Scarborough was an original fellow of the
Royal Society. As a fellow of the
Royal College of Physicians, the author of a treatise on anatomy,
Syllabus Musculorum, which was used for many years as a textbook, and a translator and commentator on the first six books of
Euclid's Elements, published in 1705. He also appeared as the subject of a poem by
Abraham Cowley. Scarborough died in London on 26 February 1694 and was buried at
Cranford, Middlesex. St Dunstan's Church there has a monument to him in Latin and English (as "Scarburgh"), erected by his widow. ==References==