a Manifestationist, but had ultimately become an Atheist. During his apprenticeship "he ran away from his master upon his lewd debauchery"; afterwards he became a compositor, then a "figure-flinger," and lived about Moorfields on cozenage. After making vile insinuations about his wife, Nedham states that by two years' drunken labour Culpepper had "gallimawfred the Apothecaries' Book into nonsense"; that he wore an old black coat lined with plush which his stationer (publisher) had got for him in Long Lane to hide his knavery, having been till then a most despicable ragged fellow; "looks as if he had been stued in a tanpit; a frowzy headed coxcomb." He was aiming to "monopolise to himself all the knavery and cozenage that ever an apothecary's shop was capable of."
Culpepper's works answer this spiteful caricature, for at any rate he must have been a man of considerable attainments, and of immense industry. That his writings acquired no little popularity is best proved by the fact that after his death it was good business to forge others somewhat resembling them and pass them off as his.
Turquet de Mayerne.
Sir Theodore Turquet de Mayerne, Baron Aulbone of France, was born at Geneva in 1573, of a Calvinistic family and studied for the medical profession first at Heidelberg and afterwards at Montpellier. Moving to Paris he acquired popularity as a lecturer on anatomy to surgeons, and on pharmacy to apothecaries. His inclination towards chemical remedies brought him to the notice of Rivierus, the first physician to Henri IV, and he was appointed one of the king's physicians. But his medical heterodoxy offended the faculty, and his Protestantism