Author:John Arbuthnot
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John Arbuthnot |
a na-akpọkarị "Doctor Arbuthnot"; onye isi na Scriblerus Club, yana otu ọgbakọ ụmụnna mbụ. Ndị enyi yaJonathan Swift, Alexander Pope, John Gay, Robert Harley, 1st Earl of Oxford, Henry St. John, 1st Viscount Bolingbroke, Thomas Parnell, wrote some of the most striking political verse and prose of the early 18th century, and Arbuthnot himself created the character of John Bull for his prose Law Is A Bottomless Pit |
Ọrụ ya[edit]
- An essay on the usefulness of mathematical learning, in a letter from a gentleman in the City to his friend in Oxford (1701)
- Epitaph on Don Francisco
- His Virgilius Restauratus (c. 1727)
- The History of John Bull (1712)
- On the Art of Political Lying (c. 1710-1730)
- Reasons Offered Against Examining Drugs (1724)
- Testimonies Respecting the Character of Dr. Swift
- Memoirs of Martinus Scriblerus (17xx), co-authored by Alexander Pope
- A Treatise concerning the Altercation or Scolding of the Ancients (17xx)
- Tables of ancient coins, weights and measures, explain'd and exemplify'd in several dissertations (1727)
- An essay concerning the nature of aliments, and the choice of them, according to the different constitutions of human bodies. (1731) [
- Practical Rules of Diet in the various Constitutions and Characters of Human Bodies (1732)
- An essay concerning the effects of air on human bodies (1733)