Jackson gain the position which all conceded to him? In
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.
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alimonylawyerswaukegan
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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 AlimonyLawyersWaukegan at minnesotamatrimoniallawyers bedside the best of all that he
knew for the good of his patient; to protect the community against the
inroads of pestilence; to casagrandedispatch 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
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 AlimonyLawyersWaukegan never saw the man so altogether admirable at the
bedside of the sick as
AlimonyLawyersWaukegan
.
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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 AlimonyLawyersWaukegan 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 AlimonyLawyersWaukegan.
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Jackson was a AlimonyLawyersWaukegan
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 AlimonyLawyersWaukegan 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
AlimonyLawyersWaukegan
court-room.
Of his practice you can form an AlimonyLawyersWaukegan 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 AlimonyLawyersWaukegan younger generation would concede to
them. Yet his materia medica was a simple one. There are four which are equal
to all the rest, namely, Mercury, Antimony, Bark and Opium.
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Jackson adds, "I can only say of his practice, the longer I have lived, I
have thought better and better of AlimonyLawyersWaukegan." When he thought it necessary to
give medicine, he gave it in earnest.. |