[51 ] 



of Simon Januensis or the ' * Pandects ' ' of 

 Matheas Sylyaticus. As " Punch " put it 

 the other day in a delightful poetical review 

 of Professor West's volume : x 



" Botany relies on Latin ever since Linnaeus' days; 



Biologic nomenclature draws on Greek in count- 

 less ways; 



While in Medicine it is obvious you can never 

 take your oath 4 



What an ailment means exactly if you have n't 

 studied both." 



Let me give a couple of examples. 



Within the narrow compass of the prim- 

 itive cell from which all living beings origi- 

 nate, onomatomania runs riot. The process 

 of mitosis has developed a special literature 

 and language. Dealing not alone with the 

 problems of heredity and of sex , but with the 

 very dynamics of life, the mitotic complex 

 is much more than a simple physiological 

 process, and in the action and interaction 

 of physical forces the cytologist hopes to 



1 The Value of the Classics. Princeton University Press, 1917. 



