Sir William Osler (1849 – 1919) was a Canadian physician, one of the founding professors of Johns Hopkins Hospital, and the "Father of Modern Medicine".
This classic work includes the following addresses and essays:
I. Aequaminitas
II. Doctor and Nurse
III. Teacher and Student
IV. Physic and Physicians as Depicted in Plato
V. The Leaven of Science
VI. The Army Surgeon
VII. Teaching and Thinking
VIII. Internal Medicine as a Vocation
IX. Nurse and Patient
X. British Medicine in Greater Britain
XI. After Twenty-Five Years
XII. Books and Men
XIII. Medicine in the Nineteenth Century
XIV. Chauvinism in Medicine
XV. Some Aspects of American Medical Bibliography
XVI. The Hospital as a College
XVII. On the Educational Value of the Medical Society
XVIII. The Master-Word in Medicine
XIX. The Fixed Period
XX. The Student Life
XXI. Unity, Peace, and Concord
XXII. L’Envoi