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Letter 0623

Victor Ferguson to Hans Sloane – July 23, 1700


Item info

Date: July 23, 1700
Author: Victor Ferguson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4038
Folio: ff. 38-39



Original Page



Transcription

Victor Ferguson (d. 1729) was a physician of Newtown, near Belfast (Toby C. Bernard, A New Anatomy of Ireland: The Irish Protestants, 1649-1770 (Connecticut: Yale University Press, 2003), ch. 5; “Fergusons of Belfast” URL: http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~colin/FergusonsOfIreland/Belfast.htm).




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A William Nivin
    Gender:
    Age:60 years old.
  • Description

    If the patient went longer than four hours without eating or drinking, he became 'insensibly positive and willful'; he spit constantly (clear spittle), and became senseless, recognizing no one. He staggered around like a drunk for a considerable time, and then sank down, foaming, and 'would choke if left alone'. When on horseback, he reeled side to side and bent backwards until he fell off; the patient slept soundly, but foamed while doing so, and could not be left unsupervised. If one attempted to feed the patient mid-episode, he thrashed and resisted.

  • Diagnosis

    'A species of epilepsy' which Ferguson has not encountered before.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:
    Ongoing Treatment:

    Ferguson obtained the patient's consent to trigger an episode so he could observe; the patient remembered nothing afterward. By regulating the patient's diet (eating every four hours), Ferguson was attempting to manage the episodes.


    Response:
  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Age, Eyes, Dizziness, Epilepsy, Balance

Letter 2621

John Neale to Hans Sloane –


Item info

Date:
Author: John Neale
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: ff. 148-149



Original Page



Transcription

Fols. 148-149 Lord Carmarthen in his return from London was taken with a griping looseness on the Road. Two nights after his coming hither he took a dose of tinctura … This not removing his Disodr he took a colus…and was better with this method, till Saturday last that his Lordship going out on a shooting and getting…his colic pains returned upon him with greater violence than before, attending with a vomiting. On Monday he took a dose of rhubarb … which gave him two stools, but his pains increasing as also a vomiting, it was thought convenient to give something strength and his Lordship took next morning … which moved him not till the evening, and then but…at Bedtime he took a paregoric draught and had a good night. On Wednesday he took … and about 2 hours … which not moving was upon … 3 hours after and in the evening, gave him 3 or 4 stools. His paregisse was repeated at bedtime, but his Lordship had a Bad night and complained much of his pains and a distention of his Body from the wind, about five this morning a carminative clyster was ordered my Lord which gave him two or three stools and much ease. Notwithstanding these applications his pains returned in 5 or 6 hours and we thought it proper for my Lord to go into a warm bath which gave him ease and upon going to Bed he fell into a Breathing sweat and slept quietly for some time. After 3 or 4 hours my Lordships pains are returned and complains now very much about his stomach, and is troubled very much with wind. My Lord, is not able to take any food, not even chicken broth or sack whey without giving him much uneasiness, though he has not vomited this 24 hours, and has had 2 or 3 stools since morning which make us hope his Lordship is better than he has been this 2 days. He drinks the bath waters warm which sit as easy on his stomach as anything he has taken, and which we think has helped his vomiting and kept his Body open. This is the exactest account we are able to give you of his Lordships case and one with all respect…

Peregrine Hyde Osborne, 3rd Duke of Leeds was referred to as Marquess Carmarthen or Lord Carmarthen at the time.




Patient Details

Letter 2620

John Cotes to Hans Sloane –


Item info

Date:
Author: John Cotes
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: ff. 148-149



Original Page



Transcription

Fols. 148-149 Lord Carmarthen in his return from London was taken with a griping looseness on the Road. Two nights after his coming hither he took a dose of tinctura … This not removing his Disodr he took a colus…and was better with this method, till Saturday last that his Lordship going out on a shooting and getting…his colic pains returned upon him with greater violence than before, attending with a vomiting. On Monday he took a dose of rhubarb … which gave him two stools, but his pains increasing as also a vomiting, it was thought convenient to give something strength and his Lordship took next morning … which moved him not till the evening, and then but…at Bedtime he took a paregoric draught and had a good night. On Wednesday he took … and about 2 hours … which not moving was upon … 3 hours after and in the evening, gave him 3 or 4 stools. His paregisse was repeated at bedtime, but his Lordship had a Bad night and complained much of his pains and a distention of his Body from the wind, about five this morning a carminative clyster was ordered my Lord which gave him two or three stools and much ease. Notwithstanding these applications his pains returned in 5 or 6 hours and we thought it proper for my Lord to go into a warm bath which gave him ease and upon going to Bed he fell into a Breathing sweat and slept quietly for some time. After 3 or 4 hours my Lordships pains are returned and complains now very much about his stomach, and is troubled very much with wind. My Lord, is not able to take any food, not even chicken broth or sack whey without giving him much uneasiness, though he has not vomited this 24 hours, and has had 2 or 3 stools since morning which make us hope his Lordship is better than he has been this 2 days. He drinks the bath waters warm which sit as easy on his stomach as anything he has taken, and which we think has helped his vomiting and kept his Body open. This is the exactest account we are able to give you of his Lordships case and one with all respect…

Peregrine Hyde Osborne, 3rd Duke of Leeds was referred to as Marquess Carmarthen or Lord Carmarthen at the time.




Patient Details

Letter 3868

George Kelly to Hans Sloane – February 5, 1730/31


Item info

Date: February 5, 1730/31
Author: George Kelly
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: ff. 182-183



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 182] The Tower feb: 5: 1730 Sir My Obligations to You are so great, that I should be very Unworthy, if I did not acknowledge them with the Utmost gratitude and return you my sincere and hearty thanks in the best Manner that my present weak condition will allow off. You have, Sir, been exceedingly good in speaking to the Duke of New Castle for me and his Grace has been so kind as to send down an order upon it, but it is so unhappily worded for me, that except you are pleasd to prevail upon him to make some small alteration in it, I shall reap no benefit by it. for the order says, that I shall go abroad for two hours in a day only, you know, will be spent in going and Coming thro the streets of London, so that I shall have no time to stay in the open air, which is the intent of my going abroad; in the Next place, It directs that I shall have an officer and a Warder to attend me, and the Expence of providing horses for them and myself will be so great [fol. 183] that I am by no means able to do it; I have represented this in a letter to his Grace, and begd of him to Indulge me with the liberty of five or six hours in a day, attended by an officer or a Warder, and there is not an officer or Warder here, but are willing to take charge of and Answer for me in this manner for I thank God, my behaviour has been such among them, that they think me incapable of a dishonest action and much less of so base a one as to make ill use of any Independence which they are pleased to allow me; Now, Sir as you have been the only person who has procured this Indulgence, I most humbly beg the favour of you to back the representation which I have made to the Duke, which is so true and reasonable, that the least application from you will produce an Order of service to me; since all I request is to go abroad for 5 or 6 hours attended by an Officer or a Warder only I hope you will pardon me for giving you so much trouble to believe me with the greatest gratitude I respect. Sir your most obliged humble sert Gero. Kelly

George Kelly (b. 1688, d. in or after 1747) was a Jacobite agent and conspirator. He was arrested twice in 1722 for his involvement in a plot to restore the Stuarts. Kelly was imprisoned in the Tower of London, where he was supported by his family, Jacobite members of parliament, and Sir Hans Sloane. He escaped in 1736 and fled to France (Roger Turner, ‘Kelly, George (b. 1688, d. in or after 1747)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2006 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/15297, accessed 29 Aug 2014]).




Patient Details

Absence Makes the Heart Grow Fonder: Early Modern Friendship

By Alice Marples

We all miss our friends – whether they leave for study, work or holidays, their sudden absence in our daily lives can leave a bit of a gap. Most of us are fortunate enough to expect to see them again, sooner or later. Early modern absences were different, especially if they involved a lengthy journey to the New World. With countries at war, and the dangers of both high-seas and unknown lands, letters could take a very long time to go halfway around the seventeenth-century world. There were any number of possible reasons for miscarriage, some more deadly than others. Letters exchanged across these absences can therefore reveal the ways in which routine gossip and friendly banter were used to mask loss and genuine fear.

Neither the correct country or period – but you get the idea! [By Francisco Aurélio de Figueiredo e Melo (1854–1916) via Wikimedia Commons]

While Hans Sloane was in Jamaica, he frequently wrote letters home to colleagues in the Royal College of Physicians, to his scholarly patrons, and to regular punters in various coffeehouses, telling extraordinary tales of the New World. However, there appears to be a difference in the letters exchanged, depending on whether the correspondents were Sloane’s London-based friends or his far-away friends .

Though the highly-esteemed naturalist, John Ray, was a close and loving friend of Sloane’s for many years, he was almost entirely taken up with his own botanical cataloguing work at the point of Sloane’s imminent departure, and seems to think only in those terms: “If you goe to Jamayca I pray you a safe and prosperous voyage. We expect great things from you, no less than the resolving all our doubts about the names we meet with of Plants in that part of America.” Because he did not regularly see Sloane–however frequently they corresponded or visited one another–Sloane’s absence was, for him, no more an insurmountable issue than usual.

Sloane’s physician colleague, Tancred Robinson, on the other hand, missed him deeply. His first letter, in Robinson’s typical off-hand style, covers anxiety with medical banter, betraying his sincere affection and strong sense of Sloane’s physical distance:

My deare Dr This hopes to find you Safe at St Iago notwithstanding the great reports at London of the Drs dying at Sea, and of his being taken by Pyrates; I sacrificed daily to neptune for your preservation, your friends at Dicks and Bettys were mourning for you, but I conforted them with Cordiall and Alexipharmick draughts, they are all well and are like to continue so if they hear often from you, for without your frequent prescription wee can neither have health or so much as life. (Sloane MS 4036, f. 30)

Sloane, too, seems to have preferred to use his correspondence with his closest friends as a way of maintaining the same relationship they had while in close proximity. For example, much of his correspondence with William Courten contained advice for the elderly man on his health, acknowledging that his concern had grown now that he was no longer close at hand to watch over him. Sloane sought to ease the separation by reminding his old friend that he could anticipate his words and, therefore, not miss him at all:

you know my opinion about severall of your distempers & I am almost confident I am in the right, I hope for my sake you will abstaine as much from excesse in wine as the too good & complaisant humour will suffer you, you cannot doe me a greater favour then to be careful of your own health… I have att all times discoursd soe largely my opinion of the state of your body that I believe you may remember every thing very particularly. (Sloane MS 3962, f. 309)

In a later letter, Sloane longs to be reunited (though not at the expense of Courten’s health, however imaginary!): “you may be sure the last I have already is delightfull to me for this is indeed a new world in all things, I wishd heartily for you to day if you could have been back in your chambers at night, I find this place very warme.” (Sloane MS 3962, f. 310)

By writing in a way that maintained the natural, nuanced tones of the friendships left behind, correspondents remained bound together across vast distances. At home, reading letters aloud could conjure up the image of a person in the space they used to occupy. Robinson, for example, deliberately seeks to provoke an anticipated reaction from Sloane:

Wee are all overjoyed to understand by yours… that you weatherd your voyage so couragiously, and was in such good health under a fiery Sun, and new climate. I read your letter to all your friends at Dicks, Bettys, Trumpet, etc. who return you their best services, and hearty wishes for your welfare. Mr Courtin shewd mee your letters, and we often sacrifice a bottle to you. (Sloane MS 4036, f. 33)

Robinson is here either comforting the famously temperate Sloane with the assurance he and Courten are dutifully following his medical advice… Or teasing him over their defiance in his honour! If the latter, it is highly likely that Sloane would have been equal parts entertained, touched and infuriated by his friends in this instance. You can imagine him rolling his eyes as he closed the letter.

Letter 3921

Pa: Adair to Plucknet –


Item info

Date:
Author: Pa: Adair
Recipient: Plucknet

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4066
Folio: f. 250-251



Original Page



Transcription

Honoured Sir Be pleased to accept of the inclosed Seeds of Bangue, (the freshest I could pick out) together with some of the Plant; untill I can Spare So much time, as to examine whither there may be any other worth your tryall amongst those samples I brought from India: which I shall doo sometime this week, or in the beginning of the next, And you shall then, be attended by Sir Your true friend & humble Servant Pa: Adair London Thursday Att. 10 in the morning

Patrick Adair sent Dr. Leonard Plukenett Bangue seeds along with a portion of the plant. Adair informs Plukenett of some additional specimens that he collected in India. Adair assures Plukenett that he will examine the specimens from India in the coming weeks to determine whether any of them will be “worth [Plukenett’s] tryall.” Patrick Adair (1624?-1693/4) was a Presbyterian minister and historian. (Finlay Holmes, ‘Adair, Patrick (1624?–1693/4)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/83, accessed 1 May 2015]).




Patient Details

Letter 1744

John Fuller Sr. to Hans Sloane – April 16, 1711


Item info

Date: April 16, 1711
Author: John Fuller Sr.
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4042
Folio: ff. 277-278



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 278] Rosehill Aprill 16th 1711 Honrd. Sr. I send you herewith a Couple of Monstrous Piggs, one of them was farrowed alive the other dead, the sow had six Piggs beside, all of them as they should be, The Plates for the Chimnys are all Cast, and shall be sent, as soon as the Wage’s are Good I am Sr yr dear son and obdt servt J Fuller

John Fuller, Senior married Elizabeth Rose, daughter of Fulke and Elizabeth Rose of Jamaica, in 1703. He managed the family sugar plantations in Jamaica and in 1705 took control of the family furnace where he became an ironmaster and gunfounder. His wife’s mother later married Sir Hans Sloane, making Sloane Fuller’s stepfather-in-law (J. S. Hodgkinson, Fuller family (per. c.16501803), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2005 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/47494, accessed 2 July 2013]).




Patient Details

Letter 2402

Thomas Hearne to Hans Sloane – May 17,1720


Item info

Date: May 17,1720
Author: Thomas Hearne
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4045
Folio: ff. 330-331



Original Page



Transcription

Hearne sends three copies ‘of [his] Collection of curious Discourses’. He requests that Sloane make the first payment. If Sloane wants a fourth copy he will need to pay for ‘A Collection of curious Discourses, written by eminent Antquaries upon several Heads in out English Antiquities, and now first published by Thomas Hearne, M.A.’ immediately. A printed advertisement is included with the letter. Thomas Hearne (bap. 1678, d. 1735) was an antiquary and diarist. He began working at the Bodleian Library in 1701. A nonjuror, his refusal to take an oath of allegiance to King George I led to his dismissal from the Bodleian in 1716. Hearne published the works of several English chroniclers (Theodor Harmsen, Hearne, Thomas (bap. 1678, d. 1735), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/12827, accessed 2 June 2011]).




Patient Details

Letter 0282

R. Cuthberson to Hans Sloane – April 27, 1721


Item info

Date: April 27, 1721
Author: R. Cuthberson
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4075
Folio: f. 45



Original Page



Transcription

Peregrine Hyde Osborne, 3rd Duke of Leeds was referred to as Marquess Carmarthen or Lord Carmarthen at the time.




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Peregrine Hyde Osborne, 3rd Duke of Leeds
    Gender:
    Age:[b. 1691, d. 1731]
  • Description

    [Probably Peregrine Hyde (Osborne), Marquess of Camarthen 1712-1729, when he became the 3rd Duke of Leeds. He married his third wife, Juliana, in 1725. The Complete Peerage, vol. 7, p. 513]

  • Diagnosis

    The author was charged by Lady Carmarthen to write to Sloane about her husband's condition and to ask him to come immediately as Lord Carmarthen was likely to die without his intervention. Included with the letter was a description of Lord Carmanthern's condition as written by his physician. [The letter was not included in sequence.]

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:
    Ongoing Treatment:
    Response:
  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Feared death, Unspecified

Letter 4400

Benjamin Holloway to Hans Sloane – November 17, 1731


Item info

Date: November 17, 1731
Author: Benjamin Holloway
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4052
Folio: ff. 42-43



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 42] Midleton-Stony Nov. 17. 1731 Honrd Sr I had the Favour of your Letter, and give you many Thanks for examining and compareing My Notes wth Dr Smith; I profess chiefly to follow Him ni the anatomical Part, but ni the Optical I think I have added other Proofs to His. I chose to trouble you with the Papers in your Hand, on the subject Matter of them, which is fetchd from ye depths of Nature; tho at ye same time go see less of my design in This than in any other Part of my Work; The 70 and other ancient versions herein varying little or Nothing from ye original, and therefore requiring no great Pains or skill to shew their reconcilement, for which there is occassion almost ev’ry where else in this Book. It is a great Pleasure to me yt my design has your Approbation: I think in ye way I have taken, to bring the Original. S.S. and their ancient version to Agreement, one may come to set forth a just Translation of the Bible, and put an end to a world of groundless disputes about ye Genuineness of ye Letter of the Hebrew on the one Hand, & of it’s first Translation the 70 on the other. wch in stead of being set at Eternal variance will hereby be made every where to illutrate and explain each other I did not think the whole of what I laid before you woud be proper to insert in the Transactions of the Society, but I conceive the Note on Chap. 12. of. 2. Upon Light. if yo approve of it, May. I give you Abundance of Thanks for your kind Intercession for me to the Council of the R.S. in Respect of my Payments, and am ready to submit it wholly to you, Whether I shall pay only to ye Time I sent to Dr Woodward to be dismissed the Society (wch believe was about two years after my Admission) […] whether I shall pay ye 10 Guineys, receive my Bond, & still be continu’d a Member: which, for the Honour I have to the Society, and Regard to your Friendship in this Affair, I rather incline to. and, if yo approve of ye same, in spring, when I think to come to Town, I will pay ye Money in Person. I beg yo will comunicate that specimen of my Notes to as many of your Friends of as you can think fit: and, when the Book is ready for the Press I will let yu know, hopeing your Recomendation will procure some subscribers, if, as my Friends generally persuade me, it shall appear advisable to publish it y self. I am, with the greatest Respect, Sr. Your Obedient and Obliged Humble Servant B. Holloway.

Benjamin Holloway (1690/91-1759) was a Church of England Clergyman and religious controversialist. He provided evidence to support the geological theories of John Woodward, which were published in the Philosophical Transaction. In 1723, with Sir Hans Sloane’s support, he was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society. Holloway published many books on religious topics (Scott Mandelbrote, Holloway, Benjamin (1690/911759), Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, Jan 2008 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/13572, accessed 25 July 2013]).




Patient Details