登陆注册
15444900000097

第97章 V(10)

Holyoke's death, one of the points most insisted upon as characteristic of that wise and good old man was the perfect balance of all his faculties. The same harmonious adjustment of powers, the same symmetrical arrangement of life, the same complete fulfilment of every day's duties, without haste and without needless delay, which characterized the master, equally distinguished the scholar. A glance at the life of our own Old Master, if I can do any justice at all to his excellences, will give you something to carry away from this hour's meeting not unworthy to be remembered.

>From December, 1797, to October, 1799, he remained with Dr. Holyoke as a student, a period which he has spoken of as a most interesting and most gratifying part of his life. After this he passed eight months in London, and on his return, in October, 1800, he began business in Boston.

He had followed Mr. Cline, as I have mentioned, and was competent to practise Surgery. But he found Dr. John Collins Warren had already occupied the ground which at that day hardly called for more than one leading practitioner, and wisely chose the Medical branch of the profession. He had only himself to rely upon, but he had confidence in his prospects, conscious, doubtless, of his own powers, knowing his own industry and determination, and being of an eminently cheerful and hopeful disposition. No better proof of his spirit can be given than that, just a year from the time when he began to practise as a physician, he took that eventful step which in such a man implies that he sees his way clear to a position; he married a lady blessed with many gifts, but not bringing him a fortune to paralyze his industry.

He had not miscalculated his chances in life. He very soon rose into a good practice, and began the founding of that reputation which grew with his years, until he stood by general consent at the head of his chosen branch of the profession, to say the least, in this city and in all this region of country. His skill and wisdom were the last tribunal to which the sick and suffering could appeal. The community trusted and loved him, the profession recognized him as the noblest type of the physician. The young men whom he had taught wandered through foreign hospitals; where they learned many things that were valuable, and many that were curious; but as they grew older and began to think more of their ability to help the sick than their power of talking about phenomena, they began to look back to the teaching of Dr. Jackson, as he, after his London experience, looked back to that of Dr. Holyoke. And so it came to be at last that the bare mention of his name in any of our medical assemblies would call forth such a tribute of affectionate regard as is only yielded to age when it brings with it the record of a life spent in well doing.

No accident ever carries a man to eminence such as his in the medical profession. He who looks for it must want it earnestly and work for it vigorously; Nature must have qualified him in many ways, and education must have equipped him with various knowledge, or his reputation will evaporate before it reaches the noon-day blaze of fame. How did Dr. Jackson gain the position which all conceded to him? In the answer to this question some among you may find a key that shall unlock the gate opening on that fair field of the future of which all dream but which not all will ever reach.

First of all, he truly loved his profession. He had no intellectual ambitions outside of it, literary, scientific or political. To him it was occupation enough to apply at the bedside the best of all that he knew for the good of his patient; to protect the community against the inroads of pestilence; to teach the young all that he himself had been taught, with all that his own experience had added; to leave on record some of the most important results of his long observation.

With his patients he was so perfect at all points that it is hard to overpraise him. I have seen many noted British and French and American practitioners, but I never saw the man so altogether admirable at the bedside of the sick as Dr. James Jackson. His smile was itself a remedy better than the potable gold and the dissolved pearls that comforted the praecordia of mediaeval monarchs. Did a patient, alarmed without cause, need encouragement, it carried the sunshine of hope into his heart and put all his whims to flight, as David's harp cleared the haunted chamber of the sullen king. Had the hour come, not for encouragement, but for sympathy, his face, his voice, his manner all showed it, because his heart felt it. So gentle was he, so thoughtful, so calm, so absorbed in the case before him, not to turn round and look for a tribute to his sagacity, not to bolster himself in a favorite theory, but to find out all he could, and to weigh gravely and cautiously all that he found, that to follow him in his morning visit was not only to take a lesson in the healing art, it was learning how to learn, how to move, how to look, how to feel, if that can be learned. To visit with Dr. Jackson was a medical education.

He was very firm, with all his kindness. He would have the truth about his patients. The nurses found it out; and the shrewder ones never ventured to tell him anything but a straight story. A clinical dialogue between Dr. Jackson and Miss Rebecca Taylor, sometime nurse in the Massachusetts General Hospital, a mistress in her calling, was as good questioning and answering as one would be like to hear outside of the court-room.

Of his practice you can form an opinion from his book called "Letters to a Young Physician." Like all sensible men from the days of Hippocrates to the present, he knew that diet and regimen were more important than any drug or than all drugs put together. Witness his treatment of phthisis and of epilepsy. He retained, however, more confidence in some remedial agents than most of the younger generation would concede to them. Yet his materia medica was a simple one.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 修阳王

    修阳王

    这就是一部普通的修仙小说,故事讲述的是一个家族被毁孤儿,他又经过百般磨炼,最终修得真仙成为深受百姓爱戴的修阳王,然而好景不长小时候和他一起长大的朋友因为一点事,和他绝交并成为了他的敌人。就说到这里,因为这已经是故事的大部分剧情了。
  • 黑色爱情之往事如烟

    黑色爱情之往事如烟

    “其实你身边爱你的人是有的,可是你没有发现。你的眼睛里都只有他,可他有把你放在心上吗?”“即使他没有把我放在心上,我也爱过他!不像你,身边围着一大群人,却从来没有动过心!”“如果我懂爱,我早就动心了!!”她的身份是那样神秘,无人知晓。或者说,知道的三个人人已经死了。这个真相,还是玫瑰夫人说了出来,要不然,她的身份是永远都没人会知道的。这不仅仅是一个黑社会的故事,还是一个纯真爱情的故事。
  • 生化来袭之宇宙病毒

    生化来袭之宇宙病毒

    2022年一块陨石撞击地球,后被科学家切开研究调查,一种人类未知的X病毒诞生了。X病毒可通过空气传播,令人防不胜防,很快这种病毒席卷了全球,一场惊天的末日危机~~~~~
  • 坏水邪殿:霸气女王秒变呆萌公主

    坏水邪殿:霸气女王秒变呆萌公主

    哼,不就是一小白脸么,算什么殿下?第一次见面,她对他压根就是满满的不屑。好吧,你是个家庭煮夫。面对一桌子佳肴,强势但不会做饭的她坦白承认。婚后,她被某只心机Boy压在身下,咬牙切齿:“你丫的城府也太深了,我TMD完全是被你拐回家的。”他邪笑,说道:“老婆,我要是没有一肚子坏水,怎么能追到你呢?”
  • 绝对恩宠:这个太子不要脸

    绝对恩宠:这个太子不要脸

    本文1v1身心干净有萌有甜有虐第一次他说:如果你还这么吵,我想我不介意把你丢出去让人围观。第二次他说:回到之前那个样子好吗?那时候的比任何时候都要美。第三次他说:没关系,只要你记住我是真的想要保护你就够了。别哭,我想再看一次你笑的样子。
  • 千魂传

    千魂传

    吾收一卷画,流转百千年,拘禁魂一缕,成其生前愿。愿吾所愿化其白骨复其血肉,吾甘堕轮回亦无悔,生生世世待君来!历经十世,沈奉丞携千魂归来,原以为破镜能重圆,怎料这从头到尾只是一场骗局。
  • 婆娑梦中记

    婆娑梦中记

    强极则辱,情深不寿。我愿用千年功德,守护你十世安康。
  • 聒噪的夏天

    聒噪的夏天

    我们大吵大闹,大哭大笑的高中三年,记忆里的她们和他们。固定的位置,固定的教室,固定的人,泪水和笑声,读书声和狡辩声,都是我们,也都是每一个人。
  • 于你九次诺言

    于你九次诺言

    他,盛世王朝的三王爷;她,一代亡国公主,却是半人半狐的.他恨,为何他生在帝王世家,掺和亲兄弟之间的帝王之争;她天真,不知世间之情.他与她相遇,他承诺于她九次诺言......
  • 末世之亡灵控植

    末世之亡灵控植

    末世来临,重新渲染了一切生存法则,丧尸族定义了一个时代,病变而生异兽,崛起血统的狼人,驯兽族,异能者,进化者等等一些列末世产物挤入生物链顶端,跌落神坛的人族即将泯灭。为了生存,舍弃血肉,化身为骨,异生亡灵,定我主宰。