Sir John Hill (1714-1775) was one of Georgian England's most vilified
men despite having contributed prolifically to its medicine, science and
literature. Born into a humble Northamptonshire family, the son of an
impecunious God-faring Anglican minister, he started out as an
apothecary, went on to collect natural objects for the great Whig lords
and became a botanist of distinction. But his scandalous behavior
prevented his election to the Royal Society and entry to all other
professions for which he was qualified. Today, we can understand his
actions as the result of a personality disorder; then he was understood
entirely in moral terms. When he saw the dye cast he turned to
journalism and publication, and strove maniacally to succeed without
patronage. As a writer he was also cut down in ferocious 'paper wars'.
Yet by the time he died, he had been knighted by the Swedish monarch and
become a household name among scientists and writers throughout Britain
and Europe. His life was a series of paradoxes without coherence,
perhaps because he was above all a provocateur. In time he would also
become a filter for the century in which he lived: its
personalities-great and small-as well as the broad canvas of its
culture, and for this reason any biography necessarily stretches beyond
the man himself to those whose profiles he also illuminates.