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years of age, his short career was not immediately closed up and lost, "like the path of an arrow," but left vestiges of it behind, conspicuous in every part of anatomy.
Under the advantage of anatomical science, thus extended by Vesalius, and afterwards by his pupil Fallopius,[1] surgery assumed a very- improved character in the hands of Fabricius ab Aquapendente and Ambroise Pare. Fabricius[2]was the favourite pupil of Fallopius, at whose death he succeeded to the anatomical chair at Padua. His talent as a physiologist
stands high, a proof of which, as Baron Cuvier has pointed out, may be found in his observations on the production of the voice; a subject, in which he anticipated several things supposed to be of modern discovery. Thus, the formation of the voice in the glottis, and the effect of the elevation and depression of the larynx upon its tone, were facts perfectly