1879—80] JOURNAL— BRITISH MEDICAL ASSOCIATION. 229 



Dec. 2. Temperature this morning 15° Fahr. Continued hard 

 frost. Heavy fall of snow in the evening. 



Dec. 5. Therm. 20°. 



Dec. 7. Therm. 2° on the morning of this day. It was only 4° 

 at 10 a.m. outside our house. Below zero in several spots near the 

 town. 



Dec. 13. A slow thaw commenced. Bar. as high as 30*7. 



1880. April 12. Commenced lectures. The most backward 

 season that I remember. 



June 12. To Rowsley. 



June 15. We took a carriage for the day, and went through 

 Bakewell and Ashford to Monsal Dale, and through it and Millar's 

 Dale : both exceedingly beautiful, as is also Cressbrooke Dale, 

 branching from them. Returned by way of Taddington ... to 

 Bakewell. 



June 18. Drove through Chatsworth Park, Baslow, Calver, to 

 Stoney Middleton, through the fine valley of cliffs to Eyam, where 

 we saw the memorials of the Plague in 1666, including the preach- 

 ing place in the rocks, and the graves in the fields. . . A magnificent 

 country. 



June 21. I walked to Stanton Moor, going by way of Pilhough, 

 where I saw the Nine Ladies' Circle, the King Stone, and the Gorse 

 Stone. 



June 22. To London to attend the Mildmay Conference. 



June 23 — 25. The Conference. Very interesting. 



Aug. 10. The British Medical Association Meeting here com- 

 menced. 



Aug. 12. Breakfasted by invitation with a large party of the 

 doctors to discuss the Temperance question. The invitation came 

 from Mr. Samuel Bowly, President of the National Temperance 

 League. 



Aug. 13. Conclusion of the Meeting. A large garden party in 

 King's Gardens, given by Dr. and Mrs. Humphry. 



Aug. 23. To Pembroke, for the Meeting of the Cambrian 

 Archaeological Association. 



Aug. 24. The town and Tenby. 



Aug. 25. Castlemartin and the south coast, and Stackpole Court, 

 and British settlement on the Warren there. 



Aug. 26. To Carew and Manorbier. 



Aug. 28. Llandudno. 



