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enrich the pages of the Transactions, as well as to extend Book 1, their circulation.

Chap. VI.
THE
FOUNDERS

OF THE

MUSEUM.

He did it, of course, in his own way, and under the necessary influence of his habits and predispositions. One SLOANE natural result of his labours, as secretary and as editor, was a frequent prominence of medical subjects, both at the meetings and in the subsequent selections for permanent record. If such a prominence might now and then give, or seem to give, fair ground of complaint to men whose thoughts were absorbed in the calculus of fluxions, or whose eyes were wont to search the heavens that they might learn the courses of the stars, it had at least the excuse that it tended to the elevation-in all senses of the word-of a profession in the thorough education and the dignified status of which all the world have a deep interest.

If SLOANE, in his day, occasionally made scientific men somewhat more familiar with medical themes than they cared to be, he did very much to make medical men aware of the peculiar duty under which their profession laid them of becoming also men of true science. And in this way he exerted an influence upon medical knowledge, which was none the less pregnant with good and enduring results because it was in great measure an indirect influence. It was one of the minor, but memorable, results of the establishment of the Royal Society that it tended powerfully to lift medical practice out of the slough of quackery.

This frequent reading of medical papers during the Doctor's secretaryship could not fail to give an opening, now and again, for the wit of the scorner. A physician, in his daily practice, is constantly seeing the power of small things. He may well, at times, over estimate trifles. In the year 1700, Dr. SLOANE was made the subject of a satirical pamphlet which appeared under the title of The

BOOK I,
Chap. VI.

THE

FOUNDERS

OF THE

SLOANE

MUSEUM.

SLOANE AND
WOODWARD.

Transactioneer, with some of his Philosophical Fancies.' The author of the satire was Dr. William KING, but, for a considerable time, the authorship was unknown. There was great anxiety to discover it, not only on SLOANE'S part individually, but on the part of the Council at large. The whole affair was trivial, and would be unworthy of memory but that it led to some dissensions within the Society itself, which for a long time left marks of their influence.

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SLOANE Conceived that The Transactioneer was the production of Dr. John WooDWARD-the author of Natural History of the Earth-who was himself a member of the Royal Society's Council. WOODWARD, in denying the imputation, endorsed the satire. Whether there was not some occasion given,' he said to the Council, may be worth your consideration. This I am sure of: The world has been now, for some time past, very loud upon that subject. And there were those who laid the charges so much wrong, that I have but too often had occasion to vinPapers; cited dicate the Society itself, and that in public company.' The in Memoirs, ill feeling thus excited lasted a long time. It seemed at length, that the Society must lose either the services of its laborious Secretary or those of his active-tongued opponent.

Newton Correspond. ence and

by Brewster,

&c. (2nd

Edit.), vol. ii,

ff. 185, 186.

The petty dissension came to a height when SLOANE chanced to make some passing medical comment on the words the bezoar is a gall-stone,' occurring in a paper which he was reading to the Society, from the Memoirs of the Parisian Academy of Sciences. SLOANE's casual remark drew from WOODWARD the offensive words, No man who understands anatomy would make such an assertion.' On another occasion he interrupted some observation or other made by SLOANE, by exclaiming-Speak sense, or English, and we shall understand you.' A friend or two

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Chap. VI.

OF THE

MUSEUM.

of WOODWARD tried hard to back him by enlisting the Book 1, illustrious President on their side. They reminded NEW- THE TON that he had been often himself impatient under the FOUNDERS medical dissertations, and they praised Dr. WOODWARD'S SLOANE acquirements in philosophy. For a seat in the Council,' replied Sir Isaac, a man should be a moral philosopher, as well as a natural one.' Eventually, it was resolved: Records of That Dr. WoODWARD be removed from the Council, for creating a disturbance by the said reflecting words upon Dr. SLOANE. The latter was of a very forgiving temper, and he soon sought to be reconciled with his adversary.

His professional course, meanwhile, was steadily upward. A friendship which he had contracted in 1705 with Dr. SYDENHAM greatly aided his progress. SYDENHAM Was retiring from practice, and gave to SLOANE his cordial recommendations. In 1712* he was made Physician Extraordinary to the Queen, whom he attended, two years afterwards, on her death bed. He filled the office of Physician-in-Chief to GEORGE THE FIRST, by whom, on the 3rd April, 1716, he was created a Baronet. He was, I believe, the first physician who received that dignity. 1719 he became President of the College of Physicians. In 1727 he received the crowning honour of a life which, to an unusual degree, had already been replete with honourable distinctions of almost every kind. He was placed in the chair of the Royal Society, as the next successor of NEWTON.

In

Eighteen years before, he had been welcomed into the illustrious Academy of Sciences, the establishment of which at Paris had followed so quickly upon the foundation of the Royal Society. Both academies had worked with con

* History of Europe [the precursor of the Annual Register], for 1712.

the Royal

Society.

BOOK I,
Chap. VI.
THE
FOUNDERS

OF THE

SLOANE

MUSEUM.

THE

NATURAL

HISTORY OF
JAMAICA.

spicuous success. Both had been adorned by a long line of eminent members. They had frequently, and in many ways, interchanged friendly communion. To SLOANE himself, the reception at Paris had been the prelude of many like invitations from other learned societies in various parts of Europe. No man of his time had a worthier estimate of the dignity involved in the freemasonry of science, nor had any a more conscientious sense of the duties and responsibilities which it entails.

As President of the Royal Society, one of his earliest proposals to the Council was that, for the future, no pecuniary contribution should be received from foreign members whose fellowship it invited as an honour. He urged this step, notwithstanding that the Society was at the time in debt from an unusual arrear of subscriptions,-an arrear so great that he felt it to be right that the Council should be recommended to sue their offending brethren in the law courts. His third proposal, like both the others, had for its object the incontestible advantage and honour of the Society. He checked some nascent abuses in elections by making it necessary that there should be an express approval of every new candidate by the Council, on the recommendation of not less than three fellows, before proceeding to a ballot in the Society at large.

The work by which SLOANE holds his chief place in the literature of science, the Natural History of Jamaica, was the work of no less than thirty-eight years. Its materials, as we have seen, were collected in the years 1687 and 1688. The first volume was not published until 1708. Seventeen additional years elapsed before the completion of the second. The fact indicates how crowded with avocations its author's life was, as well as the marked con

scientiousness and thoroughness which from youth to age Book I, characterized his doings.

Chap. VI. THE FOUNDERS OF THE SLOANE

The Jamaica book cannot be opened without some appreciation, even at first sight, of this faculty of thoroughness. MUSEUM. For it is shown not more by the elaboration and beauty of the illustrations, than by the copious citation of authorities, on all points in relation to which authority is valuable. That all previous labourers in his field should have their full meed of acknowledgment is with SLOANE a prime anxiety.

SLOANE'S
SERVICES TO

TURE.

The West Indian Voyage of 1687-89 had had, it may here be remarked, other results besides that of exciting new ARBORICUL emulation-at home and abroad-in the study of natural history, and in the amassing in cabinets and presses of the dried and preserved objects of that study. It gave a marked impulse to arboriculture, both in England and in Ireland. What SLOANE had to show, and to tell of, led to the sending oversea of vessels expressly prepared for the transport of living trees; and several noble ornaments of our parks and pleasure grounds date their introduction to English and Irish soil from the expeditions so set on foot.

Sloane and

Briasson; in

MS. Sloane,

The Natural History of Jamaica excited considerable interest abroad, as well as at home. Bernard de JUSSIEU offered to undertake the editorship of a French translation, and BRIASSON, a Parisian bookseller of some eminence, Corresp. of wrote to SLOANE that he was willing to incur the charges and risk of publication, on condition that the author would 4039, 136send the copper plates of the original work to Paris, for 140. use in the new edition. Sir Hans, however, objected to incur the risk of this transmission across the channel, but was willing to have the needful impression worked off in London; an arrangement to which the Parisian, in his

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