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John
Armstrong
Armstrong,
John, M.D. (1709–1779). Poet, son of the minister of Castleton,
Roxburghshire, studied medicine, which he practised in London.
He is remembered as the friend of Thomson, Mallet, and other
literary celebrities of the time, and as the author of a poem
on The Art of Preserving Health, which appeared in 1744, and
in which a somewhat unpromising subject for poetic treatment
is gracefully and ingeniously handled. His other works, consisting
of some poems and prose essays, and a drama, The Forced Marriage,
are forgotten, with the exception of the four stanzas at the
end of the first part of Thomson’s Castle of Indolence,
describing the diseases incident to sloth, which he contributed.
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