Page:Chronicles of pharmacy (Volume 1).djvu/64

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  • what enigmatic, and may or may not be complimentary.

It runs, "He that sinneth before his Maker, let him fall into the hand of the physician." In the recently discovered manuscript is the passage not previously known, "He that sinneth against God will behave arrogantly before his physician." Probably into this may be read the converse idea that he that behaves arrogantly towards his physician sinneth before God.

In the same chapter we are told that "the Lord hath created medicines out of the earth, and he that is wise will not abhor them." Possibly this was directed against the Jewish prejudice against bitter flavours. Then the writer asks, "Was not the water made sweet with wood?" and he says "of such" (the medicines) men to whom God hath given skill heal men and take away their pains; and "of such doth the apothecary make a confection."

The idea that physicians get their skill direct from God is prominent in these passages, and is perhaps truer than we are willing to admit in this age of curricula and examinations.


Medicines of the Jews.

The Papyrus Ebers was supposed by its discoverer to have been compiled about the time when Moses was living in Egypt, a century before the Exodus. There is no evidence in the Bible that the Jews brought with them from the land of their captivity any of the medical lore which that and other papyri not much later reveal. It is not certain that in the whole of the Bible there is any distinct reference to a medicine for internal administration. It is assumed that Rachel wanted the mandrakes which Reuben found to make a remedy for