Athothis : a satire on modern medicine / by Thomas C. Minor.

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CHAPTER VI. ATHOTHIS AND PAULUS ANDROCYDES MEET A MODERN PHYSICIAN OF A RARE OLD TYPE. HE sun had now risen above the horizon and its warm cheerful radiance was fast dissipating the last vapory atoms of foggy mist. On the western outskirts of the city, where the houses sloped up the hill-sides in terraces one above the other, thousands of windows reflected the golden rays of the eastern sky. On the highlands, surrounding the suburban portion of the town, the forests and meadows had donned the full virginal robes of spring. The air was redolent with the odor of violets, apple blossoms, and honey- suckles, while the twittering and warbling of numerous feathered songsters filled the heavens with charming melody. " What a delightful morning! What a superb pros- pect ! " exclaimed Paulus Androcydes in a tone of ecstasy, as he viewed with intense admiration the grand panorama outstretched below. " 'T is the annual awakening of Seb from his winter's nap," remarked Athothis, " and the earth is never so happy as when attired in a new suit of green, white, and red. But here is an open garret lattice, and I hear moans ; let us enter." And, therewith, the spirits drifted into a shabby old tenement house, into a dingy-looking room. This dwelling-place denoted the presence of ab- ject poverty, the furniture consisting of three broken-