Digital Highlights: A Fungous Nose

Arise Evans had a fungous nose, and said it was revealed to him that the King’s hand would cure him: and at the first coming of King Charles II. into St. James’s Park, he kissed the King’s hand and rubbed his nose with it; which disturbed the King, but cured him [Evans].

It does seem a little forward on a first acquaintance without even an “excuse me,” but the legend of the curative powers of the royal touch was a strong one and no doubt Charles felt a certain amount of need to propitiate his new subjects.

John Corry’s The detector of quackery : or, Analyser of medical, philosophical, political, dramatic, and literary imposture is a lighthearted examination of the faux in medicine. Corry was already the author of A satirical view of London at the commencement of the nineteenth century, a humorous look at the capital at the beginning of a new century.

Corry cites Samuel Johnson in his “Advertisement” before the text: “Cheats can seldom last long against laughter” and Corry’s text is still amusing, although at this point it may be just as much for what he gets wrong — making jokes about oxygen being the “philosopher’s stone” — as what he gets right — debunking Mesmer.

Click through the pages below or follow this link to read Corry’s The detector of quackery.

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Digital Highlights: The Form of the Face

The physiognomical manual of John Caspar Lavater provides rules for judging by the phsyiognomy: is someone’s nose a little to the left? perhaps their eyebrows are not quite symmetrical? or their ears are set far back on their head? These are all guides to their inner character, how they are likely to behave in almost any situation.

Lavater’s handbook provides not only visual illustrations so you can match the face against the characteristic, it also promises “One Hundred Physiognomonical [sic] Rules” to help you detect obstinacy, worthless insignificance, hypocrisy, and voluptuaries among others.

Flip through the pages of Lavater’s guidebook below or follow this link to read Essays on physiognomy (1853).

Digital Highlights: Measure Twice…

We’re well into October now — in the United States, we’re looking forward at November and December which, for many of us, involve a bout of cooking unlike anything seen in the rest of the year.

To help you out with this, we offer up this handy guide.

Click through the pages of A.T. Simmons’ and Ernest Stenhouse’s The science of common life (1912).

And if you haven’t done it yet, please take five minutes out of your Friday and fill out our quickie user survey!

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Guest Post: “Seeing With a Better Eye” Through the MHL

The MHL was kind enough to extend an invitation to guest-post regarding my usage of the MHL in the preparation of The Second Book. In this post, then, I will try to describe The Second Book as best I can, so as to frame the significance of the MHL’s holdings and resources for my work, as well as to describe specifically how I use the MHL in my daily research. Okay, sometimes the research is more like “weekly” or even “biweekly” than daily. . . Continue reading

Digital Highlights: “The State and the Doctor”

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Title page from the Webbs’ book.

Sidney and Beatrice Webb were pioneer social researchers in England at the end of the 19th and the beginning of the 20th centuries. They published indefatigably, both together and separately, to create an impressive historical and analytical body of material, including multiple volumes on English legal history, the poor law, and modern sociological topics. Continue reading

New to the MHL!

Here are a few highlights from the latest items added to our collection; you can add a RSS feed that will give you updates on our new items here.

First, a couple of items with rather immediate topical application:

And some mental health titles:

And lastly, the wonderfully titled….

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Our Reading List (#3)

With the exciting news last week of the finding of one of the ships from Sir John Franklin’s last expedition, we decided to pull together some of the MHL’s resources on Arctic exploration in case this news stimulates your interest and while it’s still warm enough out that reading about the Arctic can be fun!

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

 

New to the MHL!

Have you checked out the latest items added to our collection? Here are a few highlights:

As always, for more from the Medical Heritage Library, please visit our full collection!

Digital Highlights: Analyzing the Tea Leaves — and the Coffee Beans

Modern food packaging regulations did not come from thin air: one of the parent pieces of legislation in the United Kingdom was the Adulteration Act of 1860. Previous to formal legislation on the subject, adulteration of foodstuffs — bread, coffee, tea, cheese, processed meats, alcohol — was a widespread problem. Continue reading