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See also: Bart
.
(1826-1893), See also: British physician, was See also: born at See also: Aberdeen on the 28th of See also: October 1826
.
His See also: father, who also was a medical See also: man, died when he was only a few years
' See Capt
.
C
.
R
.
See also: Day, op. cit. p
.
Io6
.
2 V
.
Mahillon, Catal. desc
.
(188o), p
.
182, refers his statement to the Chevalier L. de Burbure
.
Das neu-eroffnete Ore/tester (See also: Hamburg, 1713)
.
Mahillon, Catal. desc . (188o), vol. i. p . 182 . s See Chevalier Ludwig von Koechel, Die kaiserliche Hofmusikkapelle zu Wien, 1543–1867 (Vienna, 1869) . ` In theSee also: Italian edition of 1769 the See also: part is scored for See also: clarinet.old
.
After attending school in Aberdeen, he was sent by his guardians to Dundee and apprenticed to a druggist; then returning to Aberdeen he began his medical studies in the university of that city
.
Soon, however, he went to See also: Edinburgh, where in the extra-academical school he had a student's career of the most brilliant description, ultimately becoming assistant to J
.
See also: Hughes See also: Bennett in the pathological department of the Royal Infirmary, and assistant demonstrator of anatomy to Robert Knox
.
But symptoms of pulmonary See also: phthisis brought his See also: academic See also: life to a close, and in the hope that the See also: sea might benefit his See also: health he joined the medical department of the See also: navy in 1848
.
Next See also: year he became pathologist to the Haslar hospital, where T
.
H
.
See also: Huxley was one of his colleagues, and in 1853 he was the successful See also: candidate for the newly-instituted See also: post of curator to the museum of the See also: London hospital
.
Here he intended to devote all his energies to pathology, but circumstances brought him into active medical practice . In 1854, the year in which he took hisSee also: doctor's degree at Aberdeen, the post of assistant-physician to the hospital became vacant and he was prevailed. upon to apply for it
.
He was foted of telling how his phthisical tendencies gained him the See also: appointment
.
" He is only a poor Scotch doctor," it was said, " with but a few months to live; let him have it." He had it, and two years before his See also: death publicly declared that of those who were on the staff of the hospital at the See also: time of his selection he was the only one remaining alive
.
In 1854 he became a member of the See also: College of Physicians, and in 1858 a See also: fellow, and then went in succession through all the offices of honour the college has to offer, ending in 1888 with the See also: presidency, which he continued to hold till his death
.
From the time of his selection as assistant physician to the London hospital, his fame rapidly See also: grew until he became a fashionable doctor with one of the largest practices in London, counting among his patients some of the most distinguished men of the day
.
The See also: great number of persons who passed through his consulting-See also: room every See also: morning rendered it inevitable that to a large extent his advice should become stereotyped and his prescriptions often reduced to See also: mere stock formulae, but in really serious cases he was not to be surpassed in the skill and carefulness of his diagnosis and in his See also: attention to detail
.
In spite of the claims of his practice he found time to produce a See also: good many books, all written in the precise and polished See also: style on which he used to See also: pride himself
.
Doubtless owing largely to See also: personal reasons, See also: lung diseases and especially fibroid phthisis formed his favourite theme, but he also discussed other subjects, such as renal inadequacy, anaemia, constipation, &c
.
He died in London on the 6th of See also: November 1893, after a paralytic stroke which was probably the result of persistent overwork
.
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