<p>The son of a London merchant Thomas Browne settled in Norwich in 1637 practising medicine and interesting himself in a wide variety of subjects upon which his pen was rarely silent. Browne&rsquo;s style is complex and multilayered deeply humane and shot through with Classical and Biblical references.&nbsp; It also abounds in neologisms and he is credited with inventing more than 700 words many &ndash; such a &lsquo;electricity&rsquo; and &lsquo;computer&rsquo; &ndash; still in common usage today.&nbsp; Thomas Browne remains one of Britain&rsquo;s most original writers with a host of admirers including such literary &lsquo;Greats&rsquo; as Dr. Johnson Coleridge and W. G. Sebald. &nbsp;<br />&#39;Hydriotaphia&#39; (Urn Burial) is ostensibly an essay on ancient burial customs but swiftly morphs into a study at once witty and profound on Death and humanity&rsquo;s vain longing for an &lsquo;immortal name&rsquo;: &ldquo;The iniquity of oblivion blindly scattereth her poppy and deals with the memory of men without distinction&hellip;&rdquo;<br />The second volume &#39;The Garden of Cyrus&#39; follows the pattern of the first posing as an exposition on the importance of the &lsquo;Quincunciall&rsquo; or &lsquo;Net-pattern&rsquo; in both Nature and human culture but gradual revealing itself as both a fascinating record of 17th century natural history and an insightful meditation on Life and Mysticism.</p><p>Browne&rsquo;s celebrated &#39;A Letter to a Friend&#39; takes the form of a traditional 17th century mourning letter but the melancholy subject is transformed by the author&rsquo;s wit humour and polished Baroque eloquence into an entrancing work of art.&nbsp; The essay came to light only after his death on October 19th 1682 which &ndash; strangely for a man obsessed with numerology &ndash; occurred exactly 77 years after his birth on&nbsp; October 19th 1605.</p>
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