The Roll of the Royal College of Physicians of London: 1701 to 1800Royal College of Physicians of London, 1878 - Physicians |
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Page 3
... settling in his native town , and attempting by the exercise of his profession , to main- tain himself at home . Mr. Yonge was in his 25th year when he settled at Plymouth ; and he obtained , for a beginner , a considerable amount of ...
... settling in his native town , and attempting by the exercise of his profession , to main- tain himself at home . Mr. Yonge was in his 25th year when he settled at Plymouth ; and he obtained , for a beginner , a considerable amount of ...
Page 27
... settled at the last - named town 3rd February , 1709-10 , when he was admitted an Extra - Licentiate of the Col- lege of Physicians . He died 2nd April , 1742. He was a voluminous writer , as the following list of his works testifies ...
... settled at the last - named town 3rd February , 1709-10 , when he was admitted an Extra - Licentiate of the Col- lege of Physicians . He died 2nd April , 1742. He was a voluminous writer , as the following list of his works testifies ...
Page 34
... settled at York , where he practised with the highest reputation and success for more than thirty - five years . He was appointed one of the physicians to the York County hospital in 1746 . Dying at York 12th March , 1748 , he was ...
... settled at York , where he practised with the highest reputation and success for more than thirty - five years . He was appointed one of the physicians to the York County hospital in 1746 . Dying at York 12th March , 1748 , he was ...
Page 38
... settled at Macclesfield in 1691 , and was successively at Nottingham , Colches- ter , and London . * THOMAS LEWIS was born in Worcestershire , and edu- cated at Magdalen hall , Oxford , but left the university without taking a degree ...
... settled at Macclesfield in 1691 , and was successively at Nottingham , Colches- ter , and London . * THOMAS LEWIS was born in Worcestershire , and edu- cated at Magdalen hall , Oxford , but left the university without taking a degree ...
Page 58
... settled at Exeter , where he soon ac- quired the confidence of a numerous party . Dr. Dicker was a member of the society of Friends ; a man of in- offensive manners and plain good sense , rather safe than scientific , and more ...
... settled at Exeter , where he soon ac- quired the confidence of a numerous party . Dr. Dicker was a member of the society of Friends ; a man of in- offensive manners and plain good sense , rather safe than scientific , and more ...
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Common terms and phrases
admitted a Candidate admitted a fellow admitted a Licentiate admitted an Extra-Licentiate anatomy Anno appointed physician April August buried Censor church cians College of Phy College of Physicians created doctor daughter death degree of doctor died Diseases doctor of medicine Dublin Edinburgh elected physician eminent England engraved Essay February Fellow 30th September Fever fuit George Baker George's hospital graduated doctor Gulstonian lecturer Harveian orator Heberden Hunter James January John July lege of Physicians line at Leyden Lond M.D.-A doctor M.D.-A native March medicine at Cambridge November October Oxford physi physic line physician in ordinary physician to St Physicians 22nd December Physicians 25th June Physicians 30th September Pitcairn portrait practice proceeded A.B. profession quĉ queen Queen's college removed to London resided Rheims Royal Society settled in London sicians Sir William Browne surgeon THOMAS took the degree Trinity college wife William Heberden
Popular passages
Page 96 - The King to Oxford sent a troop of horse, For Tories own no argument but force ; With equal skill to Cambridge books he sent, For Whigs admit no force but argument.
Page 256 - He was also a Fellow of the Royal Society and of the Society of Antiquaries, and in all respects an estimable and accomplished gentleman.
Page 79 - Specimen ; or, a Comparative Description of all the Muscles in a Man and in a Quadruped ; added is an Account of the Muscles peculiar to a Woman.
Page 208 - If I had strength enough to hold a pen, I would write how easy and pleasant a thing it is to die.
Page 410 - God;" and the promises of the Gospel, on the conditions explained by our Redeemer, were his humble but confident hope in life, and his consolation in death. If one precept appeared to be more practically approved by him than another, it was that which directs us to do unto others as we would have them to do unto us ; and this was felt and acknowledged daily by all his professional brethren in their intercourse with him.
Page 423 - Biographical Memoirs of Medicine in Great Britain, from the Revival of Literature to the Time of Harvey.
Page 232 - Mrs. Healde became a pensioner on the society for the relief of the widows and orphans of medical men, and thenceforward for many years acted in the capacity of midwife.
Page 441 - Dr Wollaston was endowed with bodily senses of extraordinary acuteness and accuracy, and with great general vigour of understanding. Trained in the discipline of the exact sciences, he had acquired a powerful command over his attention, and had habituated himself to the most rigid correctness, both of thought and of language. He was sufficiently provided with the resources of the mathematics, to be enabled to pursue with success profound...
Page 442 - ... often so minute as to be scarcely perceptible by ordinary eyes. He was remarkable, too, for the caution with which he advanced from facts to general conclusions ; a caution which, if it sometimes prevented him from reaching at once to the most sublime truths, yet rendered every step of his ascent a secure station, from which it was easy to rise to higher and more enlarged inductions.
Page 142 - Charter of the Corporation for the Relief of the Widows and Children of Clergymen in the Communion of the Church of England, in America...