登陆注册
15677000000323

第323章

If we were even assured that, when they make a mistake, that mistake of theirs would do us no harm, though it did us no good, it were a reasonable bargain to venture the making ourselves better without any danger of being made worse. AEsop tells a story, that one who had bought a Morisco slave, believing that his black complexion had arrived by accident and the ill usage of his former master, caused him to enter with great care into a course of baths and potions: it happened that the Moor was nothing amended in his tawny complexion, but he wholly lost his former health. How often do we see physicians impute the death of their patients to one another? I remember that some years ago there was an epidemical disease, very dangerous and for the most part mortal, that raged in the towns about us: the storm being over which had swept away an infinite number of men, one of the most famous physicians of all the country, presently after published a book upon that subject, wherein, upon better thoughts, he confesses that the letting blood in that disease was the principal cause of so many mishaps. Moreover, their authors hold that there is no physic that has not something hurtful in it. And if even those of the best operation in some measure offend us, what must those do that are totally misapplied? For my own part, though there were nothing else in the case, I am of opinion, that to those who loathe the taste of physic, it must needs be a dangerous and prejudicial endeavour to force it down at so incommodious a time, and with so much aversion, and believe that it marvellously distempers a sick person at a time when he has so much need of repose. And more over, if we but consider the occasions upon which they usually ground the cause of our diseases, they are so light and nice, that I thence conclude a very little error in the dispensation of their drugs may do a great deal of mischief. Now, if the mistake of a physician be so dangerous, we are in but a scurvy condition; for it is almost impossible but he must often fall into those mistakes: he had need of too many parts, considerations, and circumstances, rightly to level his design: he must know the sick person's complexion, his temperament, his humours, inclinations, actions, nay, his very thoughts and imaginations; he must be assured of the external circumstances, of the nature of the place, the quality of the air and season, the situation of the planets, and their influences: he must know in the disease, the causes, prognostics, affections, and critical days; in the drugs, the weight, the power of working, the country, figure, age, and dispensation, and he must know how rightly to proportion and mix them together, to beget a just and perfect symmetry; wherein if there be the least error, if amongst so many springs there be but any one out of order, 'tis enough to destroy us. God knows with how great difficulty most of these things are to be understood: for (for example) how shall the physician find out the true sign of the disease, every disease being capable of an infinite number of indications? How many doubts and controversies have they amongst themselves upon the interpretation of urines? otherwise, whence should the continual debates we see amongst them about the knowledge of the disease proceed? how could we excuse the error they so oft fall into, of taking fox for marten? In the diseases I have had, though there were ever so little difficulty in the case, I never found three of one opinion: which I instance, because I love to introduce examples wherein I am myself concerned.

A gentleman at Paris was lately cut for the stone by order of the physicians, in whose bladder, being accordingly so cut, there was found no more stone than in the palm of his hand; and in the same place a bishop, who was my particular friend, having been earnestly pressed by the majority of the physicians whom he consulted, to suffer himself to be cut, to which also, upon their word, I used my interest to persuade him, when he was dead and opened, it appeared that he had no malady but in the kidneys. They are least excusable for any error in this disease, by reason that it is in some sort palpable; and 'tis thence that I conclude surgery to be much more certain, by reason that it sees and feels what it does, and so goes less upon conjecture; whereas the physicians have no 'speculum matricis', by which to examine our brains, lungs, and liver.

Even the very promises of physic are incredible in themselves; for, having to provide against divers and contrary accidents that often afflict us at one and the same time, and that have almost a necessary relation, as the heat of the liver and the coldness of the stomach, they will needs persuade us, that of their ingredients one will heat the stomach and the other will cool the liver: one has its commission to go directly to the kidneys, nay, even to the bladder, without scattering its operations by the way, and is to retain its power and virtue through all those turns and meanders, even to the place to the service of which it is designed, by its own occult property this will dry-the brain; that will moisten the lungs. Of all this bundle of things having mixed up a potion, is it not a kind of madness to imagine or to hope that these differing virtues should separate themselves from one another in this mixture and confusion, to perform so many various errands? I should very much fear that they would either lose or change their tickets, and disturb one another's quarters. And who can imagine but that, in this liquid confusion, these faculties must corrupt, confound, and spoil one another? And is not the danger still more when the making up of this medicine is entrusted to the skill and fidelity of still another, to whose mercy we again abandon our lives?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 溪水照流年

    溪水照流年

    躲在某一时间,想念一段时光的掌纹;躲在某一地点,想念一个站在来路也站在去路的,让我牵挂的人。
  • 天妒之道魔情

    天妒之道魔情

    道魔一路,终归殊途,爱恨永难交织。只是这世间为何会有道魔,为何要分正邪。是上天注定还是人心不古。谁能知道呢。就如同这世间,仿佛永远都有许多身不由己的无奈决择。但有些事必定要有人去做出选择与承载。即使这是一条无法回头的不归路。也要一个人默默的行走下去。一路上的孤独,寂寞。只有靠着一颗不悔的心来独自消受。无法说出的真情爱意只能用一个个无情的阴谋来将其掩盖。漫漫道魔路,纷纷恩怨仇。拨剑欲血幕,只为红颜故。
  • 贱皇上,快滚去找你的三千弱水

    贱皇上,快滚去找你的三千弱水

    高考结束那天穿越到已故逍遥老人的幻境里成了某人的一位解药,为了出去,失了身与心。脱了幻境,才发现所托非人。面对欺骗,毅然转身离去,才发现自己的身份原来是一个附庸小国的公主,要嫁给一个七十多岁的病皇帝。命运捉弄,迎亲的冷酷二皇子竟然就是幻境里那负心的人。经历了许多生死,越来越冷静的我脑里突然多了一个逍遥老人,外挂开启。再见,我是高高在上的皇太后,他是皇上,心以死,不再爱。依靠逍遥老人教授的毒术与医术,白雨心逐渐变得强大起来,建赌场,餐馆,妓院,金蝉脱壳带球离了宫,带着逍遥老人的遗嘱建立自己的势力揭开一场惊天阴谋。路上带着个孩子也挡不住桃花朵朵开。负心人生死相随,还可以再爱吗?
  • 骷髅战神

    骷髅战神

    白骨林林之地,诞生了一个水晶头骨。这水晶头骨,用着百族的骨头为自己创造了一个新的躯体。为求进入世俗界,而后进行转生成人,怎奈因为一些原因,骨头上充满能量,为消除能量,一傻就是十几年。同时还有青峰城城主之子聂云不能修炼,这一傻一废就这么遇到一起了。从此整个世界将不得安宁,整个世界因他们而颤抖。前路,坎坷,生死不知,充满了荆棘,他们,能否一发冲天吗?随着修行,他却疑惑越来越多,自己究竟是谁?那埋骨之地又是什么?
  • 如果愿意等我改变

    如果愿意等我改变

    “你说支票,什么支票?”“阿…”那男子翻着杂志,头也不抬,“买你的支票是个女人拿走的,和你差不多年纪。”“多少钱?”“一百万。”“……”“别觉得多,这是定金,还有卖身的四百万。”“卖身?”“你过来。”男子示意她坐下。“那个女人答应,你和我签卖身契,然后……”“恩?”“领证。”“……我没和你签过。”
  • TFBOYS之再说一遍我爱你

    TFBOYS之再说一遍我爱你

    童年的相遇,使他们的缘分紧紧的拴在了一起,可是命运,本是一样令人难以琢磨清楚的东西,在他们如胶似漆之时,他突然离开了。长大以后,她又一次遇到了他,她是否能够把握住这份易碎的感情,或者……
  • 鹿晗:南有乔木,不可休思

    鹿晗:南有乔木,不可休思

    鹿晗我遇到了我的mygirl白小白,你只能是我的你只能要我,只能看我我不允许你在外面惹桃花她真的很好如果我能早点遇见她的话我想我现在一定很幸福吧我回忆着我们的相知,相恋,相爱真的我鹿晗真的很幸福我大概是世上最幸福的人吧因为我拥有一个认真爱我的人,我亦是爱她的人被她认真爱着的感觉真棒!她是一个大大咧咧的姑凉可能是她的直爽,不做作吸引了我吧娱乐圈中很难再碰到这种女孩子了ohyehallright遇见你真是我的幸运
  • 天下一号

    天下一号

    《天下一号》是石钟山历时五年,在搜集大量材料的基础上,最新推出的红色经典长篇小说。小说背景是在重庆解放前夕,国民党在重庆多处部署了千吨烈性炸药,试图炸毁重庆,将此命名为“天下一号”计划,并为此设计了子母版爆破图纸,只有子母版联合,才能解开谜底。潜伏在国民党保密局的中共地下党员秦天亮代号“蜂王”,接到组织命令后,与敌人展开了多方周旋,真真假假、虚虚实实,上演了一幕幕扣人心弦的谍中谍战,最终获得图纸秘密,彻底粉碎了敌人的阴谋,挽救了整个重庆。
  • 超能力使用手册

    超能力使用手册

    国际政治风云诡谲,新的时代萌生了新的意识形态,年轻人向往新的世界,老年人则希望维持稳定。太空探索有了新的起点,而东方神秘的玄学也在焕发光辉。一项新研究发现每个人都有超乎寻常的能力,只是不知道如何使用。这是一个英雄辈出的年代,也是全世界都感到迷茫的时代。
  • Sir Gibbie

    Sir Gibbie

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。