Chain of Friendship

医学生物化学

原   价:
663.00
售   价:
530.00
优惠
平台大促 低至8折优惠
发货周期:国外库房发货,通常付款后3-5周到货!
出  版 社
出版时间
1971年02月05日
装      帧
精装
ISBN
9780674331853
复制
语      种
英文
综合评分
暂无评分
我 要 买
- +
库存 30 本
  • 图书详情
  • 目次
  • 买家须知
  • 书评(0)
  • 权威书评(0)
图书简介
Of his friend of many years, Dr. John Fothergill, Benjamin Franklin wrote: I can hardly conceive that a better man has ever existed. Fothergill’s letters provide a fascinating perspective of his time--a totally different view from that given by his contemporaries Horace Walpole and Dr. Johnson.The Quaker internationalist (as his editors aptly call him) was during the middle decades of the eighteenth century one of the half dozen leading physicians of London, a horticulturist of great distinction, an educational reformer, a patron of many philanthropic causes, and a tireless friend of Americans and the cause of American rights. He was exceedingly generous as a patron of scientific undertakings and of young Americans abroad. He founded a famous Quaker school for boys and girls which is still flourishing he helped found various benevolent and educational institutions in America and he continually subsidized worthy books and gave them to worthy recipients.All these activities and others are recorded in the some two hundred letters here selected for publication. They throw light on Quaker history on both sides of the Atlantic, on advances in medical science and institutional care of the sick, on discoveries in natural history, and on political developments from the Jacobite Rebellion through the American Revolution. From the beginnings of the rift between colonies and mother country, Fothergill served as a vigorous advocate of conciliatory measures and commonwealth status for America, speaking with equal frankness and impartiality to leaders on both sides until well after hostilities began. A few weeks before he died (at the end of 1780), he wrote Franklin in France to say that with all Europe leagued against England nothing could be hoped for her from this war, but that the world might hope for the establishment of a tribunal to settle disputes among nations and preclude war as an instrument of policy.<
本书暂无推荐
本书暂无推荐
看了又看
  • 上一个
  • 下一个