Page:The Story of the Treasure Seekers.djvu/355

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.

T. FISHER UNWIN, Publisher, MASTERS OF MEDICINE EDITBD BT ERNEST HART, D.C.L., Editor of " The British Medical Journal." Large crown Sv o., cloth^ each. Medical discoveries more directly concern the well-being and happiness of the hnm&n rsice than any victories of science. They appeal to one of the primary instincts of human nature, that of self-preservation. The importance of health as the most valuable of our national assets is coming to be more and more recognised, and the place of the doctor in Society and in the State is becoming one of steadily increasing prominence ; indeed, Mr. Gladstone said not many years ago that the time would surely come when the medical profession would take precedence of all the others in authority as well as in dignity. The development of medicine from an empiric art to an exact science is one of the most important and also one of the most interestmg chapters in the history' of civilisation. The histories of medicine which exist are for the most part only fitted for the intellectual digestion of Dryasdust and his congeners. Of the men who made the discoveries which have saved incalculable numbers of human lives, and which have lengthened the span of human existence, there is often no record at all accessible to the general reader. "^ et the story of these men's lives, of their struggles and of their triumphs, is not only interesting, but in the highest degree stimulating and educative. Many of them could have said with literal truth what Sir Thomas Browne said figuratively, that their lives were a romance. Hitherto there have been no accounts of the lives of medical discoverers in a form at once convenient and uniform, and sold at a popular price. The " Masters of Medicine " is a series of biographies written by "eminent hands" intended to supply this want. It is intended that the man shall be depicted as he moved and lived and had his being, and that the scope and gist of his work, as well as the steps by which he reached his results, shall be set forth in a clear, readable style. The following is a condensed list AUTHOR. Stephen Paget • D'Arcy Power H. Laing Gordon . John G. McKendrick Sir William Stokes Michael Foster Timothy Holmes . J. F. Payne C. L. Taylor . of some of the earlier volumes >— TITLE. John Hunter William Harvey Sir James Simpson Hermann von Helmholtz William Stokes Claude Bernard Sir Benjamin Brodie Thomas Sydenham Vesalius , Paternoster Buildings, Lor don, E.G. J,y