Search Results for: texas hold'em hands-【✔️推薦DD96·CC✔️】-搜哈英文-texas hold'em handsgbxyf-【✔️推薦DD96·CC✔️】-搜哈英文27s8-texas hold'em handsvp9f2-搜哈英文4b9o

Letter 1214

William Derham to Hans Sloane – October 26, 1708


Item info

Date: October 26, 1708
Author: William Derham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4041
Folio: ff. 235-236



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 235r]
Upminster Oct: 26. 1708.

Sr

I recd some time since a Letter from Maghrafelt in the North of
Ireland, from a very intelligent person ^there^, & great well-wisher to our R. So-
ciety, one Mr Neve: who out of his own good will had collected some of ye
Lough-Neagh Petrifications, pieces of the Giants-Causeway, & other curiosi-
ties, & sent them, he tells me, as far as Bristol: but hearing the So-
ciety had of them already in their Repository, he took no further care of them.

He hath sent me divers particulars relating to Lough-Neagh; which I
give you no account of at present, because there is nothing but what
is in effect in Mr W. Molyneaux’s, & Mr Ed. Smiths accounts, already
published in the Transactions. But there are some other matters related
by him, that I believe will not be unacceptable.

He tells me, that on Oct. 7. 1706 after a very Rainy day, &
Southerly Wind, there happened a prodigious Flood (the like not in the me-
mory of man) which broke down several Bridges, & the sides of some
of the Mountains in that part of Ireland. That it came running
down in vast Torrents from some of the Mountains, & drowned a-
bundance of Black-Cattle & Sheep, spoiled a great deal of Corn and
Hay in the Stacks, that it laid abundance of Houses 2 or 3 feet
deep in water, and broke down several of the Forge and Mill-Dams.
Also on July 3. 1707 they had another Flood, which came so suddain-
ly from the Mountains, as if there had been some suddain Eruption of the
water. And also on the 26th of the same month, in the county of An-
trim, there was a very suddain & surprizing Flood, which raised the
Six-Mile-River ^(so called)^ at that rate, that it broke down two strong Stone
Bridges, & three Houses, & carried away 600 pieces of Linnen-Cloth, that
lay a Bleaching, filled many Houses several feet deep with water
tore down some large Rocks in it’s passage, & left several Meadows
covered a foot or two deep with sand. That they in the South East part of the
County of Derry had that day but little Rain with some Thunder: but be-
yond the Mountains, in the North West part of the County, he River Roe had a great
Flood.

Another thing he gives me an account of, is of some monstrous Birth
viz. That an Alderman of the City of Derry told him That a Cow in the
year 1706 had, within a mile of that City, calved six Calves, then all dead.
That the Barrack-Master told him Dec. 6. 1706 of a Monstrous humane
Birth ^which the Barrack Master saith he himself saw^ in London-Derry, viz With two Heads, 4 arms, and but one Body
at the Navel. That it was of both Sexes, Female on the Right side; Male
on the left. That the Right hand of the Male was behind the Females
Back, and the Left hand of the Female behind the Males back, hold-
ing each other, as in Loving-manner. This Child, or Children were born
alive, but lived but a little while. My Friend was informed that
this monstrous Birth was dissected by the Mayor of Derry (his acquain-
tance) and (if it would be any service or satisfaction to the Society) he
 

Sloane MS 4041, f. 235v


[fol. 235v]
told me he could easily procure a full account of his Observations.
The last curiosity he gives me an account of is as I imagine
that which some call the Northern Streaming, which I do not re-
member the Society had ever any accounts of; and this being (I
must confess) one of the best ^most particular^ accounts I ever, & very met with
of it, and very consentaneous to such another appearance in the Hea-
vens, which my ingenious Neighbour & Friend Mr Barret (of the
Society) was credibly informed of, was seen in his neighbourhood
in Sep: or Oct: 1706, I say that ^Mr Neves^ account being so particular, will I hope
be very acceptable to the Society. ^It is thus^ “On Sunday Nov: 16 1707 after a
“Frosty morning, and Fair still Day, Wind NorthWesterly, about half an
“hour after eight in the evening, there appeared a very strang
“Light in the North. The Evening was clear and Starlight, only
“the Horizon was darkened with condensed Vapours in the North,
“reaching I guess 10 or 15 degrees above the Horizon. Out of this
“Cloud proceeded several Streams or Rays of Light, like the
“Tails of some Comets, broad below, and ending in Points above.
“Some of them extended almost to the Tail of Ursa Minor, and
“all were nearly perpendicular to the Horizon, and it was as bright
“as if the Full Moon had been Rising in the Cloud. But what I won-
“dered at most, was the Motion of the dark and lighter parts run-
“ning strangly through one another in a moment; sometimes to the
“East, and sometimes to the West. It continued, after I first saw it, about
“a Quarter of an Hour, often changing it’s Face and Appearance,
“as to Form and Light; sometimes broken, sometimes entire and
“long Rays of Light in the clear Sky, quite separate from, and
“above the Cloud, and none below in the Cloud.
Not having room in this page in the next you have my observa-
tions of the late Eclipses of the Sun & Moon.

I am Sir with greatest respect both
Yours & the Societies much obliged humble servant
Wm Derham

To prevent mistakes I think I think
it necessary to observe that this Light
which Mr Neve saw is very different
from that like the Tail of a Comet,
which hath been seen in the Constellation of Taurus, or near it; which I
happened to see in 1706. the Figure whereof is published in the Trans:
Number 305 & A which some are pleased to call the Aurora Borealis. Which
name in my opinion would better befit this Lumen Boreali, which is seldom, if
ever seen out of the North.
 

Sl MS 4041, f. 236r


[Fol. 236r]

The Eclipse of the Sun on Sept: 3 in the morning at Upminster

The beginning of the Eclipse we could not see for Clouds
6h.44.15 The Sun peeped out of the Clouds, & I judged by my Eye that about
one Tenth of a Digit was Eclipsed
Then Clouds nearly all the time of the Eclipse. But at
8.31.15 A little obscuration appeared through the Telescope.
8.32.45 A very little obscuration, through the Telescope.
Then Clouds and at
8.35.45 We could discern no remains of the Eclipse through the Telescope.
From these Observations I imagine the End of this Solar Eclipse,
Was much about 8h 33l in the morning.
The Eclipse of the Moon Sep: 18 in the Evening at Upminster
As I was that evening coming from London, I observed for half an
hour, or more, a thin shade to possess that part of the Disk where the E-
clipse began, which remained a good while after the Eclipse was over.
After I got home, I made a shift to mount Telescopes, & get all things
in readiness before the Eclipse began. And the principal Observations I made
thereof were these following.
7h 56 30 A thin Penumbra.
7 57 40 A darker penumbra.
7 59 00 Yet darker, which may pass for the Beginning of the Eclipse.
8 00 00 The Eclipse no doubt begun.
9 1 00 The Lucid parts of the Moon, not long before the Middle of the E-
clipse, were 925 parts of my Micrometer.
9 16 40 Diameter of the Moon 1634 parts of the Micrometer.
10 23 11 The End of the Eclipse draws nigh.
10 25 0 A little obscuration.
10 26 0 Less.
10 28 15 A very little, excepting the Duskishness befor mentioned.

Derham was a Church of England clergyman and a natural philosopher, interested in nature, mathematics, and philosophy. He frequently requested medical advice from Sloane, and likely served as a physician to his family and parishioners (Marja Smolenaars, “Derham, William (1657-1735)”, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/7528, accessed 7 June 2011]).

There is the remnant of a red seal on the external part of the letter (fol. 236v].

Sloane MS 4041, f. 236 v




Patient Details

Letter 1143

Patrick Blair to Hans Sloane – June 29, 1707


Item info

Date: June 29, 1707
Author: Patrick Blair
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4040
Folio: f. 374



Original Page



Transcription

Blair thanks Sloane for his help, writing that he would have given up long ago if not for his encouragement. He will continue to work on his account of the elephant and is seeking subscriptions for it. He asks Sloane to hold the money paid to him to avoid any suspicion that he is trying to cheat subscribers. Patrick Blair was a botanist and surgeon whose papers were published in the Transactions. In 1715 Blair joined the Jacobite rebellion as a battle surgeon but was captured and condemned to death. He was visited by Sloane in prison in the hopes the latter might secure a pardon. Sloane was successful and the pardon arrived shortly before Blair’s scheduled execution (Anita Guerrini, Blair, Patrick (c.16801728), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/2568, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

Research Team

Primary Investigator

Dr. Lisa Smith, Lecturer in Digital History, University of Essex, is the primary investigator on this project. Since 1997, she has worked extensively on the Sloane medical correspondence, which proved fruitful for both her Ph.D. thesis and subsequent projects. Her main areas of research interest are gender, health, and the household in England and France (ca. 1670-1789).  Please email any feedback about this project to: lisa.smith@essex.ac.uk.

 

Current Team Members

Chiara Leon Briones is a B.A. (History of Art) student at the University of Essex. She is a Digital History Frontrunner in 2019-2020.

 

Other Database Contributors

Alice Marples (M.A. Hons. History, University of Glasgow and M.A. Early Modern History, King’s College London) completed her Ph.D. in 2016 at King’s College London and the British Library as part of an AHRC-funded project called Reconnecting Sloane: Texts, Images, Objects. She used Sloane’s manuscripts to explore how he used correspondence to fashion his identity, interact with a number of different communities, and build a global network of contributors to his vast collection. She kindly shared some of her research notes on the letters in the database.

 

Previous Team Members

University of Essex

Ed Devane, University of Essex (2015-2016), Graduate Interns Scheme.

Tracey Cornish, University of Essex (2017), Undergraduate Research Opportunity Placement.

Scott Fenn, University of Essex and Volant Systems (2015-2019), website designer and maintenance.

Jessica Fure, University of Essex (2017-2018), Digital History Frontrunner.

Tallulah Maait Pepperell, University of Essex (2017), Undergraduate Research Placement.

Amy Smith, University of Essex (2017), Undergraduate Research Opportunity Placement.

Evangeline Smith, University of Essex (2016), Digital History Frontrunner.

Ivan Spence, University of Essex (2016), Undergraduate Research Opportunity Placement.

 

University of Saskatchewan

Dr. Jon Bath, Manager of the Digital Research Centre, University of Saskatchewan (2008-2010, 2011-2015)

Chelsea Clark, University of Saskatchewan (2013-2015):  AMS-Hannah Studentship 2014.

Bronwyn M. Craig, University of Saskatchewan (2014).

Matthew De Cloedt, University of Saskatchewan (2011-2015): Young Scholars Studentship (Interdisciplinary Centre for Culture and Creativity and USTEP) 2011 and AMS-Hannah Studentship 2012.

James Hawkes, University of Saskatchewan (2014): U of S Undergraduate Student Research Assistantship 2014.

Erin Spinney, University of Saskatchewan (2013-2015).

Jason Grier, University of Saskatchewan (2010).

Ann-Marie Hansen, McGill University (2009-2010).

Amanda Harrigan, University of Alberta (2009-2010).

Rob Konkel, University of Saskatchewan (2010): AMS Hannah Studentship 2010.

Kurt Krueger, University of Saskatchewan (2008-2009).

Melanie Racette-Campbell, University of Toronto (2009-2010).

Jeff Smith, Manager of the Digital Research Centre,  University of Saskatchewan (2010-2011).

Heather Stanley, University of Saskatchewan (2008).

Letter 3523

Richard Richardson to Hans Sloane – November 19, 1728


Item info

Date: November 19, 1728
Author: Richard Richardson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 6-7



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 6] Hon d Sr I am now at preston where I designe to take up my winter Quarters & to returne into (La)keshire about the beginning of march I hope in that time to pick up something in Nat: Hist that may be acceptable to yu. I am very much obliged to yu for the valuable present of plants which I received fro Mr Miller for my garden some of the tender ones came so late that I fear I shall loose them the rest I left in good health, I thinke in good hands along with the plants I also received the favour of the two Bookes I am glad to find Dr Ruysch in such good health that he is still able to go on with his Anatomical observations. The Treates de Belammite I was very well pleased with & in it with the account of all the Bookes of fossils which have for some time by put been printed in Germany some of which I have not yet seen. Mr Millers List of plants for the physick garden came to me so late that I could not find them all though I had them in the garden, but have noted down such as I could not find which I promised to send him in the spring & if there is any thing omitted in his list which I can procure him I shall be very glad to serve him & if it lys in my power to do any thing that is obliging to you, you may be assured of the best endeavours of your obled: servant Ric: Richardson preston nov: 14 1728

Richardson was a physician and botanist who traveled widely in England, Wales, and Scotland in search of rare specimens. He corresponded and exchanged plants with many well-known botanists and naturalists (W. P. Courtney, Richardson, Richard (16631741), rev. Peter Davis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23576, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

Letter 3803

Richard Richardson to Hans Sloane – September 2, 1730


Item info

Date: September 2, 1730
Author: Richard Richardson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: ff. 91-92



Original Page



Transcription

Richardson thanks Sloane for the books and mentions several he would like to procure. He has received no word from Mr Miller, though he was told that Chelsea Physic Garden is thriving. Richardson has compiled a list of all plants growing above ground. He will send the list to Mr Miller. Richardson discusses the contamination of water in Halifax and the means employed to cure the cattle who got sick drinking it. He relays the recipe for the medicine that was used. Smallpox is becoming a problem. Richardson was a physician and botanist who traveled widely in England, Wales, and Scotland in search of rare specimens. He corresponded and exchanged plants with many well-known botanists and naturalists (W. P. Courtney, Richardson, Richard (16631741), rev. Peter Davis, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2010 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/23576, accessed 31 May 2011]).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: Mr. Horton (Son of William Horton)
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    The child's symptoms are 'favourable'.

  • Diagnosis

    Smallpox.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    Purged a few times. Dr Nettleton and Richardson treated the child.


    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:

    Shortly after being treated Horton's symptoms worsened for a few days and two weeks later he was in a bad way. His hands twitched and gripings developed in his feet. The boy died on the fifteenth day.

  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Death, Smallpox, Unspecified

Letter 3612

Thomas Dereham to Hans Sloane – May 28, 1729


Item info

Date: May 28, 1729
Author: Thomas Dereham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 115-116



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 115] May 28. 1729 Sir By your favour of ye 4th of last month I have been very glad you had then received mine, & would by the first opportunity communicate unto ye Society the papers therein contained, having already presented the observations about Venus, & the Globe of the Planet done by late Monsig. Bianchini. I desire you to remember that packet directed to Mr Perrone at Canton in China as soone as another opportunity offers. I am in expectation of the subscriptions for the Chinese Chronologicall table, that is actually under the press in my house, so that upon the first notice I will send you the promised number of copies, that I am sure will meet with the approbation of the learned world. The Transactions are not yett come to my hands, butt in return I hope to be able to send ye domus aurea Neronis of ye Society. The enclosed pay to Dr Rutty, & wish for many opportunitys to shew you how much I am with great esteem Sir your most odebt & most humble servt Thomas Dereham

Sir Thomas Dereham (c. 1678-1739) was a British expatriate and Roman Catholic who lived in Italy. He had a close association with the Royal Society (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27dereham%27%29).




Patient Details

Letter 3757

Thomas Dereham to Hans Sloane – April 22, 1730


Item info

Date: April 22, 1730
Author: Thomas Dereham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: ff. 22-23



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 22] Aprill 22. 1730. Sir I received yours of the 5 Dec. some time ago, butt having no litterary news to communicate unto you I have defferd untill now to give a full answer unto your kind offer of promoting the sale of the Chronologicall Tables, which I have sent over in a box directed to you, which you may recover upon the arrivall of the Harte, by the means of the enclosed Bill of Ladeing, & appoint some Bookseller your freind to sell them out at three shillings every Table that is of three sheets of paper & in all are three hundred, & fifty copies, & the money you may be pleased to pay unto Mr. Pucci secretary of Florence, after having reimbursed your paper charges of freight, & Custom. There are explanations how to understand, & use the Tables, butt t’is requisite to know that one begins after the Oriental manner at the right hand where the place is empty, & every square is a Cicle o f 60 years, the Chinese forming of that number there Centuries, & not of one hundred as the Europeans, whereby there times are much shortened. I have putt also into the Box as a present to the Society, an Armenian, & Latin Dictionary printed in Propaganda fide at Rome, which may be of use, to those that have undertaken the project you sent me, & I hope will be made acceptable by you unto the Illustrious body. The exact mapp of some parts of Barbary sent you by Mr. Shaw will be received by the learned world with great pleasure when published, for there are great mistakes in what has been hitherto spread about. That supposed petrified child which proved to be a marble statue of a child is a great proof that all the stories we have had of the petrefaction of men, & women in severall attitudes, & positions are only statues, & basso rilievo’s belonging to some City buried under the sands of the Country. Concerning petrefaction I must begg your leave to give you an abstract of a letter of a freind of mine from Naples, that is a very curious, & learned gentleman, who sayeth. I have learned a thing lately here, which I learned before in other Countries, butt is surprizing to me here; There is a channel of water near Naples where not only a piece of wood thrown into it, butt the grass it self that groweth at the bottom of it hardens, & becomes stones; He that has the care of keeping clean that Channel has told me the thing, butt could not tell me in how much time it hardens so, butt the grass that he takes away to cleanse the channel every year, he finds sometimes quite hardned into stone, some half [fol. 23] hardned, & half grass. I have a mind to cause many baskets to be sett att the bottom & have them remaine there some time, because it would be curious to see them interwoven of grass, & stone, & who could ever imagine that so petrified, they were once made of rush. When my freind shall acquaint me with the success of the experiment you shall be informed with the results, being an Italian that writes in English. Pray what is your opinion of this dreadfull influence of catharrs, & colds that has circulated all about Europe with no small destruction of mankind, & rages now at Naples, & in Spain: we have heard that some french philosophers have assigned the cause unto an eruption of Mount Hecla in Iceland, & a great earthquake in Norway in November last, which has infected the air, butt I don’t know how to account for it that way, wherefore begg for better information from your profound speculation. Be pleased to forward the enclosed to Dr. Rutty, who I hope will participate unto the Society the small literary news I can furnish at present being with great sincerity, & esteem Your most Obedient, & most humble servant Tho: Dereham P.S. As I was sealing up this, yours of ye 10th March came to my hands, for which I return many thanks, & especially for the parcell sent to Mr. Green, which I hope soon to receive very soon, & the experiments by ye spirits of wine are very surprizing which I long to see in a Transaction.

Sir Thomas Dereham (c. 1678-1739) was a British expatriate and Roman Catholic who lived in Italy. He had a close association with the Royal Society (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27dereham%27%29).




Patient Details

Letter 3472

Thomas Dereham to Hans Sloane – June 12, 1728


Item info

Date: June 12, 1728
Author: Thomas Dereham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4049
Folio: ff. 187-188



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 187] Rome 12 June 1728 Sir Your favour of ye 26 Aprill is just come to my hands, for which I return you many thanks, as for having communicated the contents of mine unto the R. Society & acquainting me with there having taken it very well & for having sent me the late Transactions, & Sr Isaac Newtons Cronology, an abstract whereof has been only seen in these parts, & putt every body in great expectation, therefore I which that Mr. Green keeps his word with you in forwarding them soone to me, & takes the like care in our future correspondence. The Observations on Venus, & the domus Aureal Neronis by Monsgr Bianchini are both under the press, & his nicety is the occasion of the delay. Here enclosed are the answers of the Professors of Padua to Dr. Rutty, which I entreat you to forward to him, & to tell Mr. Derham that Monsigr Bianchini makes me hope to receive of him soon his Observations on ye Jovial Satellites which I shall send him without loss of time & return the answer I owe unto him. I expect with great impatience the efect of your proposing Dr. James Beccari of Bologna to be Member of ye Society who every day more deserves such a distinction, being one of those that actually in ye Instituto of that Town trieth over again the Optical Experiments of Sr Isaac Newton to confute Rizzetti, & I am informed they all answer exactly, & prove more & more the ingenuity of the first Author. I am with the greatest esteem, & sincerity Your most Obedient, & most humble servant Thomas Dereham

Sir Thomas Dereham (c. 1678-1739) was a British expatriate and Roman Catholic who lived in Italy. He had a close association with the Royal Society (https://collections.royalsociety.org/DServe.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Persons&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28Surname%3D%27dereham%27%29).




Patient Details

Letter 3042

William Cheselden to Hans Sloane – June 13, 1724


Item info

Date: June 13, 1724
Author: William Cheselden
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4047
Folio: f. 190



Original Page



Transcription

Cheselden has sent the bearer, who carries a case history. William Cheselden was a surgeon and anatomist. He made several contributions to the Philosophical Transactions, held appointments at St Thomas’s and St George’s hospitals in London, and participated in the affairs of the Barber-Surgeons’ Company (John Kirkup, Cheselden, William (16881752), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Oct 2006 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/5226, accessed 1 Aug 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 3330

Edward Woodcock to Hans Sloane – April 4, 1727


Item info

Date: April 4, 1727
Author: Edward Woodcock
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4048
Folio: ff. 273-274



Original Page



Transcription

Woodcock is James Petiver’s nephew. He was informed that Sloane purchased his late uncle’s collection. Woodcock would like access to the papers relating to Petiver’s estate, which was ‘placed in the hands of a stranger’ before his death. It is still not known who the executor is. There are Dutch paintings, ‘Exotick Butterflies’, and books in the estate, which Woodcock is willing to sell Sloane. He would like to arrange a meeting.




Patient Details