A Journey to London in 1840. 175 



these things not as praising them or as agreeing with them but as 

 traits of character. 



M'Culloch died at H.M. Stationery Office, 11th November, 

 1864, having been appointed Comptroller in 1838. He was 

 elected in 1843 a foreign Associate of the Institute of France. 

 In 1846 he received a Government pension of £200 a year. He 

 contributed seventv-six articles to the Edinburgh Review 

 between 1818 and 1837. His wife was buried by his side in 

 Brompton Cemetery in July, 1867. His valuable library of over 

 ten thousand \'olumes passed to Lord Overstone, and his portrait, 

 painted by Sir Daniel Macnee, is in the National Portrait Gallery, 

 London. M'Culloch was a man of immense physical strength 

 and sturdy and strongly marked individuality, and, despite his 

 long residence in London, he retained to the end his broad 

 Scottish accent, and his attachment to Whig principles, his native 

 Whithorn, and his native whisky. Diet. Nat. Biog. He was 

 also a valued friend and correspondent of Archibald Constable, 

 the publisher. — J. A. F. 



Addition to Bibliography. 



(See Transactions N.S., xxii., pp. 187-191.) 



1837. 



Summary / Of / Lectures / On / Political Economy. / De- 

 livered By / Thomas Murray, LL.D. / rule / Winter 1836-7. / 

 rule / As Published In / The Edinburgh Weekly Chronicle. 



4to. Title, verso blank. (Prefatory Note) (iii) verso 

 blank. Text A — N2 in fours, pp. iv. + 100. Only fifty copies 

 printed. The one described measures 7^2^- in. by 4|- in., and 

 bears the following inscription: "To the Glasgow Mechanics' 

 Institution, / with best wishes for its success, / from Thos. 

 Murray. / Edin. May, 1837. 



The lectures printed are twenty in number. 



Compiler's Copy. 



