登陆注册
15444900000119

第119章 VII(4)

This is the great source of fallacy in medical practice. But the physician has some chance of correcting his hasty inference. He thinks his prescription cured a single case of a particular complaint; he tries it in twenty similar cases without effect, and sets down the first as probably nothing more than a coincidence. The unprofessional experimenter or observer has no large experience to correct his hasty generalization. He wants to believe that the means he employed effected his cure. He feels grateful to the person who advised it, he loves to praise the pill or potion which helped him, and he has a kind of monumental pride in himself as a living testimony to its efficacy. So it is that you will find the community in which you live, be it in town or country, full of brands plucked from the burning, as they believe, by some agency which, with your better training, you feel reasonably confident had nothing to do with it. Their disease went out of itself, and the stream from the medical fire-annihilator had never even touched it.

You cannot and need not expect to disturb the public in the possession of its medical superstitions. A man's ignorance is as much his private property, and as precious in his own eyes, as his family Bible. You have only to open your own Bible at the ninth chapter of St. John's Gospel, and you will find that the logic of a restored patient was very simple then, as it is now, and very hard to deal with. My clerical friends will forgive me for poaching on their sacred territory, in return for an occasional raid upon the medical domain of which they have now and then been accused.

A blind man was said to have been restored to sight by a young person whom the learned doctors of the Jewish law considered a sinner, and, as such, very unlikely to have been endowed with a divine gift of healing. They visited the patient repeatedly, and evidently teased him with their questions about the treatment, and their insinuations about the young man, until he lost his temper. At last he turned sharply upon them: "Whether he be a sinner or no, I know not: one thing I know, that, whereas I was blind, now I see."

This is the answer that always has been and always will be given by most persons when they find themselves getting well after doing anything, no matter what,--recommended by anybody, no matter whom.

Lord Bacon, Robert Boyle, Bishop Berkeley, all put their faith in panaceas which we should laugh to scorn. They had seen people get well after using them. Are we any wiser than those great men? Two years ago, in a lecture before the Massachusetts Historical Society, I mentioned this recipe of Sir Kenelm Digby for fever and ague: Pare the patient's nails; put the parings in a little bag, and hang the bag round the neck of a live eel, and place him in a tub of water.

The eel will die, and the patient will recover.

Referring to this prescription in the course of the same lecture, I said: "You smiled when I related Sir Kenehn Digby's prescription, with the live eel in it; but if each of you were to empty his or her pockets, would there not roll out, from more than one of them, a horse-chestnut, carried about as a cure for rheumatism? Nobody saw fit to empty his or her pockets, and my question brought no response.

But two months ago I was in a company of educated persons, college graduates every one of them, when a gentleman, well known in our community, a man of superior ability and strong common-sense, on the occasion of some talk arising about rheumatism, took a couple of very shiny horse-chestnuts from his breeches-pocket, and laid them on the table, telling us how, having suffered from the complaint in question, he had, by the advice of a friend, procured these two horse-chestnuts on a certain time a year or more ago, and carried them about him ever since; from which very day he had been entirely free from rheumatism.

This argument, from what looks like cause and effect, whether it be so or not, is what you will have to meet wherever you go, and you need not think you can answer it. In the natural course of things some thousands of persons must be getting well or better of slight attacks of colds, of rheumatic pains, every week, in this city alone.

Hundreds of them do something or other in the way of remedy, by medical or other advice, or of their own motion, and the last thing they do gets the credit of the recovery. Think what a crop of remedies this must furnish, if it were all harvested!

Experience has taught, or will teach you, that most of the wonderful stories patients and others tell of sudden and signal cures are like Owen Glendower's story of the portents that announced his birth. The earth shook at your nativity, did it? Very likely, and "So it would have done, At the same season, if your mother's cat Had kittened, though yourself had ne'er been born."

You must listen more meekly than Hotspur did to the babbling Welshman, for ignorance is a solemn and sacred fact, and, like infancy, which it resembles, should be respected. Once in a while you will have a patient of sense, born with the gift of observation, from whom you may learn something. When you find yourself in the presence of one who is fertile of medical opinions, and affluent in stories of marvellous cures,--of a member of Congress whose name figures in certificates to the value of patent medicines, of a voluble dame who discourses on the miracles she has wrought or seen wrought with the little jokers of the sugar-of-milk globule-box, take out your watch and count the pulse; also note the time of day, and charge the price of a visit for every extra fifteen, or, if you are not very busy, every twenty minutes. In this way you will turn what seems a serious dispensation into a double blessing, for this class of patients loves dearly to talk, and it does them a deal of good, and you feel as if you had earned your money by the dose you have taken, quite as honestly as by any dose you may have ordered.

You must take the community just as it is, and make the best of it.

同类推荐
  • 注同教问答

    注同教问答

    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。
  • The Guilty River

    The Guilty River

    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。
  • 散见简牍合辑

    散见简牍合辑

    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。
  • 徐氏家谱

    徐氏家谱

    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。
  • 花底拾遗

    花底拾遗

    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。
热门推荐
  • 夕生朝落

    夕生朝落

    她是开国以来的第一位女将军,也是他的皇后。他是带领国家走入盛事的皇帝,也是她的夫君。一场互利互给的政权婚姻,一朝从未有过的盛事,一位权势滔天的皇帝,一位杀伐果断的皇后,一生的爱恨纠葛。究竟是谁陷入这梦境,又是谁沦陷这温柔乡。“我恨你!”“我爱你。”“你是我一生的信仰啊。”“我该拿你怎么办。”男女主身心干净,虐文,无穿越。
  • 武者规则

    武者规则

    狂放不羁的小王爷意外身亡,穿越到武者大陆,开启漫长的武者修炼之途。武者修炼,是武者大陆上的主旋律,成为高阶武者,也是也是这里所有人的毕生追求。武童,武士,武师,大武师,武灵,武尊,武宗,武王,武皇(上、中、下),武神,直到最后的肉身成圣。千百年来,人们一直沿着这条路,前赴后继,永不停歇。狄青,同样在朝着那个目标迈进。由自我禁锢到欣然接受,由弱小无助到逐渐强大,踏碎满路荆棘,和血狂奔...但是,他却发现,自己从一开始便被卷入了一场暗流涌动的争斗之中。他能否主宰自己的命运?前世的经历又会给他带来什么...
  • 若相逢

    若相逢

    因为梦里的眼睛对你深深眷恋,但是你却总对我视而不见,是因为你真的不是我心里的那个人,还是你深藏了太多我不知道的秘密;因为一段回忆,你对我如此眷恋,是真的爱我,还是只把我当成了她的影子,为何你有一双和他相似的眼睛?而我又是你回忆里的那个她么?你们之间有怎样的恩怨纠葛,我们之间又有什么秘密?我们之间到底谁才是谁的谁,是否只有等我寻回那段失落的记忆才能解开所有的谜……我为何会遗失了那一段记忆;而我能再寻回那一段遗失的记忆么,寻回后的我们之间又将会怎样?
  • 水果摊贩的后宫人生

    水果摊贩的后宫人生

    他十八岁那年被迫退学,开了水果摊。在一次机缘巧合之下,了解到自己竟然拥有世间罕见的体质,从此开启了他的后宫之路。
  • 豪门奇恋之缘

    豪门奇恋之缘

    她,华丽优雅,高贵冷艳,独立坚强的“女王”他,冷酷无情,铁血残忍,无心无欲的“帝王”一个女王,一个帝王。在黑白道中翻手覆雨的赫赫有名的大人物。视对方为对手。暗中争霸。他不知她是谁,却在一次偶然的回眸一眼见到了她时,被她吸引。渐渐地,他发现她有着不想回忆过去,被封闭的回忆,被隐藏的身份,被完全沉迷的一切。这一切是什么,神秘无比的她,到底是什么人?最后,他们能不能收获最完美的爱情?
  • 古荒纪元

    古荒纪元

    古荒大陆,众生芸芸亿万万...武者,以元力破道,帝位凌天,传千秋万代芳华!炼阵者,以魂力炼天,九绝古阵,掌执生灭!部落少年,以血符淬体,以妖莲补魂。他从乌山山脉中走出,从此踏上波澜壮阔大征途。天才横空,独我耀九州!
  • 暗黑之佣兵传奇

    暗黑之佣兵传奇

    重生于暗黑世界,在屠戮怪物中成长,在尸山血海中前行,是英雄或是佣兵,真豪杰,岂看出处!友情、爱情、善良而平凡的众生,吾将全力守护,虽然万千神魔,吾亦横刀笑对……
  • 执一念

    执一念

    执念为何?成仙魔神!不,执念只为一人。寻觅,不为他,只因我想多见你一面。
  • 魔王抢亲:我的妻还你永世缠绵

    魔王抢亲:我的妻还你永世缠绵

    小妖:魔君!夫人不嫁……魔君:没关系,我入赘……许多世许多世过后,魔君:夫人,紫云宫就在前面,我们带着孩儿们回家去吧唐云意:不去……魔君:为何?唐云意:你不是入赘了么……就该在唐府与我生死缠绵……魔君:……那只是,只是一种,计策罢了
  • 神途灭生

    神途灭生

    他,是高高在上的神王。他,是一缕残魂。他,父母被仇人所害。他,欲要崛起,为父母报仇,但命运却不尽人意。他,觉醒了前世的血脉,融合了前生的宝物。他,踏上了一条杀戮之道,一条注定艰难无比的道路。但是,他不悔也不惧。因为,他为了复活双亲,救醒前世爱人,为了心中那一份血战到底的执念。