[Transcriber's notes]
This is derived from a copy on the Internet Archive: http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924012267013
Page numbers in this book are indicated by numbers enclosed in curly braces, e.g. {99}. They have been located where page breaks occurred in the original book.
Obvious spelling errors have been corrected but "inventive" and inconsistent spelling is left unchanged.
Extended quotations and citations are indented.
Footnotes have been renumbered to avoid ambiguity, and relocated to the end of the enclosing paragraph.
There are several occurrences of square brackets used by the author. They do not begin with "Transcriber's note", "Footnote", or "Illustration".
[End Transcriber's notes]
By the Same author.
Catholic Churchmen in Science. Cloth, gilt top, with portraits. The Dolphin Press, Philadelphia, 1906. $1.00, net.
History of the Medical Society of the State of New York (appearing serially in New York State Journal of Medicine, beginning February, 1906).
In Press.
The Thirteenth the Greatest of Centuries.
In Preparation.
The Popes in Medical History.
In Collaboration.
Essays in Pastoral Medicine. O'Malley and Walsh. Longmans, Green & Co., New York, 1906. $2.50, net.
PASTEUR
BY
JAMES J. WALSH, M.D., Ph.D., LL.D.
ACTING DEAN AND PROFESSOR OF THE HISTORY OF MEDICINE AND OF NERVOUS
DISEASES, FORDHAM UNIVERSITY MEDICAL SCHOOL, AND ADJUNCT PROFESSOR
OF MEDICINE AT THE NEW YORK POLYCLINIC SCHOOL FOR GRADUATES
IN MEDICINE; PROFESSOR OF PHYSIOLOGICAL PSYCHOLOGY
AT ST. FRANCIS XAVIER'S COLLEGE
IN NEW YORK.
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS
NEW YORK
1907
COPYRIGHT, 1907,
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY PRESS,
NEW YORK.
TO
DR. WILLIAM OSLER
WHO EXEMPLIFIES FOR THIS GENERATION THE FINEST QUALITIES OF
THESE MAKERS OF OUR MODERN MEDICINE, THIS VOLUME IS
WITH HIS KIND PERMISSION DEDICATED AS A
SLIGHT TOKEN OF THE ADMIRATION
OF A DISTANT DISCIPLE.
"If in some things I dissent from others, whose wit, industry,diligence and judgment I look up at and admire, let me not thereforehear presently of ingratitude and rashness. For I thank those thathave taught me, and will ever; but yet dare not think the scope oftheir labor and inquiry was to envy their posterity what they alsocould add and find out. If I err, pardon me. I do not desire to beequal with those that went before; but to have my reasons examinedwith theirs, and so much faith to be given them, or me, as those shallevict. I am neither author or fautor of any sect. I will have no manaddict himself to me; but if I have anything right, defend it asTruth's, not mine, save as it conduceth to a common good. It profitsnot me to have any man fence or fight for me, to follow or take mypart. Stand for truth, and 'tis enough."
{vii}