The whole imposing edifice of modern medicine is like the celebrated tower of Pisa - slightly off balance.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
Modern medicine is a negation of health. It isn't organized to serve human health, but only itself, as an institution. It makes more people sick than it heals.
The revolution is like a vessel filled with the pulsating heartbeat of millions of working people.
Wherever the art of medicine is loved, there is also a love of humanity.
Just like in medicine, when the normal medicine no longer works, one resorts to surgery. And the revolutions is like the surgery: It's painful, and it's the last resort for nations.
It makes the heart to tremble when you open an undiscovered tomb.
Revolution applies a local anaesthetic to one class of society and operates on the other.
The wonderful thing about modern medicine is that so many of these complaints that used to signify old age and decline can be coped with.
It takes a village to run the Big Man - a village of doctors.
Rome is a place almost worn out by being looked at, a city collapsing under the weight of reference.
I've been to the Leaning Tower of Pisa. It's a tower, and it's leaning. You look at it, but nothing happens, so then you look for someplace to get a sandwich.