Forty Years in the Wilderness of Pills and Powders
Forty Years in the Wilderness of Pills and Powders
Cogitations and Confessions of an Aged Physician
This is a work in which confessions of the impotence of the Healing Art, generally so-called, greatly abound, and in which the public ignorance of the Laws of Health or Hygiene met the consequences of that ignorance, presented with great plainness. The world will make wiser use of its medical men than it has hitherto done, when it comes to see more clearly what is their legitimate and what their ultimate mission.
Book Excerpt
ich had been nurtured and fed not only by an intelligent mother but by a few books I had read. Perhaps the life of Franklin, already referred to, had as much influence with me as any thing of the kind. For along with the love of knowledge which was so much developed by this book, the love of doing good was introduced. The doctor says, somewhere, that he always set a high value on a doer of good; and it is possible, nay, I might even say probable, that this desire, which subsequently became a passion with me, had its origin in this very remark.
FOOTNOTES:
[A] To illustrate this point, and show clearly the state of the public opinion, I will relate an anecdote. A certain calf in the neighborhood, after long and patient trial, was pronounced too ignorant to be able to procure his own nourishment, or in other words, was said to be a fool. On raising the question, what should be done with him, a shrewd colored man who stood by, said, "Master, send him to college!"
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