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Phantom-Wooer: The Thomas Lovell Beddoes Web Site | Dr. Thomas Beddoes | Life
Here is the entry on Thomas Beddoes from the 1885 edition of Dictionary of National Biography:
"BEDDOES, THOMAS (1760-1808), physician, was born at Shiffnal in Shropshire, 13 April 1760. Through the interposition of his grandfather, a self-made man of vigorous intellect, he was educated at Bridgnorth Grammar School and at Pembroke College, Oxford. While at the university he taught himself French, Italian, and German, and shortly after quitting it translated or annotated several works of Bergman, Scheele, and Spallanzani. He received his medical education in London and Edinburgh, and, after taking his M.D. degree at Oxford, was appointed in 1788 reader in chemistry, attracting, he says, the largest class that had been assembled in the university since the thirteenth century. He resigned this post in 1792, partly on account
of his sympathy with the French revolution. He had previously, in 1790, pointed out the merits of the great and then forgotten chemist, Mayow, the discoverer of the true theory of combustion, and had, in 1792, composed a poem on the conquests of
Alexander, partly to denounce English aggrandisement in India, partly as what now seems a highly superfluous demonstration of the possibility of imitating Darwin's 'Botanic Garden.' The poem is in every way a curiosity, having been printed by a woman and illustrated with woodcuts by a parish clerk. In 1793 he produced his treatise on calculus, and his moral tale ' Isaac Jenkins,' describing the reclamation of a drunken labourer, which went through numerous editions. In the same year he removed to Clifton, with the view of establishing a 'Pneumatic Institute' for the treatment of disease by inhalation. Watt constructed his apparatus, Wedgwood contributed a thousand pounds, and the
institute was ultimately established
in 1798. It failed in its professed object, but is memorable for having fostered the genius of Davy, whom Beddoes had engaged as his assistant, and who discovered the properties of nitrous oxide there in 1799. In the same year Davy's first work, an essay on heat and light, was given to the world in 'Contributions to Physical and Medical Knowledge, principally from the West of England,' a collection
edited by Beddoes. Before this he had married Anna, sister of Maria Edgeworth, 'the best and most amiable woman in the
world,' says Davy, and had produced several
medical works and some political pamphlets,
in the latter assailing Pitt with extreme
virulence. He had also, in 1795, edited the 'Elements of Medicine' of John Brown, the founder of the Brunonian system of medicine,
with a memoir, certainly well intended, but
unduly depreciatory of Brown's character in some respects. In 1801 he published his 'Hygeia,' popular essays in medicine, rich
in valuable sanitary precepts and eloquent
pathological descriptions. In the same year
Davy left Clifton for London, and the institute
was virtually given up. Beddoes continued
to enjoy a considerable practice, but from this
time he added little to medical literature.
In 1808 his health failed, and he died on
24 Dec., 'at the moment,' says Davy, 'when
his mind was purified for noble affections
and great works:' 'literally worn out,' says
Atkinson, 'by the action and reaction of an
inquisitive nature, and of restlessness for
fame.' 'From Beddoes,' wrote Southey on
hearing of his death,' I hoped for more good
to the human race than any other individual.' 'I felt,' wrote Coleridge on the same occasion, 'that more had been taken out of my life by
this than by any former event.' Yet Beddoes
had not succeeded in impressing himself
powerfully upon the history of science, and
he is now chiefly remembered as the father
of the author of 'Death's Jest-Book,' and to
some extent the discoverer of Davy. He was,
nevertheless, a remarkable and highly interesting
man; an enthusiast and a philanthropist;
vigorous, original, and independent. The
distinguishing merit of his medical writings
is their vivid presentation of the phenomena
of disease. 'They embrace,' says Atkinson, 'a most extensive surface of queries and
inquiry; touching, like a vessel of discovery,
upon every little topic or island; but yet
with top-sails set, as if stinted to time.' 'He was,' says Davy, 'reserved in manner
and almost dry. Nothing could be a stronger
contrast to his apparent coldness in discussion
than his wild and active imagination,
which was as poetical as Darwin's. He had
talents which would have raised him to the
pinnacle of philosophical eminence, if they
had been applied with discretion.' It is extremely
interesting to compare these traits
with similar manifestations of character in
his son."
The following full-length biography is available through the google book service:
Memoirs of the Life of Thomas Beddoes, M.D. with an Analytical Account of His Writings by John Edmonds Stock (1811).
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