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Letter 3661

Magnus Prince to Hans Sloane – September 12, 1729


Item info

Date: September 12, 1729
Author: Magnus Prince
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 194-195



Original Page



Transcription

Prince waited to reply to Sloane’s letter so he could send something of interest. He includes a ‘litle box with blew earth’ and comments on each specimen. Prince did not take stock of the age or symptoms of those who had been inoculated in Belfast. He suggests that most were between five and fourteen years of age and all had survived. Prince then recounts, in detail, an episode in which he ‘directed the inoculation of 4 children of a gentleman in the County of Derry’. Magnus Prince was a physician.




Patient Details

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 3838

Caleb Lowdham to Hans Sloane – November 25, 1730


Item info

Date: November 25, 1730
Author: Caleb Lowdham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: ff. 136-137



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 137] Excester in Devonsh: Nov. 25. 1730 Hon’d S’r I hope ye communicative Genius will excuse the freedom of beging ye Opinion ab’t a shield; Whether they are all more or less Curv’d towards the person that bears it as I have often observed in Coins & other figures, or Whether some may have the concave hold towards ye Enemy; as this Clypous or Parma (w’ch I met with at Smith’s shop in a sea-port-town near this place) seems to indicate as much (perhaps it may be Spanish, but cannot guess at it’s Age) it is ab’t 12 Inch: diam: whose convex is cover’d with Leather, & where is the remains of a Manubrium for the Sctuifer to take hold of the concave is 2 Inches, and ye Unbo wch is 4 Inch: diam: & hollow, on it’s top is a piece of solid Brass 1/2 Inch thick, wch exceeds ye Cavity by 2 Inches more, & probably a point or Dart on ye top of it, wch seems broken off that may be some Inches longer; there are 60 plates of Iron from the Umbo to ye Circumference, & 9 Circular ones, wch are fastned together by 60 Nails in each Circle where the plates intersect, whose heads are all as round as Pease, of the smaller size, but in ye other Circle ye Nails touch each other, & are in Number 150 from whence I conclude that from ye Nails, Umbo, &c. that ye concave part was held outward, wch makes this Armour Offensive as well as Defensive, however shall be determined by ye greater Judgem’t if you please to fav’r me with a Line, shall take it as an hon’r done to ye very humble ser’t Caleb Lowdham

Lowdham describes a shield.




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 3684

Thomas Dereham to Hans Sloane – November 5, 1729


Item info

Date: November 5, 1729
Author: Thomas Dereham
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4050
Folio: ff. 226-227



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 226] ye 5th November 1729 Sir I hope you are entirely recoverd as I wish of your late indisposition, so that you may continue for a long time in your occupations of promoting Arts, & Sciences, & preserving the health of mankind, whereas your Operation upon the four children that had eat by mistake a large quantity of Hyosciamus vulgaris has been admired in these parts by all Phisitians. The pacquet with the last Transactions that you mention is not yett come to my hands, butt I presume it will in due time, & I entreat you to return unto the Society my most dutifull thanks for there continuall favours, & pray remember the subscriptions you promised me, whereas I have in my hands the Chronologicall tables to be sent when you shall require them I entreat you to forward the enclosed wherein are some few accounts of what litterary news I can at present furnish you with, & I remaine with great respect, & esteem Sir Your most obedient, & most faithfull 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 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 3787

Hans Sloane to Sauveur-François Morand – [?] June 1716


Item info

Date: [?] June 1716
Author: Hans Sloane
Recipient: Sauveur-François Morand

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4068
Folio: f.129



Original Page



Transcription

Monsieur a Londres ce [?] Juin 1716 a Monsieur Morand Je viens de recevoir l’honneur de la votre du 17 Juin & je n’ay pas voulu manquer d’y repondre au plusieurs[?] je prendray donc la liberté de vous dire que le prix des migniatures de Mr. Robert est nous a 50 francs la piece & mesme a 40 excede de beaucoup ce que j’aurais ete porte s’en donner. Je ne dis reviens nullement du prix original de 3 pistoles par piece, les miennes mesmes ayant coute autant & mesme d’avantage, mais comme j’en dois posseder deja plus d’un tiers vous conservez[?] bien, que le reste ne pourraient que me revenir un peu trop haut Je souhaite vous de tous mon voeus, que la collection entiere puisse passer entre les mains de quelque scavant grand seigneur, & cela a sen juste aux * & de plus curieus ci dont la pluspart ont eté dessinées pres unes propre originaux au reste Je ne laisse pas de vous avoir egalement dobligation, vous assurent, que je suis avec beaucoup de respect monsieur




Patient Details

Letter 3814

Samuel Buckley to Hans Sloane – September 16, 1730


Item info

Date: September 16, 1730
Author: Samuel Buckley
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: f. 104



Original Page



Transcription

Buckley returns two books lent by Sloane. He comments on their contents and asks whether Sloane’s medal of Louis XII has a date on it.




Patient Details

Letter 3828

John Eade to Hans Sloane – October 3, 1730


Item info

Date: October 3, 1730
Author: John Eade
Recipient: Hans Sloane

Library: British Library, London
Manuscript: Sloane MS 4051
Folio: f. 117



Original Page



Transcription

[fol. 117] Sr. EN. 9 As my son had always pleased me, I am very solicitous to do all I can for him. The Next presentation to Chelsey was as Thought of my Own, & knowing S’r hans’s potency there was Resolv’d to presume to Wait upon him, to Offer my Son, & you was so kind as to say, you would take it into your Consideration. I make bold to say that he is a Minister fit for that Great & Genteel Congregation, he being in my Judgm’t a very Useful & Beneficial preacher. I have been very Liberal in his Education, & he has spent his Time well. he is ab’t 11 years standing, of Queens, Cambridge, of a Clear Reputation there, a Ma’r of Arts, ab’t 30 years of age: made Deacon & priest by the Bp of London 3 years agoe. he preacht ab’t a year for Doct’r hudson at his Chapel in Queens square in the park, & since in many of the great Churches in London. You will be pleas’d to Excuse me S’r since I Give him his just Charact’r to Recommend him to yr favour, that he is a person of Sobriety, & good Life, & will show, & Teach ye people the Way to heaven, where ‘ere he is placed. I have done a Great deal for him, & am ready to do more, what you may require of me, shou’d be Glad to know yr mind, in order to Compleat his happiness, & ours, wch is now in S’r hans pow’r to do. I beg leave to subscribe my self, Sr Yo’r most obed’t humble serv’t John Eade St Martins Lane Octo’r. 3. 1730

Eade asks for a recommendation for his son.




Patient Details