<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<p><br/></p>
<h1> THE EVOLUTION OF MODERN MEDICINE </h1>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0001" id="link2H_4_0001"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> A SERIES OF LECTURES DELIVERED AT YALE UNIVERSITY </h2>
<h3> ON THE SILLIMAN FOUNDATION </h3>
<h4>
IN APRIL, 1913
</h4>
<h2> by William Osler </h2>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"></SPAN> <br/> <br/></p>
<h2> THE SILLIMAN FOUNDATION </h2>
<p>IN the year 1883 a legacy of eighty thousand dollars was left to the
President and Fellows of Yale College in the city of New Haven, to be held
in trust, as a gift from her children, in memory of their beloved and
honored mother, Mrs. Hepsa Ely Silliman.</p>
<p>On this foundation Yale College was requested and directed to establish an
annual course of lectures designed to illustrate the presence and
providence, the wisdom and goodness of God, as manifested in the natural
and moral world. These were to be designated as the Mrs. Hepsa Ely
Silliman Memorial Lectures. It was the belief of the testator that any
orderly presentation of the facts of nature or history contributed to the
end of this foundation more effectively than any attempt to emphasize the
elements of doctrine or of creed; and he therefore provided that lectures
on dogmatic or polemical theology should be excluded from the scope of
this foundation, and that the subjects should be selected rather from the
domains of natural science and history, giving special prominence to
astronomy, chemistry, geology and anatomy.</p>
<p>It was further directed that each annual course should be made the basis
of a volume to form part of a series constituting a memorial to Mrs.
Silliman. The memorial fund came into the possession of the Corporation of
Yale University in the year 1901; and the present volume constitutes the
tenth of the series of memorial lectures.</p>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><br/></p>
<blockquote>
<p><big><b>CONTENTS</b></big></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0002"> THE SILLIMAN FOUNDATION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0001"> <b>CHAPTER I — ORIGIN OF MEDICINE</b></SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_INTR"> INTRODUCTION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0006"> ORIGIN OF MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0007"> EGYPTIAN MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0008"> ASSYRIAN AND BABYLONIAN MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0009"> HEBREW MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0010"> CHINESE AND JAPANESE MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0002"> <b>CHAPTER II — GREEK MEDICINE</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0012"> ASKLEPIOS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0013"> HIPPOCRATES AND THE HIPPOCRATIC WRITINGS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0014"> ALEXANDRIAN SCHOOL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0015"> GALEN </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0003"> <b>CHAPTER III — MEDIAEVAL MEDICINE</b></SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0017"> SOUTH ITALIAN SCHOOL </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0018"> BYZANTINE MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0019"> ARABIAN MEDICINE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0020"> THE RISE OF THE UNIVERSITIES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0021"> MEDIAEVAL MEDICAL STUDIES </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0022"> MEDIAEVAL PRACTICE </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0023"> ASTROLOGY AND DIVINATION </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0004"> <b>CHAPTER IV — THE RENAISSANCE AND THE
RISE OF ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0025"> PARACELSUS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0026"> VESALIUS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0027"> HARVEY </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0005"> <b>CHAPTER V — THE RISE AND DEVELOPMENT
OF MODERN MEDICINE</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0029"> INTERNAL SECRETIONS </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0030"> CHEMISTRY </SPAN></p>
<p><br/></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2HCH0006"> <b>CHAPTER VI — THE RISE OF PREVENTIVE
MEDICINE</b> </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0032"> SANITATION </SPAN></p>
<p><SPAN href="#link2H_4_0033"> TUBERCULOSIS </SPAN></p>
</blockquote>
<p><br/></p>
<hr />
<p><SPAN name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"></SPAN> <br/> <br/></p>
<h2> PREFACE </h2>
<p>THE manuscript of Sir William Osler's lectures on the "Evolution of Modern
Medicine," delivered at Yale University in April, 1913, on the Silliman
Foundation, was immediately turned in to the Yale University Press for
publication. Duly set in type, proofs in galley form had been submitted to
him and despite countless interruptions he had already corrected and
revised a number of the galleys when the great war came. But with the war
on, he threw himself with energy and devotion into the military and public
duties which devolved upon him and so never completed his proof-reading
and intended alterations. The careful corrections which Sir William made
in the earlier galleys show that the lectures were dictated, in the first
instance, as loose memoranda for oral delivery rather than as finished
compositions for the eye, while maintaining throughout the logical
continuity and the engaging con moto which were so characteristic of his
literary style. In revising the lectures for publication, therefore, the
editors have merely endeavored to carry out, with care and befitting
reverence, the indications supplied in the earlier galleys by Sir William
himself. In supplying dates and references which were lacking, his
preferences as to editions and readings have been borne in mind. The
slight alterations made, the adaptation of the text to the eye, detract
nothing from the original freshness of the work.</p>
<p>In a letter to one of the editors, Osler described these lectures as "an
aeroplane flight over the progress of medicine through the ages." They
are, in effect, a sweeping panoramic survey of the whole vast field,
covering wide areas at a rapid pace, yet with an extraordinary variety of
detail. The slow, painful character of the evolution of medicine from the
fearsome, superstitious mental complex of primitive man, with his amulets,
healing gods and disease demons, to the ideal of a clear-eyed rationalism
is traced with faith and a serene sense of continuity. The author saw
clearly and felt deeply that the men who have made an idea or discovery
viable and valuable to humanity are the deserving men; he has made the
great names shine out, without any depreciation of the important work of
lesser men and without cluttering up his narrative with the tedious
prehistory of great discoveries or with shrill claims to priority. Of his
skill in differentiating the sundry "strains" of medicine, there is
specific witness in each section. Osler's wide culture and control of the
best available literature of his subject permitted him to range the ampler
aether of Greek medicine or the earth-fettered schools of today with equal
mastery; there is no quickset of pedantry between the author and the
reader. The illustrations (which he had doubtless planned as fully for the
last as for the earlier chapters) are as he left them; save that, lacking
legends, these have been supplied and a few which could not be identified
have with regret been omitted. The original galley proofs have been
revised and corrected from different viewpoints by Fielding H. Garrison,
Harvey Cushing, Edward C. Streeter and latterly by Leonard L. Mackall
(Savannah, Ga.), whose zeal and persistence in the painstaking
verification of citations and references cannot be too highly commended.</p>
<p>In the present revision, a number of important corrections, most of them
based upon the original MS., have been made by Dr. W.W. Francis (Oxford),
Dr. Charles Singer (London), Dr. E.C. Streeter, Mr. L.L. Mackall and
others.</p>
<p>This work, composed originally for a lay audience and for popular
consumption, will be to the aspiring medical student and the hardworking
practitioner a lift into the blue, an inspiring vista or "Pisgah-sight" of
the evolution of medicine, a realization of what devotion, perseverance,
valor and ability on the part of physicians have contributed to this
progress, and of the creditable part which our profession has played in
the general development of science.</p>
<p>The editors have no hesitation in presenting these lectures to the
profession and to the reading public as one of the most characteristic
productions of the best-balanced, best-equipped, most sagacious and most
lovable of all modern physicians.</p>
<p>F.H.G.</p>
<p>BUT on that account, I say, we ought not to reject the ancient Art, as if
it were not, and had not been properly founded, because it did not attain
accuracy in all things, but rather, since it is capable of reaching to the
greatest exactitude by reasoning, to receive it and admire its
discoveries, made from a state of great ignorance, and as having been well
and properly made, and not from chance. (Hippocrates, On Ancient Medicine,
Adams edition, Vol. 1, 1849, p. 168.)</p>
<p>THE true and lawful goal of the sciences is none other than this: that
human life be endowed with new discoveries and powers. (Francis Bacon,
Novum Organum, Aphorisms, LXXXI, Spedding's translation.)</p>
<p>A GOLDEN thread has run throughout the history of the world, consecutive
and continuous, the work of the best men in successive ages. From point to
point it still runs, and when near you feel it as the clear and bright and
searchingly irresistible light which Truth throws forth when great minds
conceive it. (Walter Moxon, Pilocereus Senilis and Other Papers, 1887, p.
4.)</p>
<p>FOR the mind depends so much on the temperament and disposition of the
bodily organs that, if it is possible to find a means of rendering men
wiser and cleverer than they have hitherto been, I believe that it is in
medicine that it must be sought. It is true that the medicine which is now
in vogue contains little of which the utility is remarkable; but, without
having any intention of decrying it, I am sure that there is no one, even
among those who make its study a profession, who does not confess that all
that men know is almost nothing in comparison with what remains to be
known; and that we could be free of an infinitude of maladies both of body
and mind, and even also possibly of the infirmities of age, if we had
sufficient knowledge of their causes, and of all the remedies with which
nature has provided us. (Descartes: Discourse on the Method, Philosophical
Works. Translated by E. S. Haldane and G. R. T. Ross. Vol. I, Cam. Univ.
Press, 1911, p. 120.)</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER I — ORIGIN OF MEDICINE </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_INTR" id="link2H_INTR"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> INTRODUCTION </h2>
<p>SAIL to the Pacific with some Ancient Mariner, and traverse day by day
that silent sea until you reach a region never before furrowed by keel
where a tiny island, a mere speck on the vast ocean, has just risen from
the depths, a little coral reef capped with green, an atoll, a mimic
earth, fringed with life, built up through countless ages by life on the
remains of life that has passed away. And now, with wings of fancy, join
Ianthe in the magic car of Shelley, pass the eternal gates of the flaming
ramparts of the world and see his vision:</p>
<p>Below lay stretched the boundless Universe!<br/>
There, far as the remotest line<br/>
That limits swift imagination's flight,<br/>
Unending orbs mingled in mazy motion,<br/>
Immutably fulfilling<br/>
Eternal Nature's law.<br/>
Above, below, around,<br/>
The circling systems formed<br/>
A wilderness of harmony.<br/>
(Daemon of the World, Pt. I.)<br/></p>
<p>And somewhere, "as fast and far the chariot flew," amid the mighty globes
would be seen a tiny speck, "earth's distant orb," one of "the smallest
lights that twinkle in the heavens." Alighting, Ianthe would find
something she had probably not seen elsewhere in her magic flight—life,
everywhere encircling the sphere. And as the little coral reef out of a
vast depth had been built up by generations of polyzoa, so she would see
that on the earth, through illimitable ages, successive generations of
animals and plants had left in stone their imperishable records: and at
the top of the series she would meet the thinking, breathing creature
known as man. Infinitely little as is the architect of the atoll in
proportion to the earth on which it rests, the polyzoon, I doubt not, is
much larger relatively than is man in proportion to the vast systems of
the Universe, in which he represents an ultra-microscopic atom less ten
thousand times than the tiniest of the "gay motes that people the
sunbeams." Yet, with colossal audacity, this thinking atom regards himself
as the anthropocentric pivot around which revolve the eternal purposes of
the Universe. Knowing not whence he came, why he is here, or whither he is
going, man feels himself of supreme importance, and certainly is of
interest—to himself. Let us hope that he has indeed a potency and
importance out of all proportion to his somatic insignificance. We know of
toxins of such strength that an amount too infinitesimal to be gauged may
kill; and we know that "the unit adopted in certain scientific work is the
amount of emanation produced by one million-millionth of a grain of
radium, a quantity which itself has a volume of less than a
million-millionth of a cubic millimetre and weighs a million million times
less than an exceptionally delicate chemical balance will turn to" (Soddy,
1912). May not man be the radium of the Universe? At any rate let us not
worry about his size. For us he is a very potent creature, full of
interest, whose mundane story we are only beginning to unravel.</p>
<p>Civilization is but a filmy fringe on the history of man. Go back as far
as his records carry us and the story written on stone is of yesterday in
comparison with the vast epochs of time which modern studies demand for
his life on the earth. For two millions (some hold even three millions) of
years man lived and moved and had his being in a world very different from
that upon which we look out. There appear, indeed, to have been various
types of man, some as different from us as we are from the anthropoid
apes. What upstarts of yesterday are the Pharaohs in comparison with the
men who survived the tragedy of the glacial period! The ancient history of
man—only now beginning to be studied—dates from the Pliocene
or Miocene period; the modern history, as we know it, embraces that brief
space of time that has elapsed since the earliest Egyptian and Babylonian
records were made. This has to be borne in mind in connection with the
present mental status of man, particularly in his outlook upon nature. In
his thoughts and in his attributes, mankind at large is controlled by
inherited beliefs and impulses, which countless thousands of years have
ingrained like instinct. Over vast regions of the earth today, magic,
amulets, charms, incantations are the chief weapons of defense against a
malignant nature; and in disease, the practice of Asa(*) is comparatively
novel and unusual; in days of illness many millions more still seek their
gods rather than the physicians. In an upward path man has had to work out
for himself a relationship with his fellows and with nature. He sought in
the supernatural an explanation of the pressing phenomena of life,
peopling the world with spiritual beings, deifying objects of nature, and
assigning to them benign or malign influences, which might be invoked or
propitiated. Primitive priest, physician and philosopher were one, and
struggled, on the one hand, for the recognition of certain practices
forced on him by experience, and on the other, for the recognition of
mystical agencies which control the dark, "uncharted region" about him—to
use Prof. Gilbert Murray's phrase—and were responsible for
everything he could not understand, and particularly for the mysteries of
disease. Pliny remarks that physic "was early fathered upon the gods"; and
to the ordinary non-medical mind, there is still something mysterious
about sickness, something outside the ordinary standard.</p>
<p>(*) II Chronicles xvi, 12.<br/></p>
<p>Modern anthropologists claim that both religion and medicine took origin
in magic, "that spiritual protoplasm," as Miss Jane Harrison calls it. To
primitive man, magic was the setting in motion of a spiritual power to
help or to hurt the individual, and early forms may still be studied in
the native races. This power, or "mana," as it is called, while possessed
in a certain degree by all, may be increased by practice. Certain
individuals come to possess it very strongly: among native Australians
today it is still deliberately cultivated. Magic in healing seeks to
control the demons, or forces; causing disease; and in a way it may be
thus regarded as a "lineal ancestor of modern science" (Whetham), which,
too, seeks to control certain forces, no longer, however, regarded as
supernatural.</p>
<p>Primitive man recognized many of these superhuman agencies relating to
disease, such as the spirits of the dead, either human or animal,
independent disease demons, or individuals who might act by controlling
the spirits or agencies of disease. We see this today among the negroes of
the Southern States. A Hoodoo put upon a negro may, if he knows of it,
work upon him so powerfully through the imagination that he becomes very
ill indeed, and only through a more powerful magic exercised by someone
else can the Hoodoo be taken off.</p>
<p>To primitive man life seemed "full of sacred presences" (Walter Pater)
connected with objects in nature, or with incidents and epochs in life,
which he began early to deify, so that, until a quite recent period, his
story is largely associated with a pantheon of greater and lesser gods,
which he has manufactured wholesale. Xenophanes was the earliest
philosopher to recognize man's practice of making gods in his own image
and endowing them with human faculties and attributes; the Thracians, he
said, made their gods blue-eyed and red-haired, the Ethiopians, snub-nosed
and black, while, if oxen and lions and horses had hands and could draw,
they would represent their gods as oxen and lions and horses. In relation
to nature and to disease, all through early history we find a pantheon
full to repletion, bearing testimony no less to the fertility of man's
imagination than to the hopes and fears which led him, in his exodus from
barbarism, to regard his gods as "pillars of fire by night, and pillars of
cloud by day."</p>
<p>Even so late a religion as that of Numa was full of little gods to be
invoked on special occasions—Vatican, who causes the infant to utter
his first cry, Fabulinus, who prompts his first word, Cuba, who keeps him
quiet in his cot, Domiduca, who watches over one's safe home-coming
(Walter Pater); and Numa believed that all diseases came from the gods and
were to be averted by prayer and sacrifice. Besides the major gods,
representatives of Apollo, AEsculapius and Minerva, there were scores of
lesser ones who could be invoked for special diseases. It is said that the
young Roman mother might appeal to no less than fourteen goddesses, from
Juno Lucina to Prosa and Portvorta (Withington). Temples were erected to
the Goddess of Fever, and she was much invoked. There is extant a touching
tablet erected by a mourning mother and inscribed:</p>
<p>Febri divae, Febri<br/>
Sancte, Febri magnae<br/>
Camillo amato pro<br/>
Filio meld effecto. Posuit.<br/></p>
<p>It is marvellous what a long line of superhuman powers, major and minor,
man has invoked against sickness. In Swinburne's words:</p>
<p>God by God flits past in thunder till his glories turn to shades,<br/>
God by God bears wondering witness how his Gospel flames and<br/>
fades;<br/>
More was each of these, while yet they were, than man their<br/>
servant seemed;<br/>
Dead are all of these, and man survives who made them while he<br/>
dreamed.<br/>
<br/>
Most of them have been benign and helpful gods. Into the dark<br/>
chapters relating to demonical possession and to witchcraft we<br/>
cannot here enter. They make one cry out with Lucretius (Bk. V):<br/>
<br/>
O genus infelix humanum, talia divis<br/>
Cum tribuit facta atque iras adjunxit acerbas!<br/>
Quantos tum gemitus ipsi sibi, quantaque nobis<br/>
Vulnera, quas lacrimas peperere minoribu' nostris.<br/></p>
<p>In every age, and in every religion there has been justification for his
bitter words, "tantum religio potuit suadere malorum"—"Such wrongs
Religion in her train doth bring"—yet, one outcome of "a belief in
spiritual beings"—as Tylor defines religion—has been that man
has built an altar of righteousness in his heart. The comparative method
applied to the study of his religious growth has shown how man's thoughts
have widened in the unceasing purpose which runs through his spiritual no
less than his physical evolution. Out of the spiritual protoplasm of magic
have evolved philosopher and physician, as well as priest. Magic and
religion control the uncharted sphere—the supernatural, the
superhuman: science seeks to know the world, and through knowing, to
control it. Ray Lankester remarks that Man is Nature's rebel, and goes on
to say: "The mental qualities which have developed in Man, though
traceable in a vague and rudimentary condition in some of his animal
associates, are of such an unprecedented power and so far dominate
everything else in his activities as a living organism, that they have to
a very large extent, if not entirely, cut him off from the general
operation of that process of Natural Selection and survival of the fittest
which up to their appearance had been the law of the living world. They
justify the view that Man forms a new departure in the gradual unfolding
of Nature's predestined scheme. Knowledge, reason, self-consciousness,
will, are the attributes of Man."(1) It has been a slow and gradual
growth, and not until within the past century has science organized
knowledge—so searched out the secrets of Nature, as to control her
powers, limit her scope and transform her energies. The victory is so
recent that the mental attitude of the race is not yet adapted to the
change. A large proportion of our fellow creatures still regard nature as
a playground for demons and spirits to be exorcised or invoked.</p>
<p>(1) Sir E. Ray Lankester: Romanes Lecture, "Nature and Man,"<br/>
Oxford Univ. Press, 1905, p. 21.<br/></p>
<p>Side by side, as substance and shadow—"in the dark backward and
abysm of time," in the dawn of the great civilizations of Egypt and
Babylon, in the bright morning of Greece, and in the full noontide of
modern life, together have grown up these two diametrically opposite views
of man's relation to nature, and more particularly of his personal
relation to the agencies of disease.</p>
<p>The purpose of this course of lectures is to sketch the main features of
the growth of these two dominant ideas, to show how they have influenced
man at the different periods of his evolution, how the lamp of reason, so
early lighted in his soul, burning now bright, now dim, has never, even in
his darkest period, been wholly extinguished, but retrimmed and
refurnished by his indomitable energies, now shines more and more towards
the perfect day. It is a glorious chapter in history, in which those who
have eyes to see may read the fulfilment of the promise of Eden, that one
day man should not only possess the earth, but that he should have
dominion over it! I propose to take an aeroplane flight through the
centuries, touching only on the tall peaks from which may be had a
panoramic view of the epochs through which we pass.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ORIGIN OF MEDICINE </h2>
<p>MEDICINE arose out of the primal sympathy of man with man; out of the
desire to help those in sorrow, need and sickness.</p>
<p>In the primal sympathy<br/>
Which having been must ever be;<br/>
In the soothing thoughts that spring<br/>
Out of human suffering.<br/></p>
<p>The instinct of self-preservation, the longing to relieve a loved one, and
above all, the maternal passion—for such it is—gradually
softened the hard race of man—tum genus humanum primum mollescere
coepit. In his marvellous sketch of the evolution of man, nothing
illustrates more forcibly the prescience of Lucretius than the picture of
the growth of sympathy: "When with cries and gestures they taught with
broken words that 'tis right for all men to have pity on the weak." I
heard the well-known medical historian, the late Dr. Payne, remark that
"the basis of medicine is sympathy and the desire to help others, and
whatever is done with this end must be called medicine."</p>
<p>The first lessons came to primitive man by injuries, accidents, bites of
beasts and serpents, perhaps for long ages not appreciated by his
childlike mind, but, little by little, such experiences crystallized into
useful knowledge. The experiments of nature made clear to him the relation
of cause and effect, but it is not likely, as Pliny suggests, that he
picked up his earliest knowledge from the observation of certain practices
in animals, as the natural phlebotomy of the plethoric hippopotamus, or
the use of emetics from the dog, or the use of enemata from the ibis. On
the other hand, Celsus is probably right in his account of the origin of
rational medicine. "Some of the sick on account of their eagerness took
food on the first day, some on account of loathing abstained; and the
disease in those who refrained was more relieved. Some ate during a fever,
some a little before it, others after it had subsided, and those who had
waited to the end did best. For the same reason some at the beginning of
an illness used a full diet, others a spare, and the former were made
worse. Occurring daily, such things impressed careful men, who noted what
had best helped the sick, then began to prescribe them. In this way
medicine had its rise from the experience of the recovery of some, of the
death of others, distinguishing the hurtful from the salutary things"
(Book I). The association of ideas was suggestive—the plant
eyebright was used for centuries in diseases of the eye because a black
speck in the flower suggested the pupil of the eye. The old herbals are
full of similar illustrations upon which, indeed, the so-called doctrine
of signatures depends. Observation came, and with it an ever widening
experience. No society so primitive without some evidence of the existence
of a healing art, which grew with its growth, and became part of the
fabric of its organization.</p>
<p>With primitive medicine, as such, I cannot deal, but I must refer to the
oldest existing evidence of a very extraordinary practice, that of
trephining. Neolithic skulls with disks of bone removed have been found in
nearly all parts of the world. Many careful studies have been made of this
procedure, particularly by the great anatomist and surgeon, Paul Broca,
and M. Lucas-Championniere has covered the subject in a monograph.(2)
Broca suggests that the trephining was done by scratching or scraping,
but, as Lucas-Championniere holds, it was also done by a series of
perforations made in a circle with flint instruments, and a round piece of
skull in this way removed; traces of these drill-holes have been found.
The operation was done for epilepsy, infantile convulsions, headache, and
various cerebral diseases believed to be caused by confined demons, to
whom the hole gave a ready method of escape.</p>
<p>(2) Lucas-Championniere: Trepanation neolithique, Paris,<br/>
1912.<br/></p>
<p>The practice is still extant. Lucas-Championniere saw a Kabyle thoubib who
told him that it was quite common among his tribe; he was the son of a
family of trephiners, and had undergone the operation four times, his
father twelve times; he had three brothers also experts; he did not
consider it a dangerous operation. He did it most frequently for pain in
the head, and occasionally for fracture.</p>
<p>The operation was sometimes performed upon animals. Shepherds trephined
sheep for the staggers. We may say that the modern decompression
operation, so much in vogue, is the oldest known surgical procedure.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> EGYPTIAN MEDICINE </h2>
<p>OUT of the ocean of oblivion, man emerges in history in a highly civilized
state on the banks of the Nile, some sixty centuries ago. After
millenniums of a gradual upward progress, which can be traced in the
records of the stone age, civilization springs forth Minerva-like,
complete, and highly developed, in the Nile Valley. In this sheltered,
fertile spot, neolithic man first raised himself above his kindred races
of the Mediterranean basin, and it is suggested that by the accidental
discovery of copper Egypt "forged the instruments that raised civilization
out of the slough of the Stone Age" (Elliot Smith). Of special interest to
us is the fact that one of the best-known names of this earliest period is
that of a physician—guide, philosopher and friend of the king—a
man in a position of wide trust and importance. On leaving Cairo, to go up
the Nile, one sees on the right in the desert behind Memphis a terraced
pyramid 190 feet in height, "the first large structure of stone known in
history." It is the royal tomb of Zoser, the first of a long series with
which the Egyptian monarchy sought "to adorn the coming bulk of death."
The design of this is attributed to Imhotep, the first figure of a
physician to stand out clearly from the mists of antiquity. "In priestly
wisdom, in magic, in the formulation of wise proverbs, in medicine and
architecture, this remarkable figure of Zoser's reign left so notable a
reputation that his name was never forgotten, and 2500 years after his
death he had become a God of Medicine, in whom the Greeks, who called him
Imouthes, recognized their own AEsculapius."(3) He became a popular god,
not only healing men when alive, but taking good care of them in the
journeys after death. The facts about this medicinae primus inventor, as
he has been called, may be gathered from Kurt Sethe's study.(4) He seems
to have corresponded very much to the Greek Asklepios. As a god he is met
with comparatively late, between 700 and 332 B.C. Numerous bronze figures
of him remain. The oldest memorial mentioning him is a statue of one of
his priests, Amasis (No. 14765 in the British Museum). Ptolemy V dedicated
to him a temple on the island of Philae. His cult increased much in later
days, and a special temple was dedicated to him near Memphis Sethe
suggests that the cult of Imhotep gave the inspiration to the Hermetic
literature. The association of Imhotep with the famous temple at Edfu is
of special interest.</p>
<p>(3) Breasted: A History of the Ancient Egyptians, Scribner,<br/>
New York, 1908, p. 104.<br/>
<br/>
(4) K. Sethe: Imhotep, der Asklepios der Aegypter, Leipzig,<br/>
1909 (Untersuchungen, etc., ed. Sethe, Vol. II, No. 4).<br/></p>
<p>Egypt became a centre from which civilization spread to the other peoples
of the Mediterranean. For long centuries, to be learned in all the wisdom
of the Egyptians meant the possession of all knowledge. We must come to
the land of the Nile for the origin of many of man's most distinctive and
highly cherished beliefs. Not only is there a magnificent material
civilization, but in records so marvellously preserved in stone we may
see, as in a glass, here clearly, there darkly, the picture of man's
search after righteousness, the earliest impressions of his moral
awakening, the beginnings of the strife in which he has always been
engaged for social justice and for the recognition of the rights of the
individual. But above all, earlier and more strongly than in any other
people, was developed the faith that looked through death, to which, to
this day, the noblest of their monuments bear an enduring testimony. With
all this, it is not surprising to find a growth in the knowledge of
practical medicine; but Egyptian civilization illustrates how crude and
primitive may remain a knowledge of disease when conditioned by erroneous
views of its nature. At first, the priest and physician were identified,
and medicine never became fully dissociated from religion. Only in the
later periods did a special group of physicians arise who were not members
of priestly colleges.(6) Maspero states that the Egyptians believed that
disease and death were not natural and inevitable, but caused by some
malign influence which could use any agency, natural or invisible, and
very often belonged to the invisible world. "Often, though, it belongs to
the invisible world, and only reveals itself by the malignity of its
attacks: it is a god, a spirit, the soul of a dead man, that has cunningly
entered a living person, or that throws itself upon him with irresistible
violence. Once in possession of the body, the evil influence breaks the
bones, sucks out the marrow, drinks the blood, gnaws the intestines and
the heart and devours the flesh. The invalid perishes according to the
progress of this destructive work; and death speedily ensues, unless the
evil genius can be driven out of it before it has committed irreparable
damage. Whoever treats a sick person has therefore two equally important
duties to perform. He must first discover the nature of the spirit in
possession, and, if necessary, its name, and then attack it, drive it out,
or even destroy it. He can only succeed by powerful magic, so he must be
an expert in reciting incantations, and skilful in making amulets. He must
then use medicine (drugs and diet) to contend with the disorders which the
presence of the strange being has produced in the body."(6)</p>
<p>(5) Maspero: Life in Ancient Egypt and Assyria, London,<br/>
1891, p. 119.<br/>
<br/>
(6) Maspero: Life in Ancient Egypt and Assyria, London,<br/>
1891, p. 118.<br/>
<br/>
(7) W. Wreszinski: Die Medizin der alten Aegypter, Leipzig,<br/>
J. C. Hinrichs, 1909-1912.<br/></p>
<p>In this way it came about that diseases were believed to be due to hostile
spirits, or caused by the anger of a god, so that medicines, no matter how
powerful, could only be expected to assuage the pain; but magic alone,
incantations, spells and prayers, could remove the disease. Experience
brought much of the wisdom we call empirical, and the records, extending
for thousands of years, show that the Egyptians employed emetics,
purgatives, enemata, diuretics, diaphoretics and even bleeding. They had a
rich pharmacopoeia derived from the animal, vegetable and mineral
kingdoms. In the later periods, specialism reached a remarkable
development, and Herodotus remarks that the country was full of
physicians;—"One treats only the diseases of the eye, another those
of the head, the teeth, the abdomen, or the internal organs."</p>
<p>Our knowledge of Egyptian medicine is derived largely from the remarkable
papyri dealing specially with this subject. Of these, six or seven are of
the first importance. The most famous is that discovered by Ebers, dating
from about 1500 B.C. A superb document, one of the great treasures of the
Leipzig Library, it is 20.23 metres long and 30 centimetres high and in a
state of wonderful preservation. Others are the Kahun, Berlin, Hearst and
British Museum papyri. All these have now been published—the last
three quite recently, edited by Wreszinski.(7) I show here a reproduction
from which an idea may be had of these remarkable documents. They are
motley collections, filled with incantations, charms, magical formulae,
symbols, prayers and prescriptions for all sorts of ailments. One is
impressed by the richness of the pharmacopoeia, and the high development
which the art of pharmacy must have attained. There were gargles, salves,
snuffs, inhalations, suppositories, fumigations, enemata, poultices and
plasters; and they knew the use of opium, hemlock, the copper salts,
squills and castor oil. Surgery was not very highly developed, but the
knife and actual cautery were freely used. Ophthalmic surgery was
practiced by specialists, and there are many prescriptions in the papyri
for ophthalmia.</p>
<p>One department of Egyptian medicine reached a high stage of development,
vis., hygiene. Cleanliness of the dwellings, of the cities and of the
person was regulated by law, and the priests set a splendid example in
their frequent ablutions, shaving of the entire body, and the spotless
cleanliness of their clothing. As Diodorus remarks, so evenly ordered was
their whole manner of life that it was as if arranged by a learned
physician rather than by a lawgiver.</p>
<p>Two world-wide modes of practice found their earliest illustration in
ancient Egypt. Magic, the first of these, represented the attitude of
primitive man to nature, and really was his religion. He had no idea of
immutable laws, but regarded the world about him as changeable and fickle
like himself, and "to make life go as he wished, he must be able to please
and propitiate or to coerce these forces outside himself."(8)</p>
<p>(8) L. Thorndike: The Place of Magic in the Intellectual<br/>
History of Europe, New York, 1905, p. 29.<br/></p>
<p>The point of interest to us is that in the Pyramid Texts—"the oldest
chapter in human thinking preserved to us, the remotest reach in the
intellectual history of man which we are now able to discern"(9)—one
of their six-fold contents relates to the practice of magic. A deep belief
existed as to its efficacy, particularly in guiding the dead, who were
said to be glorious by reason of mouths equipped with the charms, prayers
and ritual of the Pyramid Texts, armed with which alone could the soul
escape the innumerable dangers and ordeals of the passage through another
world. Man has never lost his belief in the efficacy of magic, in the
widest sense of the term. Only a very few of the most intellectual nations
have escaped from its shackles. Nobody else has so clearly expressed the
origins and relations of magic as Pliny in his "Natural History."(10)
"Now, if a man consider the thing well, no marvaile it is that it hath
continued thus in so great request and authoritie; for it is the onely
Science which seemeth to comprise in itselfe three possessions besides,
which have the command and rule of mans mind above any other whatsoever.
For to begin withall, no man doubteth but that Magicke tooke root first,
and proceeded from Physicke, under the presence of maintaining health,
curing, and preventing diseases: things plausible to the world, crept and
insinuated farther into the heart of man, with a deepe conceit of some
high and divine matter therein more than ordinarie, and in comparison
whereof, all other Physicke was but basely accounted. And having thus made
way and entrance, the better to fortifie it selfe, and to give a goodly
colour and lustre to those fair and flattering promises of things, which
our nature is most given to hearken after, on goeth the habite also and
cloake of religion: a point, I may tell you, that even in these daies
holdeth captivate the spirit of man, and draweth away with it a greater
part of the world, and nothing so much. But not content with this successe
and good proceeding, to gather more strength and win a greater name, shee
entermingled with medicinable receipts and religious ceremonies, the skill
of Astrologie and arts Mathematicall; presuming upon this, That all men by
nature are very curious and desirous to know their future fortunes, and
what shall betide them hereafter, persuading themselves, that all such
foreknowledge dependeth upon the course and influence of the starres,
which give the truest and most certain light of things to come. Being thus
wholly possessed of men, and having their senses and understanding by this
meanes fast ynough bound with three sure chains, no marvell if this art
grew in processe of time to such an head, that it was and is at this day
reputed by most nations of the earth for the paragon and cheefe of all
sciences: insomuch as the mightie kings and monarchs of the Levant are
altogether ruled and governed thereby."</p>
<p>(9) Breasted: Development of Religion and Thought in<br/>
Ancient Egypt, New York, 1912, p. 84.<br/>
<br/>
(10) The Historie of the World, commonly called the Naturall<br/>
Historie of C. Plinius Secundus, translated into English by<br/>
Philemon Holland, Doctor in Physieke, London, 1601, Vol. II,<br/>
p. 371, Bk. XXX, Chap. I, Sect. 1.<br/></p>
<p>The second world-wide practice which finds its earliest record among the
Egyptians is the use secretions and parts of the animal body as medicine.
The practice was one of great antiquity with primitive man, but the papyri
already mentioned contain the earliest known records. Saliva, urine, bile,
faeces, various parts of the body, dried and powdered, worms, insects,
snakes were important ingredients in the pharmacopoeia. The practice
became very widespread throughout the ancient world. Its extent and
importance may be best gathered from chapters VII and VIII in the 28th
book of Pliny's "Natural History." Several remedies are mentioned as
derived from man; others from the elephant, lion, camel, crocodile, and
some seventy-nine are prepared from the hyaena. The practice was widely
prevalent throughout the Middle Ages, and the pharmacopoeia of the
seventeenth and even of the eighteenth century contains many extraordinary
ingredients. "The Royal Pharmacopoeia" of Moses Charras (London ed.,
1678), the most scientific work of the day, is full of organotherapy and
directions for the preparation of medicines from the most loathsome
excretions. A curious thing is that with the discoveries of the mummies a
belief arose as to the great efficacy of powdered mummy in various
maladies. As Sir Thomas Browne remarks in his "Urn Burial": "Mummy has
become merchandize. Mizraim cures wounds, and Pharaoh is sold for
balsams."</p>
<p>One formula in everyday use has come to us in a curious way from the
Egyptians. In the Osiris myth, the youthful Horus loses an eye in his
battle with Set. This eye, the symbol of sacrifice, became, next to the
sacred beetle, the most common talisman of the country, and all museums
are rich in models of the Horus eye in glass or stone.</p>
<p>"When alchemy or chemistry, which had its cradle in Egypt, and derived its
name from Khami, an old title for this country, passed to the hands of the
Greeks, and later of the Arabs, this sign passed with it. It was also
adopted to some extent by the Gnostics of the early Christian church in
Egypt. In a cursive form it is found in mediaeval translations of the
works of Ptolemy the astrologer, as the sign of the planet Jupiter. As
such it was placed upon horoscopes and upon formula containing drugs made
for administration to the body, so that the harmful properties of these
drugs might be removed under the influence of the lucky planet. At
present, in a slightly modified form, it still figures at the top of
prescriptions written daily in Great Britain (Rx)."(11)</p>
<p>(11) John D. Comrie: Medicine among the Assyrians and<br/>
Egyptians in 1500 B.C., Edinburgh Medical Journal, 1909, n.<br/>
s., II, 119.<br/></p>
<p>For centuries Egyptian physicians had a great reputation, and in the
Odyssey (Bk. IV), Polydamna, the wife of Thonis, gives medicinal plants to
Helen in Egypt—"a country producing an infinite number of drugs . .
. where each physician possesses knowledge above all other men." Jeremiah
(xlvi, 11) refers to the virgin daughter of Egypt, who should in vain use
many medicines. Herodotus tells that Darius had at his court certain
Egyptians, whom he reckoned the best skilled physicians in all the world,
and he makes the interesting statement that: "Medicine is practiced among
them on a plan of separation; each physician treats a single disorder, and
no more: thus the country swarms with medical practitioners, some under
taking to cure diseases of the eye, others of the head, others again of
the teeth, others of the intestines, and some those which are not
local."(12)</p>
<p>(12) The History of Herodotus, Blakesley's ed., Bk. II, 84.<br/></p>
<p>A remarkable statement is made by Pliny, in the discussion upon the use of
radishes, which are said to cure a "Phthisicke," or ulcer of the lungs—"proofe
whereof was found and seen in AEgypt by occasion that the KK. there,
caused dead bodies to be cut up, and anatomies to be made, for to search
out the maladies whereof men died."(13)</p>
<p>(13) Pliny, Holland's translation, Bk. XIX, Chap. V, Sect.<br/>
26.<br/></p>
<p>The study of the anatomy of mummies has thrown a very interesting light
upon the diseases of the ancient Egyptians, one of the most prevalent of
which appears to have been osteo-arthritis. This has been studied by
Elliot Smith, Wood Jones, Ruffer and Rietti. The majority of the lesions
appear to have been the common osteo-arthritis, which involved not only
the men, but many of the pet animals kept in the temples. In a much higher
proportion apparently than in modern days, the spinal column was involved.
It is interesting to note that the "determinative" of old age in
hieroglyphic writing is the picture of a man afflicted with arthritis
deformans. Evidences of tuberculosis, rickets and syphilis, according to
these authors, have not been found.</p>
<p>A study of the internal organs has been made by Ruffer, who has shown that
arterio-sclerosis with calcification was a common disease 8500 years ago;
and he holds that it could not have been associated with hard work or
alcohol, for the ancient Egyptians did not drink spirits, and they had
practically the same hours of work as modern Egyptians, with every seventh
day free.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> ASSYRIAN AND BABYLONIAN MEDICINE </h2>
<p>OF equally great importance in the evolution of medicine was the
practically contemporary civilization in Mesopotamia. Science here reached
a much higher stage then in the valley of the Nile. An elaborate scheme of
the universe was devised, a system growing out of the Divine Will, and a
recognition for the first time of a law guiding and controlling heaven and
earth alike. Here, too, we find medicine ancillary to religion. Disease
was due to evil spirits or demons. "These 'demons'—invisible to the
naked eye were the precursors of the modern 'germs' and 'microbes,' while
the incantations recited by the priests are the early equivalents of the
physician's prescriptions. There were different incantations for different
diseases; and they were as mysterious to the masses as are the mystic
formulas of the modern physician to the bewildered, yet trusting, patient.
Indeed, their mysterious character added to the power supposed to reside
in the incantations for driving the demons away. Medicinal remedies
accompanied the recital of the incantations, but despite the considerable
progress made by such nations of hoary antiquity as the Egyptians and
Babylonians in the diagnosis and treatment of common diseases, leading in
time to the development of an extensive pharmacology, so long as the cure
of disease rested with the priests, the recital of sacred formulas,
together with rites that may be conveniently grouped under the head of
sympathetic magic, was regarded as equally essential with the taking of
the prescribed remedies."(14)</p>
<p>(14) Morris Jastrow: The Liver in Antiquity and the<br/>
Beginnings of Anatomy. Transactions College of Physicians,<br/>
Philadelphia, 1907, 3. s., XXIX, 117-138.<br/></p>
<p>Three points of interest may be referred to in connection with Babylonian
medicine. Our first recorded observations on anatomy are in connection
with the art of divination—the study of the future by the
interpretation of certain signs. The student recognized two divisions of
divination—the involuntary, dealing with the interpretation of signs
forced upon our attention, such as the phenomena of the heavens, dreams,
etc., and voluntary divination, the seeking of signs, more particularly
through the inspection of sacrificial animals. This method reached an
extraordinary development among the Babylonians, and the cult spread to
the Etruscans, Hebrews, and later to the Greeks and Romans.</p>
<p>Of all the organs inspected in a sacrificial animal the liver, from its
size, position and richness in blood, impressed the early observers as the
most important of the body. Probably on account of the richness in blood
it came to be regarded as the seat of life—indeed, the seat of the
soul. From this important position the liver was not dislodged for many
centuries, and in the Galenic physiology it shared with the heart and the
brain in the triple control of the natural, animal and vital spirits. Many
expressions in literature indicate how persistent was this belief. Among
the Babylonians, the word "liver" was used in hymns and other compositions
precisely as we use the word "heart," and Jastrow gives a number of
illustrations from Hebrew, Greek and Latin sources illustrating this
usage.</p>
<p>The belief arose that through the inspection of this important organ in
the sacrificial animal the course of future events could be predicted.
"The life or soul, as the seat of life, in the sacrificial animal is,
therefore, the divine element in the animal, and the god in accepting the
animal, which is involved in the act of bringing it as an offering to a
god, identifies himself with the animal—becomes, as it were, one
with it. The life in the animal is a reflection of his own life, and since
the fate of men rests with the gods, if one can succeed in entering into
the mind of a god, and thus ascertain what he purposes to do, the key for
the solution of the problem as to what the future has in store will have
been found. The liver being the centre of vitality—the seat of the
mind, therefore, as well as of the emotions—it becomes in the case
of the sacrificial animal, either directly identical with the mind of the
god who accepts the animal, or, at all events, a mirror in which the god's
mind is reflected; or, to use another figure, a watch regulated to be in
sympathetic and perfect accord with a second watch. If, therefore, one can
read the liver of the sacrificial animal, one enters, as it were, into the
workshop of the divine will."(15)</p>
<p>(15) Morris Jastrow: loc. cit., p. 122.<br/></p>
<p>Hepatoscopy thus became, among the Babylonians, of extraordinary
complexity, and the organ of the sheep was studied and figured as early as
3000 B.C. In the divination rites, the lobes, the gall-bladder, the
appendages of the upper lobe and the markings were all inspected with
unusual care. The earliest known anatomical model, which is here shown, is
the clay model of a sheep's liver with the divination text dating from
about 2000 B.C., from which Jastrow has worked out the modern anatomical
equivalents of the Babylonian terms. To reach a decision on any point, the
phenomena of the inspection of the liver were carefully recorded, and the
interpretations rested on a more or less natural and original association
of ideas. Thus, if the gall-bladder were swollen on the right side, it
pointed to an increase in the strength of the King's army, and was
favorable; if on the left side, it indicated rather success of the enemy,
and was unfavorable. If the bile duct was long, it pointed to a long life.
Gallstones are not infrequently mentioned in the divination texts and
might be favorable, or unfavorable. Various interpretations were gathered
by the scribes in the reference note-books which serve as guides for the
interpretation of the omens and for text-books of instructions in the
temple schools (Jastrow).</p>
<p>The art of divination spread widely among the neighboring nations. There
are many references in the Bible to the practice. The elders of Moab and
Midian came to Balaam "with the rewards of divination in their hand"
(Numbers xxii, 7). Joseph's cup of divination was found in Benjamin's sack
(Genesis xliv, 5, 12); and in Ezekiel (xxi, 21) the King of Babylon stood
at the parting of the way and looked in the liver. Hepatoscopy was also
practiced by the Etruscans, and from them it passed to the Greeks and the
Romans, among whom it degenerated into a more or less meaningless form.
But Jastrow states that in Babylonia and Assyria, where for several
thousand years the liver was consistently employed as the sole organ of
divination, there are no traces of the rite having fallen into decay, or
having been abused by the priests.</p>
<p>In Roman times, Philostratus gives an account of the trial of Apollonius
of Tyana,(16) accused of human hepatoscopy by sacrificing a boy in the
practice of magic arts against the Emperor. "The liver, which the experts
say is the very tripod of their art, does not consist of pure blood; for
the heart retains all the uncontaminated blood, and irrigates the whole
body with it by the conduits of the arteries; whereas the gall, which is
situated next the liver, is stimulated by anger and depressed by fear into
the hollows of the liver."</p>
<p>We have seen how early and how widespread was the belief in amulets and
charms against the occult powers of darkness. One that has persisted with
extraordinary tenacity is the belief in the Evil Eye the power of certain
individuals to injure with a look. Of general belief in the older
civilizations, and referred to in several places in the Bible, it passed
to Greece and Rome, and today is still held fervently in many parts of
Europe. The sign of "le corna,"—the first and fourth fingers
extended, the others turned down and the thumb closed over them,—still
used against the Evil Eye in Italy, was a mystic sign used by the Romans
in the festival of Lemuralia. And we meet with the belief also in this
country. A child with hemiplegia, at the Infirmary for Diseases of the
Nervous System, Philadelphia, from the central part of Pennsylvania, was
believed by its parents to have had the Evil Eye cast upon it.</p>
<p>The second contribution of Babylonia and Assyria to medicine—one
that affected mankind profoundly—relates to the supposed influence
of the heavenly bodies upon man's welfare. A belief that the stars in
their courses fought for or against him arose early in their
civilizations, and directly out of their studies on astrology and
mathematics. The Macrocosm, the heavens that "declare the glory of God,"
reflect, as in a mirror, the Microcosm, the daily life of man on earth.
The first step was the identification of the sun, moon and stars with the
gods of the pantheon. Assyrian astronomical observations show an
extraordinary development of practical knowledge. The movements of the sun
and moon and of the planets were studied; the Assyrians knew the
precession of the equinoxes and many of the fundamental laws of astronomy,
and the modern nomenclature dates from their findings. In their days the
signs of the zodiac corresponded practically with the twelve
constellations whose names they still bear, each division being
represented by the symbol of some god, as the Scorpion, the Ram, the
Twins, etc. "Changes in the heavens . . . portended changes on earth. The
Biblical expression 'hosts of heaven' for the starry universe admirably
reflects the conception held by the Babylonian astrologers. Moon, planets
and stars constituted an army in constant activity, executing military
manoeuvres which were the result of deliberation and which had in view a
fixed purpose. It was the function of the priest—the barqu, or
'inspector,' as the astrologer as well as the 'inspector' of the liver was
called—to discover this purpose. In order to do so, a system of
interpretation was evolved, less logical and less elaborate than the
system of hepatoscopy, which was analyzed in the preceding chapter, but
nevertheless meriting attention both as an example of the pathetic
yearning of men to peer into the minds of the gods, and of the influence
that Babylonian-Assyrian astrology exerted throughout the ancient world"
(Jastrow).(17)</p>
<p>(16) Philostratus: Apollonius of Tyana, Bk. VIII, Chap.<br/>
VII, Phillimore's transl., Oxford, 1912, II, 233. See,<br/>
also, Justin: Apologies, edited by Louis Pautigny, Paris,<br/>
1904, p. 39.<br/>
<br/>
(17) M. Jastrow: Aspects of Religious Belief and Practice<br/>
in Babylonia and Assyria, New York, 1911, p. 210.<br/></p>
<p>With the rationalizing influence of the Persians the hold of astrology
weakened, and according to Jastrow it was this, in combination with Hebrew
and Greek modes of thought, that led the priests in the three centuries
following the Persian occupation, to exchange their profession of diviners
for that of astronomers; and this, he says, marks the beginning of the
conflict between religion and science. At first an expression of primitive
"science," astrology became a superstition, from which the human mind has
not yet escaped. In contrast to divination, astrology does not seem to
have made much impression on the Hebrews and definite references in the
Bible are scanty. From Babylonia it passed to Greece (without, however,
exerting any particular influence upon Greek medicine). Our own language
is rich in words of astral significance derived from the Greek, e.g.,
disaster.</p>
<p>The introduction of astrology into Europe has a passing interest.
Apparently the Greeks had made important advances in astronomy before
coming in contact with the Babylonians,—who, in all probability,
received from the former a scientific conception of the universe. "In
Babylonia and Assyria we have astrology first and astronomy afterwards, in
Greece we have the sequence reversed—astronomy first and astrology
afterwards" (Jastrow).(18)</p>
<p>(18) M. Jastrow: Aspects of Religious Belief and Practice<br/>
in Babylonia and Assyria, New York, 1911, p. 256.<br/></p>
<p>It is surprising to learn that, previous to their contact with the Greeks,
astrology as relating to the individual—that is to say, the reading
of the stars to determine the conditions under which the individual was
born—had no place in the cult of the Babylonians and Assyrians. The
individualistic spirit led the Greek to make his gods take note of every
action in his life, and his preordained fate might be read in the stars.—"A
connecting link between the individual and the movements in the heavens
was found in an element which they shared in common. Both man and stars
moved in obedience to forces from which there was no escape. An inexorable
law controlling the planets corresponded to an equally inexorable fate
ordained for every individual from his birth. Man was a part of nature and
subject to its laws. The thought could therefore arise that, if the
conditions in the heavens were studied under which a man was born, that
man's future could be determined in accord with the beliefs associated
with the position of the planets rising or visible at the time of birth
or, according to other views, at the time of conception. These views take
us back directly to the system of astrology developed by Babylonian baru
priests. The basis on which the modified Greek system rests is likewise
the same that we have observed in Babylonia—a correspondence between
heaven and earth, but with this important difference, that instead of the
caprice of the gods we have the unalterable fate controlling the entire
universe—the movements of the heavens and the life of the individual
alike" (Jastrow).(19)</p>
<p>(19) Ibid., pp. 257-258.<br/></p>
<p>From this time on until the Renaissance, like a shadow, astrology follows
astronomy. Regarded as two aspects of the same subject, the one, natural
astrology, the equivalent of astronomy, was concerned with the study of
the heavens, the other, judicial astrology, was concerned with the casting
of horoscopes, and reading in the stars the fate of the individual.</p>
<p>As I mentioned, Greek science in its palmy days seems to have been very
free from the bad features of astrology. Gilbert Murray remarks that
"astrology fell upon the Hellenistic mind as a new disease falls upon some
remote island people." But in the Greek conquest of the Roman mind,
astrology took a prominent role. It came to Rome as part of the great
Hellenizing movement, and the strength of its growth may be gauged from
the edicts issued against astrologers as early as the middle of the second
century B.C. In his introduction to his recent edition of Book II of the
Astronomicon of Manilius, Garrod traces the growth of the cult, which
under the Empire had an extraordinary vogue. "Though these (heavenly)
signs be far removed from us, yet does he (the god) so make their
influences felt, that they give to nations their life and their fate and
to each man his own character."(20) Oracles were sought on all occasions,
from the planting of a tree to the mating of a horse, and the doctrine of
the stars influenced deeply all phases of popular thought and religion.
The professional astrologers, as Pliny(21) says, were Chaldeans, Egyptians
and Greeks. The Etruscans, too, the professional diviners of Rome,
cultivated the science. Many of these "Isiaci conjectores" and "astrologi
de circo" were worthless charlatans, but on the whole the science seems to
have attracted the attention of thoughtful men of the period. Garrod
quotes the following remarkable passage from Tacitus: "My judgment
wavers," he says, "I dare not say whether it be fate and necessity
immutable which governs the changing course of human affairs—or just
chance. Among the wisest of the ancients, as well as among their apes, you
will find a conflict of opinion. Many hold fixedly the idea that our
beginning and our end—that man himself—is nothing to the Gods
at all. The wicked are in prosperity and the good meet tribulation. Others
believe that Fate and the facts of this world work together. But this
connection they trace not to planetary influences but to a concatenation
of natural causes. We choose our life that is free: but the choice once
made, what awaits us is fixed and ordered. Good and evil are different
from the vulgar opinion of them. Often those who seem to battle with
adversity are to be accounted blessed; but the many, even in their
prosperity, are miserable. It needs only to bear misfortune bravely, while
the fool perishes in his wealth. Outside these rival schools stands the
man in the street. No one will take from him his conviction that at our
birth are fixed for us the things that shall be. If some things fall out
differently from what was foretold, that is due to the deceit of men that
speak what they know not: calling into contempt a science to which past
and present alike bear a glorious testimony" (Ann. vi, 22).</p>
<p>(20) Manili Astronomicon Liber II, ed. H. W. Garrod, Oxford,<br/>
1911, p. lxix, and II, ll. 84-86.<br/>
<br/>
(21) Pliny: Natural History, Bk. XVIII, Chap. XXV, Sect.<br/>
57.<br/></p>
<p>Cato waged war on the Greek physicians and forbade "his uilicus all resort
to haruspicem, augurem, hariolum Chaldaeum," but in vain; so widespread
became the belief that the great philosopher, Panaetius (who died about
111 B.C.), and two of his friends alone among the stoics, rejected the
claims of astrology as a science (Garrod). So closely related was the
subject of mathematics that it, too, fell into disfavor, and in the
Theodosian code sentence of death was passed upon mathematicians. Long
into the Middle Ages, the same unholy alliance with astrology and
divination caused mathematics to be regarded with suspicion, and even
Abelard calls it a nefarious study.</p>
<p>The third important feature in Babylonian medicine is the evidence
afforded by the famous Hammurabi Code (circa 2000 B.C.)—a body of
laws, civil and religious, many of which relate to the medical profession.
This extraordinary document is a black diorite block 8 feet high, once
containing 21 columns on the obverse, 16 and 28 columns on the reverse,
with 2540 lines of writing of which now 1114 remain, and surmounted by the
figure of the king receiving the law from the Sun-god. Copies of this were
set up in Babylon "that anyone oppressed or injured, who had a tale of woe
to tell, might come and stand before his image, that of a king of
righteousness, and there read the priceless orders of the King, and from
the written monument solve his problem" (Jastrow). From the enactments of
the code we gather that the medical profession must have been in a highly
organized state, for not only was practice regulated in detail, but a
scale of fees was laid down, and penalties exacted for malpraxis.
Operations were performed, and the veterinary art was recognized. An
interesting feature, from which it is lucky that we have in these days
escaped, is the application of the "lex talionis"—an eye for an eye,
bone for a bone, and tooth for a tooth, which is a striking feature of the
code.</p>
<p>Some of the laws of the code may be quoted:</p>
<p>Paragraph 215. If a doctor has treated a gentleman for a severe wound with
a bronze lances and has cured the man, or has opened an abscess of the eye
for a gentleman with the bronze lances and has cured the eye of the
gentleman, he shall take ten shekels of silver.</p>
<p>218. If the doctor has treated a gentleman for a severe wound with a
lances of bronze and has caused the gentleman to die, or has opened an
abscess of the eye for a gentleman and has caused the loss of the
gentleman's eye, one shall cut off his hands.</p>
<p>219. If a doctor has treated the severe wound of a slave of a poor man
with a bronze lances and has caused his death, he shall render slave for
slave.</p>
<p>220. If he has opened his abscess with a bronze lances and has made him
lose his eye, he shall pay money, half his price.</p>
<p>221. If a doctor has cured the shattered limb of a gentleman, or has cured
the diseased bowel, the patient shall give five shekels of silver to the
doctor.</p>
<p>224. If a cow doctor or a sheep doctor has treated a cow or a sheep for a
severe wound and cured it, the owner of the cow or sheep shall give
one-sixth of a shekel of silver to the doctor as his fee.(22)</p>
<p>(22) The Oldest Code of Laws in the World; translated by C.<br/>
H. W. Johns, Edinburgh, 1903.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> HEBREW MEDICINE </h2>
<p>THE medicine of the Old Testament betrays both Egyptian and Babylonian
influences; the social hygiene is a reflex of regulations the origin of
which may be traced in the Pyramid Texts and in the papyri. The
regulations in the Pentateuch codes revert in part to primitive times, in
part represent advanced views of hygiene. There are doubts if the
Pentateuch code really goes back to the days of Moses, but certainly
someone "learned in the wisdom of the Egyptians" drew it up. As Neuburger
briefly summarizes:</p>
<p>"The commands concern prophylaxis and suppression of epidemics,
suppression of venereal disease and prostitution, care of the skin, baths,
food, housing and clothing, regulation of labour, sexual life, discipline
of the people, etc. Many of these commands, such as Sabbath rest,
circumcision, laws concerning food (interdiction of blood and pork),
measures concerning menstruating and lying-in women and those suffering
from gonorrhoea, isolation of lepers, and hygiene of the camp, are, in
view of the conditions of the climate, surprisingly rational."(23)</p>
<p>(23) Neuburger: History of Medicine, Oxford University<br/>
Press, 1910, Vol. I, p. 38.<br/></p>
<p>Divination, not very widely practiced, was borrowed, no doubt, from
Babylonia. Joseph's cup was used for the purpose, and in Numbers, the
elders of Balak went to Balaam with the rewards of divination in their
hands. The belief in enchantments and witchcraft was universal, and the
strong enactments against witches in the Old Testament made a belief in
them almost imperative until more rational beliefs came into vogue in the
eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.</p>
<p>Whatever view we may take of it, the medicine of the New Testament is full
of interest. Divination is only referred to once in the Acts (xvi, 16),
where a damsel is said to be possessed of a spirit of divination "which
brought her masters much gain by soothsaying." There is only one mention
of astrology (Acts vii, 43); there are no witches, neither are there
charms or incantations. The diseases mentioned are numerous: demoniac
possession, convulsions, paralysis, skin diseases,—as leprosy,—dropsy,
haemorrhages, fever, fluxes, blindness and deafness. And the cure is
simple usually a fiat of the Lord, rarely with a prayer, or with the use
of means such as spittle. They are all miraculous, and the same power was
granted to the apostles—"power against unclean spirits, to cast them
out, to heal all manner of sickness and all manner of disease." And more
than this, not only the blind received their sight, the lame walked, the
lepers were cleansed, the deaf heard, but even the dead were raised up. No
question of the mandate. He who went about doing good was a physician of
the body as well as of the soul, and could the rich promises of the Gospel
have been fulfilled, there would have been no need of a new dispensation
of science. It may be because the children of this world have never been
able to accept its hard sayings—the insistence upon poverty, upon
humility, upon peace that Christianity has lost touch no less with the
practice than with the principles of its Founder. Yet, all through the
centuries, the Church has never wholly abandoned the claim to apostolic
healing; nor is there any reason why she should. To the miraculous there
should be no time limit—only conditions have changed and nowadays to
have a mountain-moving faith is not easy. Still, the possession is
cherished, and it adds enormously to the spice and variety of life to know
that men of great intelligence, for example, my good friend, Dr. James J.
Walsh of New York, believe in the miracles of Lourdes.(24) Only a few
weeks ago, the Bishop of London followed with great success, it is said,
the practice of St. James. It does not really concern us much—as
Oriental views of disease and its cure have had very little influence on
the evolution of scientific medicine—except in illustration of the
persistence of an attitude towards disease always widely prevalent, and,
indeed, increasing. Nor can we say that the medicine of our great
colleague, St. Luke, the Beloved Physician, whose praise is in the
Gospels, differs so fundamentally from that of the other writings of the
New Testament that we can claim for it a scientific quality. The stories
of the miracles have technical terms and are in a language adorned by
medical phraseology, but the mental attitude towards disease is certainly
not that of a follower of Hippocrates, nor even of a scientifically
trained contemporary of Dioscorides.(25)</p>
<p>(24) Psychotherapy, New York, 1919, p. 79, "I am convinced<br/>
that miracles happen there. There is more than natural power<br/>
manifest."<br/>
<br/>
(25) See Luke the Physician, by Harnack, English ed., 1907,<br/>
and W. K. Hobart, The Medical Language of St. Luke, 1882.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHINESE AND JAPANESE MEDICINE </h2>
<p>CHINESE medicine illustrates the condition at which a highly intellectual
people may arrive, among whom thought and speculation were restricted by
religious prohibitions. Perhaps the chief interest in its study lies in
the fact that we may see today the persistence of views about disease
similar to those which prevailed in ancient Egypt and Babylonia. The
Chinese believe in a universal animism, all parts being animated by gods
and spectres, and devils swarm everywhere in numbers incalculable. The
universe was spontaneously created by the operation of its Tao, "composed
of two souls, the Yang and the Yin; the Yang represents light, warmth,
production, and life, as also the celestial sphere from which all those
blessings emanate; the Yin is darkness, cold, death, and the earth, which,
unless animated by the Yang or heaven, is dark, cold, dead. The Yang and
the Yin are divided into an infinite number of spirits respectively good
and bad, called shen and kwei; every man and every living being contains a
shen and a kwei, infused at birth, and departing at death, to return to
the Yang and the Yin. Thus man with his dualistic soul is a microcosmos,
born from the Macrocosmos spontaneously. Even every object is animated, as
well as the Universe of which it is a part."(26)</p>
<p>(26) J. J. M. de Groot: Religious System of China, Vol. VI,<br/>
Leyden, 1910, p. 929.<br/></p>
<p>In the animistic religion of China, the Wu represented a group of persons
of both sexes, who wielded, with respect to the world of spirits,
capacities and powers not possessed by the rest of men. Many practitioners
of Wu were physicians who, in addition to charms and enchantments, used
death-banishing medicinal herbs. Of great antiquity, Wu-ism has changed in
some ways its outward aspect, but has not altered its fundamental
characters. The Wu, as exorcising physicians and practitioners of the
medical art, may be traced in classical literature to the time of
Confucius. In addition to charms and spells, there were certain famous
poems which were repeated, one of which, by Han Yu, of the T'ang epoch,
had an extraordinary vogue. De Groot says that the "Ling," or magical
power of this poem must have been enormous, seeing that its author was a
powerful mandarin, and also one of the loftiest intellects China has
produced. This poetic febrifuge is translated in full by de Groot (VI,
1054-1055), and the demon of fever, potent chiefly in the autumn, is
admonished to begone to the clear and limpid waters of the deep river.</p>
<p>In the High Medical College at Court, in the T'ang Dynasty, there were
four classes of Masters, attached to its two High Medical Chiefs: Masters
of Medicine, of Acupuncture, of Manipulation, and two Masters for
Frustration by means of Spells.</p>
<p>Soothsaying and exorcism may be traced far back to the fifth and sixth
centuries B.C.</p>
<p>In times of epidemic the specialists of Wu-ism, who act as seers,
soothsayers and exorcists, engage in processions, stripped to the waist,
dancing in a frantic, delirious state, covering themselves with blood by
means of prick-balls, or with needles thrust through their tongues, or
sitting or stretching themselves on nail points or rows of sword edges. In
this way they frighten the spectres of disease. They are nearly all young,
and are spoken of as "divining youths," and they use an exorcising magic
based on the principle that legions of spectres prone to evil live in the
machine of the world. (De Groot, VI, 983-985.)</p>
<p>The Chinese believe that it is the Tao, or "Order of the Universe," which
affords immunity from evil, and according to whether or no the birth
occurred in a beneficent year, dominated by four double cyclical
characters, the horoscope is "heavy" or "light." Those with light
horoscopes are specially prone to incurable complaints, but much harm can
be averted if such an individual be surrounded with exorcising objects, if
he be given proper amulets to wear and proper medicines to swallow, and by
selecting for him auspicious days and hours.</p>
<p>Two or three special points may be referred to. The doctrine of the pulse
reached such extraordinary development that the whole practice of the art
centred round its different characters. There were scores of varieties,
which in complication and detail put to confusion the complicated system
of some of the old Graeco-Roman writers. The basic idea seems to have been
that each part and organ had its own proper pulse, and just as in a
stringed instrument each chord has its own tone, so in the human body, if
the pulses were in harmony, it meant health; if there was discord, it
meant disease. These Chinese views reached Europe in the seventeenth and
eighteenth centuries, and there is a very elaborate description of them in
Floyer's well-known book.(27) And the idea of harmony in the pulse is met
with into the eighteenth century.</p>
<p>(27) Sir John Floyer: The Physician's Pulse Watch, etc.,<br/>
London, 1707.<br/></p>
<p>Organotherapy was as extensively practiced in China as in Egypt. Parts of
organs, various secretions and excretions are very commonly used. One
useful method of practice reached a remarkable development, viz., the art
of acupuncture—the thrusting of fine needles more or less deeply
into the affected part. There are some 388 spots on the body in which
acupuncture could be performed, and so well had long experience taught
them as to the points of danger, that the course of the arteries may be
traced by the tracts that are avoided. The Chinese practiced inoculation
for smallpox as early as the eleventh century.</p>
<p>Even the briefest sketch of the condition of Chinese medicine leaves the
impression of the appalling stagnation and sterility that may afflict a
really intelligent people for thousands of years. It is doubtful if they
are today in a very much more advanced condition than were the Egyptians
at the time when the Ebers Papyrus was written. From one point of view it
is an interesting experiment, as illustrating the state in which a people
may remain who have no knowledge of anatomy, physiology or pathology.</p>
<p>Early Japanese medicine has not much to distinguish it from the Chinese.
At first purely theurgic, the practice was later characterized by
acupuncture and a refined study of the pulse. It has an extensive
literature, largely based upon the Chinese, and extending as far back as
the beginning of the Christian era. European medicine was introduced by
the Portuguese and the Dutch, whose "factory" or "company" physicians were
not without influence upon practice. An extraordinary stimulus was given
to the belief in European medicine by a dissection made by Mayeno in 1771
demonstrating the position of the organs as shown in the European
anatomical tables, and proving the Chinese figures to be incorrect. The
next day a translation into Japanese of the anatomical work of Kulmus was
begun, and from its appearance in 1773 may be dated the commencement of
reforms in medicine. In 1793, the work of de Gorter on internal medicine
was translated, and it is interesting to know that before the so-called
"opening of Japan" many European works on medicine had been published. In
1857, a Dutch medical school was started in Yedo. Since the political
upheaval in 1868, Japan has made rapid progress in scientific medicine,
and its institutions and teachers are now among the best known in the
world.(28)</p>
<p>(28) See Y. Fujikawa, Geschichte der Medizin in Japan,<br/>
Tokyo, 1911.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II — GREEK MEDICINE </h2>
<p>OGRAIAE gentis decus! let us sing with Lucretius, one of the great
interpreters of Greek thought. How grand and how true is his paean!</p>
<p>Out of the night, out of the blinding night<br/>
Thy beacon flashes;—hail, beloved light<br/>
Of Greece and Grecian; hail, for in the mirk<br/>
Thou cost reveal each valley and each height.<br/>
<br/>
Thou art my leader, and the footprints shine,<br/>
Wherein I plant my own....<br/>
<br/></p>
<hr />
<p>The world was shine to read, and having read,<br/>
Before thy children's eyes thou didst outspread<br/>
The fruitful page of knowledge, all the wealth<br/>
Of wisdom, all her plenty for their bread.<br/>
<br/>
(Bk. III.—Translated by D. A. Slater.)<br/></p>
<p>Let us come out of the murky night of the East, heavy with<br/>
phantoms,<br/>
into the bright daylight of the West, into the company of men<br/>
whose<br/>
thoughts made our thoughts, and whose ways made our ways—the men<br/>
who first dared to look on nature with the clear eyes of the<br/>
mind.<br/></p>
<p>Browning's famous poem, "Childe Roland to the Dark Tower Came," is an
allegory of the pilgrimage of man through the dark places of the earth, on
a dismal path beset with demons, and strewn with the wreckage of
generations of failures. In his ear tolled the knell of all the lost
adventurers, his peers, all lost, lost within sight of the dark Tower
itself—</p>
<p>The round squat turret, blind as the fool's heart,<br/>
Built of brown stone, without a counterpart<br/>
In the whole world.<br/></p>
<p>lost in despair at an all-encircling mystery. Not so the Greek Childe
Roland who set the slug-horn to his lips and blew a challenge. Neither
Shakespeare nor Browning tells us what happened, and the old legend,
Childe Roland, is the incarnation of the Greek spirit, the young,
light-hearted master of the modern world, at whose trumpet blast the dark
towers of ignorance, superstition and deceit have vanished into thin air,
as the baseless fabric of a dream. Not that the jeering phantoms have
flown! They still beset, in varied form, the path of each generation; but
the Achaian Childe Roland gave to man self-confidence, and taught him the
lesson that nature's mysteries, to be solved, must be challenged. On a
portal of one of the temples of Isis in Egypt was carved: "I am whatever
hath been, is, or ever will be, and my veil no man has yet lifted."</p>
<p>The veil of nature the Greek lifted and herein lies his value to us. What
of this Genius? How did it arise among the peoples of the AEgean Sea?
Those who wish to know the rock whence science was hewn may read the story
told in vivid language by Professor Gomperz in his "Greek Thinkers," the
fourth volume of which has recently been published (Murray, 1912;
Scribner, 1912). In 1912, there was published a book by one of the younger
Oxford teachers, "The Greek Genius and Its Meaning to Us,"(1) from which
those who shrink from the serious study of Gomperz' four volumes may learn
something of the spirit of Greece. Let me quote a few lines from his
introduction:</p>
<p>(1) By R. W. Livingstone, Clarendon Press, Oxford, 1912 (2d<br/>
ed., revised, 1915).<br/></p>
<p>"Europe has nearly four million square miles; Lancashire has 1,700; Attica
has 700. Yet this tiny country has given us an art which we, with it and
all that the world has done since it for our models, have equalled
perhaps, but not surpassed. It has given us the staple of our vocabulary
in every domain of thought and knowledge. Politics, tyranny, democracy,
anarchism, philosophy, physiology, geology, history—these are all
Greek words. It has seized and up to the present day kept hold of our
higher education. It has exercised an unfailing fascination, even on minds
alien or hostile. Rome took her culture thence. Young Romans completed
their education in the Greek schools.... And so it was with natures less
akin to Greece than the Roman. St. Paul, a Hebrew of the Hebrews, who
called the wisdom of the Greeks foolishness, was drawn to their Areopagus,
and found himself accommodating his gospel to the style, and quoting
verses from the poets of this alien race. After him, the Church, which was
born to protest against Hellenism, translated its dogmas into the language
of Greek thought and finally crystallized them in the philosophy of
Aristotle."</p>
<p>Whether a plaything of the gods or a cog in the wheels of the universe
this was the problem which life offered to the thinking Greek; and in
undertaking its solution, he set in motion the forces that have made our
modern civilization. That the problem remains unsolved is nothing in
comparison with the supreme fact that in wrestling with it, and in
studying the laws of the machine, man is learning to control the small
section of it with which he is specially concerned. The veil of
thaumaturgy which shrouded the Orient, while not removed, was rent in
twain, and for the first time in history, man had a clear vision of the
world about him—"had gazed on Nature's naked loveliness" ("Adonais")
unabashed and unaffrighted by the supernatural powers about him. Not that
the Greek got rid of his gods—far from it!—but he made them so
like himself, and lived on terms of such familiarity with them that they
inspired no terror.(2)</p>
<p>(2) "They made deities in their own image, in the likeness<br/>
of an image of corruptible man. Sua cuique deu fit dira<br/>
cupido. 'Each man's fearful passion becomes his god.' Yes,<br/>
and not passions only, but every impulse, every aspiration,<br/>
every humour, every virtue, every whim. In each of his<br/>
activities the Greek found something wonderful, and called<br/>
it God: the hearth at which he warmed himself and cooked his<br/>
food, the street in which his house stood, the horse he<br/>
rode, the cattle he pastured, the wife he married, the child<br/>
that was born to him, the plague of which he died or from<br/>
which he recovered, each suggested a deity, and he made one<br/>
to preside over each. So too with qualities and powers more<br/>
abstract." R.W. Livingstone: The Greek Genius and Its<br/>
Meaning to Us, pp. 51-52.<br/></p>
<p>Livingstone discusses the Greek Genius as displayed to us in certain
"notes"—the Note of Beauty—the Desire for Freedom—the
Note of Directness—the Note of Humanism—the Note of Sanity and
of Many-sidedness. Upon some of these characteristics we shall have
occasion to dwell in the brief sketch of the rise of scientific medicine
among this wonderful people.</p>
<p>We have seen that the primitive man and in the great civilizations of
Egypt and Babylonia, the physician evolved from the priest—in Greece
he had a dual origin, philosophy and religion. Let us first trace the
origins in the philosophers, particularly in the group known as the Ionian
Physiologists, whether at home or as colonists in the south of Italy, in
whose work the beginnings of scientific medicine may be found. Let me
quote a statement from Gomperz:</p>
<p>"We can trace the springs of Greek success achieved and maintained by the
great men of Hellas on the field of scientific inquiry to a remarkable
conjunction of natural gifts and conditions. There was the teeming wealth
of constructive imagination united with the sleepless critical spirit
which shrank from no test of audacity; there was the most powerful impulse
to generalization coupled with the sharpest faculty for descrying and
distinguishing the finest shades of phenomenal peculiarity; there was the
religion of Hellas, which afforded complete satisfaction to the
requirements of sentiment, and yet left the intelligence free to perform
its destructive work; there were the political conditions of a number of
rival centres of intellect, of a friction of forces, excluding the
possibility of stagnation, and, finally, of an order of state and society
strict enough to curb the excesses of 'children crying for the moon,' and
elastic enough not to hamper the soaring flight of superior minds.... We
have already made acquaintance with two of the sources from which the
spirit of criticism derived its nourishment—the metaphysical and
dialectical discussions practiced by the Eleatic philosophers, and the
semi-historical method which was applied to the myths by Hecataeus and
Herodotus. A third source is to be traced to the schools of the
physicians. These aimed at eliminating the arbitrary element from the view
and knowledge of nature, the beginnings of which were bound up with it in
a greater or less degree, though practically without exception and by the
force of an inner necessity. A knowledge of medicine was destined to
correct that defect, and we shall mark the growth of its most precious
fruits in the increased power of observation and the counterpoise it
offered to hasty generalizations, as well as in the confidence which
learnt to reject untenable fictions, whether produced by luxuriant
imagination or by a priori speculations, on the similar ground of
self-reliant sense-perception."(3)</p>
<p>(3) Gomperz: Greek Thinkers, Vol. I, p. 276.<br/></p>
<p>The nature philosophers of the Ionian days did not contribute much to
medicine proper, but their spirit and their outlook upon nature influenced
its students profoundly. Their bold generalizations on the nature of
matter and of the elements are still the wonder of chemists. We may trace
to one of them, Anaximenes, who regarded air as the primary principle, the
doctrine of the "pneuma," or the breath of life—the psychic force
which animates the body and leaves it at death—"Our soul being air,
holds us together." Of another, the famous Heraclitus, possibly a
physician, the existing fragments do not relate specially to medicine; but
to the philosopher of fire may be traced the doctrine of heat and
moisture, and their antitheses, which influenced practice for many
centuries. There is evidence in the Hippocratic treatise peri sarkwn of an
attempt to apply this doctrine to the human body. The famous expression,
panta rhei,—"all things are flowing,"—expresses the incessant
flux in which he believed and in which we know all matter exists. No one
has said a ruder thing of the profession, for an extant fragment reads: ".
. . physicians, who cut, burn, stab, and rack the sick, then complain that
they do not get any adequate recompense for it."(4)</p>
<p>(4) J. Burnet: Early Greek Philosophy, 1892, p. 137,<br/>
Bywater's no. LVIII.<br/></p>
<p>The South Italian nature philosophers contributed much more to the science
of medicine, and in certain of the colonial towns there were medical
schools as early as the fifth century B.C. The most famous of these
physician philosophers was Pythagoras, whose life and work had an
extraordinary influence upon medicine, particularly in connection with his
theory of numbers, and the importance of critical days. His discovery of
the dependence of the pitch of sound on the length of the vibrating chord
is one of the most fundamental in acoustics. Among the members of the
school which he founded at Crotona were many physicians. who carried his
views far and wide throughout Magna Graecia. Nothing in his teaching
dominated medicine so much as the doctrine of numbers, the sacredness of
which seems to have had an enduring fascination for the medical mind. Many
of the common diseases, such as malaria, or typhus, terminating abruptly
on special days, favored this belief. How dominant it became and how
persistent you may judge from the literature upon critical days, which is
rich to the middle of the eighteenth century.</p>
<p>One member of the Crotonian school, Alcmaeon, achieved great distinction
in both anatomy and physiology. He first recognized the brain as the organ
of the mind, and made careful dissections of the nerves, which he traced
to the brain. He described the optic nerves and the Eustachian tubes, made
correct observations upon vision, and refuted the common view that the
sperma came from the spinal cord. He suggested the definition of health as
the maintenance of equilibrium, or an "isonomy" in the material qualities
of the body. Of all the South Italian physicians of this period, the
personality of none stands out in stronger outlines than that of
Empedocles of Agrigentum—physician, physiologist, religious teacher,
politician and poet. A wonder-worker, also, and magician, he was acclaimed
in the cities as an immortal god by countless thousands desiring oracles
or begging the word of healing. That he was a keen student of nature is
witnessed by many recorded observations in anatomy and physiology; he
reasoned that sensations travel by definite paths to the brain. But our
attention must be confined to his introduction of the theory of the four
elements—fire, air, earth and water—of which, in varying
quantities, all bodies were made up. Health depended upon the due
equilibrium of these primitive substances; disease was their disturbance.
Corresponding to those were the four essential qualities of heat and cold,
moisture and dryness, and upon this four-fold division was engrafted by
the later physicians the doctrine of the humors which, from the days of
Hippocrates almost to our own, dominated medicine. All sorts of magical
powers were attributed to Empedocles. The story of Pantheia whom he called
back to life after a thirty days' trance has long clung in the
imagination. You remember how Matthew Arnold describes him in the
well-known poem, "Empedocles on Etna"—</p>
<p>But his power<br/>
Swells with the swelling evil of this time,<br/>
And holds men mute to see where it will rise.<br/>
He could stay swift diseases in old days,<br/>
Chain madmen by the music of his lyre,<br/>
Cleanse to sweet airs the breath of poisonous streams,<br/>
And in the mountain-chinks inter the winds.<br/>
This he could do of old—(5)<br/></p>
<p>a quotation which will give you an idea of some of the powers attributed
to this wonder-working physician.</p>
<p>(5) Poetical Works of Matthew Arnold, Macmillan & Co., 1898,<br/>
p. 440.<br/></p>
<p>But of no one of the men of this remarkable circle have we such definite
information as of the Crotonian physician Democedes, whose story is given
at length by Herodotus; and his story has also the great importance of
showing that, even at this early period, a well-devised scheme of public
medical service existed in the Greek cities. It dates from the second half
of the sixth century B.C.—fully two generations before Hippocrates.
A Crotonian, Democedes by name, was found among the slaves of Oroetes. Of
his fame as a physician someone had heard and he was called in to treat
the dislocated ankle of King Darius. The wily Greek, longing for his home,
feared that if he confessed to a knowledge of medicine there would be no
chance of escape, but under threat of torture he undertook a treatment
which proved successful. Then Herodotus tells his story—how, ill
treated at home in Crotona, Democedes went to AEgina, where he set up as a
physician and in the second year the State of AEgina hired his services at
the price of a talent. In the third year, the Athenians engaged him at 100
minae; and in the fourth, Polycrates of Samos at two talents. Democedes
shared the misfortunes of Polycrates and was taken prisoner by Oroetes.
Then Herodotus tells how he cured Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus and wife
of Darius, of a severe abscess of the breast, but on condition that she
help him to escape, and she induced her husband to send an expedition of
exploration to Greece under the guidance of Democedes, but with the
instructions at all costs to bring back the much prized physician. From
Tarentum, Democedes escaped to his native city, but the Persians followed
him, and it was with the greatest difficulty that he escaped from their
hands. Deprived of their guide, the Persians gave up the expedition and
sailed for Asia. In palliation of his flight, Democedes sent a message to
Darius that he was engaged to the daughter of Milo, the wrestler, who was
in high repute with the King.(6)</p>
<p>(6) The well-known editor of Herodotus, R. W. Macan, Master<br/>
of University College, Oxford, in his Hellenikon. A Sheaf<br/>
of Sonnets after Herodotus (Oxford, 1898) has included a<br/>
poem which may be quoted in connection with this incident:<br/>
<br/>
NOSTALGY<br/>
Atossa, child of Cyrus king of kings,<br/>
healed by Greek science of a morbid breast,<br/>
gave lord Dareios neither love nor rest<br/>
till he fulfilled her vain imaginings.<br/>
"Sir, show our Persian folk your sceptre's wings!<br/>
Enlarge my sire's and brother's large bequest.<br/>
This learned Greek shall guide your galleys west,<br/>
and Dorian slave-girls grace our banquetings."<br/>
So said she, taught of that o'er-artful man,<br/>
the Italiote captive, Kroton's Demokede,<br/>
who recked not what of maladies began,<br/>
nor who in Asia and in Greece might bleed,<br/>
if he—so writes the guileless Thurian—<br/>
regained his home, and freedom of the Mede.<br/></p>
<p>Plato has several references to these state physicians, who were evidently
elected by a public assembly: "When the assembly meets to elect a
physician," and the office was yearly, for in "The Statesman" we find the
following:(7) "When the year of office has expired, the pilot, or
physician has to come before a court of review" to answer any charges. The
physician must have been in practice for some time and attained eminence,
before he was deemed worthy of the post of state physician.</p>
<p>(7) Jowett: Dialogues of Plato, 3d ed., Statesman, Vol. IV,<br/>
p. 502 (Stephanus, II, 298 E)<br/></p>
<p>"If you and I were physicians, and were advising one another that we were
competent to practice as state-physicians, should I not ask about you, and
would you not ask about me, Well, but how about Socrates himself, has he
good health? and was anyone else ever known to be cured by him whether
slave or freeman?"(7a)</p>
<p>(7a) Jowett: Dialogues of Plato, 3d ed., Gorgias, Vol. II,<br/>
p. 407 (Stephanus, I, 514 D).<br/></p>
<p>All that is known of these state physicians has been collected by Pohl,(8)
who has traced their evolution into Roman times. That they were secular,
independent of the AEsculapian temples, that they were well paid, that
there was keen competition to get the most distinguished men, that they
were paid by a special tax and that they were much esteemed—are
facts to be gleaned from Herodotus and from the inscriptions. The lapidary
records, extending over 1000 years, collected by Professor Oehler(8a) of
Reina, throw an important light on the state of medicine in Greece and
Rome. Greek vases give representations of these state doctors at work. Dr.
E. Pottier has published one showing the treatment of a patient in the
clinic.(8b)</p>
<p>(8) R. Pohl: De Graecorum medicis publicis, Berolini,<br/>
Reimer, 1905; also Janus, Harlem, 1905, X, 491-494.<br/>
<br/>
(8a) J Oehler: Janus, Harlem, 1909, XIV, 4; 111.<br/>
<br/>
(8b) E. Pottier: Une clinique grecque au Ve siecle,<br/>
Monuments et Memoires, XIII, p. 149. Paris, 1906 (Fondation<br/>
Eugene Piot).<br/></p>
<p>That dissections were practiced by this group of nature philosophers is
shown not only by the studies of Alcmaeon, but we have evidence that one
of the latest of them, Diogenes of Apollonia, must have made elaborate
dissections. In the "Historia Animalium"(9) of Aristotle occurs his
account of the blood vessels, which is by far the most elaborate met with
in the literature until the writings of Galen. It has, too, the great
merit of accuracy (if we bear in mind the fact that it was not until after
Aristotle that arteries and veins were differentiated), and indications
are given as to the vessels from which blood may be drawn.</p>
<p>(9) The Works of Aristotle, Oxford, Clarendon Press, Vol.<br/>
IV, 1910, Bk. III, Chaps. II-IV, pp. 511b-515b.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ASKLEPIOS </h2>
<p>No god made with hands, to use the scriptural phrase, had a more
successful "run" than Asklepios—for more than a thousand years the
consoler and healer of the sons of men. Shorn of his divine attributes he
remains our patron saint, our emblematic God of Healing, whose figure with
the serpents appears in our seals and charters. He was originally a
Thessalian chieftain, whose sons, Machaon and Podalirius, became famous
physicians and fought in the Trojan War. Nestor, you may remember, carried
off the former, declaring, in the oft-quoted phrase, that a doctor was
better worth saving than many warriors unskilled in the treatment of
wounds. Later genealogies trace his origin to Apollo,(10) as whose son he
is usually regarded. "In the wake of northern tribes this god Aesculapius—a
more majestic figure than the blameless leech of Homer's song—came
by land to Epidaurus and was carried by sea to the east-ward island of
Cos.... Aesculapius grew in importance with the growth of Greece, but may
not have attained his greatest power until Greece and Rome were one."(11)</p>
<p>(10) W. H. Roscher: Lexikon der griechischen und romischen<br/>
Mythologie, Leipzig, 1886, I, p. 624.<br/>
<br/>
(11) Louis Dyer: Studies of the Gods in Greece, 1891, p.<br/>
221.<br/></p>
<p>A word on the idea of the serpent as an emblem of the healing art which
goes far back into antiquity. The mystical character of the snake, and the
natural dread and awe inspired by it, early made it a symbol of
supernatural power. There is a libation vase of Gudea, c. 2350 B.C., found
at Telloh, now in the Louvre (probably the earliest representation of the
symbol), with two serpents entwined round a staff (Jastrow, Pl. 4). From
the earliest times the snake has been associated with mystic and magic
power, and even today, among native races, it plays a part in the
initiation of medicine men.</p>
<p>In Greece, the serpent became a symbol of Apollo, and prophetic serpents
were kept and fed at his shrine, as well as at that of his son, Asklepios.
There was an idea, too, that snakes had a knowledge of herbs, which is
referred to in the famous poem of Nikander on Theriaka.(12) You may
remember that when Alexander, the famous quack and oracle monger, depicted
by Lucian, started out "for revenue," the first thing he did was to
provide himself with two of the large, harmless, yellow snakes of Asia
Minor.</p>
<p>(12) Lines 31, etc., and Scholia; cf. W. R. Halliday: Greek<br/>
Divination, London, 1913, p. 88.<br/></p>
<p>The exact date of the introduction of the cult into Greece is not known,
but its great centres were at Epidaurus, Cos, Pergamos and Tricca. It
throve with wonderful rapidity. Asklepios became one of the most popular
of the gods. By the time of Alexander it is estimated that there were
between three and four hundred temples dedicated to him.</p>
<p>His worship was introduced into Rome at the time of the Great Plague at
the beginning of the third century B.C. (as told by Livy in Book XI), and
the temple on the island of Tiber became a famous resort. If you can
transfer in imagination the Hot Springs of Virginia to the neighborhood of
Washington, and put there a group of buildings such as are represented in
these outlines of Caton's(13) (p. 52), add a sumptuous theatre with
seating capacity for 20,000, a stadium 600 feet long with a seating
capacity of 12,000, and all possible accessories of art and science, you
will have an idea of what the temple at Epidaurus, a few miles from
Athens, was. "The cult flourished mostly in places which, through climatic
or hygienic advantages, were natural health resorts. Those favoured spots
on hill or mountain, in the shelter of forests, by rivers or springs of
pure flowing water, were conducive to health. The vivifying air, the well
cultivated gardens surrounding the shrine, the magnificent view, all
tended to cheer the heart with new hope of cure. Many of these temples
owed their fame to mineral or merely hot springs. To the homely altars,
erected originally by sacred fountains in the neighbourhood of
health-giving mineral springs, were later added magnificent temples,
pleasure-grounds for festivals, gymnasia in which bodily ailments were
treated by physical exercises, baths and inunctions, also, as is proved by
excavations, living rooms for the patients. Access to the shrine was
forbidden to the unclean and the impure, pregnant women and the mortally
afflicted were kept away; no dead body could find a resting-place within
the holy precincts, the shelter and the cure of the sick being undertaken
by the keepers of inns and boarding-houses in the neighbourhood. The
suppliants for aid had to submit to careful purification, to bathe in sea,
river or spring, to fast for a prescribed time, to abjure wine and certain
articles of diet, and they were only permitted to enter the temple when
they were adequately prepared by cleansing, inunction and fumigation. This
lengthy and exhausting preparation, partly dietetic, partly suggestive,
was accompanied by a solemn service of prayer and sacrifice, whose
symbolism tended highly to excite the imagination."(14)</p>
<p>(13) Caton: Temples and Ritual of Asklepios, 2d ed.,<br/>
London, 1900.<br/>
<br/>
(14) Max Neuburger: History of Medicine, English<br/>
translation, Oxford, 1910, p. 94.<br/></p>
<p>The temples were in charge of members of the guild or fraternity, the head
of which was often, though not necessarily, a physician. The Chief was
appointed annually. From Caton's excellent sketch(15) you can get a good
idea of the ritual, but still better is the delightful description given
in the "Plutus" of Aristophanes. After offering honey-cakes and baked
meats on the altar, the suppliants arranged themselves on the pallets.</p>
<p>(15) Caton: Temples and Ritual of Asklepios, 2d ed.,<br/>
London, 1900.<br/></p>
<p>Soon the Temple servitor<br/>
Put out the lights and bade us fall asleep,<br/>
Nor stir, nor speak, whatever noise we heard.<br/>
So down we lay in orderly repose.<br/>
And I could catch no slumber, not one wink,<br/>
Struck by a nice tureen of broth which stood<br/>
A little distance from an old wife's head,<br/>
Whereto I marvellously longed to creep.<br/>
Then, glancing upwards, I beheld the priest<br/>
Whipping the cheese-cakes and figs from off<br/>
The holy table; thence he coasted round<br/>
To every altar spying what was left.<br/>
And everything he found he consecrated<br/>
Into a sort of sack—(16)<br/></p>
<p>a procedure which reminds one of the story of "Bel and the Dragon." Then
the god came, in the person of the priest, and scanned each patient. He
did not neglect physical measures, as he brayed in a mortar cloves, Tenian
garlic, verjuice, squills and Sphettian vinegar, with which he made
application to the eyes of the patient.</p>
<p>(16) Aristophanes: B. B. Roger's translation, London, Bell<br/>
& Sons, 1907, Vol. VI, ll. 668, etc., 732 ff.<br/></p>
<p>Then the God clucked,<br/>
And out there issued from the holy shrine<br/>
Two great, enormous serpents....<br/>
And underneath the scarlet cloth they crept,<br/>
And licked his eyelids, as it seemed to me;<br/>
And, mistress dear, before you could have drunk<br/>
Of wine ten goblets, Wealth arose and saw.(17)<br/></p>
<p>(17) Ibid.<br/></p>
<p>The incubation sleep, in which indications of cure were divinely sent,
formed an important part of the ritual.</p>
<p>The Asklepieion, or Health Temple of Cos, recently excavated, is of
special interest, as being at the birthplace of Hippocrates, who was
himself an Asklepiad. It is known that Cos was a great medical school. The
investigations of Professor Rudolf Hertzog have shown that this temple was
very nearly the counterpart of the temple at Epidaurus.</p>
<p>The AEsculapian temples may have furnished a rare field for empirical
enquiry. As with our modern hospitals, the larger temple had rich
libraries, full of valuable manuscripts and records of cases. That there
may have been secular Asklepiads connected with the temple, who were freed
entirely from its superstitious practices and theurgic rites, is regarded
as doubtful; yet is perhaps not so doubtful as one might think. How often
have we physicians to bow ourselves in the house of Rimmon! It is very
much the same today at Lourdes, where lay physicians have to look after
scores of patients whose faith is too weak or whose maladies are too
strong to be relieved by Our Lady of this famous shrine. Even in the
Christian era, there is evidence of the association of distinguished
physicians with AEsculapian temples. I notice that in one of his
anatomical treatises, Galen speaks with affection of a citizen of Pergamos
who has been a great benefactor of the AEsculapian temple of that city. In
"Marius, the Epicurean," Pater gives a delightful sketch of one of those
temple health resorts, and brings in Galen, stating that he had himself
undergone the temple sleep; but to this I can find no reference in the
general index of Galen's works.</p>
<p>From the votive tablets found at Epidaurus, we get a very good idea of the
nature of the cases and of the cures. A large number of them have now been
deciphered. There are evidences of various forms of diseases of the
joints, affections of women, wounds, baldness, gout; but we are again in
the world of miracles, as you may judge from the following: "Heraicus of
Mytilene is bald and entreats the God to make his hair grow. An ointment
is applied over night and the next morning he has a thick crop of hair."</p>
<p>There are indications that operations were performed and abscesses opened.
From one we gather that dropsy was treated in a novel way: Asklepios cuts
off the patient's head, holds him up by the heels, lets the water run out,
claps on the patient's head again. Here is one of the invocations: "Oh,
blessed Asklepios, God of Healing, it is thanks to thy skill that
Diophantes hopes to be relieved from his incurable and horrible gout, no
longer to move like a crab, no longer to walk upon thorns, but to have
sound feet as thou hast decreed."</p>
<p>The priests did not neglect the natural means of healing. The inscriptions
show that great attention was paid to diet, exercise, massage and bathing,
and that when necessary, drugs were used. Birth and death were believed to
defile the sacred precincts, and it was not until the time of the
Antonines that provision was made at Epidaurus for these contingencies.</p>
<p>One practice of the temple was of special interest, viz., the incubation
sleep, in which dreams were suggested to the patients. In the religion of
Babylonia, an important part was played by the mystery of sleep, and the
interpretation of dreams; and no doubt from the East the Greeks took over
the practice of divination in sleep, for in the AEsculapian cult also, the
incubation sleep played a most important role. That it continued in later
times is well indicated in the orations of Aristides, the
arch-neurasthenic of ancient history, who was a great dreamer of dreams.
The oracle of Amphiaraus in Attica sent dreams into the hearts of his
consultants. "The priests take the inquirer, and keep him fasting from
food for one day, and from wine for three days, to give him perfect
spiritual lucidity to absorb the divine communication" (Phillimore's
"Apollonius of Tyana," Bk. II, Ch. XXXVII). How incubation sleep was
carried into the Christian Church, its association with St. Cosmas and St.
Damian and other saints, its practice throughout the Middle Ages, and its
continuation to our own time may be read in the careful study of the
subject made by Miss Hamilton (now Mrs. Dickens).(18) There are still in
parts of Greece and in Asia Minor shrines at which incubation is practiced
regularly, and if one may judge from the reports, with as great success as
in Epidaurus. At one place in Britain, Christchurch in Monmouthshire,
incubation was carried on till the early part of the nineteenth century.
Now the profession has come back to the study of dreams,(19) and there are
professors as ready to give suggestive interpretations to them, as in the
days of Aristides. As usual, Aristotle seems to have said the last word on
the subject: "Even scientific physicians tell us that one should pay
diligent attention to dreams, and to hold this view is reasonable also for
those who are not practitioners but speculative philosophers,"(20) but it
is asking too much to think that the Deity would trouble to send dreams to
very simple people and to animals, if they were designed in any way to
reveal the future.</p>
<p>In its struggle with Christianity, Paganism made its last stand in the
temples of Asklepios. The miraculous healing of the saints superseded the
cures of the heathen god, and it was wise to adopt the useful practice of
his temple.</p>
<p>(18) Mary Hamilton: Incubation, or the Cure of Disease in<br/>
Pagan Temples and Christian Churches, London, 1906.<br/>
<br/>
(19) Freud: The Interpretation of Dreams, translation of<br/>
third edition by A. A. Brill, 1913.<br/>
<br/>
(20) Aristotle: Parva Naturalia, De divinatione per<br/>
somnium, Ch. I, Oxford ed., Vol. III, 463 a.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HIPPOCRATES AND THE HIPPOCRATIC WRITINGS </h2>
<p>DESERVEDLY the foundation of Greek Medicine is associated with the name of
Hippocrates, a native of the island of Cos; and yet he is a shadowy
personality, about whom we have little accurate first-hand information.
This is in strong contrast to some of his distinguished contemporaries and
successors, for example, Plato and Aristotle, about whom we have such full
and accurate knowledge. You will, perhaps, be surprised to hear that the
only contemporary mention of Hippocrates is made by Plato. In the
"Protagoras," the young Hippocrates, son of Apollodorus has come to
Protagoras, "that mighty wise man," to learn the science and knowledge of
human life. Socrates asked him: "If . . . you had thought of going to
Hippocrates of Cos, the Asclepiad, and were about to give him your money,
and some one had said to you, 'You are paying money to your namesake
Hippocrates, O Hippocrates; tell me, what is he that you give him money?'
how would you have answered?" "I should say," he replied, "that I gave
money to him as a physician." "And what will he make of you?" "A
physician," he said. And in the Phaedrus, in reply to a question of
Socrates whether the nature of the soul could be known intelligently
without knowing the nature of the whole, Phaedrus replies: "Hippocrates,
the Asclepiad, says that the nature, even of the body, can only be
understood as a whole." (Plato, I, 311; III, 270—Jowett, I, 131,
479.)</p>
<p>Several lives of Hippocrates have been written. The one most frequently
quoted is that of Soranus of Ephesus (not the famous physician of the time
of Trajan), and the statements which he gives are usually accepted, viz.,
that he was born in the island of Cos in the year 460 B.C.; that he
belonged to an Asklepiad family of distinction, that he travelled
extensively, visiting Thrace, Thessaly, and various other parts of Greece;
that he returned to Cos, where he became the most renowned physician of
his period, and died about 375 B.C. Aristotle mentions him but once,
calling him "the great Hippocrates." Busts of him are common; one of the
earliest of which, and I am told the best, dating from Roman days and now
in the British Museum, is here represented.</p>
<p>Of the numerous writings attributed to Hippocrates it cannot easily be
determined which are really the work of the Father of Medicine himself.
They were collected at the time of the Alexandrian School, and it became
customary to write commentaries upon them; much of the most important
information we have about them, we derive from Galen. The earliest
manuscript is the "Codex Laurentianus" of Florence, dating from the ninth
century, a specimen page of which (thanks to Commendatore Biagi) is
annexed. Those of you who are interested, and wish to have full references
to the various works attributed to Hippocrates, will find them in "Die
Handschriften der antiken Aerzte" of the Prussian Academy, edited by Diels
(Berlin, 1905). The Prussian Academy has undertaken the editorship of the
"Corpus Medicorum Graecorum." There is no complete edition of them in
English. In 1849 the Deeside physician, Adams, published (for the Old
Sydenham Society) a translation of the most important works, a valuable
edition and easily obtained. Littre's ten-volume edition "OEuvres
completes d'Hippocrate," Paris, 1839-1861, is the most important for
reference. Those of you who want a brief but very satisfactory account of
the Hippocratic writings, with numerous extracts, will find the volume of
Theodor Beck (Jena, 1907) very useful.</p>
<p>I can only indicate, in a very brief way, the special features of the
Hippocratic writings that have influenced the evolution of the science and
art of medicine.</p>
<p>The first is undoubtedly the note of humanity. In his introduction to,
"The Rise of the Greek Epic,"(21) Gilbert Murray emphasizes the idea of
service to the community as more deeply rooted in the Greeks than in us.
The question they asked about each writer was, "Does he help to make
better men?" or "Does he make life a better thing?" Their aim was to be
useful, to be helpful, to make better men in the cities, to correct life,
"to make gentle the life of the world." In this brief phrase were summed
up the aspirations of the Athenians, likewise illuminated in that
remarkable saying of Prodicus (fifth century B.C.), "That which benefits
human life is God." The Greek view of man was the very antithesis of that
which St. Paul enforced upon the Christian world. One idea pervades
thought from Homer to Lucian-like an aroma—pride in the body as a
whole. In the strong conviction that "our soul in its rose mesh" is quite
as much helped by flesh as flesh by the soul the Greek sang his song—"For
pleasant is this flesh." Just so far as we appreciate the value of the
fair mind in the fair body, so far do we apprehend ideals expressed by the
Greek in every department of life. The beautiful soul harmonizing with the
beautiful body was as much the glorious ideal of Plato as it was the end
of the education of Aristotle. What a splendid picture in Book III of the
"Republic," of the day when ". . . our youth will dwell in a land of
health, amid fair sights and sounds and receive the good in everything;
and beauty, the effluence of fair works, shall flow into the eye and ear
like a health-giving breeze from a purer region, and insensibly draw the
soul from earliest years into likeness and sympathy with the beauty of
reason." The glory of this zeal for the enrichment of this present life
was revealed to the Greeks as to no other people, but in respect to care
for the body of the common man, we have only seen its fulfilment in our
own day, as a direct result of the methods of research initiated by them.
Everywhere throughout the Hippocratic writings we find this attitude
towards life, which has never been better expressed than in the fine
phrase, "Where there is love of humanity there will be love of the
profession." This is well brought out in the qualifications laid down by
Hippocrates for the study of medicine. "Whoever is to acquire a competent
knowledge of medicine ought to be possessed of the following advantages: a
natural disposition; instruction; a favourable position for the study;
early tuition; love of labour; leisure. First of all, a natural talent is
required, for when nature opposes, everything else is vain; but when
nature leads the way to what is most excellent, instruction in the art
takes place, which the student must try to appropriate to himself by
reflection, becoming a nearly pupil in a place well adapted for
instruction. He must also bring to the task a love of labour and
perseverance, so that the instruction taking root may bring forth proper
and abundant fruits." And the directions given for the conduct of life and
for the relation which the physician should have with the public are those
of our code of ethics today. Consultations in doubtful cases are advised,
touting for fees is discouraged. "If two or more ways of medical treatment
were possible, the physician was recommended to choose the least imposing
or sensational; it was an act of 'deceit' to dazzle the patient's eye by
brilliant exhibitions of skill which might very well be dispensed with.
The practice of holding public lectures in order to increase his
reputation was discouraged in the physician, and he was especially warned
against lectures tricked out with quotations from the poets. Physicians
who pretended to infallibility in detecting even the minutest departure
from their prescriptions were laughed at; and finally, there were precise
by-laws to regulate the personal behaviour of the physician. He was
enjoined to observe the most scrupulous cleanliness, and was advised to
cultivate an elegance removed from all signs of luxury, even down to the
detail that he might use perfumes, but not in an immoderate degree."(22)
But the high-water mark of professional morality is reached in the famous
Hippocratic oath, which Gomperz calls "a monument of the highest rank in
the history of civilization." It is of small matter whether this is of
Hippocratic date or not, or whether it has in it Egyptian or Indian
elements: its importance lies in the accuracy with which it represents the
Greek spirit. For twenty-five centuries it has been the "credo" of the
profession, and in many universities it is still the formula with which
men are admitted to the doctorate.</p>
<p>(21) Oxford. Clarendon Press, 2d ed., 1911.<br/>
<br/>
(22) Gomperz: Greek Thinkers, Vol. I, p. 281.<br/></p>
<p>I swear by Apollo the physician and AEsculapius and Health (Hygieia) and
All-Heal (Panacea) and all the gods and goddesses, that, according to my
ability and judgment, I will keep this oath and this stipulation—to
reckon him who taught me this art equally dear to me as my parents, to
share my substance with him, and relieve his necessities if required; to
look upon his offspring in the same footing as my own brothers, and to
teach them this art, if they shall wish to learn it, without fee or
stipulation; and that by precept, lecture, and every other mode of
instruction, I will impart a knowledge of my art to my own sons, and those
of my teachers, and to disciples bound by a stipulation and oath according
to the law of medicine, but to none others. I will follow that system of
regimen which, according to my ability and judgement, I consider for the
benefit of my patients, and abstain from whatever is deleterious and
mischievous.</p>
<p>I will give no deadly medicine to anyone if asked, nor suggest any such
counsel; and in like manner I will not give to a woman a pessary to
produce abortion.</p>
<p>With purity and with holiness I will pass my life and practice my art.</p>
<p>(I will not cut persons labouring under the stone, but will leave this to
be done by men who are practitioners of this work.)</p>
<p>Into whatsoever houses I enter, I will go into them for the benefit of the
sick, and will abstain from every voluntary act of mischief and
corruption, and, further, from the abduction of females or males, of
freemen and slaves. Whatever, in connection with my professional practice,
or not in connection with it, I see or hear, in the life of men, which
ought not to be spoken of abroad, I will not divulge, as reckoning that
all such should be kept secret.</p>
<p>While I continue to keep this Oath unviolated, may it be granted to me to
enjoy life and the practice of the art, respected by all men, in all
times! But should I trespass and violate this Oath, may the reverse be my
lot!</p>
<p>(Adams, II, 779, cf. Littre, IV, 628.)</p>
<p>In his ideal republic, Plato put the physician low enough, in the last
stratum, indeed, but he has never been more honorably placed than in the
picture of Athenian society given by this author in the "Symposium." Here
the physician is shown as a cultivated gentleman, mixing in the best, if
not always the most sober, society. Eryximachus, the son of Acumenus,
himself a physician, plays in this famous scene a typical Greek part(22a)—a
strong advocate of temperance in mind and body, deprecating, as a
physician, excess in drink, he urged that conversation should be the order
of the day and he had the honor of naming the subject—"Praise of the
God of Love." Incidentally Eryximachus gives his view of the nature of
disease, and shows how deeply he was influenced by the views of
Empedocles:". . . so too in the body the good and healthy elements are to
be indulged, and the bad elements and the elements of disease are not to
be indulged, but discouraged. And this is what the physician has to do,
and in this the art of medicine consists: for medicine may be regarded
generally as the knowledge of the loves and desires of the body and how to
satisfy them or not; and the best physician is he who is able to separate
fair love from foul, or to convert one into the other; and he who knows
how to eradicate and how to implant love, whichever is required, and can
reconcile the most hostile elements in the constitution and make them
loving friends, is a skilful practitioner."</p>
<p>(22a) Professor Gildersleeve's view of Eryximachus is less<br/>
favorable (Johns Hopkins University Circular, Baltimore,<br/>
January, 1887). Plato, III, 186—Jowett, I, 556.<br/></p>
<p>The second great note in Greek medicine illustrates the directness with
which they went to the very heart of the matter. Out of mysticism,
superstition and religious ritual the Greek went directly to nature and
was the first to grasp the conception of medicine as an art based on
accurate observation, and an integral part of the science of man. What
could be more striking than the phrase in "The Law," "There are, in
effect, two things, to know and to believe one knows; to know is science;
to believe one knows is ignorance"?(23) But no single phrase in the
writings can compare for directness with the famous aphorism which has
gone into the literature of all lands: "Life is short and Art is long; the
Occasion fleeting, Experience fallacious, and Judgment difficult."</p>
<p>(23) Littre: OEuvres d'Hippocrate, Vol. IV, pp. 641-642.<br/></p>
<p>Everywhere one finds a strong, clear common sense, which refuses to be
entangled either in theological or philosophical speculations. What
Socrates did for philosophy Hippocrates may be said to have done for
medicine. As Socrates devoted himself to ethics, and the application of
right thinking to good conduct, so Hippocrates insisted upon the practical
nature of the art, and in placing its highest good in the benefit of the
patient. Empiricism, experience, the collection of facts, the evidence of
the senses, the avoidance of philosophical speculations, were the
distinguishing features of Hippocratic medicine. One of the most striking
contributions of Hippocrates is the recognition that diseases are only
part of the processes of nature, that there is nothing divine or sacred
about them. With reference to epilepsy, which was regarded as a sacred
disease, he says, "It appears to me to be no wise more divine nor more
sacred than other diseases, but has a natural cause from which it
originates like other affections; men regard its nature and cause as
divine from ignorance." And in another place he remarks that each disease
has its own nature, and that no one arises without a natural cause. He
seems to have been the first to grasp the conception of the great healing
powers of nature. In his long experience with the cures in the temples, he
must have seen scores of instances in which the god had worked the miracle
through the vis medicatrix naturae; and to the shrewd wisdom of his
practical suggestions in treatment may be attributed in large part the
extraordinary vogue which the great Coan has enjoyed for twenty-five
centuries. One may appreciate the veneration with which the Father of
Medicine was regarded by the attribute "divine" which was usually attached
to his name. Listen to this for directness and honesty of speech taken
from the work on the joints characterized by Littre as "the great surgical
monument of antiquity": "I have written this down deliberately, believing
it is valuable to learn of unsuccessful experiments, and to know the
causes of their non-success."</p>
<p>The note of freedom is not less remarkable throughout the Hippocratic
writings, and it is not easy to understand how a man brought up and
practicing within the precincts of a famous AEsculapian temple could have
divorced himself so wholly from the superstitions and vagaries of the
cult. There are probably grounds for Pliny's suggestion that he benefited
by the receipts written in the temple, registered by the sick cured of any
disease. "Afterwards," Pliny goes on to remark in his characteristic way,
"hee professed that course of Physicke which is called Clinice Wherby
physicians found such sweetnesse that afterwards there was no measure nor
end of fees," ('Natural History,' XXIX, 1). There is no reference in the
Hippocratic writings to divination; incubation sleep is not often
mentioned, and charms, incantations or the practice of astrology but
rarely. Here and there we do find practices which jar upon modern feeling,
but on the whole we feel in reading the Hippocratic writings nearer to
their spirit than to that of the Arabians or of the many writers of the
fifteenth and sixteenth centuries A. D. And it is not only against the
thaumaturgic powers that the Hippocratic writings protested, but they
express an equally active reaction against the excesses and defects of the
new philosophy, a point brought out very clearly by Gomperz.(24) He
regards it as an undying glory of the school of Cos that after years of
vague, restless speculation it introduces "steady sedentary habits into
the intellectual life of mankind." 'Fiction to the right! Reality to the
left!' was the battle-cry of this school in the war they were the first to
wage against the excesses and defects of the nature-philosophy. Though the
protest was effective in certain directions, we shall see that the authors
of the Hippocratic writings could not entirely escape from the hypotheses
of the older philosophers.</p>
<p>(24) Gomperz: Greek Thinkers, Vol. I, p. 296.<br/></p>
<p>I can do no more than indicate in the briefest possible way some of the
more important views ascribed to Hippocrates. We cannot touch upon the
disputes between the Coan and Cnidian schools.(25) You must bear in mind
that the Greeks at this time had no human anatomy. Dissections were
impossible; their physiology was of the crudest character, strongly
dominated by the philosophies. Empedocles regarded the four elements,
fire, air, earth and water, as "the roots of all things," and this became
the corner stone in the humoral pathology of Hippocrates. As in the
Macrocosm—the world at large there were four elements, fire, air,
earth, and water, so in the Microcosm—the world of man's body—there
were four humors (elements), viz.,blood, phlegm, yellow bile (or choler)
and black bile (or melancholy), and they corresponded to the four
qualities of matter, heat, cold, dryness and moisture. For more than two
thousand years these views prevailed. In his "Regiment of Life" (1546)
Thomas Phaer says:". . . which humours are called ye sones of the Elements
because they be complexioned like the foure Elements, for like as the Ayre
is hot and moyst: so is the blooud, hote and moyste. And as Fyer is hote
and dry: so is Cholere hote and dry. And as water is colde and moyst: so
is fleume colde and moyste. And as the Earth is colde and dry: so
Melancholy is colde and dry."(26)</p>
<p>(25) The student who wishes a fuller account is referred to<br/>
the histories of (a) Neuburger, Vol. 1, Oxford, 1910; (b)<br/>
Withington, London, 1894.<br/>
<br/>
(26) Thomas Phaer: Regiment of Life, London, 1546.<br/></p>
<p>As the famous Regimen Sanitatis of Salernum, the popular family hand-book
of the Middle Ages, says:</p>
<p>Foure Humours raigne within our bodies wholly,<br/>
And these compared to foure elements.(27)<br/>
<br/>
(27) The Englishman's Doctor, or the Schoole of Salerne, Sir<br/>
John Harington's translation, London, 1608, p. 2. Edited by<br/>
Francis R. Packard, New York, 1920, p. 132. Harington's book<br/>
originally appeared dated: London 1607. (Hoe copy in the<br/>
Henry E. Huntington Library.)<br/></p>
<p>According to Littre, there is nowhere so strong a statement of these views
in the genuine works of Hippocrates, but they are found at large in the
Hippocratic writings, and nothing can be clearer than the following
statement from the work "The Nature of Man": "The body of man contains in
itself blood and phlegm and yellow bile and black bile, which things are
in the natural constitution of his body, and the cause of sickness and of
health. He is healthy when they are in proper proportion between one
another as regards mixture and force and quantity, and when they are well
mingled together; he becomes sick when one of these is diminished or
increased in amount, or is separated in the body from its proper mixture,
and not properly mingled with all the others." No words could more clearly
express the views of disease which, as I mentioned, prevailed until quite
recent years. The black bile, melancholy, has given us a great word in the
language, and that we have not yet escaped from the humoral pathology of
Hippocrates is witnessed by the common expression of biliousness—"too
much bile"—or "he has a touch of the liver." The humors, imperfectly
mingled, prove irritant in the body. They are kept in due proportion by
the innate heat which, by a sort of internal coction gradually changes the
humors to their proper proportion. Whatever may be the primary cause of
the change in the humors manifesting itself in disease, the innate heat,
or as Hippocrates terms it, the nature of the body itself, tends to
restore conditions to the norm; and this change occurring suddenly, or
abruptly, he calls the "crisis," which is accomplished on some special day
of the disease, and is often accompanied by a critical discharge, or by a
drop in the body temperature. The evil, or superabundant, humors were
discharged and this view of a special materies morbi, to be got rid of by
a natural processor a crisis, dominated pathology until quite recently.
Hippocrates had a great belief in the power of nature, the vis medicatrix
naturae, to restore the normal state. A keen observer and an active
practitioner, his views of disease, thus hastily sketched, dominated the
profession for twenty-five centuries; indeed, echoes of his theories are
still heard in the schools, and his very words are daily on our lips. If
asked what was the great contribution to medicine of Hippocrates and his
school we could answer—the art of careful observation.</p>
<p>In the Hippocratic writings is summed up the experience of Greece to the
Golden Age of Pericles. Out of philosophy, out of abstract speculation,
had come a way of looking at nature for which the physicians were mainly
responsible, and which has changed forever men's views on disease.
Medicine broke its leading strings to religion and philosophy—a
tottering, though lusty, child whose fortunes we are to follow in these
lectures. I have a feeling that, could we know more of the medical history
of the older races of which I spoke in the first lecture, we might find
that this was not the first-born of Asklepios, that there had been many
premature births, many still-born offspring, even live-births—the
products of the fertilization of nature by the human mind; but the record
is dark, and the infant was cast out like Israel in the chapter of Isaiah.
But the high-water mark of mental achievement had not been reached by the
great generation in which Hippocrates had labored. Socrates had been dead
sixteen years, and Plato was a man of forty-five, when far away in the
north in the little town of Stagira, on the peninsula of Mount Athos in
Macedoniawas, in 384 B.C., born a "man of men," the one above all others
to whom the phrase of Milton may be applied. The child of an Asklepiad,
Nicomachus, physician to the father of Philip, there must have been a rare
conjunction of the planets at the birth of the great Stagirite. In the
first circle of the "Inferno," Virgil leads Dante into a wonderful
company, "star-seated" on the verdure (he says)—the philosophic
family looking with reverence on "the Master of those who know"—il
maestro di color che sanno.(28) And with justice has Aristotle been so
regarded for these twenty-three centuries. No man has ever swayed such an
intellectual empire—in logic, metaphysics, rhetoric, psychology,
ethics, poetry, politics and natural history, in all a creator, and in all
still a master. The history of the human mind—offers no parallel to
his career. As the creator of the sciences of comparative anatomy,
systematic zoology, embryology, teratology, botany and physiology, his
writings have an eternal interest. They present an extraordinary
accumulation of facts relating to the structure and functions of various
parts of the body. It is an unceasing wonder how one man, even with a
school of devoted students, could have done so much.</p>
<p>(28) The "Good collector of qualities," Dioscorides,<br/>
Hippocrates, Avicenna, Galen and Averroes were the medical<br/>
members of the group. Dante, Inferno, canto iv.<br/></p>
<p>Dissection—already practiced by Alcmaeon, Democritus, Diogenes and
others—was conducted on a large scale, but the human body was still
taboo. Aristotle confesses that the "inward parts of man are known least
of all," and he had never seen the human kidneys or uterus. In his
physiology, I can refer to but one point—the pivotal question of the
heart and blood vessels. To Aristotle the heart was the central organ
controlling the circulation, the seat of vitality, the source of the
blood, the place in which it received its final elaboration and
impregnation with animal heat. The blood was contained in the heart and
vessels as in a vase—hence the use of the term "vessel." "From the
heart the blood-vessels extend throughout the body as in the anatomical
diagrams which are represented on the walls, for the parts lie round these
because they are formed out of them."(29) The nutriment oozes through the
blood vessels and the passages in each of the parts "like water in unbaked
pottery." He did not recognize any distinction between arteries and veins,
calling both plebes (Littre); the vena cave is the great vessel, and the
aorta the smaller; but both contain blood. He did not use the word
"arteria" (arthria) for either of them. There was no movement from the
heart to the vessels but the blood was incessantly drawn upon by the
substance of the body and as unceasingly renewed by absorption of the
products of digestion, the mesenteric vessels taking up nutriment very
much as the plants take theirs by the roots from the soil. From the lungs
was absorbed the pneuma, or spiritus, which was conveyed to the heart by
the pulmonary vessels—one to the right, and one to the left side.
These vessels in the lungs, "through mutual contact" with the branches of
the trachea, took in the pneuma. A point of interest is that the windpipe,
or trachea, is called "arteria," both by Aristotle and by Hippocrates
("Anatomy," Littre, VIII, 539). It was the air-tube, disseminating the
breath through the lungs. We shall see in a few minutes how the term came
to be applied to the arteries, as we know them. The pulsation of the heart
and arteries was regarded by Aristotle as a sort of ebullition in which
the liquids were inflated by the vital or innate heat, the fires of which
were cooled by the pneuma taken in by the lungs and carried to the heart
by the pulmonary vessels.</p>
<p>(29) De Generatione Animalium, Oxford translation, Bk. II,<br/>
Chap. 6, Works V, 743 a.<br/></p>
<p>In Vol. IV of Gomperz' "Greek Thinkers," you will find an admirable
discussion on Aristotle as an investigator of nature, and those of you who
wish to study his natural history works more closely may do so easily—in
the new translation which is in process of publication by the Clarendon
Press, Oxford. At the end of the chapter "De Respiratione" in the "Parva
Naturalia" (Oxford edition, 1908), we have Aristotle's attitude towards
medicine expressed in a way worthy of a son of the profession:</p>
<p>"But health and disease also claim the attention of the scientist, and not
merely of the physician, in so far as an account of their causes is
concerned. The extent to which these two differ and investigate diverse
provinces must not escape us, since facts show that their inquiries are,
at least to a certain extent, conterminous. For physicians of culture and
refinement make some mention of natural science, and claim to derive their
principles from it, while the most accomplished investigators into nature
generally push their studies so far as to conclude with an account of
medical principles." (Works, III,480 b.)</p>
<p>Theophrastus, a student of Aristotle and his successor, created the
science of botany and made possible the pharmacologists of a few centuries
later. Some of you doubtless know him in another guise—as the author
of the golden booklet on "Characters," in which "the most eminent botanist
of antiquity observes the doings of men with the keen and unerring vision
of a natural historian" (Gomperz). In the Hippocratic writings, there are
mentioned 236 plants; in the botany of Theophrastus, 455. To one trait of
master and pupil I must refer—the human feeling, not alone of man
for man, but a sympathy that even claims kinship with the animal world.
"The spirit with which he (Theophrastus) regarded the animal world found
no second expression till the present age" (Gomperz). Halliday, however,
makes the statement that Porphyry(30) goes as far as any modern
humanitarian in preaching our duty towards animals.</p>
<p>(30) W. R. Halliday: Greek Divination, London, Macmillan &<br/>
Co., 1913.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> ALEXANDRIAN SCHOOL </h2>
<p>FROM the death of Hippocrates about the year 375 B.C. till the founding of
the Alexandrian School, the physicians were engrossed largely in
speculative views, and not much real progress was made, except in the
matter of elaborating the humoral pathology. Only three or four men of the
first rank stand out in this period: Diocles the Carystian, "both in time
and reputation next and second to Hippocrates" (Pliny), a keen anatomist
and an encyclopaedic writer; but only scanty fragments of his work remain.
In some ways the most important member of this group was Praxagoras, a
native of Cos, about 340 B.C. Aristotle, you remember, made no essential
distinction between arteries and veins, both of which he held to contain
blood: Praxagoras recognized that the pulsation was only in the arteries,
and maintained that only the veins contained blood, and the arteries air.
As a rule the arteries are empty after death, and Praxagoras believed that
they were filled with an aeriform fluid, a sort of pneuma, which was
responsible for their pulsation. The word arteria, which had already been
applied to the trachea, as an air-containing tube, was then attached to
the arteries; on account of the rough and uneven character of its walls
the trachea was then called the arteria tracheia, or the rough
air-tube.(31a) We call it simply the trachea, but in French the word
trachee-artere is still used.</p>
<p>(31a) Galen: De usu partium, VII, Chaps. 8-9.<br/></p>
<p>Praxagoras was one of the first to make an exhaustive study of the pulse,
and he must have been a man of considerable clinical acumen, as well as
boldness, to recommend in obstruction of the bowels the opening of the
abdomen, removal of the obstructed portion and uniting the ends of the
intestine by sutures.</p>
<p>After the death of Alexander, Egypt fell into the hands of his famous
general, Ptolemy, under whose care the city became one of the most
important on the Mediterranean. He founded and maintained a museum, an
establishment that corresponded very much to a modern university, for the
study of literature, science and the arts. Under his successors,
particularly the third Ptolemy, the museum developed, more especially the
library, which contained more than half a million volumes. The teachers
were drawn from all centres, and the names of the great Alexandrians are
among the most famous in the history of human knowledge, including such
men as Archimedes, Euclid, Strabo and Ptolemy.</p>
<p>In mechanics and physics, astronomy, mathematics and optics, the work of
the Alexandrians constitutes the basis of a large part of our modern
knowledge. The school-boy of today—or at any rate of my day—studies
the identical problems that were set by Euclid 300 B.C., and the student
of physics still turns to Archimedes and Heron, and the astronomer to
Eratosthenes and Hipparchus. To those of you who wish to get a brief
review of the state of science in the Alexandrian School I would recommend
the chapter in Vol. I of Dannemann's history.(31)</p>
<p>(31) Friedrich Dannemann: Grundriss einer Geschichte der<br/>
Naturwissenschaften, Vol. I, 3d ed., Leipzig, 1908.<br/></p>
<p>Of special interest to us in Alexandria is the growth of the first great
medical school of antiquity. Could we have visited the famous museum about
300 B.C., we should have found a medical school in full operation, with
extensive laboratories, libraries and clinics. Here for the first time the
study of the structure of the human body reached its full development,
till then barred everywhere by religious prejudice; but full permission
was given by the Ptolemies to perform human dissection and, if we may
credit some authors, even vivisection. The original writings of the chief
men of this school have not been preserved, but there is a possibility
that any day a papyrus maybe found which will supplement the scrappy and
imperfect knowledge afforded us by Pliny, Celsus and Galen. The two most
distinguished names are Herophilus—who, Pliny says, has the honor of
being the first physician "who searched into the causes of disease"—and
Erasistratus.</p>
<p>Herophilus, ille anatomicorum coryphaeus, as Vesalius calls him, was a
pupil of Praxagoras, and his name is still in everyday use by medical
students, attached to the torcular Herophili. Anatomy practically dates
from these Alexandrines, who described the valves of the heart, the
duodenum, and many of the important parts of the brain; they recognized
the true significance of the nerves (which before their day had been
confounded with the tendons), distinguished between motor and sensory
nerves, and regarded the brain as the seat of the perceptive faculties and
voluntary action. Herophilus counted the pulse, using the water-clock for
the purpose, and made many subtle analyses of its rate and rhythm; and,
influenced by the musical theories of the period, he built up a rhythmical
pulse lore which continued in medicine until recent times. He was a
skilful practitioner and to him is ascribed the statement that drugs are
the hands of the gods. There is a very modern flavor to his oft-quoted
expression that the best physician was the man who was able to distinguish
between the possible and the impossible.</p>
<p>Erasistratus elaborated the view of the pneuma, one form of which he
believed came from the inspired air, and passed to the left side of the
heart and to the arteries of the body. It was the cause of the heart-beat
and the source of the innate heat of the body, and it maintained the
processes of digestion and nutrition. This was the vital spirit; the
animal spirit was elaborated in the brain, chiefly in the ventricles, and
sent by the nerves to all parts of the body, endowing the individual with
life and perception and motion. In this way a great division was made
between the two functions of the body, and two sets of organs: in the
vascular system, the heart and arteries and abdominal organs, life was
controlled by the vital spirits; on the other hand, in the nervous system
were elaborated the animal spirits, controlling motion, sensation and the
various special senses. These views on the vital and animal spirits held
unquestioned sway until well into the eighteenth century, and we still, in
a measure, express the views of the great Alexandrian when we speak of
"high" or "low" spirits.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0015" id="link2H_4_0015"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> GALEN </h2>
<p>PERGAMON has become little more than a name associated in our memory with
the fulminations of St. John against the seven churches of Asia; and on
hearing the chapter read, we wondered what was "Satan's seat" and who were
the "Nicolaitanes" whose doctrine he so hated. Renewed interest has been
aroused in the story of its growth and of its intellectual rivalry with
Alexandria since the wonderful discoveries by German archaeologists which
have enabled us actually to see this great Ionian capital, and even the
"seat of Satan." The illustration here shown is of the famous city, in
which you can see the Temple of Athena Polis on the rock, and the
amphitheatre. Its interest for us is connected with the greatest name,
after Hippocrates, in Greek medicine, that of Galen, born at Pergamon A.
D. 130, in whom was united as never before—and indeed one may say,
never since—the treble combination of observer, experimenter and
philosopher. His father, Nikon, a prosperous architect, was urged in a
dream to devote his son to the profession of medicine, upon which study
the lad entered in his seventeenth year under Satyrus. In his writings,
Galen gives many details of his life, mentioning the names of his
teachers, and many incidents in his Wanderjahre, during which he studied
at the best medical schools, including Alexandria. Returning to his native
city he was put in charge of the gladiators, whose wounds he said he
treated with wine. In the year 162, he paid his first visit to Rome, the
scene of his greatest labors. Here he gave public lectures on anatomy, and
became "the fashion." He mentions many of his successes; one of them is
the well-worn story told also of Erasistratus and Stratonice, but Galen's
story is worth telling, and it is figured as a miniature in the
manuscripts of his works. Called to see a lady he found her suffering from
general malaise without any fever or increased action of the pulse. He saw
at once that her trouble was mental and, like a wise physician, engaged
her in general conversation. Quite possibly he knew her story, for the
name of a certain actor, Pylades, was mentioned, and he noticed that her
pulse at once increased in rapidity and became irregular. On the next day
he arranged that the name of another actor, Morphus, should be mentioned,
and on the third day the experiment was repeated but without effect. Then
on the fourth evening it was again mentioned that Pylades was dancing, and
the pulse quickened and became irregular, so he concluded that she was in
love with Pylades. He tells how he was first called to treat the Emperor
Marcus Aurelius, who had a stomach-ache after eating too much cheese. He
treated the case so successfully that the Emperor remarked, "I have but
one physician, and he is a gentleman." He seems to have had good fees, as
he received 400 aurei (about 2000) for a fortnight's attendance upon the
wife of Boethus.</p>
<p>He left Rome for a time in 168 A. D. and returned to Pergamon, but was
recalled to Rome by the Emperor, whom he accompanied on an expedition to
Germany. There are records in his writings of many journeys, and busy with
his practice in dissections and experiments he passed a long and energetic
life, dying, according to most authorities, in the year 200 A.D.</p>
<p>A sketch of the state of medicine in Rome is given by Celsus in the first
of his eight books, and he mentions the names of many of the leading
practitioners, particularly Asclepiades, the Bithynian, a man of great
ability, and a follower of the Alexandrians, who regarded all disease as
due to a disturbed movement of the atoms. Diet, exercise, massage and
bathing were his great remedies, and his motto—tuto, cito et jucunde—has
been the emulation of all physicians. How important a role he and his
successors played until the time of Galen may be gathered from the learned
lectures of Sir Clifford Allbutt(32) on "Greek Medicine in Rome" and from
Meyer-Steineg's "Theodorus Priscianus und die romische Medizin."(33) From
certain lay writers we learn that it was the custom for popular physicians
to be followed on their rounds by crowds of students. Martial's epigram
(V, ix) is often referred to:</p>
<p>Languebam: sed tu comitatus protinus ad me<br/>
Venisti centum, Symmache, discipulis.<br/>
Centum me tegigere manus Aquilone gelatae<br/>
Non habui febrem, Symmache, nunc habeo.<br/>
<br/>
(32) Allbutt: British Medical Journal, London, 1909, ii, 1449;<br/>
1515; 1598.<br/>
<br/>
(33) Fischer, Jena, 1909.<br/></p>
<p>And in the "Apollonius of Tyana" by Philostratus, when Apollonius wishes
to prove an alibi, he calls to witness the physicians of his sick friend,
Seleucus and Straloctes, who were accompanied by their clinical class to
the number of about thirty students.(34) But for a first-hand sketch of
the condition of the profession we must go to Pliny, whose account in the
twenty-ninth book of the "Natural History" is one of the most interesting
and amusing chapters in that delightful work. He quotes Cato's tirade
against Greek physicians,—corrupters of the race, whom he would have
banished from the city,—then he sketches the career of some of the
more famous of the physicians under the Empire, some of whom must have had
incomes never approached at any other period in the history of medicine.
The chapter gives a good picture of the stage on which Galen (practically
a contemporary of Pliny) was to play so important a role. Pliny seems
himself to have been rather disgusted with the devious paths of the
doctors of his day, and there is no one who has touched with stronger
language upon the weak points of the art of physic. In one place he says
that it alone has this peculiar art and privilege, "That whosoever
professeth himself a physician, is straightwaies beleeved, say what he
will: and yet to speake a truth, there are no lies dearer sold or more
daungerous than those which proceed out of a Physician's mouth. Howbeit,
we never once regard or look to that, so blind we are in our deepe
persuasion of them, and feed our selves each one in a sweet hope and
plausible conceit of our health by them. Moreover, this mischief there is
besides, That there is no law or statute to punish the ignorance of blind
Physicians, though a man lost his life by them: neither was there ever any
man knowne, who had revenge of recompence for the evill intreating or
misusage under their hands. They learne their skill by endaungering our
lives: and to make proofe and experiments of their medicines, they care
not to kill us."(35) He says it is hard that, while the judges are
carefully chosen and selected, physicians are practically their own
judges, and that of the men who may give us a quick despatch and send us
to Heaven or Hell, no enquiry or examination is made of their quality and
worthiness. It is interesting to read so early a bitter criticism of the
famous "Theriaca," a great compound medicine invented by Antiochus III,
which had a vogue for fifteen hundred years.</p>
<p>(34) Bk. VIII, Chap. VII.<br/>
<br/>
(35) Pliny: Natural History (XXIX, 1), Philemon Holland's<br/>
version, London, 1601, II, 347.<br/></p>
<p>But we must return to Galen and his works, which comprise the most
voluminous body of writings left by any of the ancients. The great edition
is that in twenty-two volumes by Kuhn (1821-1833). The most useful
editions are the "Juntines" of Venice, which were issued in thirteen
editions. In the fourth and subsequent editions a very useful index by
Brassavola is included. A critical study of the writings is at present
being made by German scholars for the Prussian Academy, which will issue a
definitive edition of his works.</p>
<p>Galen had an eclectic mind and could not identify himself with any of the
prevailing schools, but regarded himself as a disciple of Hippocrates. For
our purpose, both his philosophy and his practice are of minor interest in
comparison with his great labors in anatomy and physiology.</p>
<p>In anatomy, he was a pupil of the Alexandrians to whom he constantly
refers. Times must have changed since the days of Herophilus, as Galen
does not seem ever to have had an opportunity of dissecting the human
body, and he laments the prejudice which prevents it. In the study of
osteology, he urges the student to be on the lookout for an occasional
human bone exposed in a graveyard, and on one occasion he tells of finding
the carcass of a robber with the bones picked bare by birds and beasts.
Failing this source, he advises the student to go to Alexandria, where
there were still two skeletons. He himself dissected chiefly apes and
pigs. His osteology was admirable, and his little tractate "De Ossibus"
could, with very few changes, be used today by a hygiene class as a
manual. His description of the muscles and of the organs is very full,
covering, of course, many sins of omission and of commission, but it was
the culmination of the study of the subject by Greek physicians.</p>
<p>His work as a physiologist was even more important, for, so far as we
know, he was the first to carry out experiments on a large scale. In the
first place, he was within an ace of discovering the circulation of the
blood. You may remember that through the errors of Praxagoras and
Erasistratus, the arteries were believed to contain air and got their name
on that account: Galen showed by experiment that the arteries contain
blood and not air. He studied particularly the movements of the heart, the
action of the valves, and the pulsatile forces in the arteries. Of the two
kinds of blood, the one, contained in the venous system, was dark and
thick and rich in grosser elements, and served for the general nutrition
of the body. This system took its origin, as is clearly shown in the
figure, in the liver, the central organ of nutrition and of
sanguification. From the portal system were absorbed, through the stomach
and intestines, the products of digestion. From the liver extend the venae
cavae, one to supply the head and arms, the other the lower extremities:
extending from the right heart was a branch, corresponding to the
pulmonary artery, the arterial vein which distributed blood to the lungs.
This was the closed venous system. The arterial system, shown, as you see,
quite separate in Figure 31, was full of a thinner, brighter, warmer
blood, characterized by the presence of an abundance of the vital spirits.
Warmed in the ventricle, it distributed vital heat to all parts of the
body. The two systems were closed and communicated with each other only
through certain pores or perforations in the septum separating the
ventricles. At the periphery, however, Galen recognized (as had been done
already by the Alexandrians) that the arteries anastomose with the veins,
". . . and they mutually receive from each other blood and spirits through
certain invisible and extremely small vessels."</p>
<p>It is difficult to understand how Galen missed the circulation of the
blood. He knew that the valves of the heart determined the direction of
the blood that entered and left the organ, but he did not appreciate that
it was a pump for distributing the blood, regarding it rather as a
fireplace from which the innate heat of the body was derived. He knew that
the pulsatile force was resident in the walls of the heart and in the
arteries, and he knew that the expansion, or diastole, drew blood into its
cavities, and that the systole forced blood out. Apparently his view was
that there was a sort of ebb and flow in both systems—and yet, he
uses language just such as we would, speaking of the venous system as ". .
. a conduit full of blood with a multitude of canals large and small
running out from it and distributing blood to all parts of the body." He
compares the mode of nutrition to irrigating canals and gardens, with a
wonderful dispensation by nature that they should "neither lack a sufficient
quantity of blood for absorption nor be overloaded at any time with
excessive supply." The function of respiration was the introduction of the
pneuma, the spirits which passed from the lungs to the heart through the
pulmonary vessels. Galen went a good deal beyond the idea of Aristotle,
reaching our modern conception that the function is to maintain the animal
heat, and that the smoky matters derived from combustion of the blood are
discharged by expiration.</p>
<p>I have dwelt on these points in Galen's physiology, as they are
fundamental in the history of the circulation; and they are sufficient to
illustrate his position. Among his other brilliant experiments were the
demonstration of the function of the laryngeal nerves, of the motor and
sensory functions of the spinal nerve roots, of the effect of transverse
incision of the spinal cord, and of the effect of hemisection. Altogether
there is no ancient physician in whose writings are contained so many
indications of modern methods of research.</p>
<p>Galen's views of disease in general are those of Hippocrates, but he
introduces many refinements and subdivisions according to the predominance
of the four humors, the harmonious combination of which means health, or
eucrasia, while their perversion or improper combination leads to
dyscrasia, or ill health. In treatment he had not the simplicity of
Hippocrates: he had great faith in drugs and collected plants from all
parts of the known world, for the sale of which he is said to have had a
shop in the neighborhood of the Forum. As I mentioned, he was an eclectic,
held himself aloof from the various schools of the day, calling no man
master save Hippocrates. He might be called a rational empiricist. He made
war on the theoretical practitioners of the day, particularly the
Methodists, who, like some of their modern followers, held that their
business was with the disease and not with the conditions out of which it
arose.</p>
<p>No other physician has ever occupied the commanding position of
"Clarissimus" Galenus. For fifteen centuries he dominated medical thought
as powerfully as did Aristotle in the schools. Not until the Renaissance
did daring spirits begin to question the infallibility of this medical
pope. But here we must part with the last and, in many ways, the greatest
of the Greeks—a man very much of our own type, who, could he visit
this country today, might teach us many lessons. He would smile in scorn
at the water supply of many of our cities, thinking of the magnificent
aqueducts of Rome and of many of the colonial towns—some still in
use—which in lightness of structure and in durability testify to the
astonishing skill of their engineers. There are country districts in which
he would find imperfect drainage and could tell of the wonderful system by
which Rome was kept sweet and clean. Nothing would delight him more than a
visit to Panama to see what the organization of knowledge has been able to
accomplish. Everywhere he could tour the country as a sanitary expert,
preaching the gospel of good water supply and good drainage, two of the
great elements in civilization, in which in many places we have not yet
reached the Roman standard.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER III — MEDIAEVAL MEDICINE </h2>
<p>THERE are waste places of the earth which fill one with terror—not
simply because they are waste; one has not such feelings in the desert nor
in the vast solitude of the ocean. Very different is it where the
desolation has overtaken a brilliant and flourishing product of man's head
and hand. To know that</p>
<p>. . . the Lion and the Lizard keep<br/>
The Courts where Jamshyd gloried and drank deep<br/></p>
<p>sends a chill to the heart, and one trembles with a sense of human
instability. With this feeling we enter the Middle Ages. Following the
glory that was Greece and the grandeur that was Rome, a desolation came
upon the civilized world, in which the light of learning burned low,
flickering almost to extinction. How came it possible that the gifts of
Athens and of Alexandria were deliberately thrown away? For three causes.
The barbarians shattered the Roman Empire to its foundations. When Alaric
entered Rome in 410 A. D., ghastly was the impression made on the
contemporaries; the Roman world shuddered in a titanic spasm (Lindner).
The land was a garden of Eden before them, behind a howling wilderness, as
is so graphically told in Gibbon's great history. Many of the most
important centres of learning were destroyed, and for centuries Minerva
and Apollo forsook the haunts of men. The other equally important cause
was the change wrought by Christianity. The brotherhood of man, the care
of the body, the gospel of practical virtues formed the essence of the
teaching of the Founder—in these the Kingdom of Heaven was to be
sought; in these lay salvation. But the world was very evil, all thought
that the times were waxing late, and into men's minds entered as never
before a conviction of the importance of the four last things—death,
judgment, heaven and hell. One obstacle alone stood between man and his
redemption, the vile body, "this muddy vesture of decay," that so grossly
wrapped his soul. To find methods of bringing it into subjection was the
task of the Christian Church for centuries. In the Vatican Gallery of
Inscriptions is a stone slab with the single word "Stercoriae," and below,
the Christian symbol. It might serve as a motto for the Middle Ages,
during which, to quote St. Paul, all things were "counted dung but to win
Christ." In this attitude of mind the wisdom of the Greeks was not simply
foolishness, but a stumbling-block in the path. Knowledge other than that
which made a man "wise unto salvation" was useless. All that was necessary
was contained in the Bible or taught by the Church. This simple creed
brought consolation to thousands and illumined the lives of some of the
noblest of men. But, "in seeking a heavenly home man lost his bearings
upon earth." Let me commend for your reading Taylor's "Mediaeval Mind."(1)
I cannot judge of its scholarship, which I am told by scholars is ripe and
good, but I can judge of its usefulness for anyone who wishes to know the
story of the mind of man in Europe at this period. Into the content of
mediaeval thought only a mystic can enter with full sympathy. It was a
needful change in the evolution of the race. Christianity brought new
ideals and new motives into the lives of men. The world's desire was
changed, a desire for the Kingdom of Heaven, in the search for which the
lust of the flesh, the lust of the eye and the pride of life were as
dross. A master-motive swayed the minds of sinful men and a zeal to save
other souls occupied the moments not devoted to the perfection of their
own. The new dispensation made any other superfluous. As Tertullian said:
Investigation since the Gospel is no longer necessary. (Dannemann, Die
Naturw., I, p. 214.) The attitude of the early Fathers toward the body is
well expressed by Jerome. "Does your skin roughen without baths? Who is
once washed in the blood of Christ needs not wash again." In this
unfavorable medium for its growth, science was simply disregarded, not in
any hostile spirit, but as unnecessary.(2) And a third contributing factor
was the plague of the sixth century, which desolated the whole Roman
world. On the top of the grand mausoleum of Hadrian, visitors at Rome see
the figure of a gilded angel with a drawn sword, from which the present
name of the Castle of St. Angelo takes its origin. On the twenty-fifth of
April, 590, there set out from the Church of SS. Cosmas and Damian,
already the Roman patron saints of medicine, a vast procession, led by St.
Gregory the Great, chanting a seven-fold litany of intercession against
the plague. The legend relates that Gregory saw on the top of Hadrian's
tomb an angel with a drawn sword, which he sheathed as the plague abated.</p>
<p>(1) H. O. Taylor: The Mediaeval Mind, 2 vols., Macmillan Co.,<br/>
New York, 1911. (New edition, 1920.)<br/>
<br/>
(2) Ibid., Vol. 1, p. 13: "Under their action (the Christian<br/>
Fathers) the peoples of Western Europe, from the eighth to the<br/>
thirteenth century, passed through a homogeneous growth, and<br/>
evolved a spirit different from that of any other period of<br/>
history—a spirit which stood in awe before its monitors divine<br/>
and human, and deemed that knowledge was to be drawn from the<br/>
storehouse of the past; which seemed to rely on everything except<br/>
its sin-crushed self, and trusted everything except its senses;<br/>
which in the actual looked for the ideal, in the concrete saw the<br/>
symbol, in the earthly Church beheld the heavenly, and in fleshly<br/>
joys discerned the devil's lures; which lived in the unreconciled<br/>
opposition between the lust and vain-glory of earth and the<br/>
attainment of salvation; which felt life's terror and its<br/>
pitifulness, and its eternal hope; around which waved concrete<br/>
infinitudes, and over which flamed the terror of darkness and the<br/>
Judgment Day."<br/></p>
<p>Galen died about 200 A.D.; the high-water mark of the Renaissance, so far
as medicine is concerned, was reached in the year 1542. In order to
traverse this long interval intelligently, I will sketch certain great
movements, tracing the currents of Greek thought, setting forth in their
works the lives of certain great leaders, until we greet the dawn of our
own day.</p>
<p>After flowing for more than a thousand years through the broad plain of
Greek civilization, the stream of scientific medicine which we have been
following is apparently lost in the morass of the Middle Ages; but,
checked and blocked like the White Nile in the Soudan, three channels may
be followed through the weeds of theological and philosophical
speculation.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> SOUTH ITALIAN SCHOOL </h2>
<p>A WIDE stream is in Italy, where the "antique education never stopped,
antique reminiscence and tradition never passed away, and the literary
matter of the pagan past never faded from the consciousness of the more
educated among the laity and clergy."(3) Greek was the language of South
Italy and was spoken in some of its eastern towns until the thirteenth
century. The cathedral and monastic schools served to keep alive the
ancient learning. Monte Casino stands pre-eminent as a great hive of
students, and to the famous Regula of St. Benedict(4) we are indebted for
the preservation of many precious manuscripts.</p>
<p>(3) H. O. Taylor: The Mediaeval Mind, Vol. I, p. 251.<br/>
<br/>
(4) De Renzi: Storia Documentata della Scuola Medica di Salerno,<br/>
2d ed., Napoli, 1867, Chap. V.<br/></p>
<p>The Norman Kingdom of South Italy and Sicily was a meeting ground of
Saracens, Greeks and Lombards. Greek, Arabic and Latin were in constant
use among the people of the capital, and Sicilian scholars of the twelfth
century translated directly from the Greek.</p>
<p>The famous "Almagest" of Ptolemy, the most important work of ancient
astronomy, was translated from a Greek manuscript, as early as 1160, by a
medical student of Salerno.(5)</p>
<p>(5) Haskins and Lockwood: Harvard Studies in Classical<br/>
Philology, 1910, XXI, pp. 75-102.<br/></p>
<p>About thirty miles southeast of Naples lay Salernum, which for centuries
kept alight the lamp of the old learning, and became the centre of medical
studies in the Middle Ages; well deserving its name of "Civitas
Hippocratica." The date of foundation is uncertain, but Salernitan
physicians are mentioned as early as the middle of the ninth century, and
from this date until the rise of the universities it was not only a great
medical school, but a popular resort for the sick and wounded. As the
scholar says in Longfellow's "Golden Legend":</p>
<p>Then at every season of the year<br/>
There are crowds of guests and travellers here;<br/>
Pilgrims and mendicant friars and traders<br/>
From the Levant, with figs and wine,<br/>
And bands of wounded and sick Crusaders,<br/>
Coming back from Palestine.<br/></p>
<p>There were medical and surgical clinics, foundling hospitals, Sisters of
Charity, men and women professors—among the latter the famous
Trotula—and apothecaries. Dissections were carried out, chiefly upon
animals, and human subjects were occasionally used. In the eleventh and
twelfth centuries, the school reached its height, and that remarkable
genius, Frederick II, laid down regulations for a preliminary study
extending over three years, and a course in medicine for five years,
including surgery. Fee tables and strict regulations as to practice were
made; and it is specifically stated that the masters were to teach in the
schools, theoretically and practically, under the authority of Hippocrates
and Galen. The literature from the school had a far-reaching influence.
One book on the anatomy of the pig illustrates the popular subject for
dissection at that time.(6) The writings, which are numerous, have been
collected by De Renzi.(7)</p>
<p>(6) "And dissections of the bodies of swine<br/>
As likest the human form divine."—Golden Legend.<br/>
<br/>
(7) S. de Renzi: Collectio Salernitana, 5 vols., Naples,<br/>
1852-1859; P. Giacosa: Magistri Salernitani, Turin, 1901.<br/></p>
<p>The "Antidotarium" of Nicolaus Salernitanus, about 1100, became the
popular pharmacopoeia of the Middle Ages, and many modern preparations may
be traced to it.</p>
<p>The most prominent man of the school is Constantinus Africanus, a native
of Carthage, who, after numerous journeys, reached Salernum about the
middle of the eleventh century. He was familiar with the works both of the
Greeks and of the Arabs, and it was largely through his translations that
the works of Rhazes and Avicenna became known in the West.</p>
<p>One work above all others spread the fame of the school—the Regimen
Sanitatis, or Flos Medicinae as it is sometimes called, a poem on popular
medicine. It is dedicated to Robert of Normandy, who had been treated at
Salernum, and the lines begin: "Anglorum regi scripsit schola tota Salerni
. . . " It is a hand-book of diet and household medicine, with many shrewd
and taking sayings which have passed into popular use, such as "Joy,
temperance and repose Slam the door on the doctor's nose." A full account
of the work and the various editions of it is given by Sir Alexander
Croke,(8) and the Finlayson lecture (Glasgow Medical Journal, 1908) by Dr.
Norman Moore gives an account of its introduction into the British Isles.</p>
<p>(8) Regimen Sanitutis Salernitanum; a Poem on the Preservation of<br/>
Health in Rhyming Latin Verse, Oxford, D.A. Talboys, 1830.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> BYZANTINE MEDICINE </h2>
<p>THE second great stream which carried Greek medicine to modern days runs
through the Eastern Empire. Between the third century and the fall of
Constantinople there was a continuous series of Byzantine physicians whose
inspiration was largely derived from the old Greek sources. The most
distinguished of these was Oribasius, a voluminous compiler, a native of
Pergamon and so close a follower of his great townsman that he has been
called "Galen's ape." He left many works, an edition of which was edited
by Bussemaker and Daremberg. Many facts relating to the older writers are
recorded in his writings. He was a contemporary, friend as well as the
physician, of the Emperor Julian, for whom he prepared an encyclopaedia of
the medical sciences.</p>
<p>Other important Byzantine writers were Aetius and Alexander of Tralles,
both of whom were strongly under the influence of Galen and Hippocrates.
Their materia medica was based largely upon Dioscorides.</p>
<p>From Byzantium we have the earliest known complete medical manuscript,
dating from the fifth century—a work of Dioscorides—one of the
most beautiful in existence. It was prepared for Anicia Juliana, daughter
of the Emperor of the East, and is now one of the great treasures of the
Imperial Library at Vienna.(9) From those early centuries till the fall of
Constantinople there is very little of interest medically. A few names
stand out prominently, but it is mainly a blank period in our records.
Perhaps one man may be mentioned, as he had a great influence on later
ages—Actuarius, who lived about 1300, and whose book on the urine
laid the foundation of much of the popular uroscopy and water-casting that
had such a vogue in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. His work on
the subject passed through a dozen Latin editions, but is best studied in
Ideler's "Physici et medici Graeci minores" (Berlin, 1841).</p>
<p>(9) It has been reproduced by Seatone de Vries, Leyden, 1905,<br/>
Codices graeci et latini photographice depicti, Vol. X.<br/></p>
<p>The Byzantine stream of Greek medicine had dwindled to a very tiny rill
when the fall of Constantinople (1453) dispersed to the West many Greek
scholars and many precious manuscripts.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> ARABIAN MEDICINE </h2>
<p>THE third and by far the strongest branch of the Greek river reached the
West after a remarkable and meandering course. The map before you shows
the distribution of the Graeco-Roman Christian world at the beginning of
the seventh century. You will notice that Christianity had extended far
eastwards, almost to China. Most of those eastern Christians were
Nestorians and one of their important centres was Edessa, whose school of
learning became so celebrated. Here in the fifth century was built one of
the most celebrated hospitals of antiquity.</p>
<p>Now look at another map showing the same countries about a century later.
No such phenomenal change ever was made within so short space of time as
that which thus altered the map of Asia and Europe at this period. Within
a century, the Crescent had swept from Arabia through the Eastern Empire,
over Egypt, North Africa and over Spain in the West, and the fate of
Western Europe hung in the balance before the gates of Tours in 732. This
time the barbaric horde that laid waste a large part of Christendom were a
people that became deeply appreciative of all that was best in
Graeco-Roman civilization and of nothing more than of its sciences. The
cultivation of medicine was encouraged by the Arabs in a very special way.
Anyone wishing to follow the history of the medical profession among this
remarkable people will find it admirably presented in Lucien Leclerc's
"Histoire de la medecine arabe" (Paris, 1876). An excellent account is
also given in Freind's well-known "History of Medicine" (London,
1725-1726). Here I can only indicate very briefly the course of the stream
and its freightage.</p>
<p>With the rise of Christianity, Alexandria became a centre of bitter
theological and political factions, the story of which haunts the memory
of anyone who was so fortunate as to read in his youth Kingsley's
"Hypatia." These centuries, with their potent influence of neoplatonism on
Christianity, appear to have been sterile enough in medicine. I have
already referred to the late Greeks, Aetius and Alexander of Tralles. The
last of the Alexandrians was a remarkable man, Paul of AEgina, a great
name in medicine and in surgery, who lived in the early part of the
seventh century. He also, like Oribasius, was a great compiler. In the
year 640, the Arabs took Alexandria, and for the third time a great
library was destroyed in the "first city of the West." Shortly after the
conquest of Egypt, Greek works were translated into Arabic, often through
the medium of Syriac, particularly certain of Galen's books on medicine,
and chemical writings, which appear to have laid the foundation of Arabian
knowledge on this subject.</p>
<p>Through Alexandria then was one source: but the special development of the
Greek science and of medicine took place in the ninth century under the
Eastern Caliphates. Let me quote here a couple of sentences from Leclerc
(Tome I, pp. 91-92):</p>
<p>"The world has but once witnessed so marvellous a spectacle as that
presented by the Arabs in the ninth century. This pastoral people, whose
fanaticism had suddenly made them masters of half of the world, having
once founded their empire, immediately set themselves to acquire that
knowledge of the sciences which alone was lacking to their greatness. Of
all the invaders who competed for the last remains of the Roman Empire
they alone pursued such studies; while the Germanic hordes, glorying in
their brutality and ignorance, took a thousand years to re-unite the
broken chain of tradition, the Arabs accomplished this in less than a
century. They provoked the competition of the conquered Christians—a
healthy competition which secured the harmony of the races.</p>
<p>"At the end of the eighth century, their whole scientific possessions
consisted of a translation of one medical treatise and some books on
alchemy. Before the ninth century had run to its close, the Arabs were in
possession of all the science of the Greeks; they had produced from their
own ranks students of the first order, and had raised among their
initiators men who, without them, would have been groping in the dark; and
they showed from this time an aptitude for the exact sciences, which was
lacking in their instructors, whom they henceforward surpassed."</p>
<p>It was chiefly through the Nestorians that the Arabs became acquainted
with Greek medicine, and there were two famous families of translators,
the Bakhtishuas and the Mesues, both Syrians, and probably not very
thoroughly versed in either Greek or Arabic. But the prince of
translators, one of the finest figures of the century, was Honein, a
Christian Arab, born in 809, whose name was Latinized as Joannitius. "The
marvellous extent of his works, their excellence, their importance, the
trials he bore nobly at the beginning of his career, everything about him
arouses our interest and sympathy. If he did not actually create the
Oriental renaissance movement, certainly no one played in it a more
active, decided and fruitful part."(10) His industry was colossal. He
translated most of the works of Hippocrates and Galen, Aristotle and many
others. His famous "Introduction" or "Isagoge," a very popular book in the
Middle Ages, is a translation of the "Microtegni" of Galen, a small
hand-book, of which a translation is appended to Cholmeley's "John of
Gaddesden."(11) The first printed edition of it appeared in 1475 (see
Chapter IV) at Padua.</p>
<p>(10) Leclerc: Histoire de la medecine arabe, Tome I, p. 139.<br/>
<br/>
(11) Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1912, pp. 136-166. The Mesues also<br/>
did great work, and translations of their compilations,<br/>
particularly those of the younger Mesue, were widely distributed<br/>
in manuscript and were early printed (Venice, 1471) and<br/>
frequently reprinted, even as late as the seventeenth century.<br/></p>
<p>Leclerc gives the names of more than one hundred known translators who not
only dealt with the physicians but with the Greek philosophers,
mathematicians and astronomers. The writings of the physicians of India
and of Persia were also translated into Arabic.</p>
<p>But close upon the crowd of translators who introduced the learning of
Greece to the Arabians came original observers of the first rank, to a few
only of whom time will allow me to refer. Rhazes, so called from the name
of the town (Rai) in which he was born, was educated at the great hospital
at Bagdad in the second half of the ninth century. With a true Hippocratic
spirit he made many careful observations on disease, and to him we owe the
first accurate account of smallpox, which he differentiated from measles.
This work was translated for the old Sydenham Society by W.A. Greenhill
(1848), and the description given of the disease is well worth reading. He
was a man of strong powers of observation, good sense and excellent
judgment. His works were very popular, particularly the gigantic
"Continens," one of the bulkiest of incunabula. The Brescia edition, 1486,
a magnificent volume, extends over 588 pages and it must weigh more than
seventeen pounds. It is an encyclopaedia filled with extracts from the
Greek and other writers, interspersed with memoranda of his own
experiences. His "Almansor" was a very popular text-book, and one of the
first to be printed. Book IX of "Almansor" (the name of the prince to whom
it was addressed) with the title "De aegritudinibus a capite usque ad
pedes," was a very favorite mediaeval text-book. On account of his zeal
for study Rhazes was known as the "Experimentator."</p>
<p>The first of the Arabians, known throughout the Middle Ages as the Prince,
the rival, indeed, of Galen, was the Persian Ibn Sina, better known as
Avicenna, one of the greatest names in the history of medicine. Born about
980 A. D. in the province of Khorasan, near Bokhara, he has left a brief
autobiography from which we learn something of his early years. He could
repeat the Koran by heart when ten years old, and at twelve he had
disputed in law and in logic. So that he found medicine was an easy
subject, not hard and thorny like mathematics and metaphysics! He worked
night and day, and could solve problems in his dreams. "When I found a
difficulty," he says, "I referred to my notes and prayed to the Creator.
At night, when weak or sleepy, I strengthened myself with a glass of
wine."(12) He was a voluminous writer to whom scores of books are
attributed, and he is the author of the most famous medical text-book ever
written. It is safe to say that the "Canon" was a medical bible for a
longer period than any other work. It "stands for the epitome of all
precedent development, the final codification of all Graeco-Arabic
medicine. It is a hierarchy of laws liberally illustrated by facts which
so ingeniously rule and are subject to one another, stay and uphold one
another, that admiration is compelled for the sagacity of the great
organiser who, with unparalleled power of systematisation, collecting his
material from all sources, constructed so imposing an edifice of fallacy.
Avicenna, according to his lights, imparted to contemporary medical
science the appearance of almost mathematical accuracy, whilst the art of
therapeutics, although empiricism did not wholly lack recognition, was
deduced as a logical sequence from theoretical (Galenic and Aristotelian)
premises. Is it, therefore, matter for surprise that the majority of
investigators and practitioners should have fallen under the spell of this
consummation of formalism and should have regarded the 'Canon' as an
infallible oracle, the more so in that the logical construction was
impeccable and the premises, in the light of contemporary conceptions,
passed for incontrovertible axioms?"(13)</p>
<p>(12) Withington: Medical History, London, 1894, pp. 151-152.<br/>
<br/>
(13) Neuburger: History of Medicine, Vol. I, pp. 368-369.<br/></p>
<p>Innumerable manuscripts of it exist: of one of the most beautiful, a
Hebrew version (Bologna Library), I give an illustration. A Latin version
was printed in 1472 and there are many later editions, the last in 1663.
Avicenna was not only a successful writer, but the prototype of the
successful physician who was at the same time statesman, teacher,
philosopher and literary man. Rumor has it that he became dissipated, and
a contemporary saying was that all his philosophy could not make him
moral, nor all his physic teach him to preserve his health. He enjoyed a
great reputation as a poet. I reproduce a page of a manuscript of one of
his poems, which we have in the Bodleian Library. Prof. A.V.W. Jackson
says that some of his verse is peculiarly Khayyamesque, though he
antedated Omar by a century. That "large Infidel" might well have written
such a stanza as</p>
<p>From Earth's dark centre unto Saturn's Gate<br/>
I've solved all problems of this world's Estate,<br/>
From every snare of Plot and Guile set free,<br/>
Each bond resolved, saving alone Death's Fate.<br/></p>
<p>His hymn to the Deity might have been written by Plato and rivals the
famous one of Cleanthes.(14) A casual reader gets a very favorable
impression of Avicenna. The story of his dominion over the schools in the
Middle Ages is one of the most striking in our history. Perhaps we feel
that Leclerc exaggerates when he says: "Avicenna is an intellectual
phenomenon. Never perhaps has an example been seen of so precocious, quick
and wide an intellect extending and asserting itself with so strange and
indefatigable an activity." The touch of the man never reached me until I
read some of his mystical and philosophical writings translated by
Mehren.(15) It is Plato over again. The beautiful allegory in which men
are likened to birds snared and caged until set free by the Angel of Death
might be met with anywhere in the immortal Dialogues. The tractate on Love
is a commentary on the Symposium; and the essay on Destiny is Greek in
spirit without a trace of Oriental fatalism, as you may judge from the
concluding sentence, which I leave you as his special message: "Take heed
to the limits of your capacity and you will arrive at a knowledge of the
truth! How true is the saying:—Work ever and to each will come that
measure of success for which Nature has designed him." Avicenna died in
his fifty-eighth year. When he saw that physic was of no avail, resigning
himself to the inevitable, he sold his goods, distributed the money to the
poor, read the Koran through once every three days, and died in the holy
month of Ramadan. His tomb at Hamadan, the ancient Ecbatana, still exists,
a simple brickwork building, rectangular in shape, and surrounded by an
unpretentious court. It was restored in 1877, but is again in need of
repair. The illustration here shown is from a photograph sent by Dr.
Neligan of Teheran. Though dead, the great Persian has still a large
practice, as his tomb is much visited by pilgrims, among whom cures are
said to be not uncommon.</p>
<p>(14) "L'hymne d'Avicenne" in: L'Elegie du Tograi, etc., par P.<br/>
Vattier, Paris, 1660.<br/>
<br/>
(15) Traites mystiques d'Abou Ali al-Hosain b. Abdallah b. Sina<br/>
ou d'Avicenne par M. A. F. Mehren, Leyden, E. J. Brill, Fasc.<br/>
I-IV, 1889-1899.<br/></p>
<p>The Western Caliphate produced physicians and philosophers almost as
brilliant as those of the East. Remarkable schools of medicine were
founded at Seville, Toledo and Cordova. The most famous of the professors
were Averroes, Albucasis and Avenzoar. Albucasis was "the Arabian restorer
of surgery." Averroes, called in the Middle Ages "the Soul of Aristotle"
or "the Commentator," is better known today among philosophers than
physicians. On the revival of Moslem orthodoxy he fell upon evil days, was
persecuted as a free-thinker, and the saying is attributed to him—"Sit
anima mea cum philosophic."</p>
<p>Arabian medicine had certain very definite characteristics: the basis was
Greek, derived from translations of the works of Hippocrates and Galen. No
contributions were made to anatomy, as dissections were prohibited, nor to
physiology, and the pathology was practically that of Galen. Certain new
and important diseases were described; a number of new and active remedies
were introduced, chiefly from the vegetable kingdom. The Arabian hospitals
were well organized and were deservedly famous. No such hospital exists
today in Cairo as that which was built by al-Mansur Gilafun in 1283. The
description of it by Makrizi, quoted by Neuburger,(16) reads like that of
a twentieth century institution with hospital units.</p>
<p>(16) "I have founded this institution for my equals and for those beneath
me, it is intended for rulers and subjects, for soldiers and for the emir,
for great and small, freemen and slaves, men and women." "He ordered
medicaments, physicians and everything else that could be required by
anyone in any form of sickness; placed male and female attendants at the
disposal of the patients, determined their pay, provided beds for patients
and supplied them with every kind of covering that could be required in
any complaint. Every class of patient was accorded separate accommodation:
the four halls of the hospital were set apart for those with fever and
similar complaints; one part of the building was reserved for
eye-patients, one for the wounded, one for those suffering from diarrhoea,
one for women; a room for convalescents was divided into two parts, one
for men and one for women. Water was laid on to all these departments. One
room was set apart for cooking food, preparing medicine and cooking
syrups, another for the compounding of confections, balsams, eye-salves,
etc. The head-physician had an apartment to himself wherein he delivered
medical lectures. The number of patients was unlimited, every sick or poor
person who came found admittance, nor was the duration of his stay
restricted, and even those who were sick at home were supplied with every
necessity."—Makrizi.</p>
<p>"In later times this hospital was much extended and improved. The nursing
was admirable and no stint was made of drugs and appliances; each patient
was provided with means upon leaving so that he should not require
immediately to undertake heavy work." Neuburger: History of Medicine, Vol.
1, p. 378.</p>
<p>It was in the domain of chemistry that the Arabs made the greatest
advances. You may remember that, in Egypt, chemistry had already made
considerable strides, and I alluded to Prof. Elliot Smith's view that one
of the great leaps in civilization was the discovery in the Nile Valley of
the metallurgy of copper. In the brilliant period of the Ptolemies, both
chemistry and pharmacology were studied, and it seems not improbable that,
when the Arabs took Alexandria in the year 640, there were still many
workers in these subjects.</p>
<p>The most famous of those early Arabic writers is the somewhat mythical
Geber, who lived in the first half of the eighth century, and whose
writings had an extraordinary influence throughout the Middle Ages. The
whole story of Geber is discussed by Berthelot in his "La chimie au moyen
age" (Paris, 1896). The transmission of Arabian science to the Occident
began with the Crusades, though earlier a filtering of important knowledge
in mathematics and astronomy had reached Southern and Middle Europe
through Spain. Among the translators several names stand out prominently.
Gerbert, who became later Pope Sylvester II, is said to have given us our
present Arabic figures. You may read the story of his remarkable life in
Taylor,(17) who says he was "the first mind of his time, its greatest
teacher, its most eager learner, and most universal scholar." But he does
not seem to have done much directly for medicine.</p>
<p>(17) The Mediaeval Mind, Vol. I, p. 280.<br/></p>
<p>The Graeco-Arabic learning passed into Europe through two sources. As I
have already mentioned, Constantinus Africanus, a North African Christian
monk, widely travelled and learned in languages, came to Salernum and
translated many works from Arabic into Latin, particularly those of
Hippocrates and Galen. The "Pantegni" of the latter became one of the most
popular text-books of the Middle Ages. A long list of other works which he
translated is given by Steinschneider.(17a) It is not unlikely that Arabic
medicine had already found its way to Salernum before the time of
Constantine, but the influence of his translations upon the later Middle
Ages was very great.</p>
<p>(17a) Steinschneider: Virchow's Arch., Berl., 1867, xxxvii, 351.<br/></p>
<p>The second was a more important source through the Latin translators in
Spain, particularly in Toledo, where, from the middle of the twelfth till
the middle of the thirteenth century, an extraordinary number of Arabic
works in philosophy, mathematics and astronomy were translated. Among the
translators, Gerard of Cremona is prominent, and has been called the
"Father of Translators." He was one of the brightest intelligences of the
Middle Ages, and did a work of the first importance to science, through
the extraordinary variety of material he put in circulation. Translations,
not only of the medical writers, but of an indiscriminate crowd of authors
in philosophy and general literature, came from his pen. He furnished one
of the first translations of the famous "Almagest" of Ptolemy, which
opened the eyes of his contemporaries to the value of the Alexandrian
astronomy.(18) Leclerc gives a list of seventy-one works from his hand.</p>
<p>(18) For an account of that remarkable work see German<br/>
translation by Manitius, Leipzig, 1912.<br/></p>
<p>Many of the translators of the period were Jews, and many of the works
were translated from Hebrew into Latin. For years Arabic had been the
learned language of the Jews, and in a large measure it was through them
that the Arabic knowledge and the translations passed into South and
Central Europe.</p>
<p>The Arab writer whose influence on mediaeval thought was the most profound
was Averroes, the great commentator on Aristotle.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0020" id="link2H_4_0020"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> THE RISE OF THE UNIVERSITIES </h2>
<p>THE most striking intellectual phenomenon of the thirteenth century is the
rise of the universities. The story of their foundation is fully stated in
Rashdall's great work (Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages, Oxford,
1895). Monastic and collegiate schools, seats of learning like Salernum,
student guilds as at Bologna, had tried to meet the educational needs of
the age. The word "university" literally means an association, and was not
at first restricted to learned bodies. The origin appears to have been in
certain guilds of students formed for mutual protection associated at some
place specially favorable for study—the attraction generally being a
famous teacher. The University of Bologna grew up about guilds formed by
students of law, and at Paris, early in the twelfth century, there were
communities of teachers, chiefly in philosophy and theology. In this way
arose two different types of mediaeval university. The universities of
Northern Italy were largely controlled by students, who were grouped in
different "nations." They arranged the lectures and had control of the
appointment of teachers. On the other hand, in the universities founded on
the Paris model the masters had control of the studies, though the
students, also in nations, managed their own affairs.</p>
<p>Two universities have a special interest at this period in connection with
the development of medical studies, Bologna and Montpellier. At the former
the study of anatomy was revived. In the knowledge of the structure of the
human body no advance had been made for more than a thousand years—since
Galen's day. In the process of translation from Greek to Syriac, from
Syriac to Arabic, from Arabic to Hebrew, and from Hebrew or Arabic to
Latin, both the form and thought of the old Greek writers were not
infrequently confused and often even perverted, and Galen's anatomy had
suffered severely in the transmission. Our earliest knowledge of the
teaching of medicine at Bologna is connected with a contemporary of Dante,
Taddeo Alderotti, who combined Arabian erudition with the Greek spirit. He
occupied a position of extraordinary prominence, was regarded as the first
citizen of Bologna and a public benefactor exempt from the payment of
taxes. That he should have acquired wealth is not surprising if his usual
fees were at the rate at which he charged Pope Honorius IV, i.e., two
hundred florins a day, besides a "gratification" of six thousand florins.</p>
<p>The man who most powerfully influenced the study of medicine in Bologna
was Mundinus, the first modern student of anatomy. We have seen that at
the school of Salernum it was decreed that the human body should be
dissected at least once every five years, but it was with the greatest
difficulty that permission was obtained for this purpose. It seems
probable that under the strong influence of Taddeo there was an occasional
dissection at Bologna, but it was not until Mundinus (professor from 1306
to 1326) took the chair that the study of anatomy became popular. The
bodies were usually those of condemned criminals, but in the year 1319
there is a record of a legal procedure against four medical students for
body-snatching—the first record, as far as I know, of this gruesome
practice. In 1316, Mundinus issued his work on anatomy, which served as a
text-book for more than two hundred years. He quotes from Galen the
amusing reasons why a man should write a book: "Firstly, to satisfy his
own friends; secondly, to exercise his best mental powers; and thirdly, to
be saved from the oblivion incident to old age." Scores of manuscripts of
his work must have existed, but they are now excessively rare in Italy.
The book was first printed at Pavia in 1478, in a small folio without
figures. It was very often reprinted in the fifteenth and sixteenth
centuries. The quaint illustration shows us the mediaeval method of
teaching anatomy: the lecturer sitting on a chair reading from Galen,
while a barber surgeon, or an "Ostensor," opens the cavities of the body.</p>
<p>I have already referred to the study of medicine by women at Salernum.
Their names are also early met with in the school of Bologna. Mundinus is
said to have had a valuable assistant, a young girl, Alessandra Giliani,
an enthusiastic dissector, who was the first to practice the injection of
the blood vessels with colored liquids. She died, consumed by her labors,
at the early age of nineteen, and her monument is still to be seen.</p>
<p>Bologna honored its distinguished professors with magnificent tombs,
sixteen or seventeen of which, in a wonderful state of preservation, may
still be seen in the Civic Museum. That of Mundinus also exists—a
sepulchral bas-relief on the wall of the Church of San Vitale at
Bologna.(19)</p>
<p>(19) For these figures and for points relating to the old school<br/>
at Bologna see F. G. Cavezza: Le Scuole dell' antico Studio<br/>
Bolognese, Milano, 1896.<br/></p>
<p>The other early mediaeval university of special interest in medicine is
that of Montpellier. With it are connected three teachers who have left
great names in our story—Arnold of Villanova, Henri de Mondeville
and Guy de Chauliac. The city was very favorably situated not far from the
Spanish border, and the receding tide of the Arab invasion in the eighth
century had left a strong Arabic influence in that province. The date of
the origin of the university is uncertain, but there were teachers of
medicine there in the twelfth century, though it was not until 1289 that
it was formally founded by a papal bull.</p>
<p>Arnold of Villanova was one of the most prolific writers of the Middle
Ages. He had travelled much, was deeply read in Arabic medicine and was
also a student of law and of philosophy. He was an early editor of the
Regimen Sanitatis, and a strong advocate of diet and hygiene. His views on
disease were largely those of the Arabian physicians, and we cannot see
that he himself made any very important contribution to our knowledge; but
he was a man of strong individuality and left an enduring mark on
mediaeval medicine, as one may judge from the fact that among the first
hundred medical books printed there were many associated with his name. He
was constantly in trouble with the Church, though befriended by the Popes
on account of his medical knowledge. There is a Bull of Clement V asking
the bishops to search for a medical book by Arnold dedicated to himself,
but not many years later his writings were condemned as heretical.</p>
<p>In Henri de Mondeville we have the typical mediaeval surgeon, and we know
his work now very thoroughly from the editions of his "Anatomy" and
"Surgery" edited by Pagel (Berlin, 1889-1892), and the fine French edition
by Nicaise (Paris, 1893). The dominant Arabic influence is seen in that he
quotes so large a proportion of these authors, but he was an independent
observer and a practical surgeon of the first rank. He had a sharp wit and
employed a bitter tongue against the medical abuses of his day. How the
Hippocratic humors dominated practice at this time you may see at a glance
from the table prepared by Nicaise from the works of de Mondeville. We
have here the whole pathology of the period.</p>
<p>===============================================================<br/>
<br/>
TABLEAU DES HUMEURS<br/>
D'APRES H. DE MONDEVILLE<br/>
Flegme naturel.<br/>
F. aqueux.<br/>
Flegme F. mucilagineux.<br/>
F. vitreux.<br/>
Flegme non naturel F sale.<br/>
F. doux.<br/>
F. pontique, 2 especes.<br/>
F. acide, 2 especes.<br/>
Bile naturelle.<br/>
Bile B. citrine.<br/>
B. vitelline<br/>
Bile non naturelle B. praline.<br/>
B. aerugineuse.<br/>
B. brulee, 3 especes.<br/>
Sang naturel.<br/>
non naturel, 5 especes.<br/>
Melancolie naturelle.<br/>
non naturelle, 5 especes.<br/>
===============================================================<br/></p>
<p>A still greater name in the history of this school is Guy de Chauliac,
whose works have also been edited by Nicaise (Paris, 1890). His "Surgery"
was one of the most important text-books of the late Middle Ages. There
are many manuscripts of it, some fourteen editions in the fifteenth
century and thirty-eight in the sixteenth, and it continued to be
reprinted far into the seventeenth century. He too was dominated by the
surgery of the Arabs, and on nearly every page one reads of the sages
Avicenna, Albucasis or Rhazes. He lays down four conditions necessary for
the making of a surgeon—the first is that he must be learned, the
second, expert, the third that he should be clever, and the fourth that he
should be well disciplined.</p>
<p>You will find a very discerning sketch of the relation of these two men to
the history of surgery in the address given at the St. Louis Congress in
1904 by Sir Clifford Allbutt.(20) They were strong men with practical
minds and good hands, whose experience taught them wisdom. In both there
was the blunt honesty that so often characterizes a good surgeon, and I
commend to modern surgeons de Mondeville's saying: "If you have operated
conscientiously on the rich for a proper fee, and on the poor for charity,
you need not play the monk, nor make pilgrimages for your soul."</p>
<p>(20) Allbutt: Historical Relations of Medicine and Surgery,<br/>
London, Macmillan Co., 1905.<br/></p>
<p>One other great mediaeval physician may be mentioned, Peter of Abano (a
small town near Padua, famous for its baths). He is the first in a long
line of distinguished physicians connected with the great school of Padua.
Known as "the Conciliator," from his attempt to reconcile the diverse
views on philosophy and medicine, he had an extraordinary reputation as a
practitioner and author, the persistence of which is well illustrated by
the fact that eight of the one hundred and eighty-two medical books
printed before 1481 were from his pen. He seems to have taught medicine in
Paris, Bologna and Padua. He was a devoted astrologer, had a reputation
among the people as a magician and, like his contemporary, Arnold of
Villanova, came into conflict with the Church and appears to have been
several times before the Inquisition; indeed it is said that he escaped
the stake only by a timely death. He was a prolific commentator on
Aristotle, and his exposition of the "problems" had a great vogue. The
early editions of his texts are among the most superb works ever printed.
He outlived his reputation as a magician, and more than a century after
his death Frederick, Duke of Urbino, caused his effigies to be set up over
the gate of the palace at Padua with this inscription:</p>
<p>PETRUS APONUS PATAVINUS PHILOSOPHIAE MEDICINAEQUE<br/>
SCIENTISSIMUS, OB IDQUE, CONCILIATORIS NOMEN<br/>
ADEPTUS, ASTROLOGIAE VERO ADEO PERITUS,<br/>
UT IN MAGIAE SUSPICIONEM INCIDERIT,<br/>
FALSOQUE DE HAERESI POSTULATUS,<br/>
ABSOLUTUS FUERIT.(21)<br/>
<br/>
(21) Naude: History of Magick, London, 1657, p. 182, or the<br/>
original: Apologie pour les grands hommes soupconnez de magic,<br/>
e.g., ed. Amst., 1719, p. 275.<br/></p>
<p>It is said that Abano caused to be painted the astronomical figures in the
great hall of the palace at Padua.</p>
<p>One characteristic of mediaeval medicine is its union with theology, which
is not remarkable, as the learning of the time was chiefly in the hands of
the clergy. One of the most popular works, the "Thesaurus Pauperum," was
written by Petrus Hispanus, afterwards Pope John XXI. We may judge of the
pontifical practice from the page here reproduced, which probably
includes, under the term "iliac passion," all varieties of appendicitis.</p>
<p>For our purpose two beacons illuminate the spirit of the thirteenth
century in its outlook on man and nature. Better than Abelard or St.
Thomas Aquinas, and much better than any physicians, Albertus Magnus and
Roger Bacon represent the men who were awake to greet the rising of the
sun of science. What a contrast in their lives and in their works! The
great Dominican's long life was an uninterrupted triumph of fruitful
accomplishment—the titanic task he set himself was not only
completed but was appreciated to the full by his own generation—a
life not only of study and teaching, but of practical piety. As head of
the order in Germany and Bishop of Regensburg, he had wide ecclesiastical
influence; and in death he left a memory equalled only by one or two of
his century, and excelled only by his great pupil, Thomas Aquinas. There
are many Alberts in history—the Good, the Just, the Faithful—but
there is only one we call "Magnus" and he richly deserved the name. What
is his record? Why do we hold his name in reverence today?</p>
<p>Albertus Magnus was an encyclopaedic student and author, who took all
knowledge for his province. His great work and his great ambition was to
interpret Aristotle to his generation. Before his day, the Stagirite was
known only in part, but he put within the reach of his contemporaries the
whole science of Aristotle, and imbibed no small part of his spirit. He
recognized the importance of the study of nature, even of testing it by
way of experiment, and in the long years that had elapsed since
Theophrastus no one else, except Dioscorides, had made so thorough a study
of botany. His paraphrases of the natural history books of Aristotle were
immensely popular, and served as a basis for all subsequent studies. Some
of his medical works had an extraordinary vogue, particularly the "De
Secretis Mulierum" and the "De Virtutibus Herbarum," but there is some
doubt as to the authorship of the first named, although Jammy and Borgnet
include it in the collected editions of his works. So fabulous was his
learning that he was suspected of magic and comes in Naude's list of the
wise men who have unjustly been reputed magicians. Ferguson tells(22) that
"there is in actual circulation at the present time a chapbook . . .
containing charms, receipts, sympathetical and magicalcures for man and
animals, . . . which passes under the name of Albertus." But perhaps the
greatest claim of Albertus to immortality is that he was the teacher and
inspirer of Thomas Aquinas, the man who undertook the colossal task of
fusing Aristotelian philosophy with Christian theology, and with such
success that the "angelic doctor" remains today the supreme human
authority of the Roman Catholic Church.</p>
<p>(22) Bibliotheca Chemica, 1906, Vol. I, p. 15.<br/></p>
<p>A man of much greater interest to us from the medical point of view is
Roger Bacon and for two reasons. More than any other mediaeval mind he saw
the need of the study of nature by a new method. The man who could write
such a sentence as this: "Experimental science has three great
prerogatives over other sciences; it verifies conclusions by direct
experiment; it discovers truth which they never otherwise would reach; it
investigates the course of nature and opens to us a knowledge of the past
and of the future," is mentally of our day and generation. Bacon was born
out of due time, and his contemporaries had little sympathy with his
philosophy, and still less with his mechanical schemes and inventions.
From the days of the Greeks, no one had had so keen an appreciation of
what experiment meant in the development of human knowledge, and he was
obsessed with the idea, so commonplace to us, that knowledge should have
its utility and its practical bearing. "His chief merit is that he was one
of the first to point the way to original research—as opposed to the
acceptance of an authority—though he himself still lacked the means
of pursuing this path consistently. His inability to satisfy this impulse
led to a sort of longing, which is expressed in the numerous passages in
his works where he anticipates man's greater mastery over nature."(23)</p>
<p>(23) Dannemann: Die Naturwissenschaften in ihrer Entwicklung und<br/>
in ibrem Zusammenhange, Leipzig, 1910, Vol. I, pp. 278-279.<br/></p>
<p>Bacon wrote a number of medical treatises, most of which remain in
manuscript. His treatise on the "Cure of Old Age and the Preservation of
Youth" was printed in English in 1683.(24) His authorities were largely
Arabian. One of his manuscripts is "On the Bad Practices of Physicians."
On June 10, 1914, the eve of his birth, the septencentenary of Roger Bacon
will be celebrated by Oxford, the university of which he is the most
distinguished ornament. His unpublished MSS. in the Bodleian will be
issued by the Clarendon Press (1915-1920), and it is hoped that his
unpublished medical writings will be included.</p>
<p>(24) It may be interesting to note the three causes to which he<br/>
attributes old age: "As the World waxeth old, Men grow old with<br/>
it: not by reason of the Age of the World, but because of the<br/>
great Increase of living Creatures, which infect the very Air,<br/>
that every way encompasseth us, and Through our Negligence in<br/>
ordering our Lives, and That great Ignorance of the Properties<br/>
which are in things conducing to Health, which might help a<br/>
disordered way of Living, and might supply the defect of due<br/>
Government."<br/></p>
<p>What would have been its fate if the mind of Europe had been ready for
Roger Bacon's ferment, and if men had turned to the profitable studies of
physics, astronomy and chemistry instead of wasting centuries over the
scholastic philosophy and the subtleties of Duns Scotus, Abelard and
Thomas Aquinas? Who can say? Make no mistake about the quality of these
men—giants in intellect, who have had their place in the evolution
of the race; but from the standpoint of man struggling for the mastery of
this world they are like the members of Swift's famous college "busy
distilling sunshine from cucumbers." I speak, of course, from the position
of the natural man, who sees for his fellows more hope from the
experiments of Roger Bacon than from the disputations of philosophy on the
"Instants, Familiarities, Quiddities and Relations," which so roused the
scorn of Erasmus.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> MEDIAEVAL MEDICAL STUDIES </h2>
<p>IT will be of interest to know what studies were followed at a mediaeval
university. At Oxford, as at most of the continental universities, there
were three degrees, those of Bachelor, Licentiate and Doctor. The books
read were the "Tegni" of Galen, the "Aphorisms" of Hippocrates, the "De
Febribus" of Isaac and the "Antidotarium" of Nicolaus Salernitanus: if a
graduate in arts, six years' study in all was required, in other
faculties, eight. One gets very full information on such matters from a
most interesting book, "Une Chaire de Medecine au XVe Siecle," by Dr.
Ferrari (Paris, 1899). The University of Pavia was founded in 1361, and
like most of those in Italy was largely frequented by foreigners, who were
arranged, as usual, according to their nationalities; but the students do
not appear to have controlled the university quite so much as at Bologna.
The documents of the Ferrari family, on which the work is based, tell the
story of one of its members, who was professor at Pavia from 1432 to 1472.
One is surprised at the range of studies in certain directions, and still
more at the absence of other subjects. A list is given of the teachers in
medicine for the year 1433, twenty in all, and there were special lectures
for the morning, afternoon and evening. The subjects are medicine,
practical medicine, physics, metaphysics, logic, astrology, surgery and
rhetoric: very striking is the omission of anatomy, which does not appear
in the list even in 1467. The salaries paid were not large, so that most
of the teachers must have been in practice: four hundred and five hundred
florins was the maximum.</p>
<p>The dominance of the Arabians is striking. In 1467, special lectures were
given on the "Almansor" of Rhazes, and in the catalogue of the Ferrari's
library more than one half of the books are Arabian commentaries on Greek
medicine. Still more striking evidence of their influence is found in the
text-book of Ferrari, which was printed in 1471 and had been circulated
earlier in MS. In it Avicenna is quoted more than 3000 times, Rhazes and
Galen 1000, Hippocrates only 140 times. Professor Ferrari was a man who
played an important role in the university, and had a large consultation
practice. You will be interested to know what sort of advice he gave in
special cases. I have the record of an elaborate consultation written in
his own hand, from which one may gather what a formidable thing it was to
fall into the hands of a mediaeval physician. Signor John de Calabria had
a digestive weakness of the stomach, and rheumatic cerebral disease,
combined with superfluous heat and dryness of the liver and multiplication
of choler. There is first an elaborate discussion on diet and general mode
of life; then he proceeds to draw up certain light medicines as a
supplement, but it must have taken an extensive apothecary's shop to turn
out the twenty-two prescriptions designed to meet every possible
contingency.</p>
<p>One of the difficulties in the early days of the universities was to
procure good MSS. In the Paris Faculty, the records of which are the most
complete in Europe, there is an inventory for the year 1395 which gives a
list of twelve volumes, nearly all by Arabian authors.(25) Franklin gives
an interesting incident illustrating the rarity of medical MSS. at this
period. Louis XI, always worried about his health, was anxious to have in
his library the works of Rhazes. The only copy available was in the
library of the medical school. The manuscript was lent, but on excellent
security, and it is nice to know that it was returned.</p>
<p>(25) Franklin: Recherches sur la Bibliotheque de la Faculte de<br/>
Medecine de Paris, 1864.<br/></p>
<p>It is said that one of the special advantages that Montpellier had over
Paris was its possession of so many important MSS., particularly those of
the Arabian writers. Many "Compendia" were written containing extracts
from various writers, and no doubt these were extensively copied and lent
or sold to students. At Bologna and Padua, there were regulations as to
the price of these MSS. The university controlled the production of them,
and stationers were liable to fines for inaccurate copies. The trade must
have been extensive in those early days, as Rashdall mentions that in 1323
there were twenty-eight sworn booksellers in Paris, besides keepers of
bookstalls in the open air.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> MEDIAEVAL PRACTICE </h2>
<p>THE Greek doctrine of the four humors colored all the conceptions of
disease; upon their harmony alone it was thought that health depended. The
four temperaments, sanguine, phlegmatic, bilious and melancholic,
corresponded with the prevalence of these humors. The body was composed of
certain so-called "naturals," seven in number—the elements, the
temperaments, the humors, the members or parts, the virtues or faculties,
the operations or functions and the spirits. Certain "non-naturals," nine
in number, preserved the health of the body, viz. air, food and drink,
movement and repose, sleeping and waking, excretion and retention, and the
passions. Disease was due usually to alterations in the composition of the
humors, and the indications for treatment were in accordance with these
doctrines. They were to be evacuated, tenuated, cooled, heated, purged or
strengthened. This humoral doctrine prevailed throughout the Middle Ages,
and reached far into modern times—indeed, echoes of it are still to
be heard in popular conversations on the nature of disease.</p>
<p>The Arabians were famous for their vigor and resource in matters of
treatment. Bleeding was the first resort in a large majority of all
diseases. In the "Practice" of Ferrari there is scarcely a malady for
which it is not recommended. All remedies were directed to the regulation
of the six non-naturals, and they either preserved health, cured the
disease or did the opposite. The most popular medicines were derived from
the vegetable kingdom, and as they were chiefly those recommended by
Galen, they were, and still are, called by his name. Many important
mineral medicines were introduced by the Arabians, particularly mercury,
antimony, iron, etc. There were in addition scores of substances, the
parts or products of animals, some harmless, others salutary, others again
useless and disgusting. Minor surgery was in the hands of the barbers, who
performed all the minor operations, such as bleeding; the more important
operations, few in number, were performed by surgeons.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> ASTROLOGY AND DIVINATION </h2>
<p>AT this period astrology, which included astronomy, was everywhere taught.
In the "Gouernaunce of Prynces, or Pryvete of Pryveties," translated by
James Yonge, 1422,(26) there occurs the statement: "As Galian the lull
wies leche Saith and Isoder the Gode clerk, hit witnessith that a man may
not perfitely can the sciens and craft of Medissin but yef he be an
astronomoure."</p>
<p>(26) Early English Text Society, Extra Series, No. LXXIV, p. 195,<br/>
1898; Secreta Secretorum, Rawl. MS. B., 490.<br/></p>
<p>We have seen how the practice of astrology spread from Babylonia and
Greece throughout the Roman Empire. It was carried on into the Middle Ages
as an active and aggressive cult, looked upon askance at times by the
Church, but countenanced by the courts, encouraged at the universities,
and always by the public. In the curriculum of the mediaeval university,
astronomy made up with music, arithmetic and geometry the Quadrivium. In
the early faculties, astronomy and astrology were not separate, and at
Bologna, in the early fourteenth century, we meet with a professorship of
astrology.(27) One of the duties of this salaried professor, was to supply
"judgements" gratis for the benefit of enquiring students, a treacherous
and delicate assignment, as that most distinguished occupant of the chair
at Bologna, Cecco d'Ascoli, found when he was burned at the stake in 1357,
a victim of the Florentine Inquisition.(28)</p>
<p>(27) Rashdall: Universities of Europe in the Middle Ages, Vol.<br/>
I, p. 240.<br/>
<br/>
(28) Rashdall, l.c., Vol. I, p. 244.—Rashdall also mentions that<br/>
in the sixteenth century at Oxford there is an instance of a<br/>
scholar admitted to practice astrology. l.c., Vol. II, p. 458.<br/></p>
<p>Roger Bacon himself was a warm believer in judicial astrology and in the
influence of the planets, stars and comets on generation, disease and
death.</p>
<p>Many of the stronger minds of the Renaissance broke away from the follies
of the subject. Thus Cornelius Agrippa in reply to the request of a friar
to consult the stars on his behalf says:(29) "Judicial astrology is
nothing more than the fallacious guess of superstitious men, who have
founded a science on uncertain things and are deceived by it: so think
nearly all the wise; as such it is ridiculed by some most noble
philosophers; Christian theologians reject it, and it is condemned by
sacred councils of the Church. Yet you, whose office it is to dissuade
others from these vanities, oppressed, or rather blinded by I know not
what distress of mind, flee to this as to a sacred augur, and as if there
were no God in Israel, that you send to inquire of the god of Ekron."</p>
<p>(29) H. Morley: The Life of Henry Cornelius Agrippa, London,<br/>
1856, Vol. II, p. 138.<br/></p>
<p>In spite of the opposition of the Church astrology held its own; many of
the universities at the end of the fifteenth century published almanacs,
usually known as "Prognosticons," and the practice was continued far into
the sixteenth century. I show you here an illustration. Rabelais, you may
remember, when physician to the Hotel Dieu in Lyons, published almanacs
for the years 1533, 1535, 1541, 1546. In the title-page he called himself
"Doctor of Medicine and Professor of Astrology," and they continued to be
printed under his name until 1556. In the preparation of these he must
have had his tongue in his cheek, as in his famous "Pantagrueline
Prognostication," in which, to satisfy the curiosity of all good
companions, he had turned over all the archives of the heavens, calculated
the quadratures of the moon, hooked out all that has ever been thought by
all the Astrophils, Hypernephilists, Anemophylakes, Uranopets and
Ombrophori, and felt on every point with Empedocles.(30)</p>
<p>(30) Pantagrueline Prognostication, Rabelais, W. F. Smith's<br/>
translation, 1893, Vol. II, p. 460.<br/></p>
<p>Even physicians of the most distinguished reputation practised judicial
astrology. Jerome Cardan was not above earning money by casting
horoscopes, and on this subject he wrote one of his most popular books (De
Supplemento Almanach, etc., 1543), in which astronomy and astrology are
mixed in the truly mediaeval fashion. He gives in it some sixty-seven
nativities, remarkable for the events they foretell, with an exposition.
One of the accusations brought against him was that he had "attempted to
subject to the stars the Lord of the stars and cast our Saviour's
horoscope."(31) Cardan professed to have abandoned a practice looked upon
with disfavor both by the Church and by the universities, but he returned
to it again and again. I show here his own horoscope. That remarkable
character, Michael Servetus, the discoverer of the lesser circulation,
when a fellow student with Vesalius at Paris, gave lectures upon judicial
astrology, which brought him into conflict with the faculty; and the
rarest of the Servetus works, rarer even than the "Christianismi
Restitutio," is the "Apologetica disceptatio pro astrologia," one copy of
which is in the Bibliotheque Nationale. Nor could the new astronomy and
the acceptance of the heliocentric views dislocate the popular belief. The
literature of the seventeenth century is rich in astrological treatises
dealing with medicine.</p>
<p>(31) De Thou, Lib. LXII, quoted by Morley in Life of Jerome<br/>
Cardan, Vol. II, p. 294.<br/></p>
<p>No one has ever poured such satire upon the mantic arts as did Rabelais in
chapter twenty-five of the third book of "Pantagruel." Panurge goes to
consult Her Trippa—the famous Cornelius Agrippa, whose opinion of
astrology has already been quoted, but who nevertheless, as court
astrologer to Louise of Savoy, had a great contemporary reputation. After
looking Panurge in the face and making conclusions by metoposcopy and
physiognomy, he casts his horoscope secundum artem, then, taking a branch
of tamarisk, a favorite tree from which to get the divining rod, he names
some twenty-nine or thirty mantic arts, from pyromancy to necromancy, by
which he offers to predict his future. While full of rare humor, this
chapter throws an interesting light on the extraordinary number of modes
of divination that have been employed. Small wonder that Panurge repented
of his visit! I show here the title-page of a popular book by one of the
most famous of the English astrological physicians, Nicholas Culpeper.</p>
<p>Never was the opinion of sensible men on this subject better expressed
than by Sir Thomas Browne:(32) "Nor do we hereby reject or condemn a sober
and regulated Astrology; we hold there is more truth therein than in
ASTROLOGERS; in some more than many allow, yet in none so much as some
pretend. We deny not the influence of the Starres, but often suspect the
due application thereof; for though we should affirm that all things were
in all things; that Heaven were but Earth Celestified, and earth but
Heaven terrestrified, or that each part above had an influence upon its
divided affinity below; yet how to single out these relations, and duly to
apply their actions, is a work ofttimes to be effected by some revelation,
and Cabala from above, rather than any Philosophy, or speculation here
below."</p>
<p>(32) Sir Thomas Browne: Pseudodoxia Epidemica, Bk. IV, Chap.<br/>
XIII. (Wilkin's ed., Vol. III, p. 84.)<br/></p>
<p>As late as 1699, a thesis was discussed at the Paris Faculty, "Whether
comets were harbingers of disease," and in 1707 the Faculty negatived the
question propounded in a thesis, "Whether the moon had any sway on the
human body."</p>
<p>The eighteenth and nineteenth centuries saw, among intelligent men, a
progressive weakening of the belief in the subject; but not even the
satire of Swift, with his practical joke in predicting and announcing the
death of the famous almanac maker, nor contemptuous neglect of the subject
of late years sufficed to dispel the belief from the minds of the public.
Garth in the Dispensary (1699) satirizes the astrological practitioners of
his day:</p>
<p>The Sage in Velvet Chair, here lolls at Ease<br/>
To promise future Health for present Fees<br/>
Then as from Tripod solemn Sham reveals<br/>
And what the Stars know nothing of foretell. (Canto ii.)<br/></p>
<p>The almanacs of Moore and Zadkiel continue to be published, and remain
popular. In London, sandwich men are to be met with carrying
advertisements of Chaldeans and Egyptians who offer to tell your fortune
by the stars. Even in this country, astrology is still practiced to a
surprising extent if one may judge from advertisements in certain papers,
and from publications which must have a considerable sale. Many years ago,
I had as a patient an estimable astrologer, whose lucrative income was
derived from giving people astral information as to the rise and fall of
stocks. It is a chapter in the vagaries of the human mind that is worth
careful study.(33) Let me commend to your reading the sympathetic story
called "A Doctor of Medicine" in the "Rewards and Fairies" of Kipling. The
hero is Nicholas Culpeper, Gent., whose picture is here given. One stanza
of the poem at the end of the story, "Our Fathers of Old," may be quoted:</p>
<p>Wonderful tales had our fathers of old—<br/>
Wonderful tales of the herbs and the stars—<br/>
The Sun was Lord of the Marigold,<br/>
Basil and Rocket belonged to Mars.<br/>
Pat as a sum in division it goes—<br/>
(Every plant had a star bespoke)—<br/>
Who but Venus should govern the Rose?<br/>
Who but Jupiter own the Oak?<br/>
Simply and gravely the facts are told<br/>
In the wonderful books of our fathers of old.<br/>
<br/>
(33) It is not generally known that Stonewall Jackson practiced<br/>
astrology. Col. J. W. Revere in "Keel and Saddle" (Boston, 1872)<br/>
tells of meeting Jackson in 1852 on a Mississippi steamer and<br/>
talking with him on the subject. Some months later, Revere<br/>
received a letter from Jackson enclosing his (Revere's)<br/>
horoscope. There was a "culmination of the malign aspect during<br/>
the first days of May, 1863—both will be exposed to a common<br/>
danger at the time indicated." At the battle of<br/>
Chancellorsville, May 9, 1863, Revere saw Jackson mortally<br/>
wounded!<br/></p>
<p>James J. Walsh of New York has written a book of extraordinary interest
called "The Thirteenth, Greatest of Centuries." I have not the necessary
knowledge to say whether he has made out his case or not for art and for
literature. There was certainly a great awakening and, inspired by high
ideals, men turned with a true instinct to the belief that there was more
in life than could be got out of barren scholastic studies. With many of
the strong men of the period one feels the keenest mental sympathy.
Grosseteste, the great Clerk of Lincoln, as a scholar, a teacher and a
reformer, represents a type of mind that could grow only in fruitful soil.
Roger Bacon may be called the first of the moderns—certainly the
first to appreciate the extraordinary possibilities which lay in a free
and untrammelled study of nature. A century which could produce men
capable of building the Gothic cathedrals may well be called one of the
great epochs in history, and the age that produced Dante is a golden one
in literature. Humanity has been the richer for St. Francis; and Abelard,
Albertus and Aquinas form a trio not easy to match, in their special
departments, either before or after. But in science, and particularly in
medicine, and in the advance of an outlook upon nature, the thirteenth
century did not help man very much. Roger Bacon was "a voice crying in the
wilderness," and not one of the men I have picked out as specially typical
of the period instituted any new departure either in practice or in
science. They were servile followers, when not of the Greeks, of the
Arabians. This is attested by the barrenness of the century and a half
that followed. One would have thought that the stimulus given by Mundinus
to the study of anatomy would have borne fruit, but little was done in
science during the two and a half centuries that followed the delivery of
his lectures and still less in the art. While William of Wykeham was
building Winchester Cathedral and Chaucer was writing the Canterbury
Tales, John of Gaddesden in practice was blindly following blind leaders
whose authority no one dared question.</p>
<p>The truth is, from the modern standpoint the thirteenth was not the true
dawn brightening more and more unto the perfect day, but a glorious aurora
which flickered down again into the arctic night of mediaevalism.</p>
<p>To sum up—in medicine the Middle Ages represent a restatement from
century to century of the facts and theories of the Greeks modified here
and there by Arabian practice. There was, in Francis Bacon's phrase, much
iteration, small addition. The schools bowed in humble, slavish submission
to Galen and Hippocrates, taking everything from them but their spirit and
there was no advance in our knowledge of the structure or function of the
body. The Arabians lit a brilliant torch from Grecian lamps and from the
eighth to the eleventh centuries the profession reached among them a
position of dignity and importance to which it is hard to find a parallel
in history.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER IV — THE RENAISSANCE AND THE RISE OF ANATOMY AND PHYSIOLOGY </h2>
<p>THE "reconquest of the classic world of thought was by far the most
important achievement of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. It
absorbed nearly the whole mental energy of the Italians.... The revelation
of what men were and what they wrought under the influence of other faiths
and other impulses, in distant ages with a different ideal for their aim,
not only widened the narrow horizon of the Middle Ages, but it also
restored self-confidence to the reason of humanity."(1)</p>
<p>(1) J. A. Symonds: The Renaissance in Italy; the Revival of<br/>
Learning, 1877, p. 52.<br/></p>
<p>Everywhere throughout the Middle Ages learning was the handmaid of
theology. Even Roger Bacon with his strong appeal for a new method
accepted the dominant mediaeval conviction—that all the sciences did
but minister to their queen, Theology. A new spirit entered man's heart as
he came to look upon learning as a guide to the conduct of life. A
revolution was slowly effected in the intellectual world. It is a mistake
to think of the Renaissance as a brief period of sudden fruitfulness in
the North Italian cities. So far as science is concerned, the thirteenth
century was an aurora followed by a long period of darkness, but the
fifteenth was a true dawn that brightened more and more unto the perfect
day. Always a reflex of its period, medicine joined heartily though slowly
in the revolt against mediaevalism. How slowly I did not appreciate until
recently. Studying the earliest printed medical works to catch the point
of view of the men who were in the thick of the movement up to 1480—which
may be taken to include the first quarter of a century of printing—one
gets a startling record. The mediaeval mind still dominates: of the
sixty-seven authors of one hundred and eighty-two editions of early
medical books, twenty-three were men of the thirteenth and fourteenth
centuries, thirty men of the fifteenth century, eight wrote in Arabic,
several were of the School of Salernum, and only six were of classical
antiquity, viz., Pliny (first 1469), Hippocrates (1473) (Hain (*)7247),
Galen (1475) (Hain 7237), Aristotle (1476), Celsus (1478), and Dioscorides
(1478).(**)</p>
<p>(*) This asterisk is used by Hain to indicate that he had seen a<br/>
copy.—Ed.<br/>
<br/>
(**) Data added to a manuscript taken from the author's summary<br/>
on "Printed Medical Books to 1480" in Transactions of the<br/>
Bibliographical Society, London, 1916, XIII, 5-8, revised from<br/>
its "News-Sheet" (February, 1914). "Of neither Hippocrates nor<br/>
Galen is there an early edition; but in 1473 at Pavia appeared an<br/>
exposition of the Aphorisms of Hippoerates, and in 1475 at Padua<br/>
an edition of the Tegni or Notes of Galen." Ibid., p. 6.<br/>
Osler's unfinished Illustrated Monograph on this subject is now<br/>
being printed for the Society of which he was President.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p>The medical profession gradually caught the new spirit. It has been well
said that Greece arose from the dead with the New Testament in the one
hand and Aristotle in the other. There was awakened a perfect passion for
the old Greek writers, and with it a study of the original sources, which
had now become available in many manuscripts. Gradually Hippocrates and
Galen came to their own again. Almost every professor of medicine became a
student of the MSS. of Aristotle and of the Greek physicians, and before
1530 the presses had poured out a stream of editions. A wave of enthusiasm
swept over the profession, and the best energies of its best minds were
devoted to a study of the Fathers. Galen became the idol of the schools. A
strong revulsion of feeling arose against the Arabians, and Avicenna, the
Prince, who had been clothed with an authority only a little less than
divine, became anathema. Under the leadership of the Montpellier School,
the Arabians made a strong fight, but it was a losing battle all along the
line. This group of medical humanists—men who were devoted to the
study of the old humanities, as Latin and Greek were called—has had
a great and beneficial influence upon the profession. They were for the
most part cultivated gentlemen with a triple interest—literature,
medicine and natural history. How important is the part they played may be
gathered from a glance at the "Lives" given by Bayle in his "Biographic
Medicale" (Paris, 1855) between the years 1500 and 1575. More than one
half of them had translated or edited works of Hippocrates or Galen; many
of them had made important contributions to general literature, and a
large proportion of them were naturalists: Leonicenus, Linacre, Champier,
Fernel, Fracastorius, Gonthier, Caius, J. Sylvius, Brasavola, Fuchsius,
Matthiolus, Conrad Gesner, to mention only those I know best, form a great
group. Linacre edited Greek works for Aldus, translated works of Galen,
taught Greek at Oxford, wrote Latin grammars and founded the Royal College
of Physicians.(*) Caius was a keen Greek scholar, an ardent student of
natural history, and his name is enshrined as co-founder of one of the
most important of the Cambridge colleges. Gonthier, Fernel, Fuchs and
Mattioli were great scholars and greater physicians. Champier, one of the
most remarkable of the group, was the founder of the Hotel Dieu at Lyons,
and author of books of a characteristic Renaissance type and of singular
bibliographical interest. In many ways greatest of all was Conrad Gesner,
whose mors inopinata at forty-nine, bravely fighting the plague, is so
touchingly and tenderly mourned by his friend Caius.(2) Physician,
botanist, mineralogist, geologist, chemist, the first great modern
bibliographer, he is the very embodiment of the spirit of the age.(2a) On
the flyleaf of my copy of the "Bibliotheca Universalis" (1545), is written
a fine tribute to his memory. I do not know by whom it is, but I do know
from my reading that it is true:</p>
<p>(*) Cf. Osler: Thomas Linacre, Cambridge University Press,<br/>
1908.—Ed.<br/>
<br/>
(2) Joannis Caii Britanni de libris suis, etc., 1570.<br/>
<br/>
(2a) See J. C. Bay: Papers Bibliog. Soc. of America, 1916, X,<br/>
No. 2, 53-86.<br/></p>
<p>"Conrad Gesner, who kept open house there for all learned men who came
into his neighborhood. Gesner was not only the best naturalist among the
scholars of his day, but of all men of that century he was the pattern man
of letters. He was faultless in private life, assiduous in study, diligent
in maintaining correspondence and good-will with learned men in all
countries, hospitable—though his means were small—to every
scholar that came into Zurich. Prompt to serve all, he was an editor of
other men's volumes, a writer of prefaces for friends, a suggestor to
young writers of books on which they might engage themselves, and a great
helper to them in the progress of their work. But still, while finding
time for services to other men, he could produce as much out of his own
study as though he had no part in the life beyond its walls."</p>
<p>A large majority of these early naturalists and botanists were
physicians.(3) The Greek art of observation was revived in a study of the
scientific writings of Aristotle, Theophrastus and Dioscorides and in
medicine, of Hippocrates and of Galen, all in the Greek originals. That
progress was at first slow was due in part to the fact that the leaders
were too busy scraping the Arabian tarnish from the pure gold of Greek
medicine and correcting the anatomical mistakes of Galen to bother much
about his physiology or pathology. Here and there among the great
anatomists of the period we read of an experiment, but it was the art of
observation, the art of Hippocrates, not the science of Galen, not the
carefully devised experiment to determine function, that characterized
their work. There was indeed every reason why men should have been content
with the physiology and pathology of that day, as, from a theoretical
standpoint, it was excellent. The doctrine of the four humors and of the
natural, animal and vital spirits afforded a ready explanation for the
symptoms of all diseases, and the practice of the day was admirably
adapted to the theories. There was no thought of, no desire for, change.
But the revival of learning awakened in men at first a suspicion and at
last a conviction that the ancients had left something which could be
reached by independent research, and gradually the paralytic-like torpor
passed away.</p>
<p>(3) Miall: The Early Naturalists, London, 1912.<br/></p>
<p>The sixteenth and seventeenth centuries did three things in medicine—shattered
authority, laid the foundation of an accurate knowledge of the structure
of the human body and demonstrated how its functions should be studied
intelligently—with which advances, as illustrating this period, may
be associated the names of Paracelsus, Vesalius and Harvey.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0025" id="link2H_4_0025"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> PARACELSUS </h2>
<p>PARACELSUS is "der Geist der stets verneint." He roused men against the
dogmatism of the schools, and he stimulated enormously the practical study
of chemistry. These are his great merits, against which must be placed a
flood of hermetical and transcendental medicine, some his own, some
foisted in his name, the influence of which is still with us.</p>
<p>"With what judgment ye judge it shall be judged to you again" is the
verdict of three centuries on Paracelsus. In return for unmeasured abuse
of his predecessors and contemporaries he has been held up to obloquy as
the arch-charlatan of history. We have taken a cheap estimate of him from
Fuller and Bacon, and from a host of scurrilous scribblers who debased or
perverted his writings. Fuller(4) picked him out as exemplifying the
drunken quack, whose body was a sea wherein the tide of drunkenness was
ever ebbing and flowing—"He boasted that shortly he would order
Luther and the Pope, as well as he had done Galen and Hippocrates. He was
never seen to pray, and seldome came to Church. He was not onely skilled
in naturall Magick (the utmost bounds whereof border on the suburbs of
hell) but is charged to converse constantly with familiars. Guilty he was
of all vices but wantonnesse: . . . "</p>
<p>(4) Fuller: The Holy and Profane State, Cambridge, 1642, p. 56.<br/></p>
<p>Francis Bacon, too, says many hard things of him.(5)</p>
<p>(5) Bacon: Of the Proficience and Advancement of Learning, Bk.<br/>
II, Pickering ed., London, 1840, p. 181. Works, Spedding ed.,<br/>
III, 381.<br/></p>
<p>To the mystics, on the other hand, he is Paracelsus the Great, the divine,
the most supreme of the Christian magi, whose writings are too precious
for science, the monarch of secrets, who has discovered the Universal
Medicine. This is illustrated in Browning's well-known poem "Paracelsus,"
published when he was only twenty-one; than which there is no more
pleasant picture in literature of the man and of his aspirations. His was
a "searching and impetuous soul" that sought to win from nature some
startling secret—". . . a tincture of force to flush old age with
youth, or breed gold, or imprison moonbeams till they change to opal
shafts!" At the same time with that capacity for self-deception which
characterizes the true mystic he sought to cast</p>
<p>Light on a darkling race; save for that doubt,<br/>
I stood at first where all aspire at last<br/>
To stand: the secret of the world was mine.<br/>
I knew, I felt (perception unexpressed,<br/>
Uncomprehended by our narrow thought,<br/>
But somehow felt and known in every shift<br/>
And change in the spirit,—nay, in every pore<br/>
Of the body, even)—what God is, what we are,<br/>
What life is—. . .(6)<br/>
<br/>
(6) Robert Browning: Paracelsus, closing speech.<br/></p>
<p>Much has been done of late to clear up his story and his character.
Professor Sudhoff, of Leipzig, has made an exhaustive bibliographical
study of his writings,(7) there have been recent monographs by Julius
Hartmann, and Professors Franz and Karl Strunz,(8) and a sympathetic
summary of his life and writings has been published by the late Miss
Stoddart.(9) Indeed there is at present a cult of Paracelsus. The hermetic
and alchemical writings are available in English in the edition of A. E.
Waite, London, 1894. The main facts of his life you can find in all the
biographies. Suffice it here to say that he was born at Einsiedeln, near
Zurich, in 1493, the son of a physician, from whom he appears to have had
his early training both in medicine and in chemistry. Under the famous
abbot and alchemist, Trithemiusof Wurzburg, he studied chemistry and
occultism. After working in the mines at Schwatz he began his wanderings,
during which he professes to have visited nearly all the countries in
Europe and to have reached India and China. Returning to Germany he began
a triumphal tour of practice through the German cities, always in
opposition to the medical faculty, and constantly in trouble. He
undoubtedly performed many important cures, and was thought to have found
the supreme secret of alchemistry. In the pommel of his sword he was
believed to carry a familiar spirit. So dominant was his reputation that
in 1527 he was called to the chair of physic in the University of Basel.
Embroiled in quarrels after his first year he was forced to leave
secretly, and again began his wanderings through German cities, working,
quarrelling, curing, and dying prematurely at Saltzburg in 1541—one
of the most tragic figures in the history of medicine.</p>
<p>(7) Professor Sudhoff: Bibliographia Paracelsica, Berlin, 1894,<br/>
1899.<br/>
<br/>
(8) R. Julius Hartmann: Theophrast von Hohenheim, Berlin, 1904;<br/>
ditto, Franz Strunz, Leipzig, 1903.<br/>
<br/>
(9) Anna M. Stoddart: The Life of Paracelsus, London, John<br/>
Murray, 1911.<br/></p>
<p>Paracelsus is the Luther of medicine, the very incarnation of the spirit
of revolt. At a period when authority was paramount, and men blindly
followed old leaders, when to stray from the beaten track in any field of
knowledge was a damnable heresy, he stood out boldly for independent study
and the right of private judgment. After election to the chair at Basel he
at once introduced a startling novelty by lecturing in German. He had
caught the new spirit and was ready to burst all bonds both in medicine
and in theology. He must have startled the old teachers and practitioners
by his novel methods. "On June 5, 1527, he attached a programme of his
lectures to the black-board of the University inviting all to come to
them. It began by greeting all students of the art of healing. He
proclaimed its lofty and serious nature, a gift of God to man, and the
need of developing it to new importance and to new renown. This he
undertook to do, not retrogressing to the teaching of the ancients, but
progressing whither nature pointed, through research into nature, where he
himself had discovered and had verified by prolonged experiment and
experience. He was ready to oppose obedience to old lights as if they were
oracles from which one did not dare to differ. Illustrious doctor smight
be graduated from books, but books made not a single physician.(10)
Neither graduation, nor fluency, nor the knowledge of old languages, nor
the reading of many books made a physician, but the knowledge of things
themselves and their properties. The business of a doctor was to know the
different kinds of sicknesses, their causes, their symptoms and their
right remedies. This he would teach, for he had won this knowledge through
experience, the greatest teacher, and with much toil. He would teach it as
he had learned it, and his lectures would be founded on works which he had
composed concerning inward and external treatment, physic and
surgery."(11) Shortly afterwards, at the Feast of St. John, the students
had a bonfire in front of the university. Paracelsus came out holding in
his hands the "Bible of medicine," Avicenna's "Canon," which he flung into
the flames saying: "Into St. John's fire so that all misfortune may go
into the air with the smoke." It was, as he explained afterwards, a
symbolic act: "What has perished must go to the fire; it is no longer fit
for use: what is true and living, that the fire cannot burn." With
abundant confidence in his own capacity he proclaimed himself the
legitimate monarch, the very Christ of medicine. "You shall follow me,"
cried he, "you, Avicenna, Galen, Rhasis, Montagnana, Mesues; you,
Gentlemen of Paris, Montpellier, Germany, Cologne, Vienna, and whomsoever
the Rhine and Danube nourish; you who inhabit the isles of the sea; you,
likewise, Dalmatians, Athenians; thou, Arab; thou, Greek; thou, Jew; all
shall follow me, and the monarchy shall be mine."(12)</p>
<p>(10) And men have oft grown old among their books<br/>
To die case hardened in their ignorance.<br/>
<br/>
—Paracelsus, Browning.<br/></p>
<p>(11) Anna M. Stoddart: Life of Paracelsus, London, 1911, pp.<br/>
95-96.<br/>
<br/>
(12) Browning's Paracelsus, London, 1835, p. 206 (note).<br/></p>
<p>This first great revolt against the slavish authority of the schools had
little immediate effect, largely on account of the personal vagaries of
the reformer—but it made men think. Paracelsus stirred the pool as
had not been done for fifteen centuries.</p>
<p>Much more important is the relation of Paracelsus to the new chemical
studies, and their relation to practical medicine. Alchemy, he held, "is
to make neither gold nor silver: its use is to make the supreme sciences
and to direct them against disease." He recognized three basic substances,
sulphur, mercury and salt, which were the necessary ingredients of all
bodies organic or inorganic. They were the basis of the three principles
out of which the Archaeus, the spirit of nature, formed all bodies. He
made important discoveries in chemistry; zinc, the various compounds of
mercury, calomel, flowers of sulphur, among others, and he was a strong
advocate of the use of preparations of iron and antimony. In practical
pharmacy he has perhaps had a greater reputation for the introduction of a
tincture of opium—labdanum or laudanum—with which he effected
miraculous cures, and the use of which he had probably learned in the
East.</p>
<p>Through Paracelsus a great stimulus was given to the study of chemistry
and pharmacy, and he is the first of the modern iatro-chemists. In
contradistinction to Galenic medicines, which were largely derived from
the vegetable kingdom, from this time on we find in the literature
references to spagyric medicines and a "spagyrist" was a Paracelsian who
regarded chemistry as the basis of all medical knowledge.</p>
<p>One cannot speak very warmly of the practical medical writings of
Paracelsus. Gout, which may be taken as the disease upon which he had the
greatest reputation, is very badly described, and yet he has one or two
fruitful ideas singularly mixed with mediaeval astrology; but he has here
and there very happy insights, as where he remarks "nec praeter synoviam
locqum alium ullum podagra occupat."(13) In the tract on phlebotomy I see
nothing modern, and here again he is everywhere dominated by astrological
ideas—"Sapiens dominatur astris."</p>
<p>(13) Geneva ed., 1658, Vol. I, p. 613.<br/></p>
<p>As a protagonist of occult philosophy, Paracelsus has had a more enduring
reputation than as a physician. In estimating his position there is the
great difficulty referred to by Sudhoff in determining which of the extant
treatises are genuine. In the two volumes issued in English by Waite in
1894, there is much that is difficult to read and to appreciate from our
modern standpoint. In the book "Concerning Long Life" he confesses that
his method and practice will not be intelligible to common persons and
that he writes only for those whose intelligence is above the average. To
those fond of transcendental studies they appeal and are perhaps
intelligible. Everywhere one comes across shrewd remarks which prove that
Paracelsus had a keen belief in the all-controlling powers of nature and
of man's capacity to make those powers operate for his own good: "the wise
man rules Nature, not Nature the wise man." "The difference between the
Saint and the Magus is that the one operates by means of God, and the
other by means of Nature." He had great faith in nature and the light of
nature, holding that man obtains from nature according as he believes. His
theory of the three principles appears to have controlled his conception
of everything relating to man, spiritually, mentally and bodily; and his
threefold genera of disease corresponded in some mysterious way with the
three primary substances, salt, sulphur and mercury.</p>
<p>How far he was a believer in astrology, charms and divination it is not
easy to say. From many of the writings in his collected works one would
gather, as I have already quoted, that he was a strong believer. On the
other hand, in the "Paramirum," he says: "Stars control nothing in us,
suggest nothing, incline to nothing, own nothing; they are free from us
and we are free from them" (Stoddart, p. 185). The Archaeus, not the
stars, controls man's destiny. "Good fortune comes from ability, and
ability comes from the spirit" (Archaeus).</p>
<p>No one has held more firmly the dualistic conception of the healing art.
There are two kinds of doctors; those who heal miraculously and those who
heal through medicine. Only he who believes can work miracles. The
physician has to accomplish that which God would have done miraculously,
had there been faith enough in the sick man (Stoddart, p. 194). He had the
Hippocratic conception of the "vis medicatrix naturae"—no one keener
since the days of the Greeks. Man is his own doctor and finds proper
healing herbs in his own garden: the physician is in ourselves, in our own
nature are all things that we need: and speaking of wounds, with singular
prescience he says that the treatment should be defensive so that no
contingency from without could hinder Nature in her work (Stoddart, p.
213).</p>
<p>Paracelsus expresses the healing powers of nature by the word "mumia,"
which he regarded as a sort of magnetic influence or force, and he
believed that anyone possessing this could arrest or heal disease in
others. As the lily breaks forth in invisible perfume, so healing
influences may pass from an invisible body. Upon these views of Paracelsus
was based the theory of the sympathetic cure of disease which had an
extraordinary vogue in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and
which is not without its modern counterpart.</p>
<p>In the next century, in Van Helmont we meet with the Archaeus everywhere
presiding, controlling and regulating the animate and inanimate bodies,
working this time through agents, local ferments. The Rosicrucians had
their direct inspiration from his writings, and such mystics as the
English Rosicrucian Fludd were strong Paracelsians.(14)</p>
<p>(14) Robert Fludd, the Mystical Physician, British Medical<br/>
Journal, London, 1897, ii, 408.<br/></p>
<p>The doctrine of contraries drawn from the old Greek philosophy, upon which
a good deal of the treatment of Hippocrates and Galen was based—dryness
expelled by moisture, cold by heat, etc.—was opposed by Paracelsus
in favor of a theory of similars, upon which the practice of homeopathy is
based. This really arose from the primitive beliefs, to which I have
already referred as leading to the use of eyebright in diseases of the
eye, and cyclamen in diseases of the ear because of its resemblance to
that part; and the Egyptian organotherapy had the same basis,—spleen
would cure spleen, heart, heart, etc. In the sixteenth and seventeenth
centuries these doctrines of sympathies and antipathies were much in
vogue. A Scotchman, Sylvester Rattray, edited in the "Theatrum
Sympatheticum"(15) all the writings upon the sympathies and antipathies of
man with animal, vegetable and mineral substances, and the whole art of
physics was based on this principle.</p>
<p>(15) Rattray: Theatrum Sympatheticum, Norimberge, MDCLXII.<br/></p>
<p>Upon this theory of "mumia," or magnetic force, the sympathetic cure of
disease was based. The weapon salve, the sympathetic ointment, and the
famous powder of sympathy were the instruments through which it acted. The
magnetic cure of wounds became the vogue. Van Helmont adopted these views
in his famous treatise "De Magnetica Vulnerum Curatione,"(16) in which he
asserted that cures were wrought through magnetic influence. How close
they came to modern views of wound infection may be judged from the
following: "Upon the solution of Unity in any part the ambient air . . .
repleted with various evaporations or aporrhoeas of mixt bodies,
especially such as are then suffering the act of putrefaction, violently
invadeth the part and thereupon impresseth an exotic miasm or noxious
diathesis, which disposeth the blood successively arriving at the wound,
to putrefaction, by the intervention of fermentation." With his magnetic
sympathy, Van Helmont expressed clearly the doctrine of immunity and the
cure of disease by immune sera: "For he who has once recovered from that
disease hath not only obtained a pure balsaamical blood, whereby for the
future he is rendered free from any recidivation of the same evil, but
also infallibly cures the same affection in his neighbour . . . and by the
mysterious power of Magnetism transplants that balsaam and conserving
quality into the blood of another." He was rash enough to go further and
say that the cures effected by the relics of the saints were also due to
the same cause—a statement which led to a great discussion with the
theologians and to Van Helmont's arrest for heresy, and small wonder, when
he makes such bold statements as "Let the Divine enquire only concerning
God, the Naturalist concerning Nature," and "God in the production of
miracles does for the most part walk hand in hand with Nature."</p>
<p>(16) An English translation by Walter Charleton appeared in 1650,<br/>
entitled "A Ternary of Paradoxes."<br/></p>
<p>That wandering genius, Sir Kenelm Digby, did much to popularize this
method of treatment by his lecture on the "Powder of Sympathy."(17) His
powder was composed of copperas alone or mixed with gum tragacanth. He
regarded the cure as effected through the subtle influence of the
sympathetic spirits or, as Highmore says, by "atomicall energy wrought at
a distance," and the remedy could be applied to the wound itself, or to a
cloth soaked in the blood or secretions, or to the weapon that caused the
wound. One factor leading to success may have been that in the directions
which Digby gave for treating the wound (in the celebrated case of James
Howell, for instance), it was to be let alone and kept clean. The practice
is alluded to very frequently by the poets. In the "Lay of the Last
Minstrel" we find the following:</p>
<p>(17) French edition, 1668, English translation, same year. For a<br/>
discussion on the author of the weapon salve see Van Helmont, who<br/>
gives the various formulas. Highmore (1651) says the "powder is<br/>
a Zaphyrian salt calcined by a celestial fire operating in Leo<br/>
and Cancer into a Lunar complexion."<br/>
<br/>
But she has ta'en the broken lance,<br/>
And wash'd it from the clotted gore,<br/>
And salved the splinter o'er and o'er.<br/>
William of Deloraine, in trance,<br/>
Whene'er she turn'd it round and round,<br/>
Twisted, as if she gall'd his wound,<br/>
Then to her maidens she did say,<br/>
That he should be whole man and sound,<br/>
<br/>
(Canto iii, xxiii.)<br/></p>
<p>and in Dryden's "Tempest" (V, 1) Ariel says:</p>
<p>Anoint the Sword which pierc'd him with the Weapon-Salve,<br/>
And wrap it close from Air till I have time<br/>
To visit him again.<br/></p>
<p>From Van Helmont comes the famous story of the new nose that dropped off
in sympathy with the dead arm from which it was taken, and the source of
the famous lines of Hudibras. As I have not seen the original story quoted
of late years it may be worth while to give it: "A certain inhabitant of
Bruxels, in a combat had his nose mowed off, addressed himself to
Tagliacozzus, a famous Chirurgein, living at Bononia, that he might
procure a new one; and when he feared the incision of his own arm, he
hired a Porter to admit it, out of whose arm, having first given the
reward agreed upon, at length he dig'd a new nose. About thirteen moneths
after his return to his own Countrey, on a sudden the ingrafted nose grew
cold, putrified, and within few days drops off. To those of his friends
that were curious in the exploration of the cause of this unexpected
misfortune, it was discovered, that the Porter expired, neer about the
same punctilio of time, wherein the nose grew frigid and cadaverous. There
are at Bruxels yet surviving, some of good repute, that were eye-witnesses
of these occurrences."(18)</p>
<p>(18) Charleton: Of the Magnetic Cure of Wounds, London, 1650, p.<br/>
13.<br/></p>
<p>Equally in the history of science and of medicine, 1542 is a starred year,
marked by a revolution in our knowledge alike of Macrocosm and Microcosm.
In Frauenburg, the town physician and a canon, now nearing the Psalmist
limit and his end, had sent to the press the studies of a lifetime—"De
revolutionibus orbium coelestium." It was no new thought, no new
demonstration that Copernicus thus gave to his generation. Centuries
before, men of the keenest scientific minds from Pythagoras on had worked
out a heliocentric theory, fully promulgated by Aristarchus, and very
generally accepted by the brilliant investigators of the Alexandrian
school; but in the long interval, lapped in Oriental lethargy, man had
been content to acknowledge that the heavens declare the glory of God and
that the firmament sheweth his handiwork. There had been great astronomers
before Copernicus. In the fifteenth century Nicholas of Cusa and
Regiomontanus had hinted at the heliocentric theory; but 1512 marks an
epoch in the history of science, since for all time Copernicus put the
problem in a way that compelled acquiescence.</p>
<p>Nor did Copernicus announce a truth perfect and complete, not to be
modified, but there were many contradictions and lacunae which the work of
subsequent observers had to reconcile and fill up. For long years
Copernicus had brooded over the great thoughts which his careful
observation had compelled. We can imagine the touching scene in the little
town when his friend Osiander brought the first copy of the precious
volume hot from the press, a well enough printed book. Already on his
deathbed, stricken with a long illness, the old man must have had doubts
how his work would be received, though years before Pope Clement VII had
sent him encouraging words. Fortunately death saved him from the "rending"
which is the portion of so many innovators and discoverers. His great
contemporary reformer, Luther, expressed the view of the day when he said
the fool will turn topsy-turvy the whole art of astronomy; but the Bible
says that Joshua commanded the Sun to stand still, not the Earth. The
scholarly Melanchthon, himself an astronomer, thought the book so godless
that he recommended its suppression (Dannemann, Grundriss). The church was
too much involved in the Ptolemaic system to accept any change and it was
not until 1822 that the works of Copernicus were removed from the Index.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0026" id="link2H_4_0026"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> VESALIUS </h2>
<p>THE same year, 1542, saw a very different picture in the far-famed city of
Padua, "nursery of the arts." The central figure was a man not yet in the
prime of life, and justly full of its pride, as you may see from his
portrait. Like Aristotle and Hippocrates cradled and nurtured in an
AEsculapian family, Vesalius was from his childhood a student of nature,
and was now a wandering scholar, far from his Belgian home. But in Italy
he had found what neither Louvain nor Paris could give, freedom in his
studies and golden opportunities for research in anatomy. What an
impression he must have made on the student body at Padua may be judged
from the fact that shortly after his graduation in December, 1537, at the
age of twenty-four, he was elected to the chair of anatomy and surgery.
Two things favored him—an insatiate desire to see and handle for
himself the parts of the human frame, and an opportunity, such as had
never before been offered to the teacher, to obtain material for the study
of human anatomy. Learned with all the learning of the Grecians and of the
Arabians, Vesalius grasped, as no modern before him had done, the cardinal
fact that to know the human machine and its working, it is necessary first
to know its parts—its fabric.</p>
<p>To appreciate the work of this great man we must go back in a brief review
of the growth of the study of anatomy.</p>
<p>Among the Greeks only the Alexandrians knew human anatomy. What their
knowledge was we know at second hand, but the evidence is plain that they
knew a great deal. Galen's anatomy was first-class and was based on the
Alexandrians and on his studies of the ape and the pig. We have already
noted how much superior was his osteology to that of Mundinus. Between the
Alexandrians and the early days of the School of Salernum we have no
record of systematic dissections of the human body. It is even doubtful if
these were permitted at Salernum. Neuburger states that the instructions
of Frederick II as to dissections were merely nominal.</p>
<p>How atrocious was the anatomy of the early Middle Ages may be gathered
from the cuts in the works of Henri de Mondeville. In the Bodleian Library
is a remarkable Latin anatomical treatise of the late thirteenth century,
of English provenance, one illustration from which will suffice to show
the ignorance of the author. Mundinus of Bologna, one of the first men in
the Middle Ages to study anatomy from the subject, was under the strong
domination of the Arabians, from whom he appears to have received a very
imperfect Galenic anatomy. From this date we meet with occasional
dissections at various schools, but we have seen that in the elaborate
curriculum of the University of Padua in the middle of the fifteenth
century there was no provision for the study of the subject. Even well
into the sixteenth century dissections were not common, and the old
practice was followed of holding a professorial discourse, while the
butcher, or barber surgeon, opened the cavities of the body. A member of a
famous Basel family of physicians, Felix Plater, has left us in his
autobiography(19) details of the dissections he witnessed at Montpellier
between November 14, 1552, and January 10, 1557, only eleven in number.
How difficult it was at that time to get subjects is shown by the risks
they ran in "body-snatching" expeditions, of which he records three.</p>
<p>(19) There is no work from which we can get a better idea of the<br/>
life of the sixteenth-century medical student and of the style of<br/>
education and of the degree ceremonies, etc. Cumston has given<br/>
an excellent summary of it (Johns Hopkins Hospital Bulletin,<br/>
1912, XXIII, 105-113).<br/></p>
<p>And now came the real maker of modern anatomy. Andreas Vesalius had a good
start in life. Of a family long associated with the profession, his father
occupied the position of apothecary to Charles V, whom he accompanied on
his journeys and campaigns. Trained at Louvain, he had, from his earliest
youth, an ardent desire to dissect, and cut up mice and rats, and even
cats and dogs. To Paris, the strong school of the period, he went in 1533,
and studied under two men of great renown, Jacob Sylvius and Guinterius.
Both were strong Galenists and regarded the Master as an infallible
authority. He had as a fellow prosector, under the latter, the unfortunate
Servetus. The story of his troubles and trials in getting bones and
subjects you may read in Roth's "Life."(20) Many interesting biographical
details are also to be found in his own writings. He returned for a time
to Louvain, and here he published his first book, a commentary on the
"Almansor" of Rhazes, in 1537.</p>
<p>(20) M. Roth: Andreas Vesalius Bruxellensis, Berlin, 1892. An<br/>
excellent account of Vesalius and his contemporaries is given by<br/>
James Moores Ball in his superbly printed Andreas Vesalius, the<br/>
Reformer of Anatomy, St. Louis, 1910.<br/></p>
<p>Finding it difficult, either in Paris or Louvain, to pursue his anatomical
studies, he decided to go to Italy where, at Venice and Padua, the
opportunities were greater. At Venice, he attended the practice of a
hospital (now a barracks) which was in charge of the Theatiner Order. I
show you a photograph of the building taken last year. And here a strange
destiny brought two men together. In 1537, another pilgrim was working in
Venice waiting to be joined by his six disciples. After long years of
probation, Ignatius Loyola was ready to start on the conquest of a very
different world. Devoted to the sick and to the poor, he attached himself
to the Theatiner Order, and in the wards of the hospital and the
quadrangle, the fiery, dark-eyed, little Basque must frequently have come
into contact with the sturdy young Belgian, busy with his clinical studies
and his anatomy. Both were to achieve phenomenal success—the one in
a few years to revolutionize anatomy, the other within twenty years to be
the controller of universities, the counsellor of kings, and the founder
of the most famous order in the Roman Catholic Church. It was in this
hospital that Vesalius made observations on the China-root, on which he
published a monograph in 1546. The Paduan School was close to Venice and
associated with it, so that the young student had probably many
opportunities of going to and fro. On the sixth of December, 1537, before
he had reached his twenty-fourth year and shortly after taking his degree,
he was elected to the chair of surgery and anatomy at Padua.</p>
<p>The task Vesalius set himself to accomplish was to give an accurate
description of all the parts of the human body, with proper illustrations.
He must have had abundant material, more, probably, than any teacher
before him had ever had at his disposal. We do not know where he conducted
his dissections, as the old amphitheatre has disappeared, but it must have
been very different from the tiny one put up by his successor, Fabricius,
in 1594. Possibly it was only a temporary building, for he says in the
second edition of the "Fabrica" that he had a splendid lecture theatre
which accommodated more than five hundred spectators (p. 681).</p>
<p>With Vesalius disappeared the old didactic method of teaching anatomy. He
did his own dissections, made his own preparations, and, when human
subjects were scarce, employed dogs, pigs or cats, and occasionally a
monkey. For five years he taught and worked at Padua. He is known to have
given public demonstrations in Bologna and elsewhere. In the "China-root"
he remarks that he once taught in three universities in one year. The
first fruit of his work is of great importance in connection with the
evolution of his knowledge. In 1538, he published six anatomical tables
issued apparently in single leaves. Of the famous "Tabulae Anatomicae"
only two copies are known, one in the San Marco Library, Venice, and the
other in the possession of Sir John Stirling-Maxwell, whose father had it
reproduced in facsimile (thirty copies only) in 1874. Some of the figures
were drawn by Vesalius himself, and some are from the pencil of his friend
and countryman, Stephan van Calcar. Those plates were extensively pirated.
About this time he also edited for the Giunti some of the anatomical works
of Galen.(21)</p>
<p>(21) De anatomicis administrationibus, De venarum arterinrumque<br/>
dissectione, included in the various Juntine editions of Galen.<br/></p>
<p>We know very little of his private life at Padua. His most important
colleague in the faculty was the famous Montanus, professor of medicine.
Among his students and associates was the Englishman Caius, who lived in
the same house with him. When the output is considered, he cannot have had
much spare time at Padua.</p>
<p>He did not create human anatomy—that had been done by the
Alexandrians—but he studied it in so orderly and thorough a manner
that for the first time in history it could be presented in a way that
explained the entire structure of the human body. Early in 1542 the MS.
was ready; the drawings had been made with infinite care, the blocks for
the figures had been cut, and in September, he wrote to Oporinus urging
that the greatest pains should be taken with the book, that the paper
should be strong and of equal thickness, the workmen chosen for their
skill, and that every detail of the pictures must be distinctly visible.
He writes with the confidence of a man who realized the significance of
the work he had done. It is difficult to speak in terms of moderation of
the "Fabrica." To appreciate its relative value one must compare it with
the other anatomical works of the period, and for this purpose I put
before you two figures from a text-book on the subject that was available
for students during the first half of the sixteenth century. In the
figures and text of the "Fabrica" we have anatomy as we know it; and let
us be honest and say, too, largely as Galen knew it. Time will not allow
me to go into the question of the relations of these two great anatomists,
but we must remember that at this period Galen ruled supreme, and was
regarded in the schools as infallible. And now, after five years of
incessant labor, Vesalius was prepared to leave his much loved Padua and
his devoted students. He had accomplished an extraordinary work. He knew,
I feel sure, what he had done. He knew that the MSS. contained something
that the world had not seen since the great Pergamenian sent the rolls of
his "Manual of Anatomy" among his friends. Too precious to entrust to any
printer but the best—and the best in the middle of the sixteenth
century was Transalpine—he was preparing to go north with the
precious burden. We can picture the youthful teacher—he was but
twenty-eight—among students in a university which they themselves
controlled—some of them perhaps the very men who five years before
had elected him—at the last meeting with his class, perhaps giving a
final demonstration of the woodcuts, which were of an accuracy and beauty
never seen before by students' eyes, and reading his introduction. There
would be sad hearts at the parting, for never had anyone taught anatomy as
he had taught it—no one had ever known anatomy as he knew it. But
the strong, confident look was on his face and with the courage of youth
and sure of the future, he would picture a happy return to attack new and
untried problems. Little did he dream that his happy days as student and
teacher were finished, that his work as an anatomist was over, that the
most brilliant and epoch-making part of his career as a professor was a
thing of the past. A year or more was spent at Basel with his friend
Oporinus supervising the printing of the great work, which appeared in
1543 with the title "De Humani Corporis Fabrica." The worth of a book, as
of a man, must be judged by results, and, so judged, the "Fabrica" is one
of the great books of the world, and would come in any century of volumes
which embraced the richest harvest of the human mind. In medicine, it
represents the full flower of the Renaissance. As a book it is a sumptuous
tome a worthy setting of his jewel—paper, type and illustration to
match, as you may see for yourselves in this folio—the chef d'oeuvre
of any medical library.</p>
<p>In every section, Vesalius enlarged and corrected the work of Galen. Into
the details we need not enter: they are all given in Roth's monograph, and
it is a chapter of ancient history not specially illuminating.</p>
<p>Never did a great piece of literary work have a better setting. Vesalius
must have had a keen appreciation of the artistic side of the art of
printing, and he must also have realized the fact that the masters of the
art had by this time moved north of the Alps.</p>
<p>While superintending the printing of the precious work in the winter of
1542-1543 in Basel, Vesalius prepared for the medical school a skeleton
from the body of an executed man, which is probably the earliest
preparation of the kind in Europe. How little anatomy had been studied at
the period may be judged from that fact that there had been no dissection
at Basel since 1531.(22) The specimen is now in the Vesalianum, Basel, of
which I show you a picture taken by Dr. Harvey Cushing. From the
typographical standpoint no more superb volume on anatomy has been issued
from any press, except indeed the second edition, issued in 1555. The
paper is, as Vesalius directed, strong and good, but it is not, as he
asked, always of equal thickness; as a rule it is thick and heavy, but
there are copies on a good paper of a much lighter quality. The
illustrations drawn by his friend and fellow countryman, van Calcar, are
very much in advance of anything previously seen, except those of
Leonardo. The title-page, one of the most celebrated pictures in the
history of medicine, shows Vesalius in a large amphitheatre (an imaginary
one of the artist, I am afraid) dissecting a female subject. He is
demonstrating the abdomen to a group of students about the table, but
standing in the auditorium are elderly citizens and even women. One
student is reading from an open book. There is a monkey on one side of the
picture and a dog on the other. Above the picture on a shield are the
three weasels, the arms of Vesal. The reproduction which I show you here
is from the "Epitome"—a smaller work issued before (?) the
"Fabrica," with rather larger plates, two of which represent nude human
bodies and are not reproduced in the great work. The freshest and most
beautiful copy is the one on vellum which formerly belonged to Dr. Mead,
now in the British Museum, and from it this picture was taken. One of the
most interesting features of the book are the full-page illustrations of
the anatomy of the arteries, veins and nerves. They had not in those days
the art of making corrosion preparations, but they could in some way
dissect to their finest ramifications the arteries, veins and nerves,
which were then spread on boards and dried. Several such preparations are
now at the College of Physicians in London, brought from Padua by Harvey.
The plates of the muscles are remarkably good, more correct, though not
better perhaps, on the whole, than some of Leonardo's.</p>
<p>(22) The next, in 1559, is recorded by Plater in his<br/>
autobiography, who gave a public dissection during three days in<br/>
the Church of St. Elizabeth.<br/></p>
<p>Vesalius had no idea of a general circulation. Though he had escaped from
the domination of the great Pergamenian in anatomy, he was still his
follower in physiology. The two figures annexed, taken from one of the two
existing copies of the "Tabulae Anatomica," are unique in anatomical
illustration, and are of special value as illustrating the notion of the
vascular system that prevailed until Harvey's day. I have already called
your attention to Galen's view of the two separate systems, one containing
the coarse, venous blood for the general nutrition of the body, the other
the arterial, full of a thinner, warmer blood with which were distributed
the vital spirits and the vital heat. The veins had their origin in the
liver; the superior vena cava communicated with the right heart, and, as
Galen taught, some blood was distributed to the lungs; but the two systems
were closed, though Galen believed there was a communication at the
periphery between the arteries and veins. Vesalius accepted Galen's view
that there is some communication between the venous and arterial systems
through pores in the septum of the ventricles, though he had his doubts,
and in the second edition of his book (1555) says that inspite of the
authority of the Prince of Physicians he cannot see how the smallest
quantity of blood could be transmitted through so dense a muscular septum.
Two years before this (1553),(*) his old fellow student, Michael Servetus,
had in his "Christianismi Restitutio" annatomical touch with one another!</p>
<p>(*) See the Servetus Notes in the Osler Anniversary Volumes, New<br/>
York, 1919, Vol. II.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p>The publication of the "Fabrica" shook the medical world to its
foundations. Galen ruled supreme in the schools: to doubt him in the least
particular roused the same kind of feeling as did doubts on the verbal
inspiration of the Scriptures fifty years ago! His old teachers in Paris
were up in arms: Sylvius, nostrae aetatis medicorum decus, as Vesalius
calls him, wrote furious letters, and later spoke of him as a madman
(vaesanus). The younger men were with him and he had many friends, but he
had aroused a roaring tide of detraction against which he protested a few
years later in his work on the "China-root," which is full of details
about the "Fabrica." In a fit of temper he threw his notes on Galen and
other MSS. in the fire. No sadder page exists in medical writings than the
one in which Vesalius tells of the burning of his books and MSS. It is
here reproduced and translated.(23) His life for a couple of years is not
easy to follow, but we know that in 1546 he took service with Charles V as
his body physician, and the greatest anatomist of his age was lost in the
wanderings of court and campaigns. He became an active practitioner, a
distinguished surgeon, much consulted by his colleagues, and there are
references to many of his cases, the most important of which are to
internal aneurysms, which he was one of the first to recognize. In 1555 he
brought out the second edition of the "Fabrica," an even more sumptuous
volume than the first.</p>
<p>(23) Epistle on China-root, 1546, p. 196. Vesalius may be quoted<br/>
in explanation—in palliation:<br/></p>
<p>"All these impediments I made light of; for I was too young to seek gain
by my art, and I was sustained by my eager desire to learn and to promote
the studies in which I shared. I say nothing of my diligence in
anatomizing—those who attended my lectures in Italy know how I spent
three whole weeks over a single public dissection. But consider that in
one year I once taught in three different universities. If I had put off
the task of writing till this time; if I were now just beginning to digest
my materials; students would not have had the use of my anatomical
labours, which posterity may or may not judge superior to the rechauffes
formerly in use, whether of Mesua, of Gatinaria, of some Stephanus or
other on the differences, causes and symptoms of diseases, or, lastly, of
a part of Servitor's pharmacopoeia. As to my notes, which had grown into a
huge volume, they were all destroyed by me; and on the same day there
similarly perished the whole of my paraphrase on the ten books of Rhazes
to King Almansor, which had been composed by me with far more care than
the one which is prefaced to the ninth book. With these also went the
books of some author or other on the formulae and preparation of
medicines, to which I had added much matter of my own which I judged to be
not without utility; and the same fate overtook all the books of Galen
which I had used in learning anatomy, and which I had liberally disfigured
in the usual fashion. I was on the point of leaving Italy and going to
Court; those physicians you know of had made to the Emperor and to the
nobles a most unfavourable report of my books and of all that is published
nowadays for the promotion of study; I therefore burnt all these works
that I have mentioned, thinking at the same time that it would be an easy
matter to abstain from writing for the future. I must show that I have
since repented more than once of my impatience, and regretted that I did
not take the advice of the friends who were then with me."</p>
<p>There is no such pathetic tragedy in the history of our profession. Before
the age of thirty Vesalius had effected a revolution in anatomy; he became
the valued physician of the greatest court of Europe; but call no man
happy till he is dead! A mystery surrounds his last days. The story is
that he had obtained permission to perform a post-mortem examination on
the body of a young Spanish nobleman, whom he had attended. When the body
was opened, the spectators to their horror saw the heart beating, and
there were signs of life! Accused, so it is said, by the Inquisition of
murder and also of general impiety he only escaped through the
intervention of the King, with the condition that he make a pilgrimage to
the Holy Land. In carrying this out in 1564 he was wrecked on the island
of Zante, where he died of a fever or of exhaustion, in the fiftieth year
of his age.</p>
<p>To the North American Review, November, 1902, Edith Wharton contributed a
poem on "Vesalius in Zante," in which she pictures his life, so full of
accomplishment, so full of regrets—regrets accentuated by the
receipt of an anatomical treatise by Fallopius, the successor to the chair
in Padua! She makes him say:</p>
<p>There are two ways of spreading light; to be<br/>
The candle or the mirror that reflects it.<br/>
I let my wick burn out—there yet remains<br/>
To spread an answering surface to the flame<br/>
That others kindle.<br/></p>
<p>But between Mundinus and Vesalius, anatomy had been studied by a group of
men to whom I must, in passing, pay a tribute. The great artists Raphael,
Michael Angelo and Albrecht Durer were keen students of the human form.
There is an anatomical sketch by Michael Angelo in the Ashmolean Museum,
Oxford, which I here reproduce.(*) Durer's famous work on "Human
Proportion," published in 1528, contains excellent figures, but no
sketches of dissections. But greater than any of these, and antedating
them, is Leonardo da Vinci, the one universal genius in whom the new
spirit was incarnate—the Moses who alone among his contemporaries
saw the promised land. How far Leonardo was indebted to his friend and
fellow student, della Torre, at Pavia we do not know, nor does it matter
in face of the indubitable fact that in the many anatomical sketches from
his hand we have the first accurate representation of the structure of the
body. Glance at the three figures of the spine which I have had
photographed side by side, one from Leonardo, one from Vesalius and the
other from Vandyke Carter, who did the drawings in Gray's "Anatomy" (1st
ed., 1856). They are all of the same type, scientific, anatomical
drawings, and that of Leonardo was done fifty years before Vesalius!
Compare, too, this figure of the bones of the foot with a similar one from
Vesalius.(24) Insatiate in experiment, intellectually as greedy as
Aristotle, painter, poet, sculptor, engineer, architect, mathematician,
chemist, botanist, aeronaut, musician and withal a dreamer and mystic,
full accomplishment in any one department was not for him! A passionate
desire for a mastery of nature's secrets made him a fierce thing, replete
with too much rage! But for us a record remains—Leonardo was the
first of modern anatomists, and fifty years later, into the breach he
made, Vesalius entered.(25)</p>
<p>(*) This plate was lacking among the author's illustrations, but<br/>
the Keeper of the Ashmolean Museum remembers his repeatedly<br/>
showing special interest in the sketch reproduced in John<br/>
Addington Symonds's Life of Michelangelo, London, 1893, Vol. I,<br/>
p. 44, and in Charles Singer's Studies in the History and Method<br/>
of Science, Oxford, 1917, Vol. I, p. 97, representing Michael<br/>
Angelo and a friend dissecting the body of a man, by the light of<br/>
a candle fixed in the body itself.—Ed.<br/>
<br/>
(24) He was the first to make and represent anatomical cross<br/>
sections. See Leonardo: Quaderni d'Anatomia, Jacob Dybwad,<br/>
Kristiania, 1911-1916, Vol. V.<br/>
<br/>
(25) See Knox: Great Artists and Great Anatomists, London, 1862,<br/>
and Mathias Duval in Les Manuserits de Leonard de Vince: De<br/>
l'Anatomie, Feuillets A, Edouard Rouveyre, Paris, 1898. For a<br/>
good account of Leonardo da Vinci see Merejkovsky's novel, The<br/>
Forerunner, London, 1902, also New York, Putnam.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> HARVEY </h2>
<p>LET us return to Padua about the year 1600. Vesalius, who made the school
the most famous anatomical centre in Europe, was succeeded by Fallopius,
one of the best-known names in anatomy, at whose death an unsuccessful
attempt was made to get Vesalius back. He was succeeded in 1565 by a
remarkable man, Fabricius (who usually bears the added name of
Aquapendente, from the town of his birth), a worthy follower of Vesalius.
In 1594, in the thirtieth year of his professoriate, he built at his own
expense a new anatomical amphitheatre, which still exists in the
university buildings. It is a small, high-pitched room with six
standing-rows for auditors rising abruptly one above the other. The arena
is not much more than large enough for the dissecting table which, by a
lift, could be brought up from a preparing room below. The study of
anatomy at Padua must have declined since the days of Vesalius if this
tiny amphitheatre held all its students; none the less, it is probably the
oldest existing anatomical lecture room, and for us it has a very special
significance.</p>
<p>Early in his anatomical studies Fabricius had demonstrated the valves in
the veins. I show you here two figures, the first, as far as I know, in
which these structures are depicted. It does not concern us who first
discovered them; they had doubtless been seen before, but Fabricius first
recognized them as general structures in the venous system, and he called
them little doors—"ostiola."</p>
<p>The quadrangle of the university building at Padua is surrounded by
beautiful arcades, the walls and ceilings of which are everywhere covered
with the stemmata, or shields, of former students, many of them
brilliantly painted. Standing in the arcade on the side of the "quad"
opposite the entrance, if one looks on the ceiling immediately above the
capital of the second column to the left there is seen the stemma which
appears as tailpiece to this chapter, put up by a young Englishman,
William Harvey, who had been a student at Padua for four years. He
belonged to the "Natio Anglica," of which he was Conciliarius, and took
his degree in 1602. Doubtless he had repeatedly seen Fabricius demonstrate
the valves of the veins, and he may indeed, as a senior student, have
helped in making the very dissections from which the drawings were taken
for Fabricius' work, "De Venarum Osteolis," 1603. If one may judge from
the character of the teacher's work the sort of instruction the student
receives, Harvey must have had splendid training in anatomy. While he was
at Padua, the great work of Fabricius, "De Visione, Voce et Auditu" (1600)
was published, then the "Tractatus de Oculo Visusque Organo" (1601), and
in the last year of his residence Fabricius must have been busy with his
studies on the valves of the veins and with his embryology, which appeared
in 1604. Late in life, Harvey told Boyle that it was the position of the
valves of the veins that induced him to think of a circulation.</p>
<p>Harvey returned to England trained by the best anatomist of his day. In
London, he became attached to the College of Physicans, and taking his
degree at Cambridge, he began the practice of medicine. He was elected a
fellow of the college in 1607 and physician to St. Bartholomew's Hospital
in 1609. In 1615 he was appointed Lumleian lecturer to the College of
Physicians, and his duties were to hold certain "public anatomies," as
they were called, or lectures. We know little or nothing of what Harvey
had been doing other than his routine work in the care of the patients at
St. Bartholomew's. It was not until April, 1616, that his lectures began.
Chance has preserved to us the notes of this first course; the MS. is now
in the British Museum and was published in facsimile by the college in
1886.(26)</p>
<p>(26) William Harvey: Prelectiones Anatomiae Universalis, London,<br/>
J. & A. Churchill, 1886.<br/></p>
<p>The second day lecture, April 17, was concerned with a description of the
organs of the thorax, and after a discussion on the structure and action
of the heart come the lines:</p>
<p>W. H. constat per fabricam cordis sanguinem<br/>
per pulmones in Aortam perpetuo<br/>
transferri, as by two clacks of a<br/>
water bellows to rayse water<br/>
constat per ligaturam transitum sanguinis<br/>
ab arteriis ad venas<br/>
unde perpetuum sanguinis motum<br/>
in circulo fieri pulsu cordis.<br/></p>
<p>The illustration will give one an idea of the extraordinarily crabbed hand
in which the notes are written, but it is worth while to see the original,
for here is the first occasion upon which is laid down in clear and
unequivocal words that the blood CIRCULATES. The lecture gave evidence of
a skilled anatomist, well versed in the literature from Aristotle to
Fabricius. In the MS. of the thorax, or, as he calls it, the "parlour"
lecture, there are about a hundred references to some twenty authors. The
remarkable thing is that although those lectures were repeated year by
year, we have no evidence that they made any impression upon Harvey's
contemporaries, so far, at least, as to excite discussions that led to
publication. It was not until twelve years later, 1628, that Harvey
published in Frankfurt a small quarto volume of seventy-four pages,(27)
"De Motu Cordis." In comparison with the sumptuous "Fabrica" of Vesalius
this is a trifling booklet; but if not its equal in bulk or typographical
beauty (it is in fact very poorly printed), it is its counterpart in
physiology, and did for that science what Vesalius had done for anatomy,
though not in the same way. The experimental spirit was abroad in the
land, and as a student at Padua, Harvey must have had many opportunities
of learning the technique of vivisection; but no one before his day had
attempted an elaborate piece of experimental work deliberately planned to
solve a problem relating to the most important single function of the
body. Herein lies the special merit of his work, from every page of which
there breathes the modern spirit. To him, as to Vesalius before him, the
current views of the movements of the blood were unsatisfactory, more
particularly the movements of the heart and arteries, which were regarded
as an active expansion by which they were filled with blood, like bellows
with air. The question of the transmission of blood through the thick
septum and the transference of air and blood from the lungs to the heart
were secrets which he was desirous of searching out by means of
experiment.</p>
<p>(27) Harvey: Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et Sanguinis<br/>
in Animalibus, Francofurti, 1628.<br/></p>
<p>One or two special points in the work may be referred to as illustrating
his method. He undertook first the movements of the heart, a task so truly
arduous and so full of difficulties that he was almost tempted to think
with Fracastorius that "the movement of the heart was only to be
comprehended by God." But after many difficulties he made the following
statements: first, that the heart is erected and raises itself up into an
apex, and at this time strikes against the breast and the pulse is felt
externally; secondly, that it is contracted every-way, but more so at the
sides; and thirdly, that grasped in the hand it was felt to become harder
at the time of its motion; from all of which actions Harvey drew the very
natural conclusion that the activity of the heart consisted in a
contraction of its fibres by which it expelled the blood from the
ventricles. These were the first four fundamental facts which really
opened the way for the discovery of the circulation, as it did away with
the belief that the heart in its motion attracts blood into the
ventricles, stating on the contrary that by its contraction it expelled
the blood and only received it during its period of repose or relaxation.
Then he proceeded to study the action of the arteries and showed that
their period of diastole, or expansion, corresponded with the systole, or
contraction, of the heart, and that the arterial pulse follows the force,
frequency and rhythm of the ventricle and is, in fact, dependent upon it.
Here was another new fact: that the pulsation in the arteries was nothing
else than the impulse of the blood within them. Chapter IV, in which he
describes the movements of the auricles and ventricles, is a model of
accurate description, to which little has since been added. It is
interesting to note that he mentions what is probably auricular
fibrillation. He says: "After the heart had ceased pulsating an undulation
or palpitation remained in the blood itself which was contained in the
right auricle, this being observed so long as it was imbued with heat and
spirit." He recognized too the importance of the auricles as the first to
move and the last to die. The accuracy and vividness of Harvey's
description of the motion of the heart have been appreciated by
generations of physiologists. Having grasped this first essential fact,
that the heart was an organ for the propulsion of blood, he takes up in
Chapters VI and VII the question of the conveyance of the blood from the
right side of the heart to the left. Galen had already insisted that some
blood passed from the right ventricle to the lungs—enough for their
nutrition; but Harvey points out, with Colombo, that from the arrangement
of the valves there could be no other view than that with each impulse of
the heart blood passes from the right ventricle to the lungs and so to the
left side of the heart. How it passed through the lungs was a problem:
probably by a continuous transudation. In Chapters VIII and IX he deals
with the amount of blood passing through the heart from the veins to the
arteries. Let me quote here what he says, as it is of cardinal import:</p>
<p>"But what remains to be said upon the quantity and source of the blood
which thus passes, is of a character so novel and unheard of that I not
only fear injury to myself from the envy of a few, but I tremble lest I
have mankind at large for my enemies, so much doth wont and custom become
a second nature. Doctrine once sown strikes deeply its root, and respect
for antiquity influences all men. Still the die is cast, and my trust is
in my love of truth, and the candour of cultivated minds."(28) Then he
goes on to say:</p>
<p>(28) William Harvey: Exercitatio Anatomica de Motu Cordis et<br/>
Sanguinis in Animalibus, Francofurti, 1628, G. Moreton's<br/>
facsimile reprint and translation, Canterbury, 1894, p. 48.<br/></p>
<p>"I began to think whether there might not be A MOVEMENT, AS IT WERE, IN A
CIRCLE. Now this I afterwards found to be true; and I finally saw that the
blood, forced by the action of the left ventricle into the arteries, was
distributed to the body at large, and its several parts, in the same
manner as it is sent through the lungs, impelled by the right ventricle
into the pulmonary artery, and that it then passed through the veins and
along the vena cava, and so round to the left ventricle in the manner
already indicated."(29)</p>
<p>(29) Ibid. p. 49.<br/></p>
<p>The experiments dealing with the transmission of blood in the veins are
very accurate, and he uses the old experiment that Fabricius had employed
to show the valves, to demonstrate that the blood in the veins flows
towards the heart. For the first time a proper explanation of the action
of the valves is given. Harvey had no appreciation of how the arteries and
veins communicated with each other. Galen, you may remember, recognized
that there were anastomoses, but Harvey preferred the idea of filtration.</p>
<p>The "De Motu Cordis" constitutes a unique piece of work in the history of
medicine. Nothing of the same type had appeared before. It is a thoroughly
sensible, scientific study of a definite problem, the solution of which
was arrived at through the combination of accurate observation and
ingenious experiment. Much misunderstanding has arisen in connection with
Harvey's discovery of the circulation of the blood. He did not discover
that the blood moved,—that was known to Aristotle and to Galen, from
both of whom I have given quotations which indicate clearly that they knew
of its movement,—but at the time of Harvey not a single anatomist
had escaped from the domination of Galen's views. Both Servetus and
Colombo knew of the pulmonary circulation, which was described by the
former in very accurate terms. Cesalpinus, a great name in anatomy and
botany, for whom is claimed the discovery of the circulation, only
expressed the accepted doctrines in the following oft-quoted phrase:</p>
<p>"We will now consider how the attraction of aliment and the process of
nutrition takes place in plants; for in animals we see the aliment brought
through the veins to the heart, as to a laboratory of innate heat, and,
after receiving there its final perfection, distributed through the
arteries to the body at large, by the agency of the spirits produced from
this same aliment in the heart."(30) There is nothing in this but Galen's
view, and Cesalpinus believed, as did all his contemporaries, that the
blood was distributed through the body by the vena cava and its branches
for the nourishment of all its parts.(*) To those who have any doubts as
to Harvey's position in this matter I would recommend the reading of the
"De Motu Cordis" itself, then the various passages relating to the
circulation from Aristotle to Vesalius. Many of these can be found in the
admirable works of Dalton, Flourens, Richet and Curtis.(31) In my Harveian
Oration for 1906(32) I have dealt specially with the reception of the new
views, and have shown how long it was before the reverence for Galen
allowed of their acceptance. The University of Paris opposed the
circulation of the blood for more than half a century after the appearance
of the "De Motu Cordis."</p>
<p>(30) De Plantis, Lib I, cap. 2.<br/>
<br/>
(*) Cesalpinus has also a definite statement of the circlewise<br/>
process.—Ed.<br/>
<br/>
(31) J. C. Dalton Doctrines of the Circulation, Philadelphia,<br/>
1884; Flourens Histoire de la decouverte de la circulation du<br/>
sang, 2d ed., Paris, 1857; Charles Richet Harvey, la circulation<br/>
du sang, Paris, 1879; John G. Curtis Harvey's views on the use of<br/>
Circulation, etc., New York, 1916.<br/>
<br/>
(32) Osler An Alabama Student and Other Biographical Essays,<br/>
Oxford, 1908, p. 295.<br/></p>
<p>To summarize—until the seventeenth century there were believed to be
two closed systems in the circulation, (1) the natural, containing venous
blood, had its origin in the liver from which, as from a fountain, the
blood continually ebbed and flowed for the nourishment of the body; (2)
the vital, containing another blood and the spirits, ebbed and flowed from
the heart, distributing heat and life to all parts. Like a bellows the
lungs fanned and cooled this vital blood. Here and there we find
glimmering conceptions of a communication between these systems, but
practically all teachers believed that the only one of importance was
through small pores in the wall separating the two sides of the heart.
Observation—merely looking at and thinking about things—had
done all that was possible, and further progress had to await the
introduction of a new method, viz., experiment. Galen, it is true, had
used this means to show that the arteries of the body contained blood and
not air. The day had come when men were no longer content with accurate
description and with finely spun theories and dreams. It was reserved for
the immortal Harvey to put into practice the experimental method by which
he demonstrated conclusively that the blood moved in a circle. The "De
Motu Cordis" marks the final break of the modern spirit with the old
traditions. It took long for men to realize the value of this "inventum
mirabile" used so effectively by the Alexandrians—by Galen—indeed,
its full value has only been appreciated within the past century. Let me
quote a paragraph from my Harveian Oration.(33) "To the age of the hearer,
in which men had heard and heard only, had succeeded the age of the eye in
which men had seen and had been content only to see. But at last came the
age of the hand—the thinking, devising, planning hand, the hand as
an instrument of the mind, now re-introduced into the world in a modest
little monograph from which we may date the beginning of experimental
medicine."</p>
<p>(33) Osler: An Alabama Student, etc., pp. 329-330.<br/></p>
<p>Harvey caught the experimental spirit in Italy, with brain, eye and hand
as his only aids, but now an era opened in which medicine was to derive an
enormous impetus from the discovery of instruments of precision. "The new
period in the development of the natural sciences, which reached its
height in the work of such men as Galileo, Gilbert and Kepler, is chiefly
characterized by the invention of very important instruments for aiding
and intensifying the perceptions of the senses, by means of which was
gained a much deeper insight into the phenomena than had hitherto been
possible. Such instruments as the earlier ages possessed were little more
than primitive hand-made tools. Now we find a considerable number of
scientifically made instruments deliberately planned for purposes of
special research, and as it were, on the threshold of the period stand two
of the most important, the compound microscope and the telescope. The
former was invented about 1590 and the latter about 1608."(34) It was a
fellow professor of the great genius Galileo who attempted to put into
practice the experimental science of his friend. With Sanctorius began the
studies of temperature, respiration and the physics of the circulation.
The memory of this great investigator has not been helped by the English
edition of his "De Statica Medicina," not his best work, with a
frontispiece showing the author in his dietetic balance. Full justice has
been done to him by Dr. Weir Mitchell in an address as president of the
Congress of Physicians and Surgeons, 1891.(35) Sanctorius worked with a
pulsilogue devised for him by Galileo, with which he made observations on
the pulse. He is said to have been the first to put in use the clinical
thermometer. His experiments on insensible perspiration mark him as one of
the first modern physiologists.</p>
<p>(34) Dannemann: Die Naturwissenschaften in ihrer<br/>
Entwickelung..., Vol. II, p. 7, Leipzig, 1911.<br/>
<br/>
(35) See Transactions Congress Physicians and Surgeons, 1891, New<br/>
Haven, 1892, II, 159-181.<br/></p>
<p>But neither Sanctorius nor Harvey had the immediate influence upon their
contemporaries which the novel and stimulating character of their work
justified. Harvey's great contemporary, Bacon, although he lost his life
in making a cold storage experiment, did not really appreciate the
enormous importance of experimental science. He looked very coldly upon
Harvey's work. It was a philosopher of another kidney, Rene Descartes, who
did more than anyone else to help men to realize the value of the better
way which Harvey had pointed out. That the beginning of wisdom was in
doubt, not in authority, was a novel doctrine in the world, but Descartes
was no armchair philosopher, and his strong advocacy and practice of
experimentation had a profound influence in directing men to "la nouvelle
methode." He brought the human body, the earthly machine, as he calls it,
into the sphere of mechanics and physics, and he wrote the first text-book
of physiology, "De l'Homme." Locke, too, became the spokesman of the new
questioning spirit, and before the close of the seventeenth century,
experimental research became all the mode. Richard Lower, Hooke and Hales
were probably more influenced by Descartes than by Harvey, and they made
notable contributions to experimental physiology in England. Borelli,
author of the famous work on "The Motion of Animals" (Rome, 1680-1681),
brought to the study of the action of muscles a profound knowledge of
physics and mathematics and really founded the mechanical, or
iatromechanical school. The literature and the language of medicine became
that of physics and mechanics: wheels and pulleys, wedges, levers, screws,
cords, canals, cisterns, sieves and strainers, with angles, cylinders,
celerity, percussion and resistance, were among the words that now came
into use in medical literature. Withington quotes a good example in a
description by Pitcairne, the Scot who was professor of medicine at Leyden
at the end of the seventeenth century. "Life is the circulation of the
blood. Health is its free and painless circulation. Disease is an abnormal
motion of the blood, either general or local. Like the English school
generally, he is far more exclusively mechanical than are the Italians,
and will hear nothing of ferments or acids, even in digestion. This, he
declares, is a purely mechanical process due to heat and pressure, the
wonderful effects of which may be seen in Papin's recently invented
'digester.' That the stomach is fully able to comminute the food may be
proved by the following calculation. Borelli estimates the power of the
flexors of the thumb at 3720 pounds, their average weight being 122
grains. Now, the average weight of the stomach is eight ounces, therefore
it can develop a force of 117,088 pounds, and this may be further assisted
by the diaphragm and abdominal muscles the power of which, estimated in
the same way, equals 461,219 pounds! Well may Pitcairne add that this
force is not inferior to that of any millstone."(36) Paracelsus gave an
extraordinary stimulus to the study of chemistry and more than anyone else
he put the old alchemy on modern lines. I have already quoted his sane
remark that its chief service is in seeking remedies. But there is another
side to this question. If, as seems fairly certain, the Basil Valentine
whose writings were supposed to have inspired Paracelsus was a hoax and
his works were made up in great part from the writings of Paracelsus, then
to our medical Luther, and not to the mythical Benedictine monk, must be
attributed a great revival in the search for the Philosopher's Stone, for
the Elixir of Life, for a universal medicine, for the perpetuum mobile and
for an aurum potabile.(37) I reproduce, almost at random, a page from the
fifth and last part of the last will and testament of Basil Valentine
(London, 1657), from which you may judge the chemical spirit of the time.</p>
<p>(36) Withington: Medical History from the Earliest Times,<br/>
London, 1891, Scientific Press, p. 317.<br/>
<br/>
(37) See Professor Stillman on the Basil Valentine hoax, Popular<br/>
Science Monthly, New York, 1919, LXXXI, 591-600.<br/></p>
<p>Out of the mystic doctrines of Paracelsus arose the famous "Brothers of
the Rosy Cross." "The brotherhood was possessed of the deepest knowledge
and science, the transmutation of metals, the perpetuum mobile and the
universal medicine were among their secrets; they were free from sickness
and suffering during their lifetime, though subject finally to death."(38)</p>
<p>(38) Ferguson: Bibliotheca Chemica, Vol. II, p. 290. For an<br/>
account of Fludd and the English Rosicrucians see Craven's Life<br/>
of Fludd, Kirkwall, 1902.<br/></p>
<p>A school of a more rational kind followed directly upon the work of
Paracelsus, in which the first man of any importance was Van Helmont. The
Paracelsian Archeus was the presiding spirit in living creatures, and
worked through special local ferments, by which the functions of the
organs are controlled. Disease of any part represents a strike on the part
of the local Archeus, who refuses to work. Though full of fanciful ideas,
Van Helmont had the experimental spirit and was the first chemist to
discover the diversity of gases. Like his teacher, he was in revolt
against the faculty, and he has bitter things to say of physicians. He got
into trouble with the Church about the magnetic cure of wounds, as no
fewer than twenty-seven propositions incompatible with the Catholic faith
were found in his pamphlet (Ferguson). The Philosophus per ignem, Toparcha
in Merode, Royenborch, as he is styled in certain of his writings, is not
an easy man to tackle. I show the title-page of the "Ortus Medicinae," the
collection of his works by his son. As with the pages of Paracelsus, there
are many gems to be dug out. The counterblast against bleeding was a
useful protest, and to deny in toto its utility in fever required courage—a
quality never lacking in the Father of Modern Chemistry, as he has been
called.</p>
<p>A man of a very different type, a learned academic, a professor of
European renown, was Daniel Sennert of Wittenberg, the first to introduce
the systematic teaching of chemistry into the curriculum, and who tried to
harmonize the Galenists and Paracelsians. Franciscus Sylvius, a disciple
of Van Helmont, established the first chemical laboratory in Europe at
Leyden, and to him is due the introduction of modern clinical teaching. In
1664 he writes: "I have led my pupils by the hand to medical practice,
using a method unknown at Leyden, or perhaps elsewhere, i.e., taking them
daily to visit the sick at the public hospital. There I have put the
symptoms of disease before their eyes; have let them hear the complaints
of the patients, and have asked them their opinions as to the causes and
rational treatment of each case, and the reasons for those opinions. Then
I have given my own judgment on every point. Together with me they have
seen the happy results of treatment when God has granted to our cares a
restoration of health; or they have assisted in examining the body when
the patient has paid the inevitable tribute to death."(39)</p>
<p>(39) Withington: Medical History from the Earliest Times,<br/>
London, 1894, pp. 312-313.<br/></p>
<p>Glauber, Willis, Mayow, Lemery, Agricola and Stahl led up to Robert Boyle,
with whom modern chemistry may be said to begin. Even as late as 1716,
Lady Mary Wortley Montagu in Vienna found that all had transferred their
superstitions from religion to chemistry; "scarcely a man of opulence or
fashion that has not an alchemist in his service." To one scientific man
of the period I must refer as the author of the first scientific book
published in England. Dryden sings:</p>
<p>Gilbert shall live till load-stones cease to draw<br/>
Or British fleets the boundless ocean awe.<br/></p>
<p>And the verse is true, for by the publication in 1600 of the "De Magnete"
the science of electricity was founded. William Gilbert was a fine type of
the sixteenth-century physician, a Colchester man, educated at St. John's
College, Cambridge. Silvanus Thompson says: "He is beyond question
rightfully regarded as the Father of Electric Science. He founded the
entire subject of Terrestrial Magnetism. He also made notable
contributions to Astronomy, being the earliest English expounder of
Copernicus. In an age given over to metaphysical obscurities and dogmatic
sophistry, he cultivated the method of experiment and of reasoning from
observation, with an insight and success which entitles him to be regarded
as the father of the inductive method. That method, so often accredited to
Bacon, Gilbert was practicing years before him."(40)</p>
<p>(40) Silvanus P. Thompson: Gilbert of Colchester, Father of<br/>
Electrical Science, London, Chiswick Press, 1903, p. 3.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER V — THE RISE AND DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN MEDICINE </h2>
<p>THE middle of the seventeenth century saw the profession thus far on its
way—certain objective features of disease were known, the art of
careful observation had been cultivated, many empirical remedies had been
discovered, the coarser structure of man's body had been well worked out,
and a good beginning had been made in the knowledge of how the machinery
worked—nothing more. What disease really was, where it was, how it
was caused, had not even begun to be discussed intelligently.</p>
<p>An empirical discovery of the first importance marks the middle of the
century. The story of cinchona is of special interest, as it was the first
great specific in disease to be discovered. In 1638, the wife of the
Viceroy of Peru, the Countess of Chinchon, lay sick of an intermittent
fever in the Palace of Lima. A friend of her husband's, who had become
acquainted with the virtues, in fever, of the bark of a certain tree, sent
a parcel of it to the Viceroy, and the remedy administered by her
physician, Don Juan del Vego, rapidly effected a cure. In 1640, the
Countess returned to Spain, bringing with her a supply of quina bark,
which thus became known in Europe as "the Countess's Powder" (pulvis
Comitissae). A little later, her doctor followed, bringing additional
quantities. Later in the century, the Jesuit Fathers sent parcels of the
bark to Rome, whence it was distributed to the priests of the community
and used for the cure of ague; hence the name of "Jesuits' bark." Its
value was early recognized by Sydenham and by Locke. At first there was a
great deal of opposition, and the Protestants did not like it because of
its introduction by the Jesuits. The famous quack, Robert Talbor, sold the
secret of preparing quinquina to Louis XIV in 1679 for two thousand louis
d'or, a pension and a title. That the profession was divided in opinion on
the subject was probably due to sophistication, or to the importation of
other and inert barks. It was well into the eighteenth century before its
virtues were universally acknowledged. The tree itself was not described
until 1738, and Linnaeus established the genus "Chinchona" in honor of the
Countess.(1)</p>
<p>(1) Clements R. Markham: Peruvian Bark, John Murray, London,<br/>
1880; Memoir of the Lady Anna di Osoria, Countess of Chinchona<br/>
and Vice-Queen of Peru, 1874.<br/></p>
<p>A step in advance followed the objective study of the changes wrought in
the body by disease. To a few of these the anatomists had already called
attention. Vesalius, always keen in his description of aberrations from
the normal, was one of the first to describe internal aneurysm. The truth
is, even the best of men had little or no appreciation of the importance
of the study of these changes. Sydenham scoffs at the value of
post-mortems.</p>
<p>Again we have to go back to Italy for the beginning of these studies, this
time to Florence, in the glorious days of Lorenzo the Magnificent. The
pioneer now is not a professor but a general practitioner, Antonio
Benivieni, of whom we know very little save that he was a friend of
Marsilio Ficino and of Angelo Poliziano, and that he practiced in Florence
during the last third of the fifteenth century, dying in 1502. Through
associations with the scholars of the day, he had become a student of
Greek medicine and he was not only a shrewd and accurate observer of
nature but a bold and successful practitioner. He had formed the good
habit of making brief notes of his more important cases, and after his
death these were found by his brother Jerome and published in 1507.(2)
This book has a rare value as the record of the experience of an unusually
intelligent practitioner of the period. There are in all 111 observations,
most of them commendably brief. The only one of any length deals with the
new "Morbus Gallicus," of which, in the short period between its
appearance and Benivieni's death, he had seen enough to leave a very
accurate description; and it is interesting to note that even in those
early days mercury was employed for its cure. The surgical cases are of
exceptional interest, and No. 38 refers to a case of angina for which he
performed a successful operation. This is supposed to have been a
tracheotomy, and if so, it is the first in the fourteen centuries that had
elapsed since the days of Antyllus.(3) There are other important cases
which show that he was a dexterous and fearless surgeon. But the special
interest of the work for us is that, for the first time in modern
literature, we have reports of post-mortem examinations made specifically
with a view to finding out the exact cause of death. Among the 111 cases,
there are post-mortem records of cases of gallstones, abscess of the
mesentery, thrombosis of the mesenteric veins, several cases of heart
disease, senile gangrene and one of cor villosum. From no other book do we
get so good an idea of a practitioner's experience at this period; the
notes are plain and straightforward, and singularly free from all
theoretical and therapeutic vagaries. He gives several remarkable
instances of faith healing.</p>
<p>(2) De abditis nonnullis ac mirandis morborum et sanationum<br/>
causis. 8th, Florence, Gandhi, 1507.<br/>
<br/>
(3) Possibly it was only a case of angina Ludovici, or<br/>
retro-pharyngeal abscess.<br/></p>
<p>To know accurately the anatomical changes that take place in disease is of
importance both for diagnosis and for treatment. The man who created the
science, who taught us to think anatomically of disease, was Morgagni,
whose "De sedibus et causis morborum per anatomen indagatis"(4) is one of
the great books in our literature. During the seventeenth century, the
practice of making post-mortem examinations had extended greatly, and in
the "Sepulchretum anatomicum" of Bonetus (1679), these scattered fragments
are collected.(5) But the work of Morgagni is of a different type, for in
it are the clinical and anatomical observations of an able physician
during a long and active life. The work had an interesting origin. A young
friend interested in science and in medicine was fond of discoursing with
Morgagni about his preceptors, particularly Valsalva and Albertini, and
sometimes the young man inquired about Morgagni's own observations and
thoughts. Yielding to a strong wish, Morgagni consented to write his young
friend familiar letters describing his experiences. I am sorry that
Morgagni does not mention the name of the man to whom we are so much
indebted, and who, he states, was so pleased with the letters that he
continually solicited him to send more and more "till he drew me on so far
as the seventieth; . . . when I begged them of him in order to revise
their contents; he did not return them, till he had made me solemnly
promise, that I would not abridge any part thereof" (Preface).</p>
<p>(4) Venice, 1761.<br/>
<br/>
(5) Boerhaave remarked that if a man wished to deserve or get a<br/>
medical degree from ONE medical author let it be this. (James<br/>
Atkinson: Medical Bibliography, 1834, 268.)<br/></p>
<p>Born in 1682, Morgagni studied at Bologna under Valsalva and Albertini. In
1711, he was elected professor of medicine at Padua. He published numerous
anatomical observations and several smaller works of less importance. The
great work which has made his name immortal in the profession, appeared in
his eightieth year, and represents the accumulated experience of a long
life. Though written in the form of letters, the work is arranged
systematically and has an index of exceptional value. From no section does
one get a better idea of the character and scope of the work than from
that relating to the heart and arteries—affections of the
pericardium, diseases of the valves, ulceration, rupture, dilation and
hypertrophy and affections of the aorta are very fully described. The
section on aneurysm of the aorta remains one of the best ever written. It
is not the anatomical observations alone that make the work of unusual
value, but the combination of clinical with anatomical records. What could
be more correct than this account of angina pectoris—probably the
first in the literature? "A lady forty-two years of age, who for a long
time, had been a valetudinarian, and within the same period, on using
pretty quick exercise of body, she was subject to attacks of violent
anguish in the upper part of the chest on the left side, accompanied with
a difficulty of breathing, and numbness of the left arm; but these
paroxysms soon subsided when she ceased from exertion. In these
circumstances, but with cheerfulness of mind, she undertook a journey from
Venice, purposing to travel along the continent, when she was seized with
a paroxysm, and died on the spot. I examined the body on the following
day.... The aorta was considerably dilated at its curvature; and, in
places, through its whole tract, the inner surface was unequal and
ossified. These appearances were propagated into the arteria innominata.
The aortic valves were indurated...." He remarks, "The delay of blood in
the aorta, in the heart, in the pulmonary vessels, and in the vena cave,
would occasion the symptoms of which the woman complained during life;
namely, the violent uneasiness, the difficulty of breathing, and the
numbness of the arm."(6)</p>
<p>(6) Cooke's Morgagni, Vol. 1, pp. 417-418. I cannot too warmly<br/>
commend to young clinicians the reading of Morgagni. English<br/>
editions are available—Alexander's three-volume translation of<br/>
1769 and Cooke's Abridgement (London, 1822), of which there was<br/>
an American edition published in Boston in 1824.<br/></p>
<p>Morgagni's life had as much influence as his work. In close correspondence
with the leading men of the day, with the young and rising teachers and
workers, his methods must have been a great inspiration; and he came just
at the right time. The profession was literally ravaged by theories,
schools and systems—iatromechanics, iatrochemistry, humoralism, the
animism of Stahl, the vitalistic doctrines of Van Helmont and his
followers—and into this metaphysical confusion Morgagni came like an
old Greek with his clear observation, sensible thinking and ripe
scholarship. Sprengel well remarks that "it is hard to say whether one
should admire most his rare dexterity and quickness in dissection, his
unimpeachable love of truth and justice in his estimation of the work of
others, his extensive scholarship and rich classical style or his
downright common sense and manly speech."</p>
<p>Upon this solid foundation the morbid anatomy of modern clinical medicine
was built. Many of Morgagni's contemporaries did not fully appreciate the
change that was in progress, and the value of the new method of
correlating the clinical symptoms and the morbid appearances. After all,
it was only the extension of the Hippocratic method of careful observation—the
study of facts from which reasonable conclusions could be drawn. In every
generation there had been men of this type—I dare say many more than
we realize—men of the Benivieni character, thoroughly practical,
clear-headed physicians. A model of this sort arose in England in the
middle of the seventeenth century, Thomas Sydenham (1624-1689), who took
men back to Hippocrates, just as Harvey had led them back to Galen.
Sydenham broke with authority and went to nature. It is extraordinary how
he could have been so emancipated from dogmas and theories of all sorts.
He laid down the fundamental proposition, and acted upon it, that "all
disease could be described as natural history." To do him justice we must
remember, as Dr. John Brown says, "in the midst of what a mass of errors
and prejudices, of theories actively mischievous, he was placed, at a time
when the mania of hypothesis was at its height, and when the practical
part of his art was overrun and stultified by vile and silly nostrums"
("Horae Subsecivae," Vol. I, 4th ed., Edinburgh, 1882, p. 40).</p>
<p>Listen to what he says upon the method of the study of medicine: "In
writing therefore, such a natural history of diseases, every merely
philosophical hypothesis should be set aside, and the manifest and natural
phenomena, however minute, should be noted with the utmost exactness. The
usefulness of this procedure cannot be easily overrated, as compared with
the subtle inquiries and trifling notions of modern writers, for can there
be a shorter, or indeed any other way of coming at the morbific causes, or
discovering the curative indications than by a certain perception of the
peculiar symptoms? By these steps and helps it was that the father of
physic, the great Hippocrates, came to excel, his theory being no more
than an exact description or view of nature. He found that nature alone
often terminates diseases, and works a cure with a few simple medicines,
and often enough with no medicines at all."</p>
<p>Towards the end of the century many great clinical teachers arose, of whom
perhaps the most famous was Boerhaave, often spoken of as the Dutch
Hippocrates, who inspired a group of distinguished students. I have
already referred to the fact that Franciscus Sylvius at Leyden was the
first among the moderns to organize systematic clinical teaching. Under
Boerhaave, this was so developed that to this Dutch university students
flocked from all parts of Europe. After teaching botany and chemistry,
Boerhaave succeeded to the chair of physic in 1714. With an unusually wide
general training, a profound knowledge of the chemistry of the day and an
accurate acquaintance with all aspects of the history of the profession,
he had a strongly objective attitude of mind towards disease, following
closely the methods of Hippocrates and Sydenham. He adopted no special
system, but studied disease as one of the phenomena of nature. His
clinical lectures, held bi-weekly, became exceedingly popular and were
made attractive not less by the accuracy and care with which the cases
were studied than by the freedom from fanciful doctrines and the frank
honesty of the man. He was much greater than his published work would
indicate, and, as is the case with many teachers of the first rank, his
greatest contributions were his pupils. No other teacher of modern times
has had such a following. Among his favorite pupils may be mentioned
Haller, the physiologist, and van Swieten and de Haen, the founders of the
Vienna school.</p>
<p>In Italy, too, there were men who caught the new spirit, and appreciated
the value of combining morbid anatomy with clinical medicine. Lancisi, one
of the early students of disease of the heart, left an excellent monograph
on the subject, and was the first to call special attention to the
association of syphilis with cardio-vascular disease. A younger
contemporary of his at Rome, Baglivi, was unceasing in his call to the
profession to return to Hippocratic methods, to stop reading philosophical
theories and to give up what he calls the "fatal itch" to make systems.</p>
<p>The Leyden methods of instruction were carried far and wide throughout
Europe; into Edinburgh by John Rutherford, who began to teach at the Royal
Infirmary in 1747, and was followed by Whytt and by Cullen; into England
by William Saunders of Guy's Hospital. Unfortunately the great majority of
clinicians could not get away from the theoretical conceptions of disease,
and Cullen's theory of spasm and atony exercised a profound influence on
practice, particularly in this country, where it had the warm advocacy of
Benjamin Rush. Even more widespread became the theories of a pupil of
Cullen's, John Brown, who regarded excitability as the fundamental
property of all living creatures: too much of this excitability produced
what were known as sthenic maladies, too little, asthenic; on which
principles practice was plain enough. Few systems of medicine have ever
stirred such bitter controversy, particularly on the Continent, and in
Charles Creighton's account of Brown(7) we read that as late as 1802 the
University of Gottingen was so convulsed by controversies as to the merits
of the Brunonian system that contending factions of students in enormous
numbers, not unaided by the professors, met in combat in the streets on
two consecutive days and had to be dispersed by a troop of Hanoverian
horse.</p>
<p>(7) Dictionary of National Biography, London, 1886, VII, 14-17.<br/></p>
<p>But the man who combined the qualities of Vesalius, Harvey and Morgagni in
an extraordinary personality was John Hunter. He was, in the first place,
a naturalist to whom pathological processes were only a small part of a
stupendous whole, governed by law, which, however, could never be
understood until the facts had been accumulated, tabulated and
systematized. By his example, by his prodigious industry, and by his
suggestive experiments he led men again into the old paths of Aristotle,
Galen and Harvey. He made all thinking physicians naturalists, and he lent
a dignity to the study of organic life, and re-established a close union
between medicine and the natural sciences. Both in Britain and Greater
Britain, he laid the foundation of the great collections and museums,
particularly those connected with the medical schools. The Wistar-Horner
and the Warren Museums in this country originated with men greatly
influenced by Hunter. He was, moreover, the intellectual father of that
interesting group of men on this side of the Atlantic who, while
practising as physicians, devoted much time and labor to the study of
natural history; such men as Benjamin Smith Barton, David Hossack, Jacob
Bigelow, Richard Harlan, John D. Godman, Samuel George Morton, John
Collins Warren, Samuel L. Mitchill and J. Ailken Meigs. He gave an immense
impetus in Great Britain to the study of morbid anatomy, and his nephew,
Matthew Baillie, published the first important book on the subject in the
English language.</p>
<p>Before the eighteenth century closed practical medicine had made great
advance. Smallpox, though not one of the great scourges like plague or
cholera, was a prevalent and much dreaded disease, and in civilized
countries few reached adult life without an attack. Edward Jenner, a
practitioner in Gloucestershire, and the pupil to whom John Hunter gave
the famous advice: "Don't think, try!" had noticed that milkmaids who had
been infected with cowpox from the udder of the cow were insusceptible to
smallpox. I show you here the hand of Sarah Nelmes with cowpox, 1796. A
vague notion had prevailed among the dairies from time immemorial that
this disease was a preventive of the smallpox. Jenner put the matter to
the test of experiment. Let me quote here his own words: "The first
experiment was made upon a lad of the name of Phipps, in whose arm a
little vaccine virus was inserted, taken from the hand of a young woman
who had been accidentally infected by a cow. Notwithstanding the
resemblance which the pustule, thus excited on the boy's arm, bore to
variolous inoculation, yet as the indisposition attending it was barely
perceptible, I could scarcely persuade myself the patient was secure from
the Small Pox. However, on his being inoculated some months afterwards, it
proved that he was secure."(8) The results of his experiments were
published in a famous small quarto volume in 1798.(*) From this date,
smallpox has been under control. Thanks to Jenner, not a single person in
this audience is pockmarked! A hundred and twenty-five years ago, the
faces of more than half of you would have been scarred. We now know the
principle upon which protection is secured: an active acquired immunity
follows upon an attack of a disease of a similar nature. Smallpox and
cowpox are closely allied and the substances formed in the blood by the
one are resistant to the virus of the other. I do not see how any
reasonable person can oppose vaccination or decry its benefits. I show you
the mortality figures(9) of the Prussian Army and of the German Empire. A
comparison with the statistics of the armies of other European countries
in which revaccination is not so thoroughly carried out is most convincing
of its efficacy.</p>
<p>(8) Edward Jenner: The Origin of the Vaccine Inoculation,<br/>
London, 1801.<br/>
<br/>
(*) Reprinted by Camac: Epoch-making Contributions to Medicine,<br/>
etc., 1909.—Ed.<br/>
<br/>
(9) Jockmann: Pocken und Vaccinationlehre, 1913.<br/></p>
<p>The early years of the century saw the rise of modern clinical medicine in
Paris. In the art of observation men had come to a standstill. I doubt
very much whether Corvisart in 1800 was any more skilful in recognizing a
case of pneumonia than was Aretaeus in the second century A. D. But
disease had come to be more systematically studied; special clinics were
organized, and teaching became much more thorough. Anyone who wishes to
have a picture of the medical schools in Europe in the first few years of
the century, should read the account of the travels of Joseph Frank of
Vienna.(10) The description of Corvisart is of a pioneer in clinical
teaching whose method remains in vogue today in France—the ward
visit, followed by a systematic lecture in the amphitheatre. There were
still lectures on Hippocrates three times a week, and bleeding was the
principal plan of treatment: one morning Frank saw thirty patients, out of
one hundred and twelve, bled! Corvisart was the strong clinician of his
generation, and his accurate studies on the heart were among the first
that had concentrated attention upon a special organ. To him, too, is due
the reintroduction of the art of percussion in internal disease discovered
by Auenbrugger in 1761.</p>
<p>(10) Joseph Frank: Reise nach Paris (etc.), Wien, 1804-05.<br/></p>
<p>The man who gave the greatest impetus to the study of scientific medicine
at this time was Bichat, who pointed out that the pathological changes in
disease were not so much in organs as in tissues. His studies laid the
foundation of modern histology. He separated the chief constituent
elements of the body into various tissues possessing definite physical and
vital qualities. "Sensibility and contractability are the fundamental
qualities of living matter and of the life of our tissues. Thus Bichat
substituted for vital forces 'vital properties,' that is to say, a series
of vital forces inherent in the different tissues."(11) His "Anatomic
Generale," published in 1802, gave an extraordinary stimulus to the study
of the finer processes of disease, and his famous "Recherches sur la Vie
et sur la Mort" (1800) dealt a death-blow to old iatromechanical and
iatrochemical views. His celebrated definition may be quoted: "La vie est
l'ensemble des proprietes vitales qui resistent aux proprietes physiques,
ou bien la vie est l'ensemble des fonctions qui resistent a la mort."
(Life is the sum of the vital properties that withstand the physical
properties, or, life is the sum of the functions that withstand death.)
Bichat is another pathetic figure in medical history. His meteoric career
ended in his thirty-first year: he died a victim of a post-mortem wound
infection. At his death, Corvisart wrote Napoleon: "Bichat has just died
at the age of thirty. That battlefield on which he fell is one which
demands courage and claims many victims. He has advanced the science of
medicine. No one at his age has done so much so well."</p>
<p>(11) E. Boinet: Les doctrines medicules, leur evolution, Paris,<br/>
1907, pp. 85-86.<br/></p>
<p>It was a pupil of Corvisart, Rene Theophile Laennec, who laid the
foundation of modern clinical medicine. The story of his life is well
known. A Breton by birth, he had a hard, up-hill struggle as a young man—a
struggle of which we have only recently been made aware by the publication
of a charming book by Professor Rouxeau of Nantes—"Laennec avant
1806." Influenced by Corvisart, he began to combine the accurate study of
cases in the wards with anatomical investigations in the dead-house.
Before Laennec, the examination of a patient had been largely by sense of
sight, supplemented by that of touch, as in estimating the degree of
fever, or the character of the pulse. Auenbrugger's "Inventum novum" of
percussion, recognized by Corvisart, extended the field; but the discovery
of auscultation by Laennec, and the publication of his work—"De
l'Auscultation Mediate," 1819,—marked an era in the study of
medicine. The clinical recognition of individual diseases had made really
very little progress; with the stethoscope begins the day of physical
diagnosis. The clinical pathology of the heart, lungs and abdomen was
revolutionized. Laennec's book is in the category of the eight or ten
greatest contributions to the science of medicine.(*) His description of
tuberculosis is perhaps the most masterly chapter in clinical medicine.
This revolution was effected by a simple extension of the Hippocratic
method from the bed to the dead-house, and by correlating the signs and
symptoms of a disease with its anatomical appearances.</p>
<p>(*) John Forbes's translation of Auenbrugger and part of his<br/>
translation of Lacnnec are reprinted in Camac's Epoch-making<br/>
Contributions, etc., 1909.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p>The pupils and successors of Corvisart—Bayle, Andral, Bouillaud,
Chomel, Piorry, Bretonneau, Rayer, Cruveilhier and Trousseau—brought
a new spirit into the profession. Everywhere the investigation of disease
by clinical-pathological methods widened enormously the diagnostic powers
of the physician. By this method Richard Bright, in 1836, opened a new
chapter on the relation of disease of the kidney to dropsy, and to
albuminous urine. It had already been shown by Blackwell and by Wells, the
celebrated Charleston (S.C.) physician, in 1811, that the urine contained
albumin in many cases of dropsy, but it was not until Bright began a
careful investigation of the bodies of patients who had presented these
symptoms, that he discovered the association of various forms of disease
of the kidney with anasarca and albuminous urine. In no direction was the
harvest of this combined study more abundant than in the complicated and
confused subject of fever. The work of Louis and of his pupils, W.W.
Gerhard and others, revealed the distinction between typhus and typhoid
fever, and so cleared up one of the most obscure problems in pathology. By
Morgagni's method of "anatomical thinking," Skoda in Vienna, Schonlein in
Berlin, Graves and Stokes in Dublin, Marshall Hall, C. J. B. Williams and
many others introduced the new and exact methods of the French and created
a new clinical medicine. A very strong impetus was given by the researches
of Virchow on cellular pathology, which removed the seats of disease from
the tissues, as taught by Bichat, to the individual elements, the cells.
The introduction of the use of the microscope in clinical work widened
greatly our powers of diagnosis, and we obtained thereby a very much
clearer conception of the actual processes of disease. In another way,
too, medicine was greatly helped by the rise of experimental pathology,
which had been introduced by John Hunter, was carried along by Magendie
and others, and reached its culmination in the epoch-making researches of
Claude Bernard. Not only were valuable studies made on the action of
drugs, but also our knowledge of cardiac pathology was revolutionized by
the work of Traube, Cohnheim and others. In no direction did the
experimental method effect such a revolution as in our knowledge of the
functions of the brain. Clinical neurology, which had received a great
impetus by the studies of Todd, Romberg, Lockhart Clarke, Duchenne and
Weir Mitchell, was completely revolutionized by the experimental work of
Hitzig, Fritsch and Ferrier on the localization of functions in the brain.
Under Charcot, the school of French neurologists gave great accuracy to
the diagnosis of obscure affections of the brain and spinal cord, and the
combined results of the new anatomical, physiological and experimental
work have rendered clear and definite what was formerly the most obscure
and complicated section of internal medicine. The end of the fifth decade
of the century is marked by a discovery of supreme importance. Humphry
Davy had noted the effects of nitrous oxide. The exhilarating influence of
sulphuric ether had been casually studied, and Long of Georgia had made
patients inhale the vapor until anaesthetic and had performed operations
upon them when in this state; but it was not until October 16, 1846, in
the Massachusetts General Hospital, that Morton, in a public operating
room, rendered a patient insensible with ether and demonstrated the
utility of surgical anaesthesia. The rival claims of priority no longer
interest us, but the occasion is one of the most memorable in the history
of the race. It is well that our colleagues celebrate Ether Day in Boston—no
more precious boon has ever been granted to suffering humanity.(*)</p>
<p>(*) Cf. Osler: Proc. Roy. Soc. Med., XI, Sect. Hist. Med., pp.<br/>
65-69, 1918, or, Annals Med. Hist., N.Y., I, 329-332. Cf. also<br/>
Morton's publications reprinted in Camac's book cited above.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p>In 1857, a young man, Louis Pasteur, sent to the Lille Scientific Society
a paper on "Lactic Acid Fermentation" and in December of the same year
presented to the Academy of Sciences in Paris a paper on "Alcoholic
Fermentation" in which he concluded that "the deduplication of sugar into
alcohol and carbonic acid is correlative to a phenomenon of life." A new
era in medicine dates from those two publications. The story of Pasteur's
life should be read by every student.(*) It is one of the glories of human
literature, and, as a record of achievement and of nobility of character,
is almost without an equal.</p>
<p>(*) Osler wrote a preface for the 1911 English edition of the<br/>
Life by Vallery-Radot.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p>At the middle of the last century we did not know much more of the actual
causes of the great scourges of the race, the plagues, the fevers and the
pestilences, than did the Greeks. Here comes Pasteur's great work. Before
him Egyptian darkness; with his advent a light that brightens more and
more as the years give us ever fuller knowledge. The facts that fevers
were catching, that epidemics spread, that infection could remain attached
to articles of clothing, etc., all gave support to the view that the
actual cause was something alive, a contagium vivum. It was really a very
old view, the germs of which may be found in the Fathers, but which was
first clearly expressed—so far as I know—by Fracastorius, the
Veronese physician, in the sixteenth century, who spoke of the seeds of
contagion passing from one person to another;(12) and he first drew a
parallel between the processes of contagion and the fermentation of wine.
This was more than one hundred years before Kircher, Leeuwenhoek and
others began to use the microscope and to see animalcula, etc., in water,
and so give a basis for the "infinitely little" view of the nature of
disease germs. And it was a study of the processes of fermentation that
led Pasteur to the sure ground on which we now stand.</p>
<p>(12) Varro, in De Re Rustica, Bk. I, 12 (circa 40 B.C.), speaks<br/>
of minute organisms which the eye cannot see and which enter the<br/>
body and cause disease.<br/></p>
<p>Out of these researches arose a famous battle which kept Pasteur hard at
work for four or five years—the struggle over spontaneous
generation. It was an old warfare, but the microscope had revealed a new
world, and the experiments on fermentation had lent great weight to the
omne vivum ex ovo doctrine. The famous Italians, Redi and Spallanzani, had
led the way in their experiments, and the latter had reached the
conclusion that there is no vegetable and no animal that has not its own
germ. But heterogenesis became the burning question, and Pouchet in
France, and Bastian in England, led the opposition to Pasteur. The many
famous experiments carried conviction to the minds of scientific men, and
destroyed forever the old belief in spontaneous generation. All along, the
analogy between disease and fermentation must have been in Pasteur's mind;
and then came the suggestion, "What would be most desirable is to push
those studies far enough to prepare the road for a serious research into
the origin of various diseases." If the changes in lactic, alcoholic and
butyric fermentations are due to minute living organisms, why should not
the same tiny creatures make the changes which occur in the body in the
putrid and suppurative diseases? With an accurate training as a chemist,
having been diverted in his studies upon fermentation into the realm of
biology, and nourishing a strong conviction of the identity between
putrefactive changes of the body and fermentation, Pasteur was well
prepared to undertake investigations which had hitherto been confined to
physicians alone.</p>
<p>So impressed was he with the analogy between fermentation and the
infectious diseases that, in 1863, he assured the French Emperor of his
ambition "to arrive at the knowledge of the causes of putrid and
contagious diseases." After a study upon the diseases of wines, which has
had most important practical bearings, an opportunity arose which changed
the whole course of his career, and profoundly influenced the development
of medical science. A disease of the silkworm had, for some years, ruined
one of the most important industries in France, and in 1865 the Government
asked Pasteur to give up his laboratory work and teaching, and to devote
his whole energies to the task of investigating it. The story of the
brilliant success which followed years of application to the problem will
be read with deep interest by every student of science. It was the first
of his victories in the application of the experimental methods of a
trained chemist to the problems of biology, and it placed his name high in
the group of the most illustrious benefactors of practical industries.</p>
<p>In a series of studies on the diseases of beer, and on the mode of
production of vinegar, he became more and more convinced that these
studies on fermentation had given him the key to the nature of the
infectious diseases. It is a remarkable fact that the distinguished
English philosopher of the seventeenth century, the man who more than
anyone else of his century appreciated the importance of the experimental
method, Robert Boyle, had said that he who could discover the nature of
ferments and fermentation, would be more capable than anyone else of
explaining the nature of certain diseases.</p>
<p>In 1876 there appeared in Cohn's "Beitrage zur Morphologie der Pflanzen"
(II, 277-310), a paper on the "AEtiology of Anthrax" by a German district
physician in Wollstein, Robert Koch, which is memorable in our literature
as the starting point of a new method of research into the causation of
infectious diseases. Koch demonstrated the constant presence of germs in
the blood of animals dying from the disease. Years before, those organisms
had been seen by Pollender and Davaine, but the epoch-making advance of
Koch was to grow those organisms in a pure culture outside the body, and
to produce the disease artificially by inoculating animals with the
cultures Koch is really our medical Galileo, who, by means of a new
technique,—pure cultures and isolated staining,—introduced us
to a new world. In 1878, followed his study on the "AEtiology of Wound
Infections," in which he was able to demonstrate conclusively the
association of micro-organisms with the disease. Upon those two memorable
researches made by a country doctor rests the modern science of
bacteriology.</p>
<p>The next great advance was the discovery by Pasteur of the possibility of
so attenuating, or weakening, the poison that an animal inoculated had a
slight attack, recovered and was then protected against the disease. More
than eighty years had passed since on May 14, 1796, Jenner had vaccinated
a child with cowpox and proved that a slight attack of one disease
protected the body from a disease of an allied nature. An occasion equally
famous in the history of medicine was a day in 1881, when Pasteur
determined that a flock of sheep vaccinated with the attenuated virus of
anthrax remained well, when every one of the unvaccinated infected from
the same material had died. Meanwhile, from Pasteur's researches on
fermentation and spontaneous generation, a transformation had been
initiated in the practice of surgery, which, it is not too much to say,
has proved one of the greatest boons ever conferred upon humanity. It had
long been recognized that, now and again, a wound healed without the
formation of pus, that is, without suppuration, but both spontaneous and
operative wounds were almost invariably associated with that process; and,
moreover, they frequently became putrid, as it was then called,—infected,
as we should say,—the general system became involved and the patient
died of blood poisoning. So common was this, particularly in old,
ill-equipped hospitals, that many surgeons feared to operate, and the
general mortality in all surgical cases was very high. Believing that it
was from outside that the germs came which caused the decomposition of
wounds, just as from the atmosphere the sugar solution got the germs which
caused the fermentation, a young surgeon in Glasgow, Joseph Lister,
applied the principles of Pasteur's experiments to their treatment. From
Lister's original paper(*) I quote the following: "Turning now to the
question how the atmosphere produces decomposition of organic substances,
we find that a flood of light has been thrown upon this most important
subject by the philosophic researches of M. Pasteur, who has demonstrated
by thoroughly convincing evidence that it is not to its oxygen or to any
of its gaseous constituents that the air owes this property, but to minute
particles suspended in it, which are the germs of various low forms of
life, long since revealed by the microscope, and regarded as merely
accidental concomitants of putrescence, but now shown by Pasteur to be its
essential cause, resolving the complex organic compounds into substances
of simpler chemical constitution, just as the yeast-plant converts sugar
into alcohol and carbonic acid." From these beginnings modern surgery took
its rise, and the whole subject of wound infection, not only in relation
to surgical diseases, but to child-bed fever, forms now one of the most
brilliant chapters in the history of preventive medicine.</p>
<p>(*) Lancet, March 16, 1867. (Cf. Camac: Epoch-making<br/>
Contributions, etc., 1909, p. 7.—Ed.)<br/></p>
<p>With the new technique and experimental methods, the discovery of the
specific germs of many of the more important acute infections followed
each other with bewildering rapidity: typhoid fever, diphtheria, cholera,
tetanus, plague, pneumonia, gonorrhoea and, most important of all,
tuberculosis. It is not too much to say that the demonstration by Koch of
the "bacillus tuberculosis" (1882) is, in its far-reaching results, one of
the most momentous discoveries ever made.</p>
<p>Of almost equal value have been the researches upon the protozoan forms of
animal life, as causes of disease. As early as 1873, spirilla were
demonstrated in relapsing fever. Laveran proved the association of
haematozoa with malaria in 1880. In the same year, Griffith Evans
discovered trypanosomes in a disease of horses and cattle in India, and
the same type of parasite was found in the sleeping sickness. Amoebae were
demonstrated in one form of dysentery, and in other tropical diseases
protozoa were discovered, so that we were really prepared for the
announcement in 1905, by Schaudinn, of the discovery of a protozoan
parasite in syphilis. Just fifty years had passed since Pasteur had sent
in his paper on "Lactic Acid Fermentation" to the Lille Scientific Society—half
a century in which more had been done to determine the true nature of
disease than in all the time that had passed since Hippocrates. Celsus
makes the oft-quoted remark that to determine the cause of a disease often
leads to the remedy,(*) and it is the possibility of removing the cause
that gives such importance to the new researches on disease.</p>
<p>(*) "Et causae quoque estimatio saepe morbum solvit," Celsus,<br/>
Lib. I, Prefatio.—Ed.<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0029" id="link2H_4_0029"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> INTERNAL SECRETIONS </h2>
<p>ONE of the greatest contributions of the nineteenth century to scientific
medicine was the discovery of the internal secretions of organs. The basic
work on the subject was done by Claude Bernard, a pupil of the great
Magendie, whose saying it is well to remember—"When entering a
laboratory one should leave theories in the cloakroom." More than any
other man of his generation, Claude Bernard appreciated the importance of
experiment in practical medicine. For him the experimental physician was
the physician of the future—a view well borne out by the influence
his epoch-making work has had on the treatment of disease. His studies on
the glycogenic functions of the liver opened the way for the modern
fruitful researches on the internal secretions of the various glands.
About the same time that Bernard was developing the laboratory side of the
problem, Addison, a physician to Guy's Hospital, in 1855, pointed out the
relation of a remarkable group of symptoms to disease of the suprarenal
glands, small bodies situated above the kidneys, the importance of which
had not been previously recognized. With the loss of the function of these
glands by disease, the body was deprived of something formed by them which
was essential to its proper working. Then, in the last third of the
century, came in rapid succession the demonstration of the relations of
the pancreas to diabetes, of the vital importance of the thyroid gland and
of the pituitary body. Perhaps no more striking illustration of the value
of experimental medicine has ever been given than that afforded by the
studies upon those glands.</p>
<p>The thyroid body, situated in the neck and the enlargement of which is
called goitre, secretes substances which pass into the blood, and which
are necessary for the growth of the body in childhood, for the development
of the mind and for the nutrition of the tissues of the skin. If,
following an infectious disease, a child has wasting of this gland, or if,
living in a certain district, it has a large goitre, normal development
does not take place, and the child does not grow in mind or body and
becomes what is called a cretin. More than this—if in adult life the
gland is completely removed, or if it wastes, a somewhat similar condition
is produced, and the patient in time loses his mental powers and becomes
fat and flabby—myxedematous. It has been shown experimentally in
various ways that the necessary elements of the secretion can be furnished
by feeding with the gland or its extracts, and that the cretinoid or
myxedematous conditions could thus be cured or prevented.</p>
<p>Experimental work has also demonstrated the functions of the suprarenal
glands and explained the symptoms of Addison's disease, and chemists have
even succeeded in making synthetically the active principle adrenalin.</p>
<p>There is perhaps no more fascinating story in the history of science than
that of the discovery of these so-called ductless glands. Part of its
special interest is due to the fact that clinicians, surgeons,
experimental physiologists, pathologists and chemists have all combined in
splendid teamwork to win the victory. No such miracles have ever before
been wrought by physicians as those which we see in connection with the
internal secretion of the thyroid gland. The myth of bringing the dead
back to life has been associated with the names of many great healers
since the incident of Empedocles and Pantheia, but nowadays the dead in
mind and the deformed in body may be restored by the touch of the magic
wand of science. The study of the interaction of these internal
secretions, their influence upon development, upon mental process and upon
disorders of metabolism is likely to prove in the future of a benefit
scarcely less remarkable than that which we have traced in the infectious
diseases.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0030" id="link2H_4_0030"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHEMISTRY </h2>
<p>IT is not making too strong a statement to say that the chemistry and
chemical physics of the nineteenth century have revolutionized the world.
It is difficult to realize that Liebig's famous Giessen laboratory, the
first to be opened to students for practical study, was founded in the
year 1825. Boyle, Cavendish, Priestley, Lavoisier, Black, Dalton and
others had laid a broad foundation, and Young, Frauenhofer, Rumford, Davy,
Joule, Faraday, Clerk-Maxwell, Helmholtz and others built upon that and
gave us the new physics and made possible our age of electricity. New
technique and new methods have given a powerful stimulus to the study of
the chemical changes that take place in the body, which, only a few years
ago, were matters largely of speculation. "Now," in the words of Professor
Lee, "we recognize that, with its living and its non-living substances
inextricably intermingled, the body constitutes an intensive chemical
laboratory in which there is ever occurring a vast congeries of chemical
reactions; both constructive and destructive processes go on; new
protoplasm takes the place of old. We can analyze the income of the body
and we can analyze its output, and from these data we can learn much
concerning the body's chemistry. A great improvement in the method of such
work has recently been secured by the device of inclosing the person who
is the subject of the experiment in a respiration calorimeter. This is an
air-tight chamber, artificially supplied with a constant stream of pure
air, and from which the expired air, laden with the products of
respiration, is withdrawn for purposes of analysis. The subject may remain
in the chamber for days, the composition of all food and all excrete being
determined, and all heat that is given off being measured. Favorable
conditions are thus established for an exact study of many problems of
nutrition. The difficulties increase when we attempt to trace the
successive steps in the corporeal pathway of molecule and atom. Yet these
secrets of the vital process are also gradually being revealed. When we
remember that it is in this very field of nutrition that there exist great
popular ignorance and a special proneness to fad and prejudice, we realize
how practically helpful are such exact studies of metabolism."(13)</p>
<p>(13) Frederick S. Lee, Ph.D.: Scientific Features of Modern<br/>
Medicine, New York, 1911. I would like to call attention to this<br/>
work of Professor Lee's as presenting all the scientific features<br/>
of modern medicine in a way admirably adapted for anyone, lay or<br/>
medical, who wishes to get a clear sketch of them.<br/></p>
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<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER VI — THE RISE OF PREVENTIVE MEDICINE </h2>
<p>THE story so far has been of men and of movements—of men who have,
consciously or unconsciously, initiated great movements, and of movements
by which, nolens volens, the men of the time were moulded and controlled.
Hippocrates, in the tractate on "Ancient Medicine," has a splendid
paragraph on the attitude of mind towards the men of the past. My
attention was called to it one day in the Roman Forum by Commendatore
Boni, who quoted it as one of the great sayings of antiquity. Here it is:
"But on that account, I say, we ought not to reject the ancient Art, as if
it were not, and had not been properly founded, because it did not attain
accuracy in all things, but rather, since it is capable of reaching to the
greatest exactitude by reasoning, to receive it and admire its
discoveries, made from a state of great ignorance, and as having been well
and properly made, and not from chance."(1)</p>
<p>(1) The Works of Hippocrates, Adams, Vol. I, p. 168, London, 1849<br/>
(Sydenham Society).<br/></p>
<p>I have tried to tell you what the best of these men in successive ages
knew, to show you their point of outlook on the things that interest us.
To understand the old writers one must see as they saw, feel as they felt,
believe as they believed—and this is hard, indeed impossible! We may
get near them by asking the Spirit of the Age in which they lived to enter
in and dwell with us, but it does not always come. Literary criticism is
not literary history—we have no use here for the former, but to
analyze his writings is to get as far as we can behind the doors of a
man's mind, to know and appraise his knowledge, not from our standpoint,
but from that of his contemporaries, his predecessors and his immediate
successors. Each generation has its own problems to face, looks at truth
from a special focus and does not see quite the same outlines as any
other. For example, men of the present generation grow up under influences
very different from those which surrounded my generation in the seventies
of the last century, when Virchow and his great contemporaries laid the
sure and deep foundations of modern pathology. Which of you now knows the
"Cellular Pathology" as we did? To many of you it is a closed book,—to
many more Virchow may be thought a spent force. But no, he has only taken
his place in a great galaxy. We do not forget the magnitude of his labors,
but a new generation has new problems—his message was not for you—but
that medicine today runs in larger moulds and turns out finer castings is
due to his life and work. It is one of the values of lectures on the
history of medicine to keep alive the good influences of great men even
after their positive teaching is antiquated. Let no man be so foolish as
to think that he has exhausted any subject for his generation. Virchow was
not happy when he saw the young men pour into the old bottle of cellular
pathology the new wine of bacteriology. Lister could never understand how
aseptic surgery arose out of his work. Ehrlich would not recognize his
epoch-making views on immunity when this generation has finished with
them. I believe it was Hegel who said that progress is a series of
negations—the denial today of what was accepted yesterday, the
contradiction by each generation of some part at least of the philosophy
of the last; but all is not lost, the germ plasm remains, a nucleus of
truth to be fertilized by men often ignorant even of the body from which
it has come. Knowledge evolves, but in such a way that its possessors are
never in sure possession. "It is because science is sure of nothing that
it is always advancing" (Duclaux).</p>
<p>History is the biography of the mind of man, and its educational value is
in direct proportion to the completeness of our study of the individuals
through whom this mind has been manifested. I have tried to take you back
to the beginnings of science, and to trace its gradual development, which
is conditioned by three laws. In the first place, like a living organism,
truth grows, and its gradual evolution may be traced from the tiny germ to
the mature product. Never springing, Minerva-like, to full stature at
once, truth may suffer all the hazards incident to generation and
gestation. Much of history is a record of the mishaps of truths which have
struggled to the birth, only to die or else to wither in premature decay.
Or the germ may be dormant for centuries, awaiting the fullness of time.</p>
<p>Secondly, all scientific truth is conditioned by the state of knowledge at
the time of its announcement. Thus, at the beginning of the seventeenth
century, the science of optics and mechanical appliances had not made
possible (so far as the human mind was concerned) the existence of blood
capillaries and blood corpuscles. Jenner could not have added to his
"Inquiry" a study on immunity; Sir William Perkin and the chemists made
Koch technique possible; Pasteur gave the conditions that produced Lister;
Davy and others furnished the preliminaries necessary for anaesthesia.
Everywhere we find this filiation, one event following the other in
orderly sequence—"Mind begets mind," as Harvey (De Generatione)
says; "opinion is the source of opinion. Democritus with his atoms, and
Eudoxus with his chief good which he placed in pleasure, impregnated
Epicurus; the four elements of Empedocles, Aristotle; the doctrines of the
ancient Thebans, Pythagoras and Plato; geometry, Euclid."(2)</p>
<p>(2) Works of William Harvey, translated by Robert Willis, London,<br/>
1847, p. 532.<br/></p>
<p>And, thirdly, to scientific truth alone may the homo mensura principle be
applied, since of all mental treasures of the race it alone compels
general acquiescence. That this general acquiescence, this aspect of
certainty, is not reached per saltum, but is of slow, often of difficult
growth,—marked by failures and frailties, but crowned at last with
an acceptance accorded to no other product of mental activity,—is
illustrated by every important discovery from Copernicus to Darwin.</p>
<p>The difficulty is to get men to the thinking level which compels the
application of scientific truths. Protagoras, that "mighty-wise man," as
Socrates called him, who was responsible for the aphorism that man is the
measure of all things, would have been the first to recognize the folly of
this standard for the people at large. But we have gradually reached a
stage in which knowledge is translated into action, made helpful for
suffering humanity, just as the great discoveries in physics and chemistry
have been made useful in the advance of civilization. We have traced
medicine through a series of upward steps—a primitive stage, in
which it emerged from magic and religion into an empirical art, as seen
among the Egyptians and Babylonians; a stage in which the natural
character of disease was recognized and the importance of its study as a
phenomenon of nature was announced; a stage in which the structure and
functions of the human body were worked out; a stage in which the clinical
and anatomical features of disease were determined; a stage in which the
causes of disorders were profitably studied, and a final stage, into which
we have just entered, the application of the knowledge for their
prevention. Science has completely changed man's attitude towards disease.</p>
<p>Take a recent concrete illustration. A couple of years ago in Philadelphia
and in some other parts of the United States, a very peculiar disease
appeared, characterized by a rash upon the skin and moderate fever, and a
constitutional disturbance proportionate to the extent and severity of the
eruption. The malady first broke out in the members of a crew of a private
yacht; then in the crews of other boats, and among persons living in the
boarding-houses along the docks. It was the cause of a great deal of
suffering and disability.</p>
<p>There were three courses open: to accept the disease as a visitation of
God, a chastening affliction sent from above, and to call to aid the
spiritual arm of the church. Except the "Peculiar People" few now take
this view or adopt this practice. The Christian Scientist would probably
deny the existence of the rash and of the fever, refuse to recognize the
itching and get himself into harmony with the Infinite. Thirdly, the
method of experimental medicine.</p>
<p>First, the conditions were studied under which the individual cases
occurred. The only common factor seemed to be certain straw mattresses
manufactured by four different firms, all of which obtained the straw from
the same source.</p>
<p>The second point was to determine the relation of the straw to the rash.
One of the investigators exposed a bare arm and shoulder for an hour
between two mattresses. Three people voluntarily slept on the mattresses
for one night. Siftings from the straw were applied to the arm, under all
of which circumstances the rash quickly developed, showing conclusively
the relation of the straw to the disease.</p>
<p>Thirdly, siftings from the straw and mattresses which had been thoroughly
disinfected failed to produce the rash.</p>
<p>And fourthly, careful inspection of the siftings of the straw disclosed
living parasites, small mites, which when applied to the skin quickly
produced the characteristic eruption.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> SANITATION </h2>
<p>WHEN the thoughtful historian gets far enough away from the nineteenth
century to see it as a whole, no single feature will stand out with
greater distinctness than the fulfilment of the prophecy of Descartes that
we could be freed from an infinity of maladies both of body and mind if we
had sufficient knowledge of their causes and of all the remedies with
which nature has provided us. Sanitation takes its place among the great
modern revolutions—political, social and intellectual. Great Britain
deserves the credit for the first practical recognition of the maxim salus
populi suprema lex. In the middle and latter part of the century a
remarkable group of men, Southwood Smith, Chadwick, Budd, Murchison,
Simon, Acland, Buchanan, J.W. Russell and Benjamin Ward Richardson, put
practical sanitation on a scientific basis. Even before the full
demonstration of the germ theory, they had grasped the conception that the
battle had to be fought against a living contagion which found in poverty,
filth and wretched homes the conditions for its existence. One terrible
disease was practically wiped out in twenty-five years of hard work. It is
difficult to realize that within the memory of men now living, typhus
fever was one of the great scourges of our large cities, and broke out in
terrible epidemics—the most fatal of all to the medical profession.
In the severe epidemic in Ireland in the forties of the last century, one
fifth of all the doctors in the island died of typhus. A better idea of
the new crusade, made possible by new knowledge, is to be had from a
consideration of certain diseases against which the fight is in active
progress.</p>
<p>Nothing illustrates more clearly the interdependence of the sciences than
the reciprocal impulse given to new researches in pathology and entomology
by the discovery of the part played by insects in the transmission of
disease. The flea, the louse, the bedbug, the house fly, the mosquito, the
tick, have all within a few years taken their places as important
transmitters of disease. The fly population may be taken as the sanitary
index of a place. The discovery, too, that insects are porters of disease
has led to a great extension of our knowledge of their life history. Early
in the nineties, when Dr. Thayer and I were busy with the study of malaria
in Baltimore, we began experiments on the possible transmission of the
parasites, and a tramp, who had been a medical student, offered himself as
a subject. Before we began, Dr. Thayer sought information as to the
varieties of mosquitoes known in America, but sought in vain: there had at
that time been no systematic study. The fundamental study which set us on
the track was a demonstration by Patrick Manson,(3) in 1879, of the
association of filarian disease with the mosquito. Many observations had
already been made, and were made subsequently, on the importance of
insects as intermediary hosts in the animal parasites, but the first
really great scientific demonstration of a widespread infection through
insects was by Theobald Smith, now of Harvard University, in 1889, in a
study of Texas fever of cattle.(4) I well remember the deep impression
made upon me by his original communication, which in completeness, in
accuracy of detail, in Harveian precision and in practical results remains
one of the most brilliant pieces of experimental work ever undertaken. It
is difficult to draw comparisons in pathology; but I think, if a census
were taken among the world's workers on disease, the judgment to be based
on the damage to health and direct mortality, the votes would be given to
malaria as the greatest single destroyer of the human race. Cholera kills
its thousands, plague, in its bad years, its hundreds of thousands, yellow
fever, hookworm disease, pneumonia, tuberculosis, are all terribly
destructive, some only in the tropics, others in more temperate regions:
but malaria is today, as it ever was, a disease to which the word pandemic
is specially applicable. In this country and in Europe, its ravages have
lessened enormously during the past century, but in the tropics it is
everywhere and always present, the greatest single foe of the white man,
and at times and places it assumes the proportions of a terrible epidemic.
In one district of India alone, during the last four months of 1908, one
quarter of the total population suffered from the disease and there were
400,000 deaths—practically all from malaria. Today, the control of
this terrible scourge is in our hands, and, as I shall tell you in a few
minutes, largely because of this control, the Panama Canal is being built.
No disease illustrates better the progressive evolution of scientific
medicine. It is one of the oldest of known diseases. The Greeks and
Graeco-Romans knew it well. It seems highly probable, as brought out by
the studies of W.H.S. Jones of Cambridge, that, in part at least, the
physical degeneration in Greece and Rome may have been due to the great
increase of this disease. Its clinical manifestations were well known and
admirably described by the older writers. In the seventeenth century, as I
have already told you, the remarkable discovery was made that the bark of
the cinchona tree was a specific. Between the date of the Countess's
recovery in Lima and the year 1880 a colossal literature on the disease
had accumulated. Literally thousands of workers had studied the various
aspects of its many problems; the literature of this country, particularly
of the Southern States, in the first half of the last century may be said
to be predominantly malarial. Ordinary observation carried on for long
centuries had done as much as was possible. In 1880, a young French army
surgeon, Laveran by name, working in Algiers, found in the microscopic
examination of the blood that there were little bodies in the red blood
corpuscles, amoeboid in character, which he believed to be the germs of
the disease. Very little attention at first was paid to his work, and it
is not surprising. It was the old story of "Wolf, wolf"; there had been so
many supposed "germs" that the profession had become suspicious. Several
years elapsed before Surgeon-General Sternberg called the attention of the
English-speaking world to Laveran's work: it was taken up actively in
Italy, and in America by Councilman, Abbott and by others among us in
Baltimore. The result of these widespread observations was the
confirmation in every respect of Laveran's discovery of the association
with malaria of a protozoan parasite. This was step number three. Clinical
observation, empirical discovery of the cure, determination of the
presence of a parasite. Two other steps followed rapidly. Another army
surgeon, Ronald Ross, working in India, influenced by the work of Manson,
proved that the disease was transmitted by certain varieties of
mosquitoes. Experiments came in to support the studies in etiology; two of
those may be quoted. Mosquitoes which had bitten malarial patients in
Italy were sent to London and there allowed to bite Mr. Manson, son of Dr.
Manson. This gentleman had not lived out of England, where there is now no
acute malaria. He had been a perfectly healthy, strong man. In a few days
following the bites of the infected mosquitoes, he had a typical attack of
malarial fever.</p>
<p>(3) Journal Linnaean Society, London, 1879, XIV, 304-311.<br/>
<br/>
(4) Medical News, Philadelphia, 1889, LV, 689-693, and monograph<br/>
with Kilborne, Washington, 1893.<br/></p>
<p>The other experiment, though of a different character, is quite as
convincing. In certain regions about Rome, in the Campania, malaria is so
prevalent that, in the autumn, almost everyone in the district is
attacked, particularly if he is a newcomer. Dr. Sambon and a friend lived
in this district from June 1 to September 1, 1900. The test was whether
they could live in this exceedingly dangerous climate for the three months
without catching malaria, if they used stringent precautions against the
bites of mosquitoes. For this purpose the hut in which they lived was
thoroughly wired, and they slept under netting. Both of these gentlemen,
at the end of the period, had escaped the disease.</p>
<p>Then came the fifth and final triumph—the prevention of the disease.
The anti-malarial crusade which has been preached by Sir Ronald Ross and
has been carried out successfully on a wholesale scale in Italy and in
parts of India and Africa, has reduced enormously the incidence of the
disease. Professor Celli of Rome, in his lecture room, has an interesting
chart which shows the reduction in the mortality from malaria in Italy
since the preventive measures have been adopted—the deaths have
fallen from above 28,000 in 1888 to below 2000 in 1910. There is needed a
stirring campaign against the disease throughout the Southern States of
this country.</p>
<p>The story of yellow fever illustrates one of the greatest practical
triumphs of scientific medicine; indeed, in view of its far-reaching
commercial consequences, it may range as one of the first achievements of
the race. Ever since the discovery of America, the disease has been one of
its great scourges, permanently endemic in the Spanish Main, often
extending to the Southern States, occasionally into the North, and not
infrequently it has crossed the Atlantic. The records of the British Army
in the West Indies show an appalling death rate, chiefly from this
disease. At Jamaica, for the twenty years ending in 1836, the average
mortality was 101 per thousand, and in certain instances as high as 178.
One of the most dreaded of all infections, the periods of epidemics in the
Southern States have been the occasions of a widespread panic with
complete paralysis of commerce. How appalling the mortality is may be
judged from the outbreak in Philadelphia in 1793, when ten thousand people
died in three months.(5) The epidemics in Spain in the early part of the
nineteenth century were of great severity. A glance through La Roche's
great book(6) on the subject soon gives one an idea of the enormous
importance of the disease in the history of the Southern States. Havana,
ever since its foundation, had been a hotbed of yellow fever. The best
minds of the profession had been attracted to a solution of the problem,
but all in vain. Commission after commission had been appointed, with
negative results; various organisms had been described as the cause, and
there were sad illustrations of the tragedy associated with investigations
undertaken without proper training or proper technique. By the year 1900,
not only had the ground been cleared, but the work on insect-borne disease
by Manson and by Ross had given observers an important clue. It had
repeatedly been suggested that some relation existed between the bites of
mosquitoes and the tropical fevers, particularly by that remarkable
student, Nott of Mobile, and the French physician, Beauperthuy. But the
first to announce clearly the mosquito theory of the disease was Carlos
Finlay of Havana. Early in the spring of 1900, during the occupation of
Cuba by the United States, a commission appointed by Surgeon-General
Sternberg (himself one of the most energetic students of the disease)
undertook fresh investigations. Dr. Walter Reed, Professor of Bacteriology
in the Army Medical School, was placed in charge: Dr. Carroll of the
United States Army, Dr. Agramonte of Havana and Dr. Jesse W. Lazear were
the other members. At the Johns Hopkins Hospital, we were deeply
interested in the work, as Dr. Walter Reed was a favorite pupil of
Professor Welch, a warm friend of all of us, and a frequent visitor to our
laboratories. Dr. Jesse Lazear, who had been my house physician, had
worked with Dr. Thayer and myself at malaria, and gave up the charge of my
clinical laboratory to join the commission.</p>
<p>(5) Matthew Carey: A Short Account of the Malignant Fever,<br/>
Philadelphia, 1793.<br/>
<br/>
(6) R. La Roche: Yellow Fever, 2 vols., Philadelphia, 1855.<br/></p>
<p>Many scientific discoveries have afforded brilliant illustrations of
method in research, but in the work of these men one is at a loss to know
which to admire more—the remarkable accuracy and precision of the
experiments, or the heroism of the men—officers and rank and file of
the United States Army; they knew all the time that they were playing with
death, and some of them had to pay the penalty! The demonstration was
successful—beyond peradventure—that yellow fever could be
transmitted by mosquitoes, and equally the negative proposition—that
it could not be transmitted by fomites. An interval of twelve or more days
was found to be necessary after the mosquito has bitten a yellow fever
patient before it is capable of transmitting the infection. Lazear
permitted himself to be bitten by a stray mosquito while conducting his
experiments in the yellow fever hospital. Bitten on the thirteenth, he
sickened on the eighteenth and died on the twenty-fifth of September, but
not until he had succeeded in showing in two instances that mosquitoes
could convey the infection. He added another to the long list of members
of the profession who have laid down their lives in search of the causes
of disease. Of such men as Lazear and of Myers of the Liverpool
Yellow-Fever Commission, Dutton and young Manson, may fitly be sung from
the noblest of American poems the tribute which Lowell paid to Harvard's
sons who fell in the War of Secession:</p>
<p>Many in sad faith sought for her,<br/>
Many with crossed hands sighed for her;<br/>
But these, our brothers, fought for her,<br/>
At life's dear peril wrought for her,<br/>
So loved her that they died for her.<br/></p>
<p>Fortunately, the commander-in-chief at the time in Cuba was General
Leonard Wood, who had been an army surgeon, and he was the first to
appreciate the importance of the discovery. The sanitation of Havana was
placed in the hands of Dr. Gorgas, and within nine months the city was
cleared of yellow fever, and, with the exception of a slight outbreak
after the withdrawal of the American troops, has since remained free from
a disease which had been its scourge for centuries. As General Wood
remarked, "Reed's discovery has resulted in the saving of more lives
annually than were lost in the Cuban War, and saves the commercial
interest of the world a greater financial loss each year than the cost of
the Cuban War. He came to Cuba at a time when one third of the officers of
my staff died of yellow fever, and we were discouraged at the failure of
our efforts to control it." Following the example of Havana other centres
were attacked, at Vera Cruz and in Brazil, with the same success, and it
is safe to say that now, thanks to the researches of Reed and his
colleagues, with proper measures, no country need fear a paralyzing
outbreak of this once dreaded disease.</p>
<p>The scientific researches in the last two decades of the nineteenth
century made possible the completion of the Panama Canal. The narrow
isthmus separating the two great oceans and joining the two great
continents, has borne for four centuries an evil repute as the White Man's
Grave. Silent upon a peak of Darien, stout Cortez with eagle eye had gazed
on the Pacific. As early as 1520, Saavedra proposed to cut a canal through
the Isthmus. There the first city was founded by the conquerors of the new
world, which still bears the name of Panama. Spaniards, English and French
fought along its coasts; to it the founder of the Bank of England took his
ill-fated colony; Raleigh, Drake, Morgan the buccaneer, and scores of
adventurers seeking gold, found in fever an enemy stronger than the
Spaniard. For years the plague-stricken Isthmus was abandoned to the
negroes and the half-breeds, until in 1849, stimulated by the gold fever
of California, a railway was begun by the American engineers, Totten and
Trautwine, and completed in 1855, a railway every tie of which cost the
life of a man. The dream of navigators and practical engineers was taken
in hand by Ferdinand de Lesseps in January, 1881. The story of the French
Canal Company is a tragedy unparalleled in the history of finance, and,
one may add, in the ravages of tropical disease. Yellow fever, malaria,
dysentery, typhus, carried off in nine years nearly twenty thousand
employees. The mortality frequently rose above 100, sometimes to 130, 140
and in September, 1885, it reached the appalling figure of 176.97 per
thousand work people. This was about the maximum death rate of the British
Army in the West Indies in the nineteenth century.</p>
<p>When, in 1904, the United States undertook to complete the Canal, everyone
felt that the success or failure was largely a matter of sanitary control.
The necessary knowledge existed, but under the circumstances could it be
made effective? Many were doubtful. Fortunately, there was at the time in
the United States Army a man who had already served an apprenticeship in
Cuba, and to whom more than to anyone else was due the disappearance of
yellow fever from that island. To a man, the profession in the United
States felt that could Dr. Gorgas be given full control of the sanitary
affairs of the Panama Zone, the health problem, which meant the Canal
problem, could be solved. There was at first a serious difficulty relating
to the necessary administrative control by a sanitary officer. In an
interview which Dr. Welch and I had with President Roosevelt, he keenly
felt this difficulty and promised to do his best to have it rectified. It
is an open secret that at first, as was perhaps only natural, matters did
not go very smoothly, and it took a year or more to get properly
organized. Yellow fever recurred on the Isthmus in 1904 and in the early
part of 1905. It was really a colossal task in itself to undertake the
cleaning of the city of Panama, which had been for centuries a pest-house,
the mortality in which, even after the American occupation, reached during
one month the rate of 71 per thousand living. There have been a great many
brilliant illustrations of the practical application of science in
preserving the health of a community and in saving life, but it is safe to
say that, considering the circumstances, the past history, and the
extraordinary difficulties to be overcome, the work accomplished by the
Isthmian Canal Commission is unique. The year 1905 was devoted to
organization; yellow fever was got rid of, and at the end of the year the
total mortality among the whites had fallen to 8 per thousand, but among
the blacks it was still high, 44. For three years, with a progressively
increasing staff which had risen to above 40,000, of whom more than 12,000
were white, the death rate progressively fell.</p>
<p>Of the six important tropical diseases, plague, which reached the Isthmus
one year, was quickly held in check. Yellow fever, the most dreaded of
them all, never recurred. Beri-beri, which in 1906 caused sixty-eight
deaths, has gradually disappeared. The hookworm disease, ankylostomiasis,
has steadily decreased. From the very outset, malaria has been taken as
the measure of sanitary efficiency. Throughout the French occupation it
was the chief enemy to be considered, not only because of its fatality,
but on account of the prolonged incapacity following infection. In 1906,
out of every 1000 employees there were admitted to the hospital from
malaria 821; in 1907, 424; in 1908, 282; in 1912, 110; in 1915, 51; in
1917, 14. The fatalities from the disease have fallen from 233 in 1906 to
154 in 1907, to 73 in 1908 and to 7 in 1914. The death rate for malarial
fever per 1000 population sank from 8.49 in 1906 to 0.11 in 1918.
Dysentery, next to malaria the most serious of the tropical diseases in
the Zone, caused 69 deaths in 1906; 48 in 1907; in 1908, with nearly
44,000, only 16 deaths, and in 1914, 4.(*) But it is when the general
figures are taken that we see the extraordinary reduction that has taken
place. Out of every 1000 engaged in 1908 only a third of the number died
that died in 1906, and half the number that died in 1907.</p>
<p>(*) Figures for recent years supplied by editors.<br/></p>
<p>In 1914, the death rate from disease among white males had fallen to 3.13
per thousand. The rate among the 2674 American women and children
connected with the Commission was only 9.72 per thousand. But by far the
most gratifying reduction is among the blacks, among whom the rate from
disease had fallen to the surprisingly low figure in 1912 of 8.77 per
thousand; in 1906 it was 47 per thousand. A remarkable result is that in
1908 the combined tropical diseases—malaria, dysentery and beri-beri—killed
fewer than the two great killing diseases of the temperate zone, pneumonia
and tuberculosis—127 in one group and 137 in the other. The whole
story is expressed in two words, EFFECTIVE ORGANIZATION, and the special
value of this experiment in sanitation is that it has been made, and made
successfully, in one of the great plague spots of the world.</p>
<p>Month by month a little, gray-covered pamphlet was published by Colonel
Gorgas, a "Report of the Department of Sanitation of the Isthmian Canal
Commission." I have been one of the favored to whom it has been sent year
by year, and, keenly interested as I have always been in infectious
diseases, and particularly in malaria and dysentery, I doubt if anyone has
read it more faithfully. In evidence of the extraordinary advance made in
sanitation by Gorgas, I give a random example from one of his monthly
reports (1912): In a population of more than 52,000, the death rate from
disease had fallen to 7.31 per thousand; among the whites it was 2.80 and
among the colored people 8.77. Not only is the profession indebted to
Colonel Gorgas and his staff for this remarkable demonstration, but they
have offered an example of thoroughness and efficiency which has won the
admiration of the whole world. As J. B. Bishop, secretary of the Isthmian
Canal Commission, has recently said: "The Americans arrived on the Isthmus
in the full light of these two invaluable discoveries (the insect
transmission of yellow fever and malaria). Scarcely had they begun active
work when an outbreak of yellow fever occurred which caused such a panic
throughout their force that nothing except the lack of steamship
accommodation prevented the flight of the entire body from the Isthmus.
Prompt, intelligent and vigorous application of the remedies shown to be
effective by the mosquito discoveries not only checked the progress of the
pest, but banished it forever from the Isthmus. In this way, and in this
alone, was the building of the canal made possible. The supreme credit for
its construction therefore belongs to the brave men, surgeons of the
United States Army, who by their high devotion to duty and to humanity
risked their lives in Havana in 1900-1901 to demonstrate the truth of the
mosquito theory."(7)</p>
<p>(7) Bishop: The French at Panama, Scribner's Magazine, January,<br/>
1913, p. 42.<br/></p>
<p>One disease has still a special claim upon the public in this country.
Some fourteen or fifteen years ago, in an address on the problem of
typhoid fever in the United States, I contended that the question was no
longer in the hands of the profession. In season and out of season we had
preached salvation from it in volumes which fill state reports, public
health journals and the medical periodicals. Though much has been done,
typhoid fever remains a question of grave national concern. You lost in
this state(7a) in 1911 from typhoid fever 154 lives, every one sacrificed
needlessly, every one a victim of neglect and incapacity. Between 1200 and
1500 persons had a slow, lingering illness. A nation of contradictions and
paradoxes—a clean people, by whom personal hygiene is carefully
cultivated, but it has displayed in matters of public sanitation a
carelessness simply criminal: a sensible people, among whom education is
more widely diffused than in any other country, supinely acquiesces in
conditions often shameful beyond expression. The solution of the problem
is not very difficult. What has been done elsewhere can be done here. It
is not so much in the cities, though here too the death rate is still
high, but in the smaller towns and rural districts, in many of which the
sanitary conditions are still those of the Middle Ages. How Galen would
have turned up his nose with contempt at the water supply of the capital
of the Dominion of Canada, scourged so disgracefully by typhoid fever of
late! There is no question that the public is awakening, but many State
Boards of Health need more efficient organization, and larger
appropriations. Others are models, and it is not for lack of example that
many lag behind. The health officers should have special training in
sanitary science and special courses leading to diplomas in public health
should be given in the medical schools. Were the health of the people made
a question of public and not of party policy, only a skilled expert could
possibly be appointed as a public health officer, not, as is now so often
the case, the man with the political pull.</p>
<p>(7a) Connecticut.<br/></p>
<p>It is a long and tragic story in the annals of this country. That
distinguished man, the first professor of physic in this University in the
early years of last century, Dr. Nathan Smith, in that notable monograph
on "Typhus Fever" (1824), tells how the disease had followed him in his
various migrations, from 1787, when he began to practice, all through his
career, and could he return this year, in some hundred and forty or one
hundred and fifty families of the state he would find the same miserable
tragedy which he had witnessed so often in the same heedless sacrifice of
the young on the altar of ignorance and incapacity.</p>
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<br/>
<h2> TUBERCULOSIS </h2>
<p>IN a population of about one million, seventeen hundred persons died of
tuberculosis in this state in the year 1911—a reduction in thirty
years of nearly 50 per cent. A generation has changed completely our
outlook on one of the most terrible scourges of the race. It is simply
appalling to think of the ravages of this disease in civilized
communities. Before the discovery by Robert Koch of the bacillus, we were
helpless and hopeless; in an Oriental fatalism we accepted with folded
hands a state of affairs which use and wont had made bearable. Today, look
at the contrast! We are both helpful and hopeful. Knowing the cause of the
disease, knowing how it is distributed, better able to recognize the early
symptoms, better able to cure a very considerable portion of all early
cases, we have gradually organized an enthusiastic campaign which is
certain to lead to victory. The figures I have quoted indicate how
progressively the mortality is falling. Only, do not let us be
disappointed if this comparatively rapid fall is not steadily maintained
in the country at large. It is a long fight against a strong enemy, and at
the lowest estimate it will take several generations before tuberculosis
is placed at last, with leprosy and typhus, among the vanquished diseases.
Education, organization, cooperation—these are the weapons of our
warfare. Into details I need not enter. The work done by the National
Association under the strong guidance of its secretary, Mr. Farrand, the
pioneer studies of Trudeau and the optimism which he has brought into the
campaign, the splendid demonstration by the New York Board of Health of
what organization can do, have helped immensely in this world-wide
conflict.</p>
<p>SOME years ago, in an address at Edinburgh, I spoke of the triple gospel
which man has published—of his soul, of his goods, of his body. This
third gospel, the gospel of his body, which brings man into relation with
nature, has been a true evangelion, the glad tidings of the final conquest
of nature by which man has redeemed thousands of his fellow men from
sickness and from death.</p>
<p>If, in the memorable phrase of the Greek philosopher, Prodicus, "That
which benefits human life is God," we may see in this new gospel a link
betwixt us and the crowning race of those who eye to eye shall look on
knowledge, and in whose hand nature shall be an open book—an
approach to the glorious day of which Shelley sings so gloriously:</p>
<p>Happiness<br/>
And Science dawn though late upon the earth;<br/>
Peace cheers the mind, health renovates the frame;<br/>
Disease and pleasure cease to mingle here,<br/>
Reason and passion cease to combat there,<br/>
Whilst mind unfettered o'er the earth extends<br/>
Its all-subduing energies, and wields<br/>
The sceptre of a vast dominion there.<br/>
<br/>
(Daemon of the World, Pt. II.)<br/></p>
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