Many and great talkers have I known, but WilliamGilbert, at this time, exceeded them all.
2
But immediately after the Renaissance, WilliamGilbert, the private physician of Queen Elizabeth, wrote his famous treatise on the character and behaviour of Magnets.
3
For two days we watched as he and a man the BBC understands to be WilliamGilbert worked in the garden and washed cars.
4
In 1600 WilliamGilbert, son of a gentleman, and physician to Queen Elizabeth, wrote a book on terrestrial magnetism which founded the science of electricity.
5
WilliamGilbert, he supposed, though he had never seen the man in person.