Annals of medical history . apter and receive thereby a con-ditional immortality. Those who know the author would know that there is nothing in his book which ex-ploits himself. We should rather be in-clined to say that the author is almost tooshy in recounting his achievements. Heseems more interested in the personalitiesabout him. He shows that he likes to esti-mate and esteem his fellow men, and con-fesses that he has been well-treated bythose in his profession. He shows himselfvery keen and very sound on problems ofeducation. He is a lover of art, of music, ofbooks and of all the phases of


Annals of medical history . apter and receive thereby a con-ditional immortality. Those who know the author would know that there is nothing in his book which ex-ploits himself. We should rather be in-clined to say that the author is almost tooshy in recounting his achievements. Heseems more interested in the personalitiesabout him. He shows that he likes to esti-mate and esteem his fellow men, and con-fesses that he has been well-treated bythose in his profession. He shows himselfvery keen and very sound on problems ofeducation. He is a lover of art, of music, ofbooks and of all the phases of outdoor life,his own experience in which he felicitouslyportrays. If the traveler from Mars shouldpick up the work, he would say, we think,that it tells a story of a very unusual man,progressive, and sometimes aggressive, tenaxpropositi, broadly educated, widely endowedand a mighty good fellow. The book is wellprinted, and illustrated with some very inter-esting plates of his family and L. Dana VOLUME I. NUMBER 4 ANNALS OF MEDICAL HISTORY m r


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Keywords: ., bookauthorp, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmedicine