FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   >>  
ed is very noticeable--making due allowance for Gallic enthusiasm and bitterness. Lanfranchi, the great surgeon of Paris, about the year 1300 is moved to write as follows: "Why, in God's name, in our days is there such a great difference between the physician and the surgeon? The physicians have abandoned operative procedures to the laity, either, as some say, because they disdain to operate with their hands, or rather, as I think, because they do not know how to perform operations. Indeed, this abuse is so inveterate that the common people look upon it as impossible for the same person to understand both surgery and medicine. It ought, however, to be understood that no one can be a good physician who has no idea of surgical operations, and that a surgeon is nothing if ignorant of medicine. In a word, one must be familiar with both departments of medicine." Now Gilbert by the incorporation of many chapters on surgery in his Compendium inculcates practically the same idea more than fifty years before Lanfranchi, and may claim to be the earliest representative of surgical teaching in England. Malgaigne, indeed, does not include his name in the admirable sketch of medieval surgery with which he introduces his edition of the works of Ambroise Pare, and says Gilbert was no more a surgeon than Bernard Gordon. This is in a certain sense true. Gilbert was certainly not an operative surgeon. But it needs only a very superficial comparison of the Compendium of Gilbert with the Lilium Medicinae of Gordon to establish the fact that the books are entirely unlike. Indeed, it may be truthfully said that Gordon's work does not contain a single chapter on surgery proper. His cases involving surgical assistance are turned over at once, and with little or no discussion, to those whom he calls "restauratores" or "chirurgi," and his own responsibility thereupon ends. We have no historical facts which demonstrate that Gilbert's Compendium exercised any considerable influence upon the development of surgery in England, but when we consider the depressed condition of both medicine and surgery in his day, we should certainly emphasize the clearness of vision which led our author to indicate the natural association of these two departments of the healing art, and the assistance which each lends to the other. ***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GILBERTUS ANGLICUS*** ******* This file should be named 16155.txt or 16155.zip ***
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   69   70   71   72   73   74   75   76   77   >>  



Top keywords:

surgery

 
surgeon
 
Gilbert
 

medicine

 

surgical

 

Compendium

 

Gordon

 

Indeed

 
assistance
 

operations


England
 
departments
 

operative

 

Lanfranchi

 

physician

 

turned

 

proper

 
involving
 

making

 

restauratores


chirurgi

 
responsibility
 
chapter
 

discussion

 

superficial

 

comparison

 
Lilium
 

allowance

 

Medicinae

 

establish


truthfully

 

unlike

 

single

 

association

 

healing

 

PROJECT

 

ANGLICUS

 

GUTENBERG

 
GILBERTUS
 

natural


considerable

 

influence

 

development

 
exercised
 
historical
 
demonstrate
 

noticeable

 

clearness

 

vision

 

author