Annals of medical history . f our parents, their training, tho brief,Engrave in our heart every early beliefWhich example and custom so often retraceAnd which, it may be, only God can efface. II, 560. In Chariot he bringsout the Socratic doc-trine, overthrown byAristotle and revivedin our days by Freud,that knowledge andvirtue are the samething. Le Marquis,an overbearing andspoiled young man,excuses himself to hismo* her by saying:Jesuisfortnaturel,to which his mother,the countess, replies: Oui, mais soyez aimable—Cette pure nature est fort pareils sont polis; pour quoi? eest


Annals of medical history . f our parents, their training, tho brief,Engrave in our heart every early beliefWhich example and custom so often retraceAnd which, it may be, only God can efface. II, 560. In Chariot he bringsout the Socratic doc-trine, overthrown byAristotle and revivedin our days by Freud,that knowledge andvirtue are the samething. Le Marquis,an overbearing andspoiled young man,excuses himself to hismo* her by saying:Jesuisfortnaturel,to which his mother,the countess, replies: Oui, mais soyez aimable—Cette pure nature est fort pareils sont polis; pour quoi? eest quils ont euCette education qui tient lieu de vertu;Leur ame en est empreinte; et si cet avantageNest pas la vertu meme, il est sa noble imageDompter cette humeur brusque, ou le penchant vous Iivre,Pour vivre heureux, mon fils, que faut il? Savoir vivre. A balance runs through his opinions whichis truly remarkable for a man who took suchpersonal prejudices as he did. He hated war,and relative to a hand-book of tactics by. Bourgelat, founder of first veterinary schooFrance. Guibcrt, which was used by the Frenchofficers in this country during our Revolu-tion, and which was later highly prized byNapoleon, he wrote: Fevers, gout and catarrh and a hundred worse illsWith a hundred learned charlatans working their wills—You might think the world evil enougli as things are,Without mans inventing the great art of But feeling in this way did not preventhim from realizing that the nation bestprovided with steel will alwayssubjugate the one which hasmore gold and less John Moore, a prac-titioner of London, whoseletters about his travelsgained him some liter-ary reputation, whiletutor of the youngDuke of Hamiltonvisited Voltaire atFerney in the lastyear of Voltaires life(1778). He has left alively picture whichseems to have escapedthe great French-mans English biog-raphers. This skeleton, hewrites, has a keenerand brighter glanceof the eye than anyhuman being, withthe


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Keywords: ., bookauthorp, bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectmedicine