Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia, and the Letter to a Friend
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About This Book
The opening part offers a candid, introspective apology for private religious conviction that intertwines medical observation, natural philosophy, and Christian devotion. A later essay, prompted by the unearthing of ancient urns, becomes an erudite meditation on burial practices, mortality, the transience of fame, and human attempts at memorialization. A companion letter develops similar consolatory and speculative themes in a more personal register. Throughout, learned, allusive prose moves between empirical detail, classical and biblical scholarship, and metaphysical reflection, balancing curiosity about the natural world with steady concern for spiritual meaning.