THE HARVEIAN ORATION, 1904 3
Desiring to render this address as little
wearisome as may be I propose to divide it into
two parts: the first archaeological, dealing with
Egyptian medicine, the medicine god, and the
earliest inquiries known to have been made con-
cerning the circulation and circulatory diseases-
viz., those of the physicians of ancient Egypt, a
department of pre-Harveian work, and perhaps
the only one, which has not been dealt with in
this room. Secondly, I wish to speak with great
brevity on the more practical subject of the pre-
ventive treatment of certain forms of circulatory
disease.
I
EGYPT AND THE EARLIEST RESEARCHES ON THE
CIRCULATION
To all who love our venerable and beneficent profession the spectacle of our predecessors in early ages striving in darkness and difficulty to acquire that hidden knowledge to which we have partially attained is interesting and should awaken our sympathy. As was remarked by the learned Harveian Orator of 1896: The past is worth our study and ever more so the further we advance."
The information which archaeological re- search has of late afforded, though in a fitful and partial manner, as to the earliest history of medicine, and particularly in regard to that de- partment in which our founder laboured, is not unworthy of our attention. 1. Dr. Payne, Harveian Oration, p. 51