'... at the end an exhibition was given where the cells were all illuminated white against black, and it was like staring into the Heavens. Just the same as the nebula....'Letters, (Ed. Thomas Pinney) vol 5. p. 448]. See also his "A Doctor of Medicine"in Rewards and Fairies, his poem "Our Fathers of Old", Dr Gillian Sheehan's article on "Kipling and Medicine", and in particularhis story "Unprofessional"(October 1930), collected in Limits and Renewals, which developed the ideas expressed in this speech.
[
... the natural ground of medicine and disease ... depends much upon astral influx and elementary impression; and hence it is, that, by the nativity or decumbiture of the patient, we are enabled to discern both the cause and conclusion of the disease.. [Page 296 lines 10-13] this creation ... high as the stars Kipling is drawing together some of Culpeper's statements from The English Physician Enlargedand combining them into a single sentence. All references are to the edition of 1789. In speaking of 'contraries', Kipling omits Culpeper's reference to God:
'The hand eternal, in the beginning, when he formed the creation, made it a composition of contraries' ... (I, 59) 'if we consider that the whole creation is one entire and united body, composed by the power of an All-wise God, of a composition of discords'... (I, 63) 'Man is an admirable creature, the universe and epitome of the world'. (II, 3)[Page 296 line 17] pneumabreath of life
Introduction The speech Notes on XXXII Notes on XXXIV
[April 25th 2011] Publication Published in The Times 16 November 1928, page 18. Published in The Lancet as The Story of Nicholas Culpeper: Astrologer-Physician, 24 November 1928, page 1061. Published as "Healing by the Stars" in pamphlet form, Doubleday, New York, 1928. Collected in the Sussex Edition vol. XXV, pp. 293-99, together with the earlier speeches collected in A Book of Words, and in the Burwash Edition vol. XXIV. Background Kipling and Winston Churchill were the guests of honour at the annual dinner. Kipling wrote to Peter Stanley on 26-28 November 1928: I made a speech at the R.Society of Medicine (maybe you saw it in the Lancet) on the old astrological lines we discussed more than a year ago. It was rather fun but it has unchained on me every dam astrological crank in England (with pamphlets!) and the U.S. mail has yet to come.Letters, (Ed. Thomas Pinney) vol 5. |