{"id":13461,"date":"2022-04-20T12:14:14","date_gmt":"2022-04-20T10:14:14","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/?p=206574"},"modified":"2022-04-20T12:44:11","modified_gmt":"2022-04-20T10:44:11","slug":"the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind","status":"publish","type":"rss_feed","link":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/rss_feed\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind\/","title":{"rendered":"The Anatomy of Melancholy: how Robert Burton helped shape our understanding of the mind"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"rssexcerpt\"><\/p><p class=\"rssauthor\">By Freya Parr\n                \t\t<\/p><p class=\"rssbyline\">Published: Wednesday, 20 April 2022 at 12:00 am<\/p><hr class=\"no-tts wp-block-separator\"\/><?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\" standalone=\"yes\"?>\n<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><body><div class=\"&quot;page&quot;\" title=\"&quot;Page\">\n<div class=\"&quot;section&quot;\">\n<div class=\"&quot;layoutArea&quot;\">\n<div class=\"&quot;column&quot;\">\n<p>Many strange stories of melancholy caught the eye of Robert Burton, <span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">an Oxford scholar who dedicated most of his life to writing <i>The Anatomy of Melancholy<\/i> (1621). First printed 400 years ago, it is a vast compendium of melancholy that is also a literary masterpiece.<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<div class=\"&quot;column&quot;\">\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Burton defined melancholy as a type of \u201cdotage\u201d or mental instability typically accompanied by sorrow and fear. Nowadays we associate the term with a state of dejection, pensiveness, or even depression, but for more than 2,000 years, melancholy has encompassed much more.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p>One such story that was included in Burton\u2019s book was that of the non-urinating Italian man \u2013 a case study that might surprise modern readers.<span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">\u00a0The 16th-century writer Andr\u00e9 du Laurens, physician to King Henri IV of France, records what happened: the patient told his doctors that he would rather die than go to the toilet because, if he relieved himself, he would drown his home city of Siena.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">At first the patient\u2019s physicians tried to reason with him. They pointed out that the cubic capacity of his bladder was hardly equal to the task of submerging a whole city. Even 10,000 people, they said, would not be able to flood a single house. But the gentleman would not be convinced.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Seeing that his life was now in danger, the doctors hit on a novel treatment \u2013 if an extreme one. Rather than trying to persuade him through logic, instead they entered into his delusory state. They started a fire in the house next door and triggered Siena\u2019s fire alarm system \u2013 the ringing of church bells. The servants became bit-part actors in the drama, shouting out: \u201cTo the fire, to the fire!\u201d Then the civic worthies came to visit the patient. They pleaded with him for help: there was only one way to save the town, and that was if he urinated and put out the fire.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">So this melancholic man realised the danger and stepped up to the challenge of being Siena\u2019s first human fire hose. As he relieved his bladder, he was instantly cured. The doctors\u2019 unusual treatment succeeded, its elaborate and even theatrical method enabling their patient to live out his false belief and \u2013 quite literally \u2013 flush it out of his system.<\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"&quot;image-handler__container\" image-handler__container--full=\"\" style=\"&quot;padding-bottom:\" calc=\"\"> <picture><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=300%2C189,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=300%2C189,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=355%2C224,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=355%2C224,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=405%2C255,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=405%2C255,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=554%2C349,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(max-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=554%2C349,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(min-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=620%2C390,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(min-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=620%2C390,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(min-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=408%2C257,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(min-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=408%2C257,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(min-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=556%2C350,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/webp&quot;\"><source media=\"&quot;(min-width:\" data-srcset=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=556%2C350,\" https:=\"\" type=\"&quot;image\/jpeg&quot;\"><img class=\"&quot;wp-image-206576\" align=\"\" size-landscape_thumbnail=\"\" image-handler__image=\"\" image-handler__image--full=\"\" no-wrap=\"\" js-lazyload=\"\" data-src=\"&quot;https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2022\/04\/G36K4Yweb_ready-1b479ee.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=620%2C390&quot;\" width=\"&quot;620&quot;\" height=\"&quot;413&quot;\" alt=\"&quot;&quot;\" title=\"&quot;&quot;\"\/><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/picture><\/div><div class=\"&quot;caption-hold&quot;\"><figcaption class=\"&quot;wp-caption-text&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;caption-copy&quot;\"><i class=\"&quot;icon-arrow\" icon-camera-circle=\"\"\/> A 1628 frontispiece of The Anatomy of Melancholy by English clergyman and author Robert Burton. The author regarded his writings as a form of self-therapy. (Photo by Getty Images)<\/span><\/figcaption><span class=\"&quot;im-image-caption&quot;\"\/><\/div>\n<h2><strong>What was Robert Burton\u2019s definition of melancholy?<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><strong><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">During the 16th and 17th centuries \u2013 the cultural high-water mark of melancholy \u2013 the condition was seen as slippery, infinitely varied in its manifestations, and nearly impossible to categorise. <\/span><\/strong><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Burton says of sufferers that there are \u201cscarce two of two thousand that concur in the same symptoms. The tower of Babel never yielded such confusion of tongues, as the chaos of melancholy doth variety of symptoms.\u201d While one patient feared urinating, another was convinced he was made of glass; one thought he had a giant head; another that he was a cockerel. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Some melancholics succumbed to despair and met a violent end; others simply wasted away with shame or embarrassment. Burton doggedly attempted to document all the cases he read, comparing himself to a \u201cranging spaniel\u201d who picked up a scent and pursued it to its end. <\/span><\/p>\n<h3 class=\"&quot;p5&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\"><b>Scratching the itch<\/b><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"&quot;p2&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Why did Burton devote himself to chronicling this condition? He observed that he suffered from melancholy himself and was driven to write about it as a form of self-therapy, or even as a symptom: \u201cOne must scratch where it itcheth,\u201d he said. That claim is borne out by the history of his book. After the <i>Anatomy<\/i> was first published in 1621, five more editions appeared, each enlarged with new stories of melancholy he had found through his omnivorous reading from the shelves of Renaissance learning: <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/topic\/medicine-and-health\/&quot;\">medicine<\/a>, history, philosophy, <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/topic\/religion\/&quot;\">theology<\/a> and <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/topic\/literature\/&quot;\">literature<\/a>. In 1651, 11 years after Burton\u2019s death, his publishers printed the sixth edition of the <i>Anatomy<\/i>, now grown to more than half a million words.<\/span><\/p>\n<h2><strong>Why were people fascinated by melancholy?<\/strong><\/h2>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">The <i>Anatomy<\/i> clearly captured the imagination of English <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/renaissance\/&quot;\">Renaissance<\/a> readers. But what was it that made its subject so appealing? A major reason is that melancholy was seen as a fashionable ailment. From <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/ancient-greece\/ancient-greeks-facts-homer-troy-achilles-aristotle-thucydides\/&quot;\">ancient Greece<\/a> onwards, the condition was associated not only with sadness and fear, but also with intellectual and creative genius. The pseudo-Aristotelian <i>Problems<\/i> asked the question: \u201cWhy is it that all those men who have become extraordinary in philosophy, politics, poetry or the arts are obviously melancholic\u2026?\u201d <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">In the late 15th century, the Italian Neoplatonist scholar Marsilio Ficino argued that melancholy was the companion of scholarly introspection. Drawing on astrological theory, he claimed that Saturn cast its influence over deep thinkers, bringing contemplative wisdom but also a kind of holy madness. This brand of melancholy gave a dark glamour to the condition: it was a source of inspiration to artists and writers, while young gentlemen of the Tudor period fashioned themselves \u2013 like Hamlet \u2013 as lone, pensive figures, wearing black. Put simply, it looked good to be melancholy.<\/span><\/p>\n<ul><li><strong>Read more | <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/stuart\/robert-burton-scholar-anatomy-melancholy-depression-mental-illness\/&quot;\">Can the work of a 17th-century scholar help us understand mental illness?<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul><h3 class=\"&quot;p2&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s3&quot;\"><b>Bewitching thoughts<\/b><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"&quot;p2&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Yet being melancholy was far from a safe occupation, as Burton knew all too well. He describes it as like a Siren, that mythical creature who lured sailors to their watery deaths through her sweet singing. Melancholy can start out pleasantly enough: a person might want to spend time in solitary contemplation, wandering alone in woods or down by the river. \u201cA most incomparable delight it is so to melancholise, and build castles in the air,\u201d he comments. Though seemingly innocent, this behaviour starts to intrude on everything, until the person experiencing it can no longer control it: \u201cThese fantastical and bewitching thoughts so covertly, so feelingly, so urgently, so continually set upon, creep in, insinuate, possess, overcome, distract, and detain them, they cannot, I say, go about their more necessary business, stave off or extricate themselves, but are ever musing, melancholising, and carried along.\u201d Burton\u2019s language hints at the experience he is describing: each word spills into the next one, just as \u201cbewitching thoughts\u201d crowd into the sufferer\u2019s mind.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Pleasurable or \u201csweet\u201d melancholy isonly one side of the coin. On the other is anguish, desperation, inescapable sorrow and terror. Burton charts the many variations of this dangerous illness in his book, through the stories of those who suffered from it as well as the prescriptions given by <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/renaissance\/&quot;\">Renaissance<\/a> physicians. <strong><i>The Anatomy of Melancholy<\/i><\/strong> takes its subject seriously: Burton ambitiously attempts to delineate the wide contours of mental suffering, as they had been understood from antiquity up to the 17th century.<\/span><\/p>\n<h2>The etymology of melancholy and the theory of \u2018black bile\u2019<\/h2>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Melancholy is a mental disorder that, writes Burton, is rooted in the body. The term literally means \u201cblack bile\u201d, one of the four humours of the human body, according to <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/ancient-greece\/&quot;\">ancient Greek<\/a> physiology. In humoral theory, blood is hot and wet, yellow bile (or choler) is hot and dry, phlegm is cold and wet, and black bile (or melancholy) is cold and dry. These four humours are essential for living, and a healthy person maintains them in a perfect balance. But most people have a predominance of one humour, which influences not only their physical health but also their personality. As people get older, they lose some of their natural heat and moisture. This means that, while young people might be prone to the anger and passionate moods triggered by choler, older people are less hot-tempered but also tend to be more melancholic: sad, solitary and timorous.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">It is not simply an excess of black bile that causes melancholy: all of the humours, on their own or in combination, can cause the condition. As Galenic medical theory<br\/>\n(so named after the ancient Greek physician Aelius Galenus) explains it, this is because the humours can become corrupted or burnt through sickness or bad living, producing vapours that travel to the brain and affect the imagination. This can then produce different varieties of melancholy, corresponding to the original humour. For example, while a sanguine person \u2013 someone whose humoral complexion is dominated by blood \u2013 is characteristically cheerful, a sanguine melancholic is unable to restrain his hilarity. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Such was the case of a man called Brunsellius, who, Burton tells us, was sitting at church one day when a woman fell asleep during a sermon and fell off a bench. While most of the people who saw it laughed, the sanguine melancholic Brunsellius was so overcome that \u201cfor three whole days after he did nothing but laugh, by which means he was much weakened\u201d.<\/span><\/p>\n<h3 class=\"&quot;p5&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\"><b>Too much \u201cchamber-work\u201d<\/b><\/span><\/h3>\n<p class=\"&quot;p2&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Behaviour and habits could alter the \u201ccomplexion\u201d or balance of humours in the body, especially anything that used up the body\u2019s heat and moisture \u2013 such as through sweating or riotous living. In extreme cases, this could lead not just to melancholy but to outright madness. For instance, Burton charts the case of a man in Italy who \u201cmarried a young wife in a hot summer, and so dried himself with chamber-work, that he became in short space from melancholy, mad\u201d. The older man\u2019s lust affected not only his body, but also his state of mind.<\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Just as too much sex could cause melancholy, so could other kinds of excess. Burton tells the cautionary tale of a group of young men in Agrigento in Sicily who spent a long session drinking in a tavern, until they became convinced they were in a ship during a storm. To prevent shipwreck, they started to throw the furniture out of the tavern\u2019s windows into \u201cthe sea\u201d. Hauled before the magistrate, they knelt before him as a sea god, beseeching him to be merciful to them in return for which they would build him an altar when they reached land.<\/span><\/p>\n<ul><li><strong>Read more | <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/victorian\/bethlem-royal-hospital-history-why-called-bedlam-lunatic-asylum\/&quot;\">Why did the infamous Bedlam asylum have such a fearsome reputation?<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul><section class=\"&quot;highlight\"><div class=\"&quot;highlight__content\" editor-content=\"\"> <h4><strong>What was believed to cause melancholy?<\/strong><\/h4>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">It was not simply the quantity of what you drank or ate that might put you at risk of melancholy. Burton gathers a long list of <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/topic\/food-and-drink\/&quot;\">food and drink<\/a> that provoke excessive black bile. Dark meats such as venison, beef and goat are notorious for causing melancholy, he notes, as is hare: \u201ca black meat, melancholy, and hard of digestion\u201d, which breeds nightmares. The fact that hares are typically solitary animals is significant, too, since melancholics tend to prefer their own company to that of others. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Other, less obvious things would also be off the menu if you wanted to avoid melancholy, among them cheese, melons, fish, root vegetables, pigeons, salad, cider and sherry. By the time Burton\u2019s catalogue is finished, it seems that there is little left that is safe to eat. However, Burton does give an exception that he calls \u201cCardan\u2019s rule\u201d, after the 16th-century Italian polymath Girolamo Cardano: \u201cTo follow our disposition and appetite in some things is not amiss; to eat sometimes of a dish that is hurtful, if we have an extraordinary liking to it.\u201d In other words, a little bit of what you fancy does you good.<\/span><\/p>\n<p> <\/p><\/div> <\/section><ul><li><strong>Read more | <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/general-history\/gender-pain-gap-history-womens-health\/&quot;\">The gender pain gap: perceptions of women\u2019s health through history<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul><p class=\"&quot;p2&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">Among the reasons why <strong><i>The Anatomy of Melancholy<\/i><\/strong> has proven popular is that Burton\u2019s advice for dealing with this pervasive condition is often wise and humane. He may be distilling hundreds of years\u2019 worth of learned medical theory, but he also tells his readers simple things like \u201chope the best\u201d and \u2013 his very last piece of advice in the book \u2013 \u201cbe not solitary, be not idle\u201d. While the <i>Anatomy<\/i> is a huge and unwieldy self-help book, it is also practical. Burton wants his readers to get better, not to be gripped by the sufferings of a condition that he himself knows well.<\/span><\/p>\n<h2><strong>The legacy of Burton\u2019s <em>Anatomy of Melancholy<\/em><\/strong><\/h2>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">In the 400 years since the <i>Anatomy<\/i>\u2019s first appearance, readers have been puzzled, entertained, frustrated and absorbed by Burton\u2019s book and the disease at its centre. It has provided inspiration for Romantic poets, source material for novelists from Laurence Sterne to George Eliot to Philip Pullman, and a rich diversion for many. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">The <i>Anatomy<\/i>\u2019s subject may have slipped from official diagnoses of mental health conditions, but melancholy still resonates in our own time. Perhaps what we can learn most from the way Burton and his <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/renaissance\/&quot;\">Renaissance<\/a> contemporaries treated this condition is its all-encompassing nature. Ranging through so many different symptoms \u2013 from sadness and terror to delusion, from despondency to wild exuberance \u2013 melancholy stands as a marker for the breadth of human fragility to which everyone was and is susceptible. <\/span><\/p>\n<p class=\"&quot;p3&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;s2&quot;\">For Burton and his Renaissance contemporaries, melancholy revealed how people\u2019s bodies, minds and spirits were intimately interlinked, so much so that grief could show itself in a skin rash, or a physical sickness in an unshakeable low mood. As Burton concludes \u2013 though far from hopelessly \u2013 melancholy touches us all, for it is no more or less than \u201cthe character of mortality\u201d.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<\/div>\n<p class=\"&quot;p1&quot;\"><strong><span class=\"&quot;s1&quot;\">Dr Mary Ann Lund is associate professor of Renaissance English literature at the University of Leicester. She is the author of <i>A User\u2019s Guide to Melancholy<\/i> (Cambridge, February 2021). BBC Radio Four\u2019s <em><a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.bbc.co.uk\/programmes\/m000j1jq&quot;\">The New Anatomy of Melancholy<\/a> <\/em>is available on BBC\u00a0<\/span><\/strong><b>iPlayer<\/b><\/p>\n<p><em><strong><span class=\"&quot;TextRun\" scxw62614119=\"\" bcx0=\"\" lang=\"&quot;EN-US&quot;\" xml:lang=\"&quot;EN-US&quot;\" data-contrast=\"&quot;auto&quot;\"><span class=\"&quot;NormalTextRun\" scxw62614119=\"\" bcx0=\"\">This article was first published in the December 2021 issue of <a href=\"&quot;https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/bbc-history-magazine\/&quot;\">BBC History Magazine<\/a><\/span><\/span><\/strong><\/em><\/p><\/body><\/html>\n<hr class=\"no-tts wp-block-separator\"\/>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>By Freya Parr Published: Wednesday, 20 April 2022 at 12:00 am Many strange stories of melancholy caught the eye of Robert Burton, an Oxford scholar who dedicated most of his life to writing The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621). First printed 400 years ago, it is a vast compendium of melancholy that is also a literary [&hellip;]<\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":24,"featured_media":13462,"template":"","categories":[1],"acf":{"readingTimeMinutes":"11"},"uagb_featured_image_src":{"full":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-scaled.jpg",2560,2084,false],"thumbnail":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-150x150.jpg",150,150,true],"medium":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-300x244.jpg",300,244,true],"medium_large":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-768x625.jpg",768,625,true],"large":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-1024x833.jpg",800,651,true],"1536x1536":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-1536x1250.jpg",1536,1250,true],"2048x2048":["https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/uploads\/sites\/46\/2022\/04\/the-anatomy-of-melancholy-how-robert-burton-helped-shape-our-understanding-of-the-mind-2048x1667.jpg",2048,1667,true]},"uagb_author_info":{"display_name":"importmanagerhub@sprylab.com","author_link":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/author\/importmanagerhubsprylab-com\/"},"uagb_comment_info":0,"uagb_excerpt":"By Freya Parr Published: Wednesday, 20 April 2022 at 12:00 am Many strange stories of melancholy caught the eye of Robert Burton, an Oxford scholar who dedicated most of his life to writing The Anatomy of Melancholy (1621). First printed 400 years ago, it is a vast compendium of melancholy that is also a literary&hellip;","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/rss_feed\/13461"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/rss_feed"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/rss_feed"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/24"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/13462"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=13461"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=13461"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}