THE CRANIOLOGY OF MAN AND ANTHROPOID APES. 449 



liiteial pursuits less iiHHiecTiateh' .ittached to it." Sir William con- 

 tinues: ''It is only in reference to such views and objects that the 

 Hunterian collection could have been accepted or can be of any use to 

 this college."" Huute^r would, had he still been with us, have thrown 

 all his indomitable energies into the successful working of such an 

 institution, and amidst the turmoil, strife, and competition going on 

 around him, would, as we see him in this picture, have been engaged 

 in the earnest, accurate, patient study of nature. It remains for our 

 younger members to emulate the example set them by flohn Hunter, 

 and by such service secure for themselves lasting satisfaction and add 

 to the real dignity and utility of this college and of their profession. 



« Lectures on Physiology, Zoology, and the Natural History of INIan, delivered at 

 the Royal College of Surgeons by W. Lawrence, F. R. S., 1819, p. 497. 



SM 1902 29 



