Search Results for: AZ-700-German Probesfragen 🎵 AZ-700-German Online Praxisprüfung 😍 AZ-700-German Tests 🆘 Suchen Sie einfach auf ▷ www.itzert.com ◁ nach kostenloser Download von [ AZ-700-German ] 😏AZ-700-German Ausbildungsressourcen

Letter 3665

Mary Dering to Hans Sloane – September 20, 1729


Item info

Date: September 20, 1729
Author: Mary Dering
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: f. 199



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 199] Spring Garden Sept. 20 1729 Sr I make no excuse for not answring [sic] the letter you did me the favour off to Carolina last year, because I have brought at my self, as well as all I could pick up there which is not much, but if there is any thing amongst em worth your acceptance the are at your service I can’t possibly get at them till tusday next, so if you please to give your self the trouble to see them I beg you woud let me know that I may be in the way, there is no possibility of a Coach Coming near this House for I am at Mrs Le Grand Who has left me full possesion for all next Week, being gone out of town her self for that time. So I beg it may be in this week, for I must think of getting a lodging somewhere else, our famely now being grown too large […] interlopers. I only tell you this that you […] at the libberty I take in fixing a time Who am Sr yours very Obedient humble servant Mary Dering




Patient Details

Letter 3675

Nicholas Harris to Hans Sloane – October 17, 1729


Item info

Date: October 17, 1729
Author: Nicholas Harris
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 216-217



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 216] Looe Octr 17th. 1729 Much Respected Friend Sr Hans Sloane As thee wer’t pleas’d to give me Leave to advise thee how my Sight was when I return’d I now make bold to Acquaint thee that I gott well home to Morrow will be four weeks & according to thy advice I had this day three weeks an Issue cutt on each shoulder wch proves very well & Discharges much thick white Matter. I have Continued to take the Electuary & Julip wch I bought from London twice every day, Likewise I annoint my Eyes and take my Pills as Directed the Ointment is grown very thick how may I make it Thiner. The Pupill of my Eye grows Bigg & small as I Look to or from the Light it hath as Quick a Motion as other peoples Eyes my Eye Looks very Clear and well & the film on my blinde Eye seems much thinner than it was the sight of the Eye Appears through the Film, yet I cannot see with it I think I’ve gain’d very large Characters wch I could not then do, I deferd my writing there being in hopes I should have messaged faster after having The Issues – pray how much Longer shall I continue taking the Electuary Julep & Pills & to Annoint Mine Eyes, as this Ointment is nigh done pray how or where may I have More, I sent my Man to see thy Patient Townsend who he found writing & in his presence Read a news paper. Shee told him her sight gradually Decay’d for four or five yeares & that shee was blinde about a year & nigh a year recovering her sight & said shee though our Cases n’ere very Nigh alike. Turn Over This Actt comforted me very much. I observe the shades of the Sunn Moon & Candle Light Much more perfect than I have bin able to do for a Long time past. Spectacles nor any other Glasses are of very little service to me. Thy thoughts hereon and thy advice how to proceed will be Esteem’d a great favour by him who is with due Respects thy sincere Friend Nicho Harris Junior




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: N/A Nicholas Harris
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    Sloane's advice is solicited.

  • Diagnosis

    Blindness in one eye.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    'I had this day three weeks an Issue cutt on each shoulder wch proves very well & Discharges much thick white Matter'. He is taking an electuary, pills, julep, and applying an ointment.


    Ongoing Treatment:

    'I continue taking the Electuary Julep & Pills & to Annoint Mine Eyes'.


    Response:
  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Eyes, Eyes

Letter 3676

Nicholas Harris to Hans Sloane – October 17, 1729


Item info

Date: October 17, 1729
Author: Nicholas Harris
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 216-217



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 216] Looe Octr 17th. 1729 Much Respected Friend Sr Hans Sloane As thee wer’t pleas’d to give me Leave to advise thee how my Sight was when I return’d I now make bold to Acquaint thee that I gott well home to Morrow will be four weeks & according to thy advice I had this day three weeks an Issue cutt on each shoulder wch proves very well & Discharges much thick white Matter. I have Continued to take the Electuary & Julip wch I bought from London twice every day, Likewise I annoint my Eyes and take my Pills as Directed the Ointment is grown very thick how may I make it Thiner. The Pupill of my Eye grows Bigg & small as I Look to or from the Light it hath as Quick a Motion as other peoples Eyes my Eye Looks very Clear and well & the film on my blinde Eye seems much thinner than it was the sight of the Eye Appears through the Film, yet I cannot see with it I think I’ve gain’d very large Characters wch I could not then do, I deferd my writing there being in hopes I should have messaged faster after having The Issues – pray how much Longer shall I continue taking the Electuary Julep & Pills & to Annoint Mine Eyes, as this Ointment is nigh done pray how or where may I have More, I sent my Man to see thy Patient Townsend who he found writing & in his presence Read a news paper. Shee told him her sight gradually Decay’d for four or five yeares & that shee was blinde about a year & nigh a year recovering her sight & said shee though our Cases n’ere very Nigh alike. Turn Over This Actt comforted me very much. I observe the shades of the Sunn Moon & Candle Light Much more perfect than I have bin able to do for a Long time past. Spectacles nor any other Glasses are of very little service to me. Thy thoughts hereon and thy advice how to proceed will be Esteem’d a great favour by him who is with due Respects thy sincere Friend Nicho Harris Junior




Patient Details

Letter 3677

Nicholas Harris to Hans Sloane – October 17, 1729


Item info

Date: October 17, 1729
Author: Nicholas Harris
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 216-217



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 216] Looe Octr 17th. 1729 Much Respected Friend Sr Hans Sloane As thee wer’t pleas’d to give me Leave to advise thee how my Sight was when I return’d I now make bold to Acquaint thee that I gott well home to Morrow will be four weeks & according to thy advice I had this day three weeks an Issue cutt on each shoulder wch proves very well & Discharges much thick white Matter. I have Continued to take the Electuary & Julip wch I bought from London twice every day, Likewise I annoint my Eyes and take my Pills as Directed the Ointment is grown very thick how may I make it Thiner. The Pupill of my Eye grows Bigg & small as I Look to or from the Light it hath as Quick a Motion as other peoples Eyes my Eye Looks very Clear and well & the film on my blinde Eye seems much thinner than it was the sight of the Eye Appears through the Film, yet I cannot see with it I think I’ve gain’d very large Characters wch I could not then do, I deferd my writing there being in hopes I should have messaged faster after having The Issues – pray how much Longer shall I continue taking the Electuary Julep & Pills & to Annoint Mine Eyes, as this Ointment is nigh done pray how or where may I have More, I sent my Man to see thy Patient Townsend who he found writing & in his presence Read a news paper. Shee told him her sight gradually Decay’d for four or five yeares & that shee was blinde about a year & nigh a year recovering her sight & said shee though our Cases n’ere very Nigh alike. Turn Over This Actt comforted me very much. I observe the shades of the Sunn Moon & Candle Light Much more perfect than I have bin able to do for a Long time past. Spectacles nor any other Glasses are of very little service to me. Thy thoughts hereon and thy advice how to proceed will be Esteem’d a great favour by him who is with due Respects thy sincere Friend Nicho Harris Junior




Patient Details

Letter 3678

Nicholas Harris to Hans Sloane – October 17, 1729


Item info

Date: October 17, 1729
Author: Nicholas Harris
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 216-217



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 216] Looe Octr 17th. 1729 Much Respected Friend Sr Hans Sloane As thee wer’t pleas’d to give me Leave to advise thee how my Sight was when I return’d I now make bold to Acquaint thee that I gott well home to Morrow will be four weeks & according to thy advice I had this day three weeks an Issue cutt on each shoulder wch proves very well & Discharges much thick white Matter. I have Continued to take the Electuary & Julip wch I bought from London twice every day, Likewise I annoint my Eyes and take my Pills as Directed the Ointment is grown very thick how may I make it Thiner. The Pupill of my Eye grows Bigg & small as I Look to or from the Light it hath as Quick a Motion as other peoples Eyes my Eye Looks very Clear and well & the film on my blinde Eye seems much thinner than it was the sight of the Eye Appears through the Film, yet I cannot see with it I think I’ve gain’d very large Characters wch I could not then do, I deferd my writing there being in hopes I should have messaged faster after having The Issues – pray how much Longer shall I continue taking the Electuary Julep & Pills & to Annoint Mine Eyes, as this Ointment is nigh done pray how or where may I have More, I sent my Man to see thy Patient Townsend who he found writing & in his presence Read a news paper. Shee told him her sight gradually Decay’d for four or five yeares & that shee was blinde about a year & nigh a year recovering her sight & said shee though our Cases n’ere very Nigh alike. Turn Over This Actt comforted me very much. I observe the shades of the Sunn Moon & Candle Light Much more perfect than I have bin able to do for a Long time past. Spectacles nor any other Glasses are of very little service to me. Thy thoughts hereon and thy advice how to proceed will be Esteem’d a great favour by him who is with due Respects thy sincere Friend Nicho Harris Junior




Patient Details

  • Patient info
    Name: Lady Townshend
    Gender:
    Age:
  • Description

    Sloane's advice is solicited.

  • Diagnosis

    Blindness in one eye.

  • Treatment
    Previous Treatment:

    'I had this day three weeks an Issue cutt on each shoulder wch proves very well & Discharges much thick white Matter'. He is taking an electuary, pills, julep, and applying an ointment.


    Ongoing Treatment:

    'I continue taking the Electuary Julep & Pills & to Annoint Mine Eyes'.


    Response:
  • More information
  • Medical problem reference
    Eyes, Eyes

Letter 3193

Philip Henry Zollman to Hans Sloane – August 25, 1725


Item info

Date: August 25, 1725
Author: Philip Henry Zollman
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4048
Folio: ff. 49-50



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 49] Stockholm 25th August 1725. O.S. Sir, On the 28th of May I was honoured with your kind letter of the 30th of April. The inclosed list of Books and Dissertations I left with Dr Benzelius when I was lately at Upsal, who promised to get as many of them as possible, which offer will be much for your service, because the Dissertations are hardly to be met with here, except now and then straggling in Auctions, and tacked to others of little or no value. In the mean time I am looking out for what is to be had here, which I shall send when opportunity offers. Dr Roberg at Upsal gave me, when I was there, the enclosed four Dissertations: 1. De Pernionibus. 2. Ossa tuberosa. 3. De pede marcescente et indurato. 4. De metallo Danemorensi, some of which I find in your List. I was surprised to hear that Rudbeckii Hortus Botanicus was not in the last Parcel I sent by Mr Brighter the Messenger. The Packet indeed was not sealed up, which I omitted on purpose in order to his untying and dividing it, if it should prove too bulky in his valise. But I am positive I put it up with the rest, nor can I find it among my Books here, so that I almost believe it was only overlooked at first, being but so small a size. However I have met with another and hereby send it. If you have since found the first, I beg you will let Dr Sherard have this, if he has not got one yet. I had lately a Letter from him in which he appears very desirous of Till-land’s Planta Aboensis, a Book which he says he never was master of. I have got that likewise, but as it is marked in your first List which I took with me from London, I send it to you, till I can find another, which must be by mere chance, for it is very scarce. M. Norborg who was formerly Minister to the Swedish Church in Ratclif Highway, having helped me to it, has desired to carry it, that he might have the honour to wait on you with it himself. He sails in a few days for London, to take leave of his Congregation there, being now otherwise provided for in his native Country. He assures me there are no Bibles printed in the Lapponian tongue, for this reason I lately bought a Prayer Book or Liturgy in that Language, in which two leaves being tore out, I shall keep the Book Fol. 50 till I meet with another to supply that defect. We have had for a long time no Auctions here, and the many Messengers that have gone backwards and forwards between this Place and London and Hanover, have afforded a good deal of business for me, so that I have not had sufficient leisure for discharging so soon as I could have wished the Commissions you have honoured me with. But the Auctions have begun again, and Dr Benzelius will be here sometime next month, so that by these helps I shall be betters able to answer your desires, & opportunities will not be wanting to send what I meet with. This will be delivered to you with a Letter and a Packet from Dr Benzelius, which he sent me lately from Upsal. I beg leave to assure Dr Scheuchzer of my respects, and to wish him good success in his work on Kampfer’s Japan. I am with the profoundest Veneration Sir your most humble and obedient servant P.H. Zollman P.S. M. Norborg is now with me, and I have persuaded him to let me send Planta Aboensis in this Packet. He intends however to wait at you at London.

Philip Henry Zollman (c. 1680-1748) was the Royal Society’s first Assistant Secretary for Foreign Correspondence, a post he assumed in 1723. He first landed in England in 1714, was trained in several foreign languages, and regularly corresponded with Leibniz (Derek Massarell, ‘Philip Henry Zollman, the Royal Society’s First Assistant Secretary for Foreign Correspondence’, Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London 46, no. 2 (1992), 219-234).




Patient Details

Letter 3170

Johann Georg Steigertahl to Hans Sloane – July 2, 1725


Item info

Date: July 2, 1725
Author: Johann Georg Steigertahl
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4048
Folio: ff. 13-14



Original Page



Transcription

The King arrived at Herrenhausen in good health eight days ago. In two days Steigertahl will be leaving for Pyrmont to take the waters. He requests that Sloane write to him on medical matters. Mr Brindley has sent books to Mr Jäger, which have to be paid for since Steigertahl’s son forgot to pay for them. He thanks Sloane for the Madeira wine and books. The Duke of York and Prince Frederick send their compliments for the books Sloane sent them. Mrs Steigertahl wishes Sloane well. Steigertahl bid farewell to Mr Scheuchzer. Johann Georg Steigertahl (1666-1740) was the personal physician to George I of England. He was a member of the Royal Society and secured the purchase of Engelbert Kaempfer’s collection of East Asian curiosities for Sir Hans Sloane in 1723 (http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Johann_Georg_Steigerthal).




Patient Details

Letter 3969

John Gibson to Man –


Item info

Date:
Author: John Gibson
Recipient: Man

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: MS 4066
Folio: f. 346



Original Page



Transcription

Sr. Where I was in Company ye. other day talking of men yt. were great Judges of Curiositys, I was told Sr. Hans Sloane was ye. gratest man in yt. way, therefore I beg ye. favou you’ll recomend a Couple of Christiall Glasses sir to cover picture breast high, I am Infrom’d they are ye. best of ye. best & yt. there ar[e?] none such to be had in England, I am yr most humble Servt. John: Gibson Satturday 12 a clock

Gibson asks Mr. Man to show Sir Hans Sloane a couple Christiall glasses.




Patient Details

Letter 2612

John Manley to Hans Sloane – n.d.


Item info

Date: n.d.
Author: John Manley
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4076
Folio: f. 125



Original Page



Transcription

Fol. 125 Master Plowden’s mishaps. pain, cold, feverish. …I impatiently wait for your commands, and desire you will be very particular in them: and tell me what dyet he must have, especially in the Lent time which is very near: a time when we abstain from flesh, except when necessity forces us to the contrary…




Patient Details

Letter 2516

John Wynter to Hans Sloane – October 28, 1721


Item info

Date: October 28, 1721
Author: John Wynter
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4046
Folio: ff. 142-143



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 142] Honed. Sir. I have the Honour of your very kind Letter of ye 19th. I thank you extreamly for your Friendship: since ye favour of yours I have one from Mr. Molyneux wch brings me His Graces Comands to repair to London as soon as I can conveniently, wch. will prevent me obeying your Directions in relation to sending a Catalogue, but will endeavour to find so much time as to bring it finish’d with me. I am very sensible of ye great Humanity you please to treat me with, and shall always be happy in shewing myself Hon.ed Sir Your most oblig’d humble servant John Wynter Oct ye 28 1721

John Wynter was the Duke of Portland’s physician.




Patient Details