id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt work_gsjotpuvfja4jof3ud27p4eod4 J. Pearce Fanny Burney on Samuel Johnson's tics and mannerisms 1994 1 .pdf application/pdf 588 125 84 We shall then preserve, for everyone, the highest qualities of social existence, at a time Francisco has described as "dying in life", the And what you call living is dying in life, Fanny Burney on Samuel Johnson's tics and verbal repetitions displayed by Samuel Johnson which de la Tourette syndrome (see J Neurol Neurosurg Fanny (Frances) Burney (1752-1840) was daughter She was a favoured friend in Johnson's household. He is, indeed, very ill-favoured! Yet he has naturally nature (frequent recitations of the Lord's Prayer) but coprolalia and scatological comments are very probable, although doubtless the loyalties and social niceties Samuel Johnson's tics and gesticulations. J7 Hist Med 1967;22: 152-68. Dr Samuel Johnson's movement disorder. BMJ 1979;1:1610-4. Doctor Samuel Johnson: "the Great Convulsionary" a victim of Gilles de la Tourette's J R Soc Med 1994 (in press). London: G Bell. Early diary of F Burney. London: Constable and Co. 1897, reprinted 1966: http://jnnp.bmj.com/ ./cache/work_gsjotpuvfja4jof3ud27p4eod4.pdf ./txt/work_gsjotpuvfja4jof3ud27p4eod4.txt