ANCIENT IRISH MEDICINE
not according to the amount of labor or effort in-
volved in his service—which is the standard of
wages for the manual laborer—but according to
the value of that service to his patient or his client.
In Babylonia as in Ireland, though the two coun-
tries were separated by all the breadth of Europe
and some of Asia, and the customs were separated
by over 2,000 years, this thoroughgoing professional
spirit obtained. The scale of fees was very nearly
the same. For curing a relative of the royal family,
a prince or a wealthy merchant, the physician in
Babylonia was justified in charging about the equiva-
lent of a year’s wages to a working man; for healing
a slave the charge could be only one-fifth or one-sixth
that amount. Curiously enough in Babylonia too
they were rather hard on quacks and charlatans and
the physician was kept to his promise of healing.
The Brehon (Irish) laws are very interesting
especially for us in the modern time in their exact
distinction between the “lawful” and the “unlawful”
physician. We might secure hints for the regula-
tion and practice of medicine in our day when there
are so many abuses due to the irregular practitioner
of medicine from the old Irish laws. For instance
the law declared:
“If an unlawful physician treat a joint or sinew
without obtaining an indemnity against liability to
damages and with a notice to the patient that he is
not a regular physician, he is subject to a penalty
with compensation to the patient.”
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