THE SERPENT-WREATHED STAFF the serpent wreathed staff ALICE TISDALE HOBART THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY, INC. INDIANAPOLIS Publishers NEW YORK With profound gratitude I dedicate this book to the two who have been inextricably woven into this and all the other novels I have written DR. JOEL GOLDTHWAIT who because of his great knowledge and understanding brought me out of invalidism and made possible for me the arduous work of writing and MRS. ANNE STODDARD who recommended to the Century Magazine my first fiction and throughout ...
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THE SERPENT-WREATHED STAFF the serpent wreathed staff ALICE TISDALE HOBART THE BOBBS-MERRILL COMPANY, INC. INDIANAPOLIS Publishers NEW YORK With profound gratitude I dedicate this book to the two who have been inextricably woven into this and all the other novels I have written DR. JOEL GOLDTHWAIT who because of his great knowledge and understanding brought me out of invalidism and made possible for me the arduous work of writing and MRS. ANNE STODDARD who recommended to the Century Magazine my first fiction and throughout all the years since has without stint given me the benefit of her sensitive and perceptive mind CARVED on the doors of medical buildings and hospitals, stamped on seals and charters, used as the insignia of the Medical Corps, printed on the title pages of books is the caduceus, the sign and symbol of healing-a staff, two wings at its top, two serpents entwining it. A symbol with the power of a symbol to convey vast areas of experience. In the ancient temples of the East the living serpent was used in the rites of healing, In time it gave place to the serpent symbol. Into the hieroglyph ics of Egypt the entwined serpents were woven. On the walls of the temples of India are the opposed and balanced serpents, male and female, the bearers of life and healing. The Hebrews had the emblem-the brazen serpent raised on a pole by Moses so that the people might look upon it and be healed, From ancient Babylon the symbol, a rod wreathed with two serpents, was carried to Greece, For long centuries the symbol disappeared, then reappeared, Mysteriously it made its way across Europe until it reached England, In its long journey at times doves hovered over it, once griffins, and inGreece the wings of the herald were added. Sometimes it was a bare staff, but always serpent en twined, Finally tipped with wings it came to America, EARLY on a June morning in 1942 Dr. Samuel Towne went quietly out of his house, crossed the lawn, and passed through an opening in the lilac hedge which surrounded his garden. Although the darkness was not entirely dispelled by the pale light of the approaching dawn, from long habit he walked sure-footedly along the faintly discernible paths until he reached a bed of roses. Taking a trowel from the pocket of the loose cotton jacket he was wearing, he knelt and began loosening the soil around the bushes. He had come to his garden this morning because he had found through past experience that when he had a problem, either medical or personal, which perplexed him he was often able to solve it if his hands were close to the earth. Today marked a change in his life for which he thought he had pre pared himself, but when he woke this morning he realized he had not. In appreciation of his services to the hospital which he had helped to found forty years ago the lately completed orthopedic wing for children was to be given his name today at the annual commencement exercises of the medical students. The conferring of this honor upon him marked his retirement both as head of the hospitals staff and as dean of the medical school. At seventy-seven he needed to slow down, but he felt that during the fifty years he had specialized in the baffling causes of arthritis he had acquired knowledge which still could with benefit be drawn upon by the younger doctors at the hospital had he been given a position of consultant. What he had learned through years ofstudy about the mechanics of the body and the manifestations of arthritis which result from wrong use of the human machine was not yet, he knew, fully understood by his fellow spe cialists. Furthermore, the physician who was to take his place considered disease an entity in itself, something Dr. Towne vigorously denied. Although he believed the body was a machine that when damaged demanded the most scientific care, he believed also the spirit transcended it and must be en listed in the fight against disease...
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Good in Fair jacket. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall. Cover corners and spine rubbed and worn. Jacket browning and torn, chipped edges. Pages are clean & text is free from markings. All pages secure in binding.
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Good in Good jacket. 8vo-over 7¾"-9¾" tall. Jacket scuffed with edgewear. Boards have light wear. Pages are clean, text has no markings, binding is sound.
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Very Good with no Dust Jacket. 8vo 8"-9" tall; Book Club Edition; 313 pages; Tan cloth with dark blue lettering on spine. Spine is straight, binding tight. The pages are clean with very light aging. The dust jacket has light edge wear. The jacket is browned on reverse side.; Book Club Edition; 8vo; 313 pages.
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USED....Hardcover(NO DUST JACKET), good condition, outside cover shows age related minimum too tolerable signs of use, Main Text and Pages of Main Text in good condition. Outer Binder in good condition, Inner Binder in good condition. No Dust Jacket! ! ! ! , Main Text and Pages of Main Text in good condition. No signs of water damages, No signs of writing, No signs of underlining, No signs of markings, and No signs of highlighting. Pages very readable. Good Hardcover.