Raining at the very limit of written language’, Wakley’s tone was perhaps less colourful.42 And yet within the context of medical journalism his grandiloquence was unprecedented, his opponents denouncing his `mock bombast and sentimental lachrymation’.43 Like its political equivalents, The Lancet also employed a rich and imaginative lexicon of insult.44 The metropolitan medical and surgical elites, for example, were referred to as `Bats’, for `bred in dark dreary recesses’ they were often to be found `crawling upon the walls of old hospitals, infirmaries, colleges and other chartered institutions’, while those who occupied posts at London teaching hospitals were denominated `Hole and Corner’ surgeons for the fact that they operated beyond public and professional scrutiny.45 Physicians who obtained their MDs by virtue of diplomas from the universities of Aberdeen or St Andrews rather than a regular course of study were ridiculed as `Dubs’, while the Society of Apothecaries was caricatured as the `Old Hags of Rhubarb Hall’.46 As in the political realm, insult and epithet performed a variety of functions. At one level they reinforced the moral indignation of radical opposition, promoting and sustaining a culture of collective outrage. At another they served to configure the object of that outrage. By substituting epithets for names, Wakley at once identified the principal beneficiaries of medical corruption while simultaneously depersonalizing them, rendering them `at one’ with the system they perpetuated. Similarly, as with Cobbett’s use of collective nouns such as `boroughmongers’, terms like `Bats’ gave that otherwise nebulous and diffuse system a concrete linguistic form. Wakley’s biographer, Sprigge, was alert to this when he claimed that his attacks on the corporations included `much that almost amounted to personal abuse of individuals’, when they could have dealt with such complaints `in a more abstract manner’: But his reflections upon hospital administration were directed against systems whenever LM22A-4 structure feasible, and although names were introduced, and although personal remarks formed the basis of much of his fault-finding, yet it was the administration rather than the administrators which he designed to attack.47 This interplay between the individual and the abstract takes us to the very heart of The Lancet’s stylistic radicalism. By attacking the system through the medium of individuals, Wakley opened himself up to accusations of libel. In his editorial pronouncements he repeatedly sought to differentiate between the personal and the political, maintaining that the `lash of censure’ Tulathromycin msds applied only to public acts, not private characters.48 In purely legal terms this distinction was bound to prove problematic. And yet, as we shall see, libel was not simply an unfortunate and inevitable consequence of radical discourse. Rather, it provided a critically important rhetorical resource by which Wakley could extend and42 ibid., 116. See also Hadley, Melodramatic Tactics, op. cit. and R. Hendrix, `Popular humour and the Black Dwarf’, Journal of British Studies, XVI , 1 (Autumn 1976), 108?8. 43 Medical Chirurgical Review and Journal of Medical Science, IV , 16 (March 1824), 976. 44Clarke, op. cit., 67.The Lancet, 17:422 (10 October 1829) and 3:56 (23 October 1824), 82 ?5. 46The Lancet, 10:240 (5 April 1828), 22 and 6:153 (5 August 1826), 593?6. 47 Sprigge, op. cit., 129. 48The Lancet, 10:248 (31 May 1828), 276 ?.Social HistoryVOL.39 :NO.deepen hi.Raining at the very limit of written language’, Wakley’s tone was perhaps less colourful.42 And yet within the context of medical journalism his grandiloquence was unprecedented, his opponents denouncing his `mock bombast and sentimental lachrymation’.43 Like its political equivalents, The Lancet also employed a rich and imaginative lexicon of insult.44 The metropolitan medical and surgical elites, for example, were referred to as `Bats’, for `bred in dark dreary recesses’ they were often to be found `crawling upon the walls of old hospitals, infirmaries, colleges and other chartered institutions’, while those who occupied posts at London teaching hospitals were denominated `Hole and Corner’ surgeons for the fact that they operated beyond public and professional scrutiny.45 Physicians who obtained their MDs by virtue of diplomas from the universities of Aberdeen or St Andrews rather than a regular course of study were ridiculed as `Dubs’, while the Society of Apothecaries was caricatured as the `Old Hags of Rhubarb Hall’.46 As in the political realm, insult and epithet performed a variety of functions. At one level they reinforced the moral indignation of radical opposition, promoting and sustaining a culture of collective outrage. At another they served to configure the object of that outrage. By substituting epithets for names, Wakley at once identified the principal beneficiaries of medical corruption while simultaneously depersonalizing them, rendering them `at one’ with the system they perpetuated. Similarly, as with Cobbett’s use of collective nouns such as `boroughmongers’, terms like `Bats’ gave that otherwise nebulous and diffuse system a concrete linguistic form. Wakley’s biographer, Sprigge, was alert to this when he claimed that his attacks on the corporations included `much that almost amounted to personal abuse of individuals’, when they could have dealt with such complaints `in a more abstract manner’: But his reflections upon hospital administration were directed against systems whenever feasible, and although names were introduced, and although personal remarks formed the basis of much of his fault-finding, yet it was the administration rather than the administrators which he designed to attack.47 This interplay between the individual and the abstract takes us to the very heart of The Lancet’s stylistic radicalism. By attacking the system through the medium of individuals, Wakley opened himself up to accusations of libel. In his editorial pronouncements he repeatedly sought to differentiate between the personal and the political, maintaining that the `lash of censure’ applied only to public acts, not private characters.48 In purely legal terms this distinction was bound to prove problematic. And yet, as we shall see, libel was not simply an unfortunate and inevitable consequence of radical discourse. Rather, it provided a critically important rhetorical resource by which Wakley could extend and42 ibid., 116. See also Hadley, Melodramatic Tactics, op. cit. and R. Hendrix, `Popular humour and the Black Dwarf’, Journal of British Studies, XVI , 1 (Autumn 1976), 108?8. 43 Medical Chirurgical Review and Journal of Medical Science, IV , 16 (March 1824), 976. 44Clarke, op. cit., 67.The Lancet, 17:422 (10 October 1829) and 3:56 (23 October 1824), 82 ?5. 46The Lancet, 10:240 (5 April 1828), 22 and 6:153 (5 August 1826), 593?6. 47 Sprigge, op. cit., 129. 48The Lancet, 10:248 (31 May 1828), 276 ?.Social HistoryVOL.39 :NO.deepen hi.