he arrives

      you get hold of his back end, will you?"

      "Right," I replied without enthusiasm.

      He faced his brother. "And you, Tristan, can deal with the head. OK?"

      "Fine, fine," the young man muttered, his face expressionless.

      His brother continued. "I suggest you get a good grip with your arms

      round his neck and I'll be ready to give him a shot of sedative."

      "Splendid, splendid," said Tristan.

      "Ah well, that's capital." My employer rubbed his hands together. "Once

      I get the dope into him the rest will be easy. I do like to satisfy my

      mind about these things."

      It was a typical Dales practice at Darrowby; mainly large animal and we

      didn't have packed waiting rooms at surgery times. But on the following

      afternoon we had nobody in at all, and it added to the tension of

      waiting. The three of us mooched about the office, making aimless

      conversation, glancing with studied carelessness into the front street,

      whistling little tunes to ourselves. By two twenty-five we had all

      fallen silent. Over the next five minutes we consulted our watches about

      every thirty seconds, then at exactly two thirty Siegfried spoke up.

      "This is no damn good. I told Joe he had to be here before half past but

      he's taken not a bit of notice. He's always late and there doesn't seem

      to be any way to get him here on time." He took a last look out of the

      window at the empty street. "Right we're not waiting any longer. You and

      I James, have got that colt to cut and you, Tristan, have to see that

      beast of Wilson's. So let's be off."

      Up till then, Laurel and Hardy were the only people I had ever seen

      getting jammed together in doorways but there was a moment when the

      three of us gave a passable imitation of the famous comics as we all

      fought our way into the passage at the same time. Within seconds we were

      in the street and Tristan was roaring off in a cloud of exhaust smoke.

      My employer and I proceeded almost as rapidly in the opposite direction.

      At the end of Trengate we turned into the market place and I looked

      around in vain for signs of Mr. Mulligan. It wasn't until we had reached

      the outskirts of the town that we saw him. He had just left his house

      and was pacing along under a moving pall of blue smoke with Clancy as

      always bringing up the rear.

      "There he is!" Siegfried exclaimed. "Would you believe it? At the rate

      he's going he'll get to the surgery around three o'clock. Well we won't

      be there and it's his own fault." He looked at the great curly-coated

      animal tripping along,

      a picture of health and energy. "Well, I su
    ppose we'd have been wasting

      our time examining that dog in any case. There's nothing really wrong

      with him." For a moment he paused, lost in thought, then he turned to

      me. "He does look pretty lively, doesn't he?"

      Chapter Two.

      This was my second spring m the Dales but it was like the one before and

      all the springs after. The kind of spring, that is, that a country vet

      knows; the din of the lambing pens, the bass rumble of the ewes and the

      high, insistent bawling of the lambs. This, for me, has always heralded

      the end of winter and the beginning of something new. This and the

      piercing Yorkshire wind and the hard, bright sunshine flooding the bare

      hillsides.

      At the top of the grassy slope the pens, built of straw bales, formed a

      long row of square cubicles each holding a ewe with her lambs and I

      could see Rob Benson coming round the far end carrying two feeding

      buckets. Rob was hard at it; at this time of the year he didn't go to

      bed for about six weeks; he would maybe take off his boots and doze by

      the kitchen fire at night but he was his own shepherd and never very far

      from the scene of action.

      "Ah've got a couple of cases for you today, Jim." His face, cracked and

      purpled by the weather, broke into a grin, "It's not really you ah need,

      it's that little lady's hand of yours and right sharpish, too."

     


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