The pencil of Kay has done justice to the memory of
this eminent surgeon and very excellent man, by the production of two
striking portraits of him. The first possesses the real octogenarian
demeanour of the "kind old Sandy Wood," who is represented as passing
along the North Bridge with an umbrella under his arm, in allusion to
the circumstance of his having been the first person in Edinburgh who
made use of that very convenient article—now so common.
Mr. Wood's father was the youngest sou of Mr. Wood of Warriston, in
Midlothian—now the property of the Earl of Morton. He long possessed a
house and grounds, situated immediately to the north of Queen Street,
and rented from the Town of Edinburgh, where Mr. Wood was born in the
year 1725.
Mr. Wood completed his medical education in
Edinburgh; and having taken out his diploma, he established himself at
Musselburgh, where he practised successfully for some time. He then
removed to Edinburgh, became a fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons,
and entered into a copartnership with Messrs. Rattray and Congalton, men
of eminence in their day, and to whose practice he subsequently
succeeded.
Being gifted with strong natural talents,
great tact, and an activity of mind and person rarely surpassed ; and
possessing a perfect simplicity and openness of character, with a
singularly benevolent disposition and peculiar tenderness of heart, Mr.
Wood soon rose to high professional celebrity.
Not
long after connecting himself with Messrs. Rattray and Congalton, he
married Miss Veronica Chalmers, second daughter of George Chalmers,
Esq., W.S., an individual of great worth and respectability. In
reference to this connection a very pleasing anecdote is told. Mr. Wood,
on obtaining the consent of the lady, having proposed himself to Mr.
Chalmers as his son-in-law, that gentleman addressed him thus:—"Sandy, I
have not the smallest objection to you; but I myself am not rich, and
should, therefore, like to know how you are to support a wife and
family?" Mr. Wood put his hand into his pocket, drew out his
lancet-case, and said, "I have nothing but this, sir, and a de-tu-mination
to use my best endeavours to succeed in my profession." His future
father-in-law was so struck with this straightforward and honest reply,
that he immediately exclaimed, "Vera is yours! "
Notwithstanding a certain bluntness and decision of manner, which was
liable to be occasionally misunderstood, and which gave rise to some,
curious scenes and incidents in the course of his professional practice,
Mr. Wood's philanthropy and kindness were proverbial; and his
unremitting attention to the distresses of the indigent sick, whom he
continued to visit in their wretched dwellings, after he had given up
general practice, was a noble trait in his character. What has been said
of the illustrious Boerhaave may be equally applied to him— "that he
considered the poor as his best patients, and that he never neglected
them." To his other qualities he added an enthusiastic warmth and
steadiness in his friendships, with a total freedom from
selfishness—and, in his social relations, that kind and playful manner,
which softened asperities, and rendered available all the best
sympathies and affections of which human is susceptible; and being of a
most convivial disposition, his company was courted by all ranks. In
fact, few men have ever been so universally beloved as Mr. Wood, and
proportionally numerous are the testimonies to his worth.
During the long course of his useful career, he enjoyed the unanimous
good will and approbation of his brethren, who, without anv jealous
feelings, allowed him the palm of superiority he deservedly merited—a
tribute due not only to the soundness of his practical knowledge, and
the dexterity of his skill in operating (which tended much to raise the
reputation of the surgical department of the Eoyal Infirmary), but to
his personal character.
In a fragment of a fifth Canto
of " Childe Harold," which appeared in Blackwood's Magazine for May,
1818, he is thus alluded to:—
"Oh! for an hour of him
who knew no feud— The octogenarian chief, the kind old Sandy Wood;"
and, in a note on this stanza, he is spoken of as Sandy Wood—one of the
delightful reminiscences of Old Edinburgh—who was at least eighty years
of age, when in high repute as a medical man he could yet divert himself
in his walks with the "Hie Schuil laddies," or bestow the relics of his
universal benevolence in feeding a goat or a raven.
He
is also alluded to in a spirit of tenderness and affection by Sir Walter
Scott, in a prophecy put into the mouth of Meg Merrilees: "A gathering
together of the powerful shall be made amidst the caves of the
inhabitants of Dunedin. Sandy is at his rest. They shall beset his goat;
they shall profane his raven; they shall blacken the buildings of the
Infirmary; her secrets shall be examined; a new goat shall bleat, until
they have measured out and run over fifty-four feet nine inches and a
half." And the late celebrated John Bell, who had been a pupil of Mr.
Wrood, dedicates to him his first volume of "Anatomy," in a concise but
elegant tribute to his skill, his disinterested conduct, and public and
private virtues.
Mr. Wood's character is farther
commemorated by the late Sir Alexander Boswell of Auchinleck, in these
lines—part of an epitaph composed by him on Mr. Wood:—
"But cold the heart that feels no genial glow, Pondering on him whose
ashes sleep below: Whose vivid mind, with grasping power, could reach
Truths that the plodding schools can never teach. Who scorned, in
honesty, the specious wiles Of dull importance, or of fawning smiles:
Who scouted feelings frittered and refined, But had an ample heart for
all mankind."
The following anecdote is a proof of Mr.
Wood's popularity with the lower classes. During a riot in Edinburgh,
some of the mob, mistaking him at night (owing to a great resemblance in
figure) for Sir James Stirling, then the Lord Provost of the City, and
at that ALEXANDER WOOD. 117 time far from being a favourite,
seized Mr. Wood on the North Bridge, and were going to throw him over
the parapet, when he cried out, "I'm lang Sandy Wood—tak' me to a lamp
and ye'll see." Instead of executing their vengeance, he was cordially
cheered and protected from farther outrage.
Sir James
and Mr. Wood, although thus in such different esteem with the lower
class of the inhabitants of Edinburgh, were intimate friends. It is told
of them, that on one occasion the Provost—with his cocked hat, and long
spare figure—meeting the Doctor in the High Street, he jocularly put a
guinea into his hand, and giving a piteous account of his sufferings
from indigestion, and the state of his stomach, asked his advice. The
Doctor—with a figure almost equally spare, and the same
head-dress—retreated from the Provost, who continued to follow him,
reproaching him for pocketing the money without giving him any opinion
on his case. At last, after this scene had lasted some considerable
space, Mr. Wood replied to Sir James's remonstrances:—"You're quite
wrong, Sir James; I have been giving you the best possible advice all
this while. If you'll take hold of my coat-tail, and only follow me for
a week as you've been doing for the last ten minutes, you'll have no
mors trouble with your stomach."
Although very
confident in his own practice, and very decided, Mr. Wood never failed
to call in the aid of his professional brethren when there appeared to
be real danger. The celebrated Dr. Cullen and he were frequently in
attendance together, and on the most friendly and intimate footing. Upon
one occasion they were in the sick room of a young nobleman of high
promise, who was afflicted with a severe fever—the Doctor on one side of
the bed, in his usual formal and important manner, counting the
patient's pulse, with his large stopwatch in his hand—Mr. Wood on the
other, and the parents anxiously waiting the result. The Doctor abruptly
broke the silence—"We are at the crisis; in order to save him, these
pills must be taken instantly," producing some from his waistcoat
pocket. Mr. Wood, who had a real affection for the young Lord, shook his
head significantly, and said with a smile, "O Doctor, Doctor, nature has
already done her work, and he is saved. As to your pills—you may just as
well gie him some pease meal." The young Lord, now a most distinguished
and venerable Earl, tells this anecdote of his old friend, and always
adds, that he remembers the whole scene as well as if it had happened
yesterday.
A second Print represents Mr. Wood in the
full possession of all that activity and fire for which he was
distinguished in the hey-day of middle age. The cane is thrown smartly
over his shoulder, while the whole bearing of the portrait is admirably
illustrative of the bold and original character of the man.
In addition to the foregoing reminiscences, there are a few other
characteristic anecdotes of Mr. Wood, which may with propriety be given
here. The following humorous one has been related to us by a citizen of
Edinburgh, then in his eighty-third year. This gentleman was at the time
an apprentice to Deacon Thomson, a glover and breeches-maker by
profession. The Deacon was a guzzling hypochondriacal sort of a genius,
and, like many others of similar habits, was subject to much imaginary
misery. One night he took it into his head that he was djdng. Impressed
with this belief, he despatched a messenger for Mr. Wood; but, being
very impatient, and terrified that the "grim king" should seize him
before the Doctor could come to his rescue, and suspecting that the
messenger might dally with his mission, the dying breeches-maker started
from the couch of anticipated dissolution, and went himself to the house
of Mr. Wood. He knocked violently at the door, and, in a state of great
perturbation, told the servant to hurry his master to his house, "For,"
continued he, "Deacon Thomson is just dying!" Having thus delivered his
doleful mission, away hobbled the epicurean hypochondriac, anxious, from
certain unpleasant suggestions which instinctively occurred to him, to
get again into bed before* the Doctor should arrive. In this wise
resolution he was however baulked : Mr. Wood, although half undressed
when he received the summons, lost no time in hastening off, and pushed
past the Deacon just as he was threading his way up his own turnpike.
"Oh, Doctor, it is me" said the hypochondriac. "You!" exclaimed the
justly-indignant Sandy Wood, at the same time applying the cane to the
back of his patient with the utmost good-will. He then left him to
ascend the remainder of the stair with the accelerated motion which the
application of this wholesome regimen inspired, and so effectual proved
the cure, that our informant has frequently heard the Deacon mention the
circumstance in presence of the Doctor.
Another
ridiculous story is told of Mr. Wood. The Honourable Mrs.---------had
taken a fancy to sit upon hens' eggs, in order that she might hatch
chickens. Her relations becoming alarmed for her health, went to consult
the Doctor on the subject, who, promising a perfect cure, desired them
to make his compliments to their friend (with whom he was well
acquainted), and tell her that he meant to have the pleasure of drinking
tea with her that evening. The lady, resolving to do honour to her
guest, ordered her servant to place her best set of china on the table,
and to wheel it up opposite her nest. Mr. Wood made his appearance at
the appointed hour, and having, with all due gravity, partaken of a dish
of tea, he suddenly laid hold of a portion of the favourite
tea-equipage, rushed towards the window, which he opened, and seemed
about to throw the whole into the street.
Mrs.---------, alarmed at the insane-like proceeding of her guest, flew
to save the valuable china, when Mr. Wood, seizing the opportunity,
herried the nest, and broke all the eggs. By this stratagem the whim of
his patient was effectually put to flight.
Mr. Wood
was an enthusiastic admirer of the great Mrs. Siddons. At her first
visit to Edinburgh, many were the fainting and hysterical fits among the
fairer portion of the audience. Indeed, the}' were so common that to be
supposed to have escaped might almost have argued a want of proper
feeling. One night, when the house had been thrown into confusion by
repeated scenes of this kind, and when Mr. Wood was most reluctantly
getting from the pit (the favourite resort of all the theatrical critics
of that day) to attend some fashionable female, a friend said to him in
passing, "This is glorious acting, Sandy," alluding to Mrs. Siddons; to
which Mr. Wood answered, "Yes, and a d------d deal o't too," looking
round at the fainting and screaming ladies in the boxes.
"When routs were first introduced in Edinburgh, they were very formal
affairs, being in no way congenial to the manners or temper of the
people. At one of the first that had been given, by a person of
distinction, the guests were painfully wearing away the time, stiffly
ranged in rows along the sides of the room, and looking at each other,
the very pictures of dulness and ennui, when Mr. Wood was announced,
who, casting his eyes round him, proceeded up the empty space in the
middle of the drawing-room, and then addi'essed the lady of the house,
saying, "Well, my lady, will ye just tell me what we are all brought
here to do?"—an inquiry which everyone felt to be so perfectly
appropriate that it was followed by a hearty laugh, which had the effect
of breaking up the formality of the party, and producing general
hilarity and cheerfulness for the rest of the evening.
If Mr. Wood's kindness of disposition widely diffused itself towards his
fellow-creatures, young and old, he was almost equally remarkable for
his love of animals. His pets were numerous, and of all kinds. Not to
mention dogs and cats, there were two others that individually were
better known to the citizens of Edinburgh—a sheep and a raven, the
latter of which is alluded to by Sir Walter Scott, in the quotation
which has been given from Guy Mannering. Willy, the sheep, pastured in
the ground adjoining to the Excise Office, now the Royal Bank, and might
be daily seen standing at the railings, watching Mr. Wood's passing to
or from his house in York Place, when Willy used to poke his head into
his coat-pocket, which was always filled with supplies for his
favourite, and would then trot along after him through the town, and
sometimes might be found in the houses of the Doctor's patients. The
raven was domesticated at an ale and porter-shop in North Castle Street,
which is still, or very lately was, marked by a tree growing from the
area against the wall. It also kept upon the watch for Mr. Wood, and
would recognize him even as he passed at some distance along George
Street, and taking a low flight towards him, was frequently his
companion during some part of his forenoon walks—for Mr. Wood never
entered his carriage when he could possibly avoid it, declaring that
unless a vehicle could be found that would carry him down the closes and
up the turnpike stairs, they produced nothing but trouble and
inconvenience.
It may be superfluous to state that the
subject of these brief sketches was rarely spoken of as Mr. Wood, but as
Sandy Wood. This general use of the Christian name, instead of the
ordinary title, proceeded from a feeling the very opposite of
disrespect. It was the result of that affection for his person with
which his universal and inexhaustible benevolence and amiable character
inspired all who knew him.
Mr. Wood continued to
maintain that professional eminence which had been so early conceded to
him, and was considered the unrivalled head of the surgical practice in
his native city, till within a few years of his death, when increasing
infirmities obliged him to retire. He died on the 12th of May, 1807, at
the advanced age of eighty-two. |