Page:Dictionary of National Biography volume 36.djvu/119

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Maplet
113
Mapletoft

first the most sufferaigne vertues in all the whole kinde of stones & mettals: next of plants, as of herbes, trees, & shrubs; lastly of brute beastes, foules, fishes, creeping wormes, & serpents,' 8vo, London, 1567, dedicated to Thomas, earl of Sussex. 2. 'The Diall of Destinie . . . wherein maybe seen the continuall . . . course, . . . effectes, and influence of the seven planets upon allkyndes of creatures here below: and unto the severall . . . situation of countryes and kingdomes. Compiled and discussed briefly, as well astrological as poetically,' 12mo, Lond. 1581 (8vo, 1582), dedicated to Sir Christopher Hatton. Both these curious treatises are very rare.

[Information from J. Challenor Smith, esq., and W. H. L. Shadwell, esq.; Cooper's Athenæ Cantabr. iii. 135-6; Tanner's Bibl. Brit.-Hib. 1748, p. 508.]


MAPLET, JOHN (1612?–1670), physician, probably born in 1612 in the parish of St. Martin-le-Grand, London, was son, according to Wood, of 'a sufficient shoemaker.' According to the 'Register of the Parliamentary Visitors to Oxford' (ed. Burrows, p. 488) he was twenty in 1632. He was educated at Westminster, whence in 1630 he was elected to Christ Church, Oxford. He graduated B.A. on 8 July 1634, MA. on 17 April 1638, and M.D. 24 July 1647. On 9 Dec. 1643 he was elected junior proctor upon the death of William Cartwright, and served for the remainder of the year; and in the autumn of 1647 he was nominated principal of Gloucester Hall, now Worcester College. He was a delegate of the university appointed to receive the parliamentary visitors, and is said to have submitted to their authority. But he quickly left the university. About 1648 he became tutor to Lucius Gary, third lord Falkland, with whom he travelled in France for two years, staying chiefly at Orleans, Blois, and Saumur. During the tour he made many observations, which he committed to writing, 'in a neat and curious hand, with a particular tract of his travels in an elegant Latin style' (Guidott). He afterwards went to Holland and the Low Countries, where an uncle seems to have resided. On 5 March 1651 it was certified to the committee for reformation of the universities that he was ' absent upon leave' (Burrows, p. 329), but while still abroad he appears to have been ejected from his offices at Oxford. On his return he settled as a physician at Bath, practising there in the summer and at Bristol in the winter 'with great respect and veneration from all people in those parts.' He was acquainted with the chief physicians of his time, and helped Guidott in his early days [see Guidott, Thomas]. At the Restoration he resumed the principalship of Gloucester Hall, but retired in 1662. He died at Bath on 4 Aug. 1670, aged 55; his wife died in the following February. In the north aisle of Bath Abbey, where they were buried, an elaborate monument, with a black marble tablet with a Latin inscription to Maplet's memory, was erected by Guidott. Under it is another small tablet with an inscription to his wife, aged 35, and his children, a son John, aged three years, and a daughter Mary, aged three months. Of Maplet Guidott says: 'He was of a tender, brittle constitution, inclining to feminine, clear skinn'd and of a very fresh complexion.' Wood says 'he was learned, candid, and ingenious, a good physician, a better Christian, and an excellent Latin poet.'

Besides 'Familiar Epistles,' Maplet left in manuscript 'Mercurial Epistles,' 'Consultation with Dr. Edmund Meara [q. v.], Dr. Samuel Bave, and others,' 'Cosmetics,' the 'Treatise of his Travels into the Low Countries and France,' and 'Poems and Epitaphs on Several Occasions and Persons ' (in the Oxford collection), all in Latin. In 1694 Guidott published in quarto Maplet's 'Epistolarum Medicarum Specimen de Thermarum Bathoniensium Eftectis,' which was dedicated to the leading contemporary physicians. Guidott also preserves some Latin verses by him on catarrh in the eyes, some lines headed 'De Catarrhi Fuga' and 'In Primum Canitiem,' with a rhymed translation of the latter. He considers his patron's style terse and his words choice, but his periods a little too elaborate.

[Guidott's Lives and Characters of the Physicians of Bathe, pp. 151-63; Wood's Athenæ Oxon. ed. Bliss, iii. 71, iv. 733, vii. 900-1, Fasti, pt. i. pp. 473, 506, ii. 56, 104; Welch's Alumni Westmonast. pp. 102-3; Foster's Alumni Oxon. 1500-1714; Chalmers's Biog. Dict. xxi. 269-70, which is also copied by Rose.]


MAPLETOFT, JOHN (1631–1721), physician and divine, was descended from an old Huntingdonshire family. His father was Joshua Mapletoft, vicar of Margaretting and rector of Wickford, Essex, and his mother Susanna, daughter of John Collet by Susanna, sister of Nicholas Ferrar [q. v.] of Little Gidding. She afterwards married James Chedley, and, dying on 31 Oct. 1657, was buried at Little Gidding. John was born at Margaretting on 15 June 1631. On the death of his father in 1635 he was taken to Little Gidding, where he was brought up by Nicholas Ferrar, his godfather. In 1647 he was sent by his uncle, Robert Mapletoft [q. v.], to Westminster School, was entered as a pensioner at Trinity College, Cam--