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When I was in my college and early med school years, physician-scientist Lewis Thomas was publishing a series of books of essays on medicine and the biological sciences.
Thomas (1913-1993) was a 1937 graduate of Harvard Medical School who rose to be Dean of both NYU and Yale medical schools and President of Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. (See his Wiki here). His books included Lives of a Cell (1974), Medusa and the Snail (1979), and The Youngest Science: Notes of a Medicine-Watcher (autobiographical; 1983).
Youngest Science notes on page 5 that in 1935, he got on the HMS yearbook staff because he'd written a poem about the autopsy service at MGH, called "Allen Street." Although it's not footnoted in the text, the full poem can be found in the Appendix (pp. 249-253).
Hoping it's within the limits of critical quotation, I've put a PDF of the full poem in the cloud here.
Sample: Allen Street, Canto III |
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The poem is mentioned and quoted on Page 24 of the book on the history of the MGH pathology department; PDF online here.
Page 5 of Lewis's book (can be seen in my short cloud PDF cited just above the poem) mentions classmate Albert Coons, who became a noted pathologist.
Lewis Thomas, the medical scientist, not to be confused with Lowell Thomas, the 20th-century journalist.