John Keats and tuberculosis

John Keats was trained as an apothecary, the general practitioner of the day. Precocious in his sensibilities and fluent in his imagery, he also was the model of the romantic poet. That he was a physician and a poet makes his early death from tuberculosis poignant and revealing. This history traces...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Pediatric infectious disease journal 2001-05, Vol.20 (5), p.535-540
1. Verfasser: RADETSKY, MICHAEL
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description John Keats was trained as an apothecary, the general practitioner of the day. Precocious in his sensibilities and fluent in his imagery, he also was the model of the romantic poet. That he was a physician and a poet makes his early death from tuberculosis poignant and revealing. This history traces his life and death against the backdrop of medicine at the turn of the 19th century.
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subjects Bacterial diseases
Biological and medical sciences
England
Famous Persons
History, 19th Century
Human bacterial diseases
Humans
Infectious diseases
Keats
Male
Medical sciences
Poetry as Topic - history
Tuberculosis and atypical mycobacterial infections
Tuberculosis, Pulmonary - history
title John Keats and tuberculosis
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