[26] Lancet, July 8, 1876, p. 41, supplement to Harveian Oration.
[27] See Photographs of Eminent Medical Men, ii, 59.
- Abercrombie’s, Sir Ralph, Expedition, i. 182.
- Aberdeen University, i. 100, ii. [246.]
- Abernethy, John (1764-1831), i. 146, 162, 168;
- early years, 227;
- apprenticeship, 227;
- pupil of Pott and John Hunter, 228;
- appointed assistant-surgeon to St. Bartholomew’s, 228;
- his lectures, 229;
- dramatic style, 230, 231;
- his method, 232;
- apt phrases, 233;
- roughness and eccentricity, 233, 234;
- impatience, 235;
- gratitude of an Irishman, 235, 236;
- anecdotes, 236, 237;
- surgical and physiological essays, 237;
- “read my book,” 238;
- marriage, 239;
- becomes full surgeon, 239;
- failing health, 240;
- resigns appointments, 240;
- death, 241;
- Abernethy and Brodie, 289;
- and Lawrence, 303-305, 307.
- Academy of Science, French, i. 283.
- Acland, Sir H., on Brodie, i. 300-303;
- on Stokes, ii. [189], [192].
- Acupressure, ii. [102.]
- Addison Family, the, ii. [1], [2].
- Addison, Thomas (1793-1860), education, ii. [2];
- at Edinburgh, [2];
- settles in London, [3];
- dislike of specialism, [3];
- appointments at Guy’s, [4], [5];
- early works, [4];
- writes on practice of medicine, &c., [5];
- on disease of supra-renal capsules (Addison’s disease), [6], [7];
- clinical teaching, [7];
- his practicality, [8];
- Dr. Wilks on, [8-10], [11];
- bluntness and shyness, [10], [11];
- Continental reputation, [11];
- Dr. Lonsdale on, [12];
- marriage, [12], [13];
- death, [13];
- Addison Ward, [13];
- association with Dr. Bright, [17], [21].
- Aikin, John, on Harvey, i. 47;
- on Cullen, [95].
- Akenside, Mark, i. 99.
- Aldersgate School of Medicine, i. 279, ii. [241].
- Aldus Manutius, i. 2, 3.
- Alison, Dr. W. P., i. 105, ii. [180], [188].
- Anæsthetics, ii. [95-100].
- Anatomical Lectures, i. 18, 75-79, 84, 109, 121, 135, 138, 204, 205, 229, 246, 289, ii. [25], [26], [36], [37], [48], [49], [73], [226].
- Anatomists, William Hunter on, i. 125.
- Anatomy in London, i. 18;
- in Edinburgh, 72, 73;
- stealing corpses for, 77;
- the resurrectionists, 208-211;
- at Royal Academy, 247.
- —— Comparative. See Comparative Anatomy.
- Anderson, Dr. James, on Cullen, i. 96, 98.
- Aneurism, i. 153, 214, ii. [44].
- Antiseptic Surgery, ii. [46], [114], [141-147].
- Arthur, Prince, i. 3.
- Aubrey on Harvey, i. 35, 38, 48, 49.
- Babington, Dr., on Brodie, i. 299.
- Baillie, Dr. Matthew (1761-1823) on William Hunter, i. 124;
- completes his uncle’s work, 128;
- his uncle’s bequests to him, 130, 132;
- at John Hunter’s death, 158;
- and Marshall Hall, 267, 269;
- his practicality, ii. [51];
- education, [52];
- assists William Hunter, [53];
- writes on morbid anatomy, [53];
- physician to St. George’s Hospital, [53];
- physician to George III., [54];
- manners and generosity, [54], [55];
- death, [55];
- bequest to College of Physicians, [55].
- Balderson, Charles, i. 208, 211, 215.
- Balfour, Sir A., i. 72.
- Barber Surgeons, i. 18, 72.
- Barclay, Dr. (anatomical lecturer), ii. [25], [35].
- Bark, Peruvian, i. 59.
- Barlow, Dr. H. C., ii. [120].
- Barlow, Dr., on Dr. Bright, ii. [14].
- Baron, Dr., Life of E. Jenner, i. 169, 200, 201.
- Bayley, Miss, i. 186.
- Bell, Benjamin, i. 109, 110.
- Bell, George Joseph, i. 243, 259.
- Bell (John Hunter’s artist), i. 145, 147, 148.
- Bell, Lady; i. 249, 258, 261-263.
- Bell, John (1763-1820), and Dr. Gregory, i. 103, 105, 110;
- early years, 108;
- attacks Monro and Benjamin Bell, 109, 110:
- excluded from Infirmary, 110;
- success in practice, 111;
- operative skill, 111;
- works on anatomy and surgery, 112;
- marriage, 113;
- artistic tastes; 113;
- illness and foreign travel, 113;
- death, 114;
- Observations on Italy, 114;
- personal character, 117, 118;
- and Charles Bell, 243, 244, ii. [48], [107].
- Bell, Sir Charles (1774-1842), i. 108, 112, 113;
- birth and education, 243;
- medical study in Edinburgh, 244;
- early works, 244;
- goes to London, 245;
- artistic anatomy, 245;
- lectures and early struggles, 246;
- anatomy of expression, 246;
- his lively temperament, 247;
- first idea of new anatomy of brain, 247;
- disappointment of Academy professorship, 248
- visit to Haslar Hospital, 248;
- marriage, 249;
- partnership in Windmill Street School, 249;
- elected surgeon to Middlesex Hospital, 250;
- goes to Waterloo, 250;
- pamphlet on Brain, 251;
- crucial experiments on spinal cord, 252;
- publishes his discoveries on the nervous system, 253;
- elucidates obscure diseases, 254;
- muscular sense, 254;
- Bridgewater Treatise on the Hand, 255;
- becomes professor at College of Surgeons, 256;
- at London University, 257;
- retires from latter, 257;
- fly-fishing, 257;
- his happy temperament, 258;
- knighted, 259;
- elected Professor at Edinburgh, 259;
- coldness of fellow-professors, 260;
- excitement at proposed changes, 260;
- journey to London, 260, 261;
- his last day, 261;
- Edinburgh Review on, 262;
- Jeffrey’s Epitaph on, 262.
- Bell, William, i. 242.
- Bennett, John Hughes (1812-1875);
- early training, ii. [209];
- studies at Edinburgh, [210];
- studies in Paris and in Germany, [210];
- treatise on cod-liver oil, [210];
- lectures in Edinburgh, [211];
- polyclinical course, [211], [212];
- literary work, [212];
- elected Professor, [212];
- clinical teaching, [213];
- and Leucocythæmia, [213];
- views on pneumonia, [214];
- principal works, [214], [215];
- character, [215], [216];
- illness, operation, and death, [216].
- Berkeley, Admiral, and vaccination, i. 192.
- Bishops’ licenses to practise medicine, i. 10.
- Blackhall, Dr., ii. [19].
- Black, Joseph, i. 84, 90, 92, 96.
- Blane, Sir Gilbert, i. 192.
- Blicke, Sir C., i. 227.
- Blizard, Sir W., i. 144, 228.
- Booker, Rev. Dr., i. 185.
- Botany at Edinburgh, i. 72.
- Bowman, J. Eddowes, ii. [261].
- Bowman, Sir W. (b. 1816);
- early life, ii. [261];
- studies medicine at Birmingham, [261];
- at Dublin and King’s College, London, [261];
- becomes demonstrator and curator, [262];
- Continental studies, [262];
- physiological papers, [262];
- scientific writing, [263];
- appointed to Ophthalmic Hospital, [263];
- eye practice, [264];
- professorship of physiology, [264];
- baronetcy, [265];
- St. John’s House, [265];
- assist Miss Nightingale’s work, [265];
- supports physiological experiments, [265];
- lofty view of surgery, [266].
- Boyle, Robert, i. 54.
- Bridgewater Treatises, i. 255.
- Bright, Richard (1789-1858), ii. [5];
- birth, [14];
- studies at Edinburgh and Guy’s, [15];
- journey through Iceland, [15];
- enters at Cambridge, [16];
- travels on Continent, [16], [17];
- at Waterloo, [16];
- appointments at Fever Hospital and at Guy’s, [17];
- Dr. Wilks on, [18];
- writes on kidney diseases, [18-20];
- on pneumonia, [20];
- on cerebral and spinal diseases, [21];
- practice, and death, [21];
- character, [22], [23];
- and Holland, [63], [64].
- Bristol Medical School, ii. [127].
- British Association, ii. [183].
- British Medical Association, i. 281, ii. [162], [177].
- British Medical Journal, ii. [154], [248], [265].
- Brodie, Alexander, i. 286.
- Brodie, Peter, i. 288.
- Brodie, Rev. Mr., i. 287.
- Brodie, Sir Benjamin (1783-1862);
- ancestry, i. 286;
- birth, 287;
- early years and education, 288;
- an ensign at fourteen, 288;
- medical study in London, 288, 290;
- non-medical friends, 289;
- the Academical Society, 289;
- becomes demonstrator at Windmill Street, 290;
- appointed Assistant-Surgeon to St. George’s, 290;
- lectures on Surgery, 291;
- physiological studies, 291, 292;
- marriage, 292;
- work on Diseases of Joints, 292;
- professional success, 294;
- professorship at College of Surgeons, 294;
- subcutaneous surgery, 294;
- court appointments, and baronetcy, 295;
- opposition to impostors, 296;
- his numerous presidencies, 297;
- autobiography, 297;
- operations on his eyes, 298;
- death, 298;
- character of, 298-303;
- character of Lawrence, 308.
- Brougham, Lord, i. 246, ii. [34], [43].
- Brown, Baker, ii. [110], [111].
- Brown, Dr. John (Horæ Subsecivæ), on Sydenham, i. 59.
- Brown, Dr. John (founder of Brownian System), i. 98.
- Brown Square School, ii. [36], [37].
- Buckland, F., and John Hunter’s remains, i. 163.
- Budd, George, ii. [125].
- Budd, Samuel, ii. [125].
- Budd, William (1811-1880);
- early life, ii. [125];
- medical studies, [125];
- investigates typhoid fever at North Tawton, [125-126];
- germ theory, [126-128];
- removes to Clifton, [127];
- opposition to his views, [128];
- measures against cholera, [128], [129];
- against rinderpest, [129];
- his writings, [129];
- incessant work, [130];
- views on pulmonary consumption, [130];
- death, [130];
- Murchison and, [132].
- Buller, Justice, and John Hunter, i. 151.
- Burke, Edmund, i. 91.
- Byng, Dr., and Caius, i. 20.
- Cæsalpinus, i. 29.
- Caius College. See Gonville and Caius, also Caius, John.
- Caius, John (1510-1573), builds Linacre’s monument, i. 13;
- birth, 13;
- at Cambridge, 14;
- elected fellow of Gonville Hall, 14;
- studies at Padua, and travels in Italy, France, and Germany, 14;
- practises medicine, 14;
- appointed physician to Edward VI., 14;
- writes on Sweating Sickness, 15;
- denounces quacks, 16, 17;
- elected President of College of Physicians, 17, 20;
- introduces dissection, 18;
- enlarges Gonville Hall and builds gates, 19;
- obtains statutes for Gonville and Caius College, and becomes Master, 19;
- charged with atheism and Romanism, 20;
- books and vestments burnt, 20;
- writes on British Dogs, 21;
- account of Bloodhound, 21, 22;
- writes Method of Healing, 22;
- death and burial, 23;
- inscription on tomb, 23.
- Calvin, i. 28.
- Cambridge University, and Linacre, i. 3, 11;
- and Caius, 14, 19, 20, 23;
- and Sydenham, 60;
- and Chambers, ii. [59];
- and Watson, [149].
- Canadian Indians and Jenner, i. 194.
- Carlisle, Sir Anthony, i. 146, 155, 248, ii. [32].
- Caroline, Princess (wife of George IV.), ii. [65].
- Carro, Dr. De, i. 182.
- Carter, Elizabeth, ii. [267].
- Carter, R. Brudenell (b. 1828);
- education, [268];
- early works, [268];
- Crimean service, [268];
- country practice, [269];
- connection with journalism, [269];
- ophthalmic specialism, [269];
- Treatise on Eye Diseases, [270];
- later writings, [270], [271].
- Celsus, i. 14.
- Chambers, William Frederic (1786-1855);
- education, ii. [59];
- physician to St. George’s Hospital, [59];
- physician to William IV., [60];
- death, [60];
- character and habits, [61].
- Chandler, Mr., on Astley Cooper, i. 218.
- Charles I., i. 35-39.
- Charlesworth and Lunacy, ii. [220].
- Cheselden, i. 76, 77, 120, 134.
- Cholera, ii. [128].
- Christison, Sir R. (1797-1882), ii. [42];
- education at Edinburgh, [286];
- studies in London and Paris, [286];
- appointed Professor of Medical Jurisprudence at Edinburgh, [286];
- his success in lecturing, [287];
- success as scientific witness, [287];
- dangerous experiments, [288];
- work on poisons, [288];
- appointed Professor of Materia Medica, [289];
- influence in Edinburgh University, [289];
- honours, [290];
- death, [290];
- personal characteristics, [290].
- Circulation of the blood, i. 27-36.
- Civiale’s operation, ii. [196].
- Clarke, Dr., and J. Hunter, i. 150.
- Clark, Sir James, ii. [181].
- Clay, Dr. C., ii. [109], [110].
- Clay, John, ii. [112].
- Cleopatra’s Needle, ii. [247].
- Clerke, Dr., i. 89.
- Clift, W., i. 157, 160, 168, 220.
- Cline, Henry, i. 144, 146, 180, 203, 204, 206, 212, 226.
- Clinical lectures, i. 92, 93, 103, 250, ii. [38], [172], [206], [213].
- —— medicine, ii. [162].
- Cobbold, T. Spencer (b. 1828);
- early life, ii. [255];
- studies at Edinburgh, [255];
- geological studies, [255], [256];
- appointments in London, [256];
- dissections at Zoological Gardens, [256];
- practice as a specialist, [257];
- connection with Veterinary College, [257];
- lectures on parasites, [258], [259].
- Cod-liver oil, ii. [186], [187], [210], [211].
- Colet, i. 3.
- Collyer, Robert, and anæsthetics, ii. [96], [97].
- Columbus, Realdus, i. 14, 29.
- Combe, William, i. 130, 131.
- Comparative anatomy, i. 80.
- Conolly, John (1794-1867), ii. [160], [217];
- early life, [221];
- enters militia, [221];
- studies at Edinburgh, [222];
- practises at Chichester, [222];
- at Stratford, [222];
- appointed Professor at London University, [222];
- settles at Warwick, [222];
- studies insanity, [222], [223];
- work on Indications of Insanity, [223];
- appointed to Hanwell, [225];
- abolishes mechanical restraint, [226];
- clinical lectures, [227];
- interest in patients, [228];
- retirement from Hanwell, [228];
- at Earlswood Asylum, [229], [230];
- private practice, [230];
- writings and lectures, [231];
- writes on Hamlet, [231];
- death, [231].
- Conservative surgery, ii. [47], [71-81].
- Consumption Hospital, ii. [185].
- Contemporary Review, ii. [197], [198].
- Cooper, Bransby, i. 209, 221, 222.
- Cooper family, the, i. 202.
- Cooper, Sir Astley (1768-1841), i. 113, 146, 152;
- early life, 202;
- escapades, 203;
- pupilage with Cline, 203;
- studies at Edinburgh, 204;
- becomes lecturer, 204;
- visit to Paris, 204;
- his style of lecturing, 205;
- a severe accident, 206;
- his personal influence, 206;
- appearance and habits, 207;
- sympathy with mental suffering, 207;
- his servant Charles, 208;
- Cooper and the resurrectionists, 208;
- their extortions, 209;
- his determination to have specimens, 210;
- dissection of dogs, 211;
- of an elephant, 211;
- income, 211;
- gives up politics on appointment to Guy’s surgeoncy, 212;
- operates on tympanic membrane, 212;
- membership of societies, 213;
- his store of information, 214;
- operations for aneurism, 214;
- work on Hernia, 214;
- life in New Broad Street, 215;
- in the hospital and lecture-room, 216;
- his overpowering influence, 217;
- graceful operations, 218;
- peremptory orders, 218;
- a big fee, 219;
- his limited pharmacopœia, 219;
- lectures at College of Surgeons, 220;
- ties the aorta, 220;
- operates on George IV., 221;
- Sir Astley as an examiner, 221;
- foundation of Guy’s separate medical school, 222;
- Presidency of the College of Surgeons, 222;
- life in the country, 223;
- horse-keeping, 223;
- temporary retirement, 223;
- later works, 224;
- rapid movements, 224;
- death, monument and portrait, 225;
- estimate of Cooper, 225;
- his own character of himself, 226;
- and Abernethy, 235;
- and Charles Bell, 248;
- and Brodie, 295, 296.
- Cooper, William, i. 203, 212.
- Cornelio Vitelli, i. 2.
- Corrigan, Sir Dominic (1802-1880);
- education and medical studies, ii. [155];
- papers on heart diseases, [156], [157];
- Corrigan’s pulse, [156], [157];
- appointments, [158];
- becomes M.P. for Dublin, [159];
- death, [159].
- Coulton, ii. [97].
- Cowley on Harvey, i. 39.
- Coxe, Dr. Thomas, i. 53.
- Cremation, ii. [116], [117], [194], [198], [199].
- Cromwell, i. 73.
- Cruickshank, i. 127, 130, 149.
- Cullen, William (1710-1790);
- birth, i. 87;
- education at Glasgow, 87;
- apprenticeship, 88;
- goes to West Indies as ship’s surgeon, 88;
- assists in a London shop, 88;
- begins practice, 88;
- receives a legacy, 88;
- further studies at Edinburgh, 88;
- friendship of Duke of Hamilton, 89;
- influences William Hunter, 89;
- marriage, 89;
- removal to Glasgow, 89;
- founds medical school there, 90;
- his lectures and discoveries, 90, 91;
- becomes Professor of Medicine at Glasgow, 91;
- friendship with Adam Smith and David Hume, 91;
- appointed Professor of Chemistry at Edinburgh, 91;
- his clinical lectures, 92;
- his candour, 92, 93;
- letter to his son, 94, 95;
- appointed to Chair of Physic, 95;
- his works, 96;
- personal influence, 96, 97;
- kindness to students, 97;
- Cullen and John Brown, 98;
- death, 98;
- personal aspect and habits, 98;
- agreement with Gregory, 100;
- friendship with William Hunter, 91, 94, 120, 122.
- Czermak, ii. [251].
- Dancaster, William, i. 13.
- Darwin, Charles, anticipation of, i. 172.
- Davy, Sir Humphrey, i. 172, ii. [95], [96].
- Dogs, Caius on, i. 21.
- Donders, ii. [260].
- Donellan, Captain, trial of, i. 150.
- Douglas, Dr., i. 120, 121.
- Down, Dr. Langdon, on Conolly, ii. [229].
- Drummond, George, i. 78.
- Dublin Medical School, ii. [105], [155], [189-191], [201-208].
- Duncan, Dr., on Monro secundus , i. 85, 86.
- Edinburgh University and Medical School, i. 71-118, 204, 213, 224, 259, 260; ii. [2], [15], [25-28], [35-50], [56], [59], [63], [64], [73], [85-94], [99-103], [125], [130], [131], [138], [149], [155], [204], [210-216], [221], [222], [286], [289].
- Edward VI., i. 14.
- Elizabeth, Queen, i. 14, 18, 23.
- Elliot, Robert, Professor of Anatomy at Edinburgh, i. 75.
- Ent, Sir G., i. 40, 41.
- Erasmus, i. 3, 4, 5.
- Esquirol and lunacy, ii. [220].
- Expectant treatment, i. 59.
- Fabricius, i. 26, 29.
- Faraday, ii. [96], [181].
- Ferguson, Sir William (1808-1877), and conservative surgery, ii. [71], [72];
- early years, [72];
- studies anatomy under Knox, [72], [73];
- assists Knox, [73];
- his Edinburgh appointments, [73];
- removal to London, [74];
- operative skill, [74], [75];
- conservation of limbs, [75];
- lithotomy, [76];
- excision of joints, [76], [77];
- hare-lip and cleft-palate, [77];
- invents instruments, [78];
- careful planning of operations, [78], [79];
- “Practical Surgery,” [79];
- social character and manners, [80-82];
- appointments, [81];
- President of College of Surgeons, [81];
- death, [82].
- Fever Hospital, London, ii. [118], [119], [124], [131], [132].
- Fevers, Sydenham’s method of curing, i. 54;
- treatment of, 64.
- Fisher, Robert, i. 3.
- Flogging of Soldiers, i. 281.
- Flourens, i. 283.
- Foot, Jesse, on John Hunter, i. 135.
- Fortnightly Review, ii. [240], [253].
- Fothergill’s, Dr., collection, i. 130.
- Fox, Bishop of Winchester, i. 4, 11.
- Framingham, William, i. 16.
- French Academy of Sciences, i. 283.
- Fuller, on Caius, i. 20.
- Galen, i. 7, 8, 14.
- Gardner, E., i. 173, 176, 178.
- Garthshore, Dr., i. 139, 162.
- Generation, Harvey on, i. 34, 39-43.
- George III., i. 127, ii. [54], [57].
- George IV., i. 221, 295, ii. [57].
- Gerhard, Dr., of Philadelphia, ii. [120].
- Germ Theory of Typhoid, ii. [126], [127].
- Gesner and Caius, i. 21.
- Gilbert, William (1540-1603), i. 23, 24;
- physician to Queen Elizabeth, 23;
- writes on the magnet, 24.
- Glasgow University, i. 87, 89, 120, 122, 128.
- Gonville and Caius College, i. 19, 26.
- Gonville Hall, i. 14, 19.
- Goodsir, John, ii. [47], [255].
- Graves, R. J. (1795-1853), ii. [189];
- studies at Dublin, London, and Edinburgh, [202];
- travels on Continent, [202];
- intercourse with Turner, [202];
- decision when in danger, [203];
- description of, by Stokes, [203];
- appointments in Dublin, [204], [206];
- introductory lecture, [204];
- his clinical method, [205];
- lectures on physiology, [206];
- clinical lectures, [206];
- Trousseau’s opinion, [206], [207];
- views on fevers, [208];
- on cholera, [208];
- death, [209].
- Gregory family, i. 87, 99-108.
- Gregory, Henry, on Marshall Hall, i. 277.
- Gregory, James, Dr. (1753-1821), on Monro secundus , i. 83;
- early years, 102;
- completes his father’s lectures, 102;
- studies on the Continent, 102;
- practice, 103;
- Gregory’s “Conspectus,” 103;
- succeeds to Cullen’s chair, 103;
- controversies, 103-105;
- Gregory and John Bell, 105, 110, 112;
- as a teacher and lecturer, 106;
- autocracy, 103-107;
- philosophical writings, 107.
- Gregory, John (1724-1773), i. 95;
- early years, 99;
- studies at Edinburgh, 99;
- at Leyden, 99;
- elected professor at Aberdeen, 100;
- marriage, 100;
- settles in London, 100;
- recalled to Aberdeen, 100;
- removes to Edinburgh, 100;
- works, 101;
- death, 102.
- Gregory, William, i. 107.
- Grocyn, i. 3, 7.
- Gull, Sir W. W. (b. 1816);
- studies at Guy’s Hospital, ii. [159];
- appointments at Guy’s, [160];
- writings, [161];
- protest against specialism, [161];
- address to British Medical Association, [162];
- Harveian oration, [162], [163];
- honours, [163], [164];
- evidence on intemperance, [164];
- view of vivisection, [165], [166].
- Guy, William, ii. [302].
- Guy, W. A. (b. 1810);
- education, ii. [302];
- studies at Guy’s, Cambridge, and on the Continent, [303];
- appointed professor at King’s College, London, [303];
- studies statistics, [303];
- sanitary reforms, [303];
- works, [303].
- Guy’s Hospital, i. 202-222, 225, ii. [3-13], [15-21], [159-161], [282], [291].
- Guy’s Hospital Reports, ii. [10], [18], [20], [21], [161], [294].
- Halford, Sir Henry (1766-1844);
- on Baillie, ii. [51];
- education, [56];
- physician to Middlesex Hospital, [56];
- physician to George III., [57];
- change of name, [57];
- president of College of Physicians, [58];
- writings, [58].
- Hall, Marshall (1790-1857);
- birth, i. 264;
- education and apprenticeship, 265;
- study at Edinburgh, 265;
- lectures on diagnosis, 266;
- Continental study, 267;
- practice in Nottingham, 267;
- work on Diagnosis, 267;
- on Symptoms and History of Diseases, 268;
- on Loss of Blood, 268;
- antagonism to bleeding, 268;
- removes to London, 269;
- rapid success, 269;
- research on circulation refused by Royal Society, 270;
- other papers accepted, 270;
- study of hybernation, 271;
- accident to a manuscript, 271;
- research on reflex actions, 272-276;
- application to nervous diseases, 273, 274, 276, 277;
- persistent attacks on, 274, 275;
- second paper rejected by Royal Society, 274;
- researches on galvanism and nervous tissues, 275;
- replies to mis-statements, 275, 276;
- new memoir on Nervous System, 276;
- Ready Method in Asphyxia, 277;
- his demeanour in practice, 278, 279;
- lectures, 279;
- at College of Physicians, 280;
- British Medical Association, 281;
- philanthropic schemes, 281;
- visit to America, 282;
- writes on Slavery, 282;
- Continental tour, and reception in Paris, 283;
- suggestions for restoring the apparently drowned, 284;
- painful illness and death, 285.
- Hall, Mrs. Marshall, i. 276.
- Hall, Robert, father of Marshall, i. 264.
- Hall, Samuel, brother of Marshall, i. 265.
- Hamilton, Duke of, i. 87, 89, 90.
- Harrison, Treasurer of Guy’s, i. 212, 222, ii. [3].
- Harveian Oration, i. 25, 45, 86, ii. [162].
- Harvey, William (1578-1657);
- birth, i. 26;
- at Cambridge and Padua, 26;
- settles in London, 26;
- physician to St. Bartholomew’s, 27;
- Lumleian lecturer, 27;
- expounds new views on heart and circulation, 27;
- Treatise on Motion of Heart and Blood, 30-33;
- Harvey called crack-brained, 35;
- physician to James I. and Charles I., 35;
- travels on the Continent, 36;
- attendance on Charles I., 36, 37;
- at Edgehill, 37, 38;
- at Oxford, 38;
- studies hatching of eggs, 38;
- appointed Warden of Merton College, 38;
- his museum destroyed, 39;
- leaves Oxford, 39;
- lives with his brothers, 40;
- entrusts Treatise on Generation to Dr. Ent, 41;
- its publication, 42;
- Harvey’s lost medical works, 43;
- benefactions to College of Physicians, 44-47;
- declines Presidency, 45;
- infirmity in old age, 46;
- death and burial, 46;
- will, 46, 47;
- personal character, 47;
- personal appearance, 47, 48;
- lofty intellectual position, 49;
- habits, 49, 50;
- Latinity, 50;
- memorials in College of Physicians, 50;
- William Hunter on, 126;
- records of, in St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, ii. [169].
- Harvey’s brothers, i. 26, 40, 46, 50.
- Harwood, Dr., on William Hunter’s library, i. 129.
- Hawkins, Cæsar, ii. [110].
- Hazelwood School, ii. [261].
- Healing, Caius’ Method of, i. 22.
- Helmholtz, ii. [260].
- Henry VII., i. 1, 2, 4.
- Henry VIII., i. 4, 7, 10, 14.
- Herbert, Sidney, ii. [298].
- Hewson, William, i. 84, 126, 138.
- Hill, Gardiner, and Lunacy, ii. [220], [221].
- Hinton, James (1822-1875);
- early history, ii. [278], [279];
- studies at St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, [280];
- foreign voyages, [280];
- residence in Jamaica, [280];
- intercourse with Toynbee, [281];
- early writings, [281];
- aural practice, [282];
- charm of conversation, [283];
- later publications, [284];
- death, [284].
- Hinton, J. H., ii. [278].
- Hippocrates, the British, i. 52-70.
- Hobbes of Malmesbury, i. 47.
- Hodgson, Joseph, ii. [261].
- Holland, Lord and Lady, i. 294, ii. [65].
- Holland, Sir Henry (1788-1873), ii. [15];
- early life, [62];
- at Glasgow University, [63];
- draws up Report on Agriculture of Cheshire, [63];
- at Edinburgh, [64];
- in society, [64];
- travels, [64], [65], [68], [69];
- becomes medical attendant to Princess Caroline, [65];
- success and moderation, [66];
- his great energy, [67];
- marriages, [67];
- physician to Queen Victoria, [67], [68];
- death, [68];
- writings, [69];
- Recollections of Past Life, [70].
- Home, Sir Everard, i. 141, 143, 148, 152, 154, 158-161, 178, 290, 291.
- Houstoun, R., ii. [109].
- Humane Society, i. 147, 284.
- Hume, David, i. 91, 102.
- Hunterian Museums. See Museums.
- Hunterian Oration, i. 309.
- Hunter, John (1728-1793), i. 123, 124, 127, 131;
- birth and early years, 133;
- visit to Glasgow, 133;
- goes to London and assists his brother, 134;
- his hospital studies, 134;
- short residence at Oxford, 135;
- shares his brother’s lectures, 135;
- his style of lecturing, 136;
- early discoveries, 136;
- dissection of animals, 137;
- becomes staff-surgeon in army, and goes to Belleisle and Portugal, 137;
- returns home and practises in Golden Square, 138;
- want of tact, 138;
- his brusqueness, 139;
- builds a house at Earl’s Court, and keeps a private menagerie, 139;
- his encounter with leopards, 139;
- ruptures his tendo Achillis , and studies mode of cure, 140;
- elected Fellow of Royal Society, and surgeon to St. George’s Hospital, 140;
- takes a house in Jermyn Street, and receives Jenner as pupil, 141;
- marries Miss Home, 141;
- his dislike of fashionable parties, 141;
- writes on the Teeth, and on digestion of stomach after death, 142;
- his principal contributions to the Royal Society, 142, 143;
- his indefatigable industry, 143;
- punctuality and order, 144;
- blunt hospitality, 144;
- employs an artist named Bell, 144, 145;
- lectures on surgery, 145;
- after-dinner habits, 146, 147;
- appointed surgeon to the King, 147;
- Croonian lectures, 148;
- suffers from angina pectoris, 148;
- visit to Bath, 148;
- emotion at his brother’s death, 149;
- his eagerness for specimens, 150;
- obtains skeleton of O’Brien, the Irish giant, 150;
- evidence on murder of Sir T. Boughton, 150;
- Justice Buller’s strictures, 151;
- builds museum in Leicester Square, 151;
- renewed illness, 152;
- portrait by Sir Joshua Reynolds, 153;
- ties femoral artery, 153;
- experiments on deer’s antlers, 153;
- appointed surgeon-general to the army, 154;
- Copley medal awarded, 154;
- Home assists him, 154;
- Hunter writes treatise on Blood, Inflammation, &c., 155;
- dispute with hospital governors and surgeons, 155-157;
- aid to young students, 155;
- discussion at board meeting, and sudden death, 157;
- personal appearance, 158;
- national vote for his museum, 158;
- declined by Physicians, accepted by Surgeons, 158;
- Home and Hunter’s papers, 159;
- Home burns them, 160;
- Hunter the Cerberus of the Royal Society, 161;
- his generosity, 162;
- his income, 162;
- his sense of his own importance, 162;
- religious views, 162;
- removal of remains to Westminster Abbey, 163;
- views on life, 163, 164;
- Dr. Moxon on, 165;
- Sir James Paget on, 166-168;
- Abernethy on, 168;
- Clift on, 168;
- and Edward Jenner, 170, 171, 176;
- and Cline, 203;
- and Astley Cooper, 204, 205;
- and Abernethy, 228, 241;
- and Baillie, ii. [53];
- and ovariotomy, [106].
- Hunter, William (1718-1783), i. 84;
- becomes Cullen’s pupil, 89;
- subsequent friendship with Cullen, 91, 94, 120, 122;
- studies at Edinburgh, 120;
- goes to London, 120;
- studies at St. George’s Hospital, 121;
- lectures on anatomy, 121;
- lack of means, 122;
- enters on obstetric practice, 122;
- visits home, 122;
- Medical Commentaries and other writings, 123;
- disputes as to originality, 123, 127;
- is assisted by John Hunter, 124;
- excellence as a teacher, 124;
- on anatomical controversy, 125;
- on Harvey, 126;
- called in to the Queen, 126;
- chosen professor to the Royal Academy, 127;
- Hunter and the Royal Society, 127, 128;
- Hunterian Museum (now at Glasgow), 128;
- founds anatomical school in Great Windmill Street, 129;
- cost and extent of his collection, 129, 130;
- leaves it to Baillie, with reversion to Glasgow University, 130;
- intends to retire, 130;
- dies, 131;
- portraits of Hunter, 131;
- personal habits and manners, 132;
- bequeaths estate to Baillie, 132;
- and John Hunter, 134;
- and Baillie, ii. [53];
- and ovariotomy, [106].
- Hypochondria, Description of, i. 65.
- India and Jenner, i. 183, 197.
- Infirmary at Edinburgh, i. 78, ii. [26-28], [36-39], [45], [49], [73].
- Jackson, C., ii. [98].
- James I., i. 24, 35.
- Jefferson, President, i. 182.
- Jeffrey, Francis, i. 257, 258, 262.
- Jenner, Edward (1749-1823), i. 141, 148;
- apprenticeship, 169;
- inoculation for small-pox, 170;
- becomes John Hunter’s pupil, 170;
- their mutual influence, 171;
- Jenner’s sympathetic qualities, 172;
- suggestion about earthworms, 172;
- his personal appearance, 173;
- wit, poetry, and accomplishments, 174;
- convivial societies, 174, 175;
- studies cow-pox, 176-180;
- publishes discovery of vaccination, 179;
- refuses London practice, 180;
- Jenner and Dr. Woodville, 181;
- discovery made known on Continent, 181;
- in United States, 182;
- in the East, 183;
- Jenner’s patriotic offer, 183;
- publishes brief narrative, 184-186;
- vaccination by non-professionals, 186;
- vaccination attacked, 187;
- gratuitous vaccination, 189;
- public vaccine Board, 190;
- a temple to Jenner, 191;
- the Empress of Russia and Jenner, 191;
- Parliamentary grant, 192;
- Royal Jennerian Institution, 193;
- Treasury delays, 193;
- testimony of Canadian Indians, 194;
- Napoleon and Jenner, 194;
- National Vaccine Establishment, 195;
- Jenner’s inward life, 196;
- second Parliamentary grant, 196, 197;
- gratitude of Europeans in India, 197;
- bereavements, 197;
- death from small-pox after vaccination, 198;
- Jenner’s account, 198;
- presentation to the Czar, 199;
- death of Mrs. Jenner, 199;
- death, 200;
- Dr. Baron on, 200, 201.
- Jennerian Society, Royal, i. 190, 193.
- Jenner, Sir William (b. 1815);
- studies and early successes, ii. [118];
- papers on Typhoid and Typhus Fevers, [119], [123];
- later appointments and writings, [124], [125];
- on Parkes, [296], [301].
- Jenner, Stephen, i. 169.
- Kaye. See Caius.
- Keate, i. 155.
- Keith, T., ii. [102].
- Key. See Caius.
- King’s College, London, ii. [74], [76], [77], [147], [149], [150], [262-264], [304].
- Knox, Robert, ii. [72], [73].
- Laennec, ii. [5], [181].
- Lancet, The, i. 267, 275, 293, 298, 307, 309, 310, ii. [97], [133], [134], [142], [214], [243], [244], [295].
- Latimer, i. 7.
- Lawrence, Sir William (1783-1867),
- and Brodie, i. 289;
- education, 303;
- apprenticed
- to Abernethy, 303;
- appointments at St. Bartholomew’s, 304;
- early works, 304;
- professor at College of Surgeons, 305;
- criticism of Abernethy, 305;
- lectures on Man, and controversy thereon, 305-307;
- Lawrence yields to the storm, 307;
- establishes Aldersgate Medical School, 307;
- ophthalmic works, 308;
- relations with College of Surgeons, 308;
- delivers Hunterian oration, 309;
- character of, 310;
- death, 311.
- Lenten preacher at Rome, a, i. 115-117.
- Lifeboat Institution, National, and Marshall Hall, i. 284.
- Lilye, i. 12.
- Linacre, Thomas (1460-1524), birth, i. 1;
- descent, 2;
- school-days, 2;
- elected fellow of All Souls’, 2;
- takes pupils, 2;
- travels in Italy, 2;
- graduates M.D. at Oxford, 3;
- translates the “Sphere” of Proclus, 3;
- teaches Erasmus Greek, 3;
- becomes Prince Arthur’s tutor, 3;
- appointed physician to Henry VIII, 4;
- studies theology, 4;
- gains preferments, 5;
- advises Erasmus, 5;
- lectures at Oxford, 6;
- receives a flattering address, 6;
- translates Aristotle and Galen, 7, 8;
- writes on grammar and language, 8;
- founds College of Physicians, 8-10;
- benefactions to it, 10;
- founds lectureships at Oxford and Cambridge, 10-12;
- his practical skill, 12;
- his personal character, 12;
- death, 13;
- buried in St. Paul’s, 13;
- memorial erected by Caius, 13;
- will, 13.
- Lister, Joseph Jackson, F.R.S., ii. [135-137].
- Lister, Sir Joseph (b. 1828), ii. [46], [47], [114];
- studies, [137];
- physiological researches, [137];
- professorship at Glasgow, [138];
- unhealthy wards, [138-140];
- carbolic acid and germs, [141];
- the antiseptic system, [141-147];
- diminution of pyæmia, [143], [146];
- experiment on a calf, [143], [144];
- antiseptic gauze, [145];
- carbolic spray, [146];
- corrosive sublimate, [146];
- distinctions conferred upon, [147].
- Liston, Rev. Harry, ii. [24].
- Liston, Robert (1794-1847), education and early years, ii. [24];
- medical study in Edinburgh, [25];
- in London, [25];
- assists Barclay, [25];
- lectures on anatomy and surgery, [26];
- dissensions at the Royal Infirmary, [26-28];
- removes to London, [28];
- works on surgery, [28];
- as an operator, [29], [30];
- his great strength, [30], [31];
- his decision, [31];
- and the College of Surgeons, [32];
- the Times on, [32], [33];
- and Syme, [33], [34], [35-37], [39-41];
- death, [34];
- and Sir J. Simpson, [85];
- and chloroform, [98].
- Lizars, Alexander, ii. [49].
- Lizars, John, ii. [39], [48-50], [74], [109].
- Locke, John, i. 62, 63, 70.
- Lombard, Dr. H. C., ii. [119].
- London Hospital, ii. [250-252].
- London University, i. 257, ii. [163], [176], [301].
- Long, St. John, i. 296.
- Lonsdale, Dr., on Dr. Addison, ii. [3], [12], [13].
- Lorenzo de Medici, i. 2.
- Louis, i. 283, ii. [120].
- Lumleian lectures, i. 27, 35, 44.
- Lunacy, ii. [217-235].
- Lymphatics, i. 84.
- Macilwain on Abernethy, i. 231-233.
- M’Dowell, Ephraim, ii. [107-109].
- M’Kendrick, Dr., on Hughes Bennett, ii. [215], [216].
- Mackenzie, Morell (b. 1837), on specialism, ii. [240];
- early life, [249], [250];
- medical study, [250], [251];
- Continental studies, [251];
- acquaintance with Czermak, [251];
- appointments at London Hospital, [251], [252];
- work with laryngoscope, [251-254];
- becomes a specialist in diseases of the throat, [252];
- his various works, [253];
- extension of specialism, [253], [254].
- Mackenzie, Stephen, ii. [249], [250], [268].
- Mackenzie’s Travels in Iceland, ii. [15], [64].
- Malpighi, i. 30, note.
- Malthus, i. 61.
- Manchester, Bishop of, on cremation, ii. [117].
- Manutius, Aldus, i. 2, 3.
- Mapletoft, Dr. J., i. 52, 62.
- Mary, Queen, i. 14.
- Materialism, i. 306.
- Maudsley, Henry (b. 1835);
- studies in London, ii. [232];
- appointed Professor at University College, [233];
- writes on Theory of Vitality and on Physiology and Pathology of Mind, [233];
- Gulstonian Lectures on Body and Mind, [234];
- case of Victor Townley, [235];
- on Responsibility in Mental Disease, [235];
- on Pathology of Mind, [235];
- on Body and Will, [237], [238].
- Meckel, i. 83.
- Medical and Chirurgical Society, Royal, i. 213, 268, 295, 297, 299, ii. [11], [123], [187].
- Medical Association, British, i. 281, ii. [45], [81], [124], [290].
- Medical Council, ii. [159], [164], [289].
- Medical Lectures, i. 75, 90, 92, 95, 96, 97, 100, 103, 106, ii. [5], [17], [133], [150], [158], [160], [183], [189].
- Medical Society, Royal, of Edinburgh, i. 213, 265, ii. [2], [88], [209], [222].
- Medical Times, ii. [77], [293], [294], [297].
- Medicine, British, Foundation of, i. 1-24.
- Menagerie, Tower, i. 137, 211.
- Merton College, Oxford, i. 38, 39.
- Middlesex Hospital, i. 250, 259, ii. [56], [131], [149], [256].
- Minto House Hospital, ii. [38], [39].
- Monro, Alexander (primus ) (1697-1767);
- birth, i. 75;
- education, 75, 76;
- appointed Professor of Anatomy, 76;
- first lecture, 76;
- large classes, 77;
- difficulty of obtaining subjects, 77;
- building of the infirmary, 78;
- clinical lectures, 79;
- post mortem examinations, 79;
- “Osteology,” 79;
- other works, 79;
- Comparative Anatomy, 80;
- private life, 80;
- dresses wounds after Prestonpans, 81;
- death, 81;
- Professor Struthers on, 81.
- Monro, Alexander (secundus ) (1733-1817);
- birth, i. 82;
- lectures for his father, 82;
- Continental travels, 82;
- taught by Meckel, 83;
- becomes professor, 83;
- medical practice, 83;
- discoveries on the lymphatic system, 84;
- other works, 85;
- fondness for the stage, 85;
- and for horticulture, 85;
- economy of time, 86;
- favours vaccination, 86;
- death, 87;
- John Bell and, 108, 109.
- Monro, Alexander (tertius ), i. 86.
- Monro, John, i. 75, 76.
- Montagu, Lady Mary, i. 100.
- Montanus, i. 14.
- Monteith, Alex., i. 73, 74.
- More, Hannah, ii. [178].
- More, Sir T., i. 2, 3, 11.
- Morris, Edward, i. 197.
- Morton, W. T. G., ii. [98].
- Moxon, Dr., on John Hunter, i. 165, 166.
- Müller, Johannes, and Marshall Hall, i. 270.
- Murchison, Charles (1830-1879), ii. [119];
- medical studies, [130], [131];
- work in Calcutta and Burmah, [131];
- returns to London, [131];
- appointments, [131];
- work on Continued Fevers, [131-133];
- other writings, [133];
- his teaching powers, [133];
- character, [134].
- Museums, Hunterian, i. 128-130, 151, 158, 159, 163.
- Napoleon I. and Jenner, i. 194.
- National Vaccine Institution, i. 193, 195.
- Nélaton, ii. [11].
- Nightingale, Miss Florence, ii. [265].
- O’Brien, skeleton of, i. 150.
- Orfila, ii. [285], [286], [291].
- Ottley, D., on John Hunter, i. 146.
- Ovariotomy, ii. [106-114].
- Oxford University, Linacre and, i. 2, 3, 6, 7, 11;
- Harvey and, 38, 39;
- Sydenham at, 52-54;
- John Hunter at, 135;
- and Jenner, 199;
- and Baillie, ii. [52];
- and Halford, [56].
- Padua, Linacre at, i. 2;
- Caius at, 14;
- Harvey at, 26.
- Paget, Sir James (b. 1814), i. 166-168, ii. [72], [114], [143];
- early studies, [167];
- report on results of use of microscope, [168];
- address to students, [168], [169];
- professorship at College of Surgeons, [169]:
- publication of lectures, [170];
- conditions of healthy nutrition, [170], [171];
- lecture on Study of Physiology, [172];
- clinical lectures, [172];
- attention to detail, [173];
- serious illness, [173], [174];
- on Theology and Science, [174];
- on alcohol, [175];
- appointments, [176];
- on the College of Surgeons’ Museum, [176];
- on exceptions to types, [177];
- on Study of Science, [177].
- Palmer, trial of, i. 284, ii. [287], [288], [294].
- Palmerston, Lord, ii. [66].
- Parkes, E. A. (1819-1875);
- Harveian oration, i. 25;
- early influences, ii. [296];
- studies at University College, [296];
- goes to Madras and Moulmein, [297];
- practice in London, [297];
- journalistic work, [297];
- physician to University College Hospital, [297];
- serves in Crimean war, [298];
- appointed professor at Army Medical School, [298];
- Manual of Practical Hygiene, [299];
- Army Medical Reports, [300];
- Sir W. Jenner on, [301];
- death, [302].
- Parry, Dr., and Jenner, i. 197.
- Paterson, Dr., Life of Syme by, ii. [31].
- Pathological Society, ii. [185].
- Pathology, i. 145.
- Pearson, Dr., and vaccination, i. 190, 191.
- Pembroke, Earl of, i. 15.
- Pennock, Dr., of Philadelphia, ii. [120].
- Peruvian bark, i. 59.
- Pettigrew, Dr., on Astley Cooper, i. 216-218;
- on Abernethy, 230.
- Petty, Lord H., and vaccination, i. 196.
- Physical Society of Guy’s, i. 213, ii. [6].
- Physicians (Edinburgh), College of, i. 72-73, 76, ii. [289].
- Physicians (Irish), College of, ii. [158], [206].
- Physicians (London), College of, foundation of, i. 1, 8;
- letters patent, 9;
- new statutes, 10;
- Caius and, 15;
- insignia of, 17;
- dissection, 18;
- Harvey Lumleian lecturer at, 27, 35;
- declines presidency, 45;
- Sydenham and, 61;
- and John Hunter’s Museum, 158;
- E. Jenner and, 195, 199;
- Marshall Hall and, 280;
- Bright and, ii. [21];
- Baillie and, [53], [55];
- Halford and, [56], [58];
- W. Jenner and, [124];
- Murchison and, [133];
- Watson and, [151];
- Williams and, [184], [187];
- Maudsley and, [234], [238];
- Parkes and, [298];
- Guy and, [303].
- Pinel, ii. [218], [219].
- Piozzi, Mrs., on Henry Holland, ii. [64].
- Pitcairne, i. 73.
- Pitt, William, i. 158.
- Plempius of Louvain, i. 44.
- Poisons, ii. [4].
- Politian, i. 2.
- Pott, Percival, i. 134, 228.
- Prayer for the sick, ii. [197].
- Prestonpans, i. 81.
- Priestley, Dr., ii. [95].
- Quacks, i. 16, 17, 58.
- Quain, Jones, ii. [241], [242].
- Queen’s University, Ireland, ii. [158].
- Reflex action, i. 272-277.
- Reid, John, ii. [85].
- Reid, Thomas, i. 99, 107.
- Resurrectionists, i. 208-211.
- Reynolds, Dr. Russell, i. 276, 295.
- Reynolds’, Sir Joshua, portrait of William Hunter, i. 131;
- of John Hunter, 153, 163.
- Richardson, John, i. 257.
- Rinderpest, ii. [129].
- Riolan, John, the younger, i. 33, 36, note.
- Roots, Dr. W., and Astley Cooper, 206.
- Royal Institution, ii. [66], [172].
- Royal Society and William Hunter, i. 127;
- and John Hunter, 140, 142, 143, 147, 148, 149, 154;
- and Astley Cooper, 212, 213;
- and Charles Bell, 253;
- and Marshall Hall, 270, 272, 274, 275;
- and Brodie, 291, 292, 297, 300;
- and Lister, ii. [138], [147];
- and Wilson, [244];
- and Bowman, [262];
- and Toynbee, [273], [275];
- and Parkes, [301].
- Russia, Emperor of, i. 195, 199.
- —— Empress of, i. 191.
- Salm, Count de, and vaccination, i. 191.
- Sandford, Bishop, i. 114.
- Sandys, Bishop, i. 20.
- Scott, Sir Walter, ii. [150].
- Selling, William, fellow of All Souls’, i. 2.
- Servetus, i. 27, 28.
- Shagglyng Lecture, i. 6.
- Sharpe, Samuel, i. 121.
- Shaw, Alexander, i. 249, 257, 258.
- Shaw, John, i. 249, 250, 256.
- Shelburne, Lord, i. 128.
- Short, Dr. T., i. 68.
- Sibbald, Sir R., i. 72, 73, 75.
- Siddons, Mrs., i. 85.
- Simmons, Dr. Foart, on William Hunter, i. 132.
- Simon, John (b. 1816);
- student at King’s College, [304];
- appointed lecturer at St. Thomas’s Hospital, [304];
- medical officer to City of London, [304];
- to Board of Health and Privy Council, [304];
- Reports to Privy Council, [305];
- honours, [306].
- Simpson, Alexander, ii. [84], [86], [89], [104].
- Simpson, Sir James Y. (1811-1870);
- birth and early years, ii. [83], [84];
- student life in Edinburgh, [85];
- his father’s death, [86];
- disappointed of a parish surgeoncy, [86];
- becomes assistant to Professor Thomson, [87];
- his first original paper, [88];
- description of, when presiding over Medical Society, [88], [89];
- visits London and the Continent, [89];
- his habits of plain speech, [90];
- candidature for professorship of midwifery, [90], [91];
- his success, [91], [92];
- antiquarian paper on Leprosy, [92];
- success in practice, [92], [93];
- complaints of neglect, [93];
- controversies, [94];
- experiments with sulphuric ether, [98];
- introduces chloroform, [99];
- description of Simpson’s parties, [101];
- introduces acupressure, [102];
- attacks hospital system, [102];
- honours, [103];
- bereavements, [103];
- death, [104].
- Slavery, Marshall Hall on, i. 282.
- Smith, Adam, i. 91.
- Smith, Henry, and Marshall Hall, i. 271.
- Smith, Henry, and Sir W. Fergusson, ii. [79], [80], [82].
- Smith, Sydney, and Holland, ii. [67], [68].
- Specialism, ii. [161], [239], [240].
- Squirrel, Dr., and vaccination, i. 188.
- St. Andrews University, i. 175.
- St. Bartholomew’s Hospital, i. 27, 36, 134, 304, 307, ii. [149], [167-169], [176], [286].
- St. George’s Hospital, i. 134, 140, 154-158, 290, 291, ii. [25], [53], [59], [269], [273].
- St. Mary’s Hospital, ii. [131], [257], [275].
- St. Thomas’s Hospital, i. 204, 205, 211, 212, 216, 218, 219, 221, 222, 279, ii. [105], [133], [291], [304].
- Stethoscope, the, ii. [5], [60].
- Stewart, Dr. A. P., ii. [120].
- Stewart, Dugald, i. 63, 95.
- Stokes, William (1804-1878);
- studies in Glasgow and Edinburgh, ii. [188];
- writes on the stethoscope, [188];
- early success, [189];
- work on Diseases of the Chest, [189];
- appointed Professor in Dublin University, [189];
- work on Diseases of the Heart, [190];
- lectures on fever, [191];
- on student’s culture, [191];
- on prevention of disease, [192];
- character by Sir H. Acland, [192];
- early rising and geniality, [193];
- death, [193];
- on Graves, [203], [205].
- Struthers, Professor, on Monro primus , i. 81;
- on Monro secundus , 83, 87;
- on John Bell, 111.
- Surgeons, College of, Edinburgh, i. 72, 75, 77, 208, ii. [44], [49], [73]
- Surgeons, College of, London, i. 220, 221, 240, 250, 256, 294, 297, 304-311, ii. [32], [79], [81], [115], [167], [169], [176], [246], [249], [271], [305].
- Surgical Lectures, i. 79, 109, 131, 138, 145, 154, 156, 205, 229, 246, 247, 291, ii. [25], [28], [36], [37], [48], [49], [79].
- Sutherland, James, i. 72.
- Sweating Sickness, i. 15.
- Sydenham College, i. 279, ii. [242].
- —— Society, New, ii. [187], [189].
- Sydenham, Thomas (1624-1689);
- birth, i. 52;
- at Oxford, 52;
- led to choose medicine by Dr. Coxe, 53;
- escapes when shot at in London, 53;
- returns to Oxford, 54;
- removes to London, 54;
- publishes method of curing fevers, 54;
- his principles, 55;
- philosophic views, 56;
- ideas of disease, 57;
- views on nature’s order, 58;
- on quacks and culpable secrecy, 58;
- on Peruvian bark, 59;
- Dr. J. Brown on the “Method,” 59, 60;
- subsequent editions, 60;
- becomes M.D., 61;
- treatise on gout and dropsy, 61;
- death, 61;
- will, 61;
- medicine learnt by practice, 62;
- his opinion of Locke, 62;
- experimental medicine, 63;
- attention to wishes of patients, 64;
- on hysteria and hypochondria, 65;
- Sydenham’s character of himself, 66;
- his humour, 66, 67;
- kindheartedness, 67;
- calumnies on, 68;
- his Rational Theology, 69;
- his religious feelings, 69, 70.
- Sydenham, William, i. 52.
- Syme, James (1799-1870);
- and Liston, ii. [25-27], [31], [33], [34];
- education and early years, [35];
- discovers waterproofing process, [35];
- assists Liston, [36];
- amputation at the hip-joint, [36];
- studies in Germany, [36];
- Brown Square Medical School, [36];
- surgical lectures, [37];
- starts Minto House Hospital, [38];
- clinical lectures, [38];
- Liston’s jealousy, [39];
- gains professorship of surgery, [39];
- reconciliation with Liston, [40];
- Syme’s controversies, [40];
- writings, [41], [44], [45];
- brief removal to London, [41-43];
- great operations, [44];
- Principles of Surgery, [44];
- address to British Medical Association, [45];
- Battle of the Sites, [45];
- private life, [46];
- on antiseptic method, [46];
- testimonial dinner, [47];
- Professor Lister on, [48];
- and Fergusson, [73], [75], [76].
- Taylor, A. Swaine (1806-1880);
- education, ii. [291];
- medical studies, [291];
- studies chemistry and medical jurisprudence, [291];
- appointed to lecture at Guy’s, [292];
- papers and writings, [292], [293];
- appearance as witness, [294];
- the Palmer trial, [294];
- death, [294].
- Theology, Sydenham’s Rational, i. 69.
- Thompson, Sir Henry (b. 1820);
- studies in London and Paris, ii. [195];
- twice wins Jacksonian prize, [195];
- appointments at University College, [195], [196];
- Clinical Lectures, [195];
- Practical Lithotomy and Lithotrity, [195];
- Civiale’s operation, [196];
- attends King of the Belgians, [196];
- controversy on Prayer for the Sick, [197];
- on cremation, [198], [199];
- on use of intoxicants, [200];
- on Food and Feeding, [200];
- artistic tastes, [200].
- Thomson, Prof. A. T., ii. [296], [297].
- Thomson, Prof. John, ii. [87], [90].
- Thornhill, Sir James, i. 61.
- Times, The, on Liston, ii. [32], [33].
- Todd, R. B., ii. [262-264].
- Tonstal, i. 11.
- Tower Menagerie and John Hunter, i. 137;
- and Astley Cooper, 211.
- Toynbee, Joseph (1815-1866);
- education, [273];
- medical study, [273];
- researches on the eye, [273];
- aural practice, [274];
- Asylum for Deaf and Dumb, [274];
- researches and dissections, [275];
- appointment to St. Mary’s Hospital, [275];
- ventilation hobby, [275], [276];
- Hints on Local Museums, [276];
- artificial tympanic membrane, [276];
- melancholy death, [277];
- intercourse with Hinton, [281].
- Travers, Mr., on Astley Cooper, [207].
- Treatment, expectant, i. 59.
- Trousseau, ii. [6], [11];
- on Graves, [206], [207].
- Tuke family and lunacy, ii. [219], [220], [231].
- Turner, J. M. W., ii. [202].
- Typhoid and Typhus Fevers, ii. [119-133].
- University College, London, i. 257, ii. [28], [41-43], [118], [124], [137], [149], [183], [195], [196], [222], [232], [233], [273], [296-298].
- Vaccination, i. 178-200.
- Vaccine Institution, National, i. 193, 195.
- Vaughan family, the, ii. [55], [56].
- Vaughan, Henry. See Halford, Sir Henry.
- Vesalius, i. 14.
- Victoria, Queen, i. 311, ii. [57], [60], [67], [68], [81], [124], [151], [158], [164], [176], [188], [196].
- Vitelli, Cornelio, i. 2.
- Vivisection, i. 252, 271-275, 292, ii. [143], [165], [265].
- Wakley, Thomas, ii. [243], [245].
- Walker, Dr., and vaccination, i. 193.
- Wallis, John, ii. [267].
- Warren, Dr. J. C., and anæsthetics, ii. [98].
- Waterhouse, Prof., i. 182.
- Waterloo, Charles Bell at, i. 250.
- Watson, Sir Thomas (1792-1882), ii. [128];
- education, [148];
- elected fellow of St. John’s, Cambridge, [149];
- medical studies in Edinburgh and London, [149];
- becomes proctor at Cambridge, [149];
- removes to London, [149];
- appointments, [149], [150];
- and Sir Walter Scott, [150];
- lectures published, [150];
- honours, [151];
- Introductory Lecture, [151-153];
- Dr. West on, [153];
- British Medical Journal on, [154];
- death, [155].
- Webb Street School of Medicine, i. 279.
- Wells, Horace, ii. [97].
- West, Dr. C., on Sir T. Watson, ii. [153].
- Westfaling, Thomas, i. 179.
- Wells, Sir T. Spencer (b. 1818),
- on Sir W. Fergusson, ii. [72];
- student life in Leeds, Dublin, and London, [105];
- joins Samaritan Hospital, [106];
- experience in Crimean war, [110];
- early experiences in ovariotomy, [111], [112];
- stringent precautions, [113];
- great successes, [113], [114];
- adopts antiseptic system, [114];
- on surgery as salvaging, [115];
- municipal and state questions, [116];
- on cremation, [117].
- Whytt, Andrew, i. 95, [100], [273].
- Wilkes, John, i. 100.
- Wilks, Dr., on Dr. Addison, ii. [8-11];
- on Dr. Bright, [18].
- William IV., i. 224, 259, 295, ii. [57], [60].
- Williams, Charles J. B. (b. about 1800);
- early education, ii. [178];
- scientific experiments, [179];
- studies at Edinburgh, [179];
- chemical researches, [180];
- studies in London and Paris, [180];
- work on Stethoscope, [181];
- settles in London, [181];
- early writings, [182];
- sounds of heart, [182];
- Lectures at Kinnerton Street, [183];
- reports to British Association, [183];
- becomes Professor at University College, [183];
- Gulstonian lectures, [184];
- physician to Hospital for Consumption, [185];
- Principles of Medicine, [185];
- first president of Pathological Society, [185];
- work on Cod-Liver Oil, [186], [187];
- presidency of New Sydenham Society, and of Medical and Chirurgical
- Society, [187];
- studies in retirement, [188].
- Wilson, Erasmus (1809-1884);
- early life, ii. [240], [241];
- studies under Abernethy, and in Paris, [241];
- pupil of Langstaff, [241];
- joins Aldersgate School of Medicine, [241];
- assists Quain at University College, [242];
- establishes Sydenham College, [242];
- writes the Dissector’s Manual and Anatomist’s Vade Mecum, [242];
- acquaintance with Thomas Wakley, and appointment on The Lancet, [243];
- becomes a specialist in skin diseases, [243];
- portraits of diseases of skin, [244];
- Continental studies, [244];
- character in practice, [244], [245];
- the case of flogging at Hounslow, [245];
- various works, [246];
- founds professorship of dermatology, [246];
- and of pathology, [246];
- becomes President of College of Surgeons, [247];
- pays for bringing Cleopatra’s Needle to London, [247];
- his great munificence, [248];
- bequest to College of Surgeons, [249];
- death, [249].
- Wilson, i. 249, 256, 290, 291.
- Windmill Street School, i. 129, 140, 156, 249, 256, 290, 291, ii. [59].
- Wolsey, Cardinal, i. 4, 8.
- Wood, Alexander, i. 108.
- Woodville, Dr., and vaccination, i. 181, 187.
- Yelloly, Dr., on Astley Cooper, i. 214.
- York, Duke of, and Abernethy, i. 234.
- Zoological Society, i. 274.
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