Thank you! Don't forget to confirm subscription in your email.
In Persia in the 11th Century, a surgeon's apprentice disguises himself as a Jew to study at a school that does not admit Christians.
Ibn Sina: Because there is nothing to be afraid of.Death is merely a threshold we must all cross... into the silence, after the final heartbeat... drifting away with our final exhalation... into eternal peace...
Ibn Sina: How pale and tedious this world would be without mystery.
Rob Cole: I don't want to treat warts all my life. I don't want to pull teeth and sell horse piss as a miracle tonic. I want to learn how to cure cataracts, side sickness and all other diseases.
Ibn Sina: What is it like? Rob Cole: Inside? Ibn Sina: [nods] Rob Cole: It is both... beautiful... and frightening. Ibn Sina: Go on. Rob Cole: I saw the heart! Ibn Sina: Describe it. Rob Cole: It has two chambers with an impassable wall in between. Ibn Sina: So how does the blood get from one side to the other? Rob Cole: By way of the lungs, I think. Ibn Sina: So all our theories of human circulation would be... wrong. Rob Cole: Master, nothing is as it is in the books! Nothing!
Rebecca: In my fever, I dreamt that we were man and wife. We had children... Four! Rob Cole: Did we roam around in a barber's car? Rebecca: [smiles] No, we lived in a great city. Where you built a Madraza! Rob Cole: All by myself? Rebecca: I helped.