Edward Collis Berdoe (7 March 1836 – 2 March 1916) was an English physician, anti-vivisectionist and writer. He studied and wrote on the works of Robert Browning. He also campaigned against medical experiments on human patients and animals.
Medical career
Born in St Pancras, London on 7 March 1836, Berdoe was educated at Regent's Park College,[1] presumably as a lay student rather than a candidate for the Baptist ministry. While working in an apothecary's shop in Reading, he took up photography. There is an Edward Berdoe recorded as serving in a medical capacity during the Crimean War and later in the American Civil War, which ended in 1865,[2] but this is likely to be a namesake, as the physician Edward Berdoe was developing his career in pharmacy and raising a family in England in those times.[3]
In the 1880s, Berdoe became a prominent student of the works of Robert Browning, sitting on the committee of the London Browning Society from its foundation in 1881 to its dissolution in 1894.[5] Over the years he published a series of works to help readers understand the poet's ideas, such as The Browning Cyclopaedia, which was to be reprinted in England and the United States in the 20th century.[6]
Patient and animal welfare
Two aspects of medical practice in Berdoe's time drew him into campaigning for change in the treatment of patients and animals. One was the use for experiments in teaching hospitals of poor patients unable to afford private treatment. This he viewed as callous and cruel, and wrote a novel against it under the pseudonym Aesculapius Scalpel.[7][8][9] A follow-up exposed the abuses dramatically.[10][1]
An allied subject on which he wrote extensively was animal welfare, notably vivisection. He served as editor of a magazine, The Zoophilist, published by what became the National Anti-Vivisection Society. Among other works, he collaborated in 1893 with the Society's founder, Frances Power Cobbe,[1] on an exposé entitled Nine Circles, or The Torture of the Innocent.[11]
In 1858 Berdoe was married in Hastings to Mary Inskipp.[13] They had two sons and four daughters. A lifelong teetotaller and vegetarian, his immersion in Browning's writings led him to seek greater knowledge of the Roman Catholic Church, which he joined in 1890.[13]
^Berdoe, Edward (1964), The Browning Cyclopaedia. A guide to the study of the works of Robert Browning. With copious explanatory notes and references on all difficult passages (2 ed.), London: G. Allen
^Berdoe, Edward (1887), St. Bernard's: the romance of a medical student, London: Swann Sonnenschein, Lowery & Co.
^[1]. Catalogue 187 of Jarndyce Antiquarian Booksellers, London. Accessed June 10, 2010.