File:Interstate medical journal (1909) (14781543124).jpg

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Identifier: interstatemedica1619unse (find matches)
Title: Interstate medical journal
Year: 1909 (1900s)
Authors:
Subjects: Medicine
Publisher: St. Louis, : Interstate Medical Journal
Contributing Library: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia Historical Medical Library
Digitizing Sponsor: The College of Physicians of Philadelphia and the National Endowment for the Humanities

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to be understood—this panophobia of Charles VII. recurredin his son, the future king, Louis XI. * * * Louis XL is a sovereign who to be understood must be judged fromthe standpoint of psychiatry. Mental pathology reclaims this craftymonarch, for if he is an enigma in history it is because history ha?thought itself capable of doing without the aid of medicine. More than any other holder of the sceptre, Louis XI. lends himself *Paris: Albin Michel. 1909.**Sauval, Antiquites de Paris, t. II., p. 373; following the customary reportsof the provostship of Paris. 684 INTERSTATE MEDICAL JOURNAL to analysis, though at first sight he seems to defy it on account of themelange that he presents of a perfect surety of decision, an inexhaustibleactivity, and a stupefying amorousness, with manifest propensities to the strangest beliefs and the most absurd practices. This statesman, so reflective and penetrating, this ingenious andcunning mind, so sensitive and acute, believed nothing except what he
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wanted to believe, neither moral laws nor conscience; nevertheless hehad faith in the most ridiculous superstitions peculiar to coarse and ig-norant men. His religion was decidedly inferior to that of the MiddleAges, and like the old Merovingian kings in barbarous times, he madehis vows to the Virgin and the Saints of Paradise, by bestowing therichest gifts on the churches which were dedicated to them, in the hopeof gaining their support in his most dishonest enterprises. Mindful of SPECIAL ARTICLE 685 his mental independence even in his superstitions, he did not submit to the least influence on the part of the clergy.* Have we here sufficient evidence to class one of the greatest kings ofwhich France boasts in the category of the semi-insane? Should ourdeduction be that at certain moments Louis XI. had a veritable in-tellectual functional miopragia? All depends on the significance of theterm semi-insane, which, thanks to Grasset, has to-day quite an unex-pected vogue. Let it pass for

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Volume
InfoField
1909
Flickr tags
InfoField
  • bookid:interstatemedica1619unse
  • bookyear:1909
  • bookdecade:1900
  • bookcentury:1900
  • booksubject:Medicine
  • bookpublisher:St__Louis____Interstate_Medical_Journal
  • bookcontributor:The_College_of_Physicians_of_Philadelphia_Historical_Medical_Library
  • booksponsor:The_College_of_Physicians_of_Philadelphia_and_the_National_Endowment_for_the_Humanities
  • bookleafnumber:695
  • bookcollection:medicalheritagelibrary
  • bookcollection:collegeofphysiciansofphiladelphia
  • bookcollection:americana
Flickr posted date
InfoField
30 July 2014

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