登陆注册
15444900000125

第125章 VIII(2)

This is what the young men and those who worked under their guidance undertook to give us. And now such a library, such a reading-room, such an exchange, such an intellectual and social meeting place, we be hold a fact, plain before us. The medical profession of our city, and, let us add, of all those neighboring places which it can reach with its iron arms, is united as never before by the commune vinculum, the common bond of a large, enduring, ennobling, unselfish interest. It breathes a new air of awakened intelligence. It marches abreast of the other learned professions, which have long had their extensive and valuable centralized libraries; abreast of them, but not promising to be content with that position. What glorifies a town like a cathedral? What dignifies a province like a university?

What illuminates a country like its scholarship, and what is the nest that hatches scholars but a library?

The physician, some may say, is a practical man and has little use for all this book-learning. Every student has heard Sydenham's reply to Sir Richard Blackmore's question as to what books he should read, --meaning medical books. "Read Don Quixote," was his famous answer.

But Sydenham himself made medical books and may be presumed to have thought those at least worth reading. Descartes was asked where was his library, and in reply held up the dissected body of an animal.

But Descartes made books, great books, and a great many of them. A physician of common sense without erudition is better than a learned one without common sense, but the thorough master of his profession must have learning added to his natural gifts.

It is not necessary to maintain the direct practical utility of all kinds of learning. Our shelves contain many books which only a certain class of medical scholars will be likely to consult. There is a dead medical literature, and there is a live one. The dead is not all ancient, the live is not all modern. There is none, modern or ancient, which, if it has no living value for the student, will not teach him something by its autopsy. But it is with the live literature of his profession that the medical practitioner is first of all concerned.

Now there has come a great change in our time over the form in which living thought presents itself. The first printed books,--the incunabula,--were inclosed in boards of solid oak, with brazen clasps and corners; the boards by and by were replaced by pasteboard covered with calf or sheepskin; then cloth came in and took the place of leather; then the pasteboard was covered with paper instead of cloth; and at this day the quarterly, the monthly, the weekly periodical in its flimsy unsupported dress of paper, and the daily journal, naked as it came from the womb of the press, hold the larger part of the fresh reading we live upon. We must have the latest thought in its latest expression; the page must be newly turned like the morning bannock; the pamphlet must be newly opened like the ante-prandial oyster.

Thus a library, to meet the need of our time, must take, and must spread out in a convenient form, a great array of periodicals. Our active practitioners read these by preference over almost everything else. Our specialists, more particularly, depend on the month's product, on the yearly crop of new facts, new suggestions, new contrivances, as much as the farmer on the annual yield of his acres.

One of the first wants, then, of the profession is supplied by our library in its great array of periodicals from many lands, in many languages. Such a number of medical periodicals no private library would have room for, no private person would pay for, or flood his tables with if they were sent him for nothing. These, I think, with the reports of medical societies and the papers contributed to them, will form the most attractive part of our accumulated medical treasures. They will be also one of our chief expenses, for these journals must be bound in volumes and they require a great amount of shelf-room; all this, in addition to the cost of subscription for those which are not furnished us gratuitously.

It is true that the value of old scientific periodicals is, other things being equal, in the inverse ratio of their age, for the obvious reason that what is most valuable in the earlier volumes of a series is drained off into the standard works with which the intelligent practitioner is supposed to be familiar. But no extended record of facts grows too old to be useful, provided only that we have a ready and sure way of getting at the particular fact or facts we are in search of.

And this leads me to speak of what I conceive to be one of the principal tasks to be performed by the present and the coming generation of scholars, not only in the medical, but in every department of knowledge. I mean the formation of indexes, and more especially of indexes to periodical literature.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 塔天尊

    塔天尊

    读者大人:你小子写的这是个什么故事啊?天河贝壳:这是一个穿越者为了穿越回去而努力拼搏的故事读者大人:修炼体系是咋样的?天河贝壳:这是一个塔的世界,修炼者叫做叫塔师,每个刚成为塔师的人都会觉醒自己的塔灵,另外根据塔灵的属性还有着层出不穷的塔术,还有……读者大人:得得得,还是我自己看吧,说多了,我晕天河贝壳:客官请,罗通(主角)出来接客了!读者大人:呸!哥是来看女主的!
  • Hp淡蓝色

    Hp淡蓝色

    看到你心就砰砰直跳呢这就是一件钟情吧女主是一只赫奇帕奇的吃货CP未定反正不会很阴暗就是了女主姓加百列然而并没有什么关系看故事吧作者文笔渣
  • 妖娆公子:温柔神医太腹黑

    妖娆公子:温柔神医太腹黑

    自从宁陌离捡到了一只小韶殇后,一切都乱了套。她是身世离奇的亡国公主,一袭男装,红衣如火,妖艳张扬。他是圣医谷最有天赋的少主,衣袂翩然,纯白如谪仙。他把无家可归的她带回了家,然后某只倔强的小丫头开始了在他面前装白兔,在他背后惹是生非的日子。然后有一天,她突然发现:自己的伪装居然早就被表面谪仙,内心腹黑的他看破了?于是小家伙看着淡笑的他终于炸毛了——啊啊啊扑倒扑倒再扑倒!
  • 未说出的密码74520

    未说出的密码74520

    她在大学四年中整整爱恋了他三年,却带着遗憾毕业,三年过去啦,她和他的相遇又会有什么样的故事呢?
  • 南宗顿教最上大乘摩诃般若波罗蜜经六祖惠能大师于韶州大梵寺施法坛经

    南宗顿教最上大乘摩诃般若波罗蜜经六祖惠能大师于韶州大梵寺施法坛经

    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。
  • 守护甜心之十二骑士

    守护甜心之十二骑士

    以及自己的实力和皇室经过上雨末儿的陷害,亚梦明白自己的真实身份,冰夜落雪皇家十二骑士之一,凭借十一骑士对她的友谊,以及自己的实力和皇室精英,展开了报仇
  • 荒原狂牛

    荒原狂牛

    莫名奇妙的死在牛角之下,牛顶天重生成荒原里的一头野牛,饥饿的师群,死亡代名词的鳄鱼,阴险狡诈的黑曼巴毒蛇。以及无处不在的偷猎者。神秘的家传武学,拥有人类灵魂的野牛,注定不平凡的生命,狂牛顶天,震慑天下
  • 中华青少年成长必读集萃:一分钟推理

    中华青少年成长必读集萃:一分钟推理

    本书作者精心选编了内容跌宕起伏、扣人心弦的古今中外精彩的推理故事奉献给小读者。作者想让小读者在书中体会大侦探的感觉,希望他们认真揣摩悬念丛生的案情,查找狡猾嫌犯的蛛丝马迹,巧妙地揭开一个个错综复杂的案件真相,成为福尔摩斯式的“侦探高手”。
  • Nozuonodie说的就是爱
  • 许你一生负我一世

    许你一生负我一世

    叶沉兮,南越国云府少夫人,富可敌国,钱两多得可以买下一个国家。念往昔,她爱上一穷书生寻千亿,为了他可以与家人一闹再闹。寻千亿为她许下生死相依,不离不弃!可最终,命运捉弄,两人永生不见。为了寻千亿,她甘愿抛弃荣华富贵,千山万水,走遍大半个中国,只为千亿而来。一女,三男,并非女强后宫剧,而是一部令人动容的追爱剧,不信,点击试试?