, born at Paris in 1665, was the son of a surgeon, who, not being very
, born at Paris in 1665, was
the son of a surgeon, who, not being very prosperous in
his practice, had recourse for his support to music; and
first performed, professionally, at Lyons; and afterwards
went to Paris and played on the harp to Louis XIV. who
was much pleased with his performance. His son, Peter
John, was so sickly and feeble during infancy, that he
passed almost his whole youth in amusing himself on the
spinet, and in the study of music; but he had so strong a
passion for this instrument, that he had scarcely arrived
at his ninth year when he was heard at court, accompanied by his father on the harp. Two years after, the
king heard him again, when he performed a duet with
his father on the harp, and at eleven years of age he
assisted him in giving lessons to his scholars. His taste
for music, however, did not extinguish his passion for
other sciences. He taught himself Latin and Greek with
little assistance from others; and the study of these languages inclined him to medical inquiries. At eighteen
years old he attended, for the first time, the public schools,
went through a course of philosophy, and took lessons in
the schools of medicine. And even during this time he
learned Hebrew, Syriac, Arabic, Italian, Spanish, German, and English, sufficiently to understand them in
books. He was at length admitted of the faculty at Paris,
and practised with reputation during thirty-three years.
In 1705, he was received into the academy of belleslettres, and in 1706 he had a considerable share in the
publication of the “Journal des Scavans,
” at which he
laboured more than thirty years. In