The reason I enjoy Victorian writers so much is that they write as if they were writing for their own pleasure, with no thought of their readership, or interest in their tastes and preferences; they write as if there were no tomorrow. Of course this is not correct; nearly everyone who made a living by writing lived in straitened circumstances. And yet, the feeling of space, of time and of pleasurable idleness, is what strikes you as you read a book by Elizabeth Gaskell or Margaret Oliphant.
‘The Doctor's Family,’ continuing the Carlingford series is, at first glance, a tale about laziness, selfishness and familial ingratitude, a study in character rather than plot. Dr Edward Rider is the eponymous Doctor, who made a cameo appearance in ‘The Executor,’ the first short story set in the fictitious rural town of Carlingford. There, the role assigned to him was an ignoble one; in ‘Family,’ he redeems himself to some degree, but not without first exposing more disagreeable qualities in him - temper, impatience, intolerance for people with weaker wills than himself and, one might add, a hospitality that is a grudging, resentful hospitality, until he falls utterly in love with a self reliant and very independent young woman, and the trials he has to go through before Nettie Underwood can be wooed and won.
The other principals are his brother Fred Rider, himself once a successful doctor, and now an alcoholic, with an alcoholic’s fecklessness. He had run away from his family in Australia, and now lives on sufferance with his younger brother. Although at the start of this book, the lazy Fred tries to effect a reconciliation with Dr Rider, and the two brothers exchange a deal of confidences, at no point does Fred reveal the fact of his deserted wife and three children, all of whom are maintained by his sister-in-law Nettie, his wife's younger sister.
Totally without warning, Nettie Underwood arrives at his lodgings the morning after the confidences with a querulous woman in tow, and the promise of three children in the wings, all waiting for a welcome as if by right. Since both women are absolute strangers to him, Dr Rider is unable to understand their air of aggressive expectation. Then the truth comes out: when Fred deserted his wife and children and returned to England, the resourceful Nettie packed herself and her sister Susan Rider and Susan’s children on board a ship, and sailed to England in search of her brother-in-law, after several months of waiting in vain for news from him.
Although Fred and Susan Rider bitterly resent Nettie’s take-charge and autocratic, if kindly ways, they cannot do without her and her annual income of two hundred pounds, which serves to maintain them after Dr Rider has unequivocally informed them that they cannot all of them live with him in his lodgings. While Fred Rider lolls at his ease and smokes and reads trash, his wife sits by him and, on the rare occasions Nettie goes to take tea with the Wodehouses, surreptitiously supplies him with liquor. It is Nettie who handles the tradespeople and the landlady, takes care of the household, does the sewing and manages the children, Nettie who supports and slaves for them with goodwill and determination, taking on all their responsibilities and duties with tireless cheerfulness.
She rejects all offers of help from a remorseful Dr Rider, and finally rejects his profession of love and his proposal.
We also meet several people with their own narratives in the Chronicles: Frank Wenkworth, the perpetual curate of St Roque's, the Anglican Church, the two Misses Wodehouse, Mary and Lucy, and even a glimpse of Bessie Christian, the girl whom Edward Rider had jilted in ‘The Executor,’ and Mr Brown, the solicitor who married her.
It is perhaps open to question if Nettie, instead of slaving for her sister's family, had instead left them to fend for themselves. Would Fred Rider then have been forced to work and maintain his family? Would Susan rouse herself from her sloth and indifference to rear her children herself? Perhaps. But then, there would have been no delightful story!