It was from 1825 that Robert Macnish’s association with
Blackwood's Magazine began with the publication, as a leading article, of his story
The Metempsychosis, followed by publication of his
Man with the Nose, and the
Barber of Gottingen. 1826 brought publication of his
Adventures of Colonel O’Shaughnessy and
Who can it be?, and for Macnish the epithet, 'Modern Pythagorean'. His other works included
Execution at Paris,
Night near Monte Video,
A Vision of Robert Bruce,
The Philosophy of Sleep, and his
Book of Aphorisms, published in 1833. His
Introduction to Phrenology followed in 1835. Macnish’s works were to be translated into French and German, and re-published in the United States. In 1835 he was awarded the
honorary degree of
LL.D. by
Hamilton College, United States. Contracting influenza that developed into
typhus fever, Robert Macnish died at Glasgow and was interred in the cemetery of St. Andrew’s Episcopal Chapel, Glasgow. His portrait by
Daniel Maclise, and published by James Fraser as a
lithograph in 1835, is held in the
National Gallery, London. ==Published works==