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The idea that you must pull out every one of every nice young man and

young woman's natural teeth!  Poh; poh!  Nobody believes that。  This

tooth must be straightened; that must be filled with gold; and this

other perhaps extracted; but it must be a very rare case; if they are

all so bad as to require extraction; and if they are; don't blame the

poor soul for it!  Don't tell us; as some old dentists used to; that

everybody not only always has every tooth in his head good for

nothing; but that he ought to have his head cut off as a punishment

for that misfortune!  No; I can't sign Number One。  Give us Number

Two。



II。  We hold that no man can be well who does not agree with our

views of the efficacy of calomel; and who does not take the doses of

it prescribed in our tables; as there directed。



To which I demur; questioning why it should be so; and get for answer

the two following:



III。  Every man who does not take our prepared calomel; as prescribed

by us in our Constitution and By…Laws; is and must be a mass of

disease from head to foot; it being self…evident that he is

simultaneously affected with Apoplexy; Arthritis; Ascites; Asphyxia;

and Atrophy; with Borborygmus; Bronchitis; and Bulimia; with

Cachexia; Carcinoma; and Cretinismus; and so on through the alphabet;

to Xerophthahnia and Zona; with all possible and incompatible

diseases which are necessary to make up a totally morbid state; and

he will certainly die; if he does not take freely of our prepared

calomel; to be obtained only of one of our authorized agents。



IV。  No man shall be allowed to take our prepared calomel who does

not give in his solemn adhesion to each and all of the above…named

and the following propositions (from ten to a hundred) and show his

mouth to certain of our apothecaries; who have not studied dentistry;

to examine whether all his teeth have been extracted and a new set

inserted according to our regulations。



Of course; the doctors have a right to say we sha'n't have any

rhubarb; if we don't sign their articles; and that; if; after signing

them; we express doubts (in public; about any of them; they will cut

us off from our jalap and squills;but then to ask a fellow not to

discuss the propositions before he signs them is what I should call

boiling it down a little too strong!



If we understand them; why can't we discuss them?  If we can't

understand them; because we have n't taken a medical degree; what the

Father of Lies do they ask us to sign them for?



Just so with the graver profession。  Every now and then some of its

members seem to lose common sense and common humanity。  The laymen

have to keep setting the divines right constantly。  Science; for

instance;in other words; knowledge;is not the enemy of religion;

for; if so; then religion would mean ignorance: But it is often the

antagonist of school…divinity。



Everybody knows the story of early astronomy and the school…divines。

Come down a little later; Archbishop Usher; a very learned Protestant

prelate; tells us that the world was created on Sunday; the twenty…

third of October; four thousand and four years before the birth of

Christ。  Deluge; December 7th; two thousand three hundred and forty…

eight years B。 C。  Yes; and the earth stands on an elephant; and the

elephant on a tortoise。  One statement is as near the truth as the

other。



Again; there is nothing so brutalizing to some natures as moral


surgery。  I have often wondered that Hogarth did not add one more

picture to his four stages of Cruelty。  Those wretched fools;

reverend divines and others; who were strangling men and women for

imaginary crimes a little more than a century ago among us; were set

right by a layman; and very angry it made them to have him meddle。



The good people of Northampton had a very remarkable man for their

clergyman;a man with a brain as nicely adjusted for certain

mechanical processes as Babbage's calculating machine。  The

commentary of the laymen on the preaching and practising of Jonathan

Edwards was; that; after twenty…three years of endurance; they turned

him out by a vote of twenty to one; and passed a resolve that he

should never preach for them again。  A man's logical and analytical

adjustments are of little consequence; compared to his primary

relations with Nature and truth: and people have sense enough to find

it out in the long ran; they know what 〃logic〃 is worth。



In that miserable delusion referred to above; the reverend Aztecs and

Fijians argued rightly enough from their premises; no doubt; for many

men can do this。  But common sense and common humanity were

unfortunately left out from their premises; and a layman had to

supply them。  A hundred more years and many of the barbarisms still

lingering among us will; of course; have disappeared like witch…

hanging。  But people are sensitive now; as they were then。  You will

see by this extract that the Rev。 Cotton Mather did not like

intermeddling with his business very well。



〃Let the Levites of the Lord keep close to their Instructions;〃 he

says; 〃and God will smite thro' the loins of those that rise up

against them。  I will report unto you a Thing which many Hundreds

among us know to be true。  The Godly Minister of a certain Town in

Connecticut; when he had occasion to be absent on a Lord's Day from

his Flock; employ'd an honest Neighbour of some small Talents for a

Mechanick; to read a Sermon out of some good Book unto 'em。  This

Honest; whom they ever counted also a Pious Man; had so much conceit

of his Talents; that instead of Reading a Sermon appointed; he to the

Surprize of the People; fell to preaching one of his own。  For his

Text he took these Words; 'Despise not Prophecyings'; and in his

Preachment he betook himself to bewail the Envy of the Clergy in the

Land; in that they did not wish all the Lord's People to be Prophets;

and call forth Private Brethren publickly to prophesie。  While he was

thus in the midst of his Exercise; God smote him with horrible

Madness; he was taken ravingly distracted; the People were forc'd

with violent Hands to carry him home。  I will not mention his Name:

He was reputed a Pious Man。〃This is one of Cotton Mather's

〃Remarkable Judgments of God; on Several Sorts of Offenders;〃and

the next cases referred to are the Judgments on the 〃 Abominable

Sacrilege〃 of not paying the Ministers' Salaries。



This sort of thing does n't do here and now; you see; my young

friend!  We talk about our free institutions;they are nothing but a

coarse outside machinery to secure the freedom of individual thought。

The President of the United States is only the engine driver of our

broad…gauge mail…train; and every honest; independent thinker has a

seat in the first…class cars behind him。



There is something in what you say;replied the divinity…student;…

…and yet it seems to me there are places and times where disputed

doctrines of religion should not be introduced。  You would not attack

a church dogmasay Total Depravityin a lyceum…lecture; for

instance?



Certainly not; I should choose another place;I answered。 But;

mind you; at this table I think it is very different。  I shall

express my ideas on any subject I like。  The laws of the lecture…

room; to which my friends and myself are always amenable; do not hold

here。  I shall not often give arguments; but frequently opinions;I

trust with courtesy and propriety; but; at any rate; with such

natural forms of expression as it has pleased the Almighty to bestow

upon me。



A man's opinions; look you; are generally of much more value than his

arguments。  These last are made by his brain; and perhaps he does not

believe the proposition they tend to prove;as is often the case

with paid lawyers; but opinions are formed by our whole nature;

brain; heart; instinct; brute life; everything all our experience has

shaped for us by contact with the whole circle of our being。



There is one thing more;said the divinity…student;that I wished

to speak of; I mean that idea of yours; expressed some time since; of

depolarizing the text of sacred books in order to judge them fairly。

May I ask why you do not try the experiment yourself?



Certainly;I replied;if it gives you any pleasure to ask foolish

questions。  I think the ocean telegraph…wire ought to be laid and

will be laid; but I don't know that you have any right to ask me to

go and lay it。  But; for that matter; I have heard a good deal of

Scripture depolarized in and out of the pulpit。  I heard the Rev。

Mr。 F。 once depolarize the story of the Prodigal Son in Park…Street

Church。  Many years afterwards; I heard him repeat the same or a

similar depolarized version in Rome; New York。  I heard an admirable

depolarization of the story of the young man who 〃had great

possessions〃 from the Rev。  Mr。 H。  in another pulpit; and felt that

I had never half understood it before。  All paraphrases are more or

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