Complete School of Physic in Ireland. 151 
instructed in the details of chemical and pharmaceutical processes. 
Terms for such instruction are six guineas. 
Students in botany, have access to the botanic garden, which 
is in the immediate vicinity of Dublin, and have the opportunity 
of taking frequent excursions with the Professor of Botany and 
his assistant, to the mountains and sea-coast adjacent to the 
city. 
Botanical Demonstrations are daily given by the Professor’s 
assistant in the garden during the season. Terms of which, one 
guinea. 
A Course of Lectures on Mineralogy is delivered by the Pro- 
fessor of Natural History, in Trinity College, to which those 
who have their names on the books of the University are admitted 
gratis. 
The Museum of Trinity College, to which Students have ad- 
mission two days in the week, contains a collection of minerals, 
systematically arranged, with references to a printed catalogue. 
Pupils are taken by the Apothecary of Sir Patrick Dunn’s 
Hospital, and instructed in the Practice of Pharmacy. Terms for 
which, during three months, twe guineas. 
A Medical Society holds weekly meetings in Trinity College, 
for the purpose of discussing subjects connected with Medicine, 
Surgery, or Pharmacy. A medical circulating library belongs to 
the members. Terms of admission to the Society, with the use 
of the library, one pound. 
Medical Officers of the Army and Navy are permitted to attend 
the Lectures on Anatomy and Surgery, in Trinity College, with- 
put fee. 
Hospital, 
This is chiefly supported by the rents of Sir P. Dunn’s estates, 
and partly by private contribution. The Board of Governors con- 
sist of the Visitors of the College of Physicians, the President, 
Vice-president, and Censors of the same, the Provost of Trinity 
College, aud twelve Subscribers ; but ‘no physician or surgeon” 
of the hospital is eligible to be a governor. The house is intend- 
ed to hold one hundred and thirty patients, of whom thirty are 
selected for instruction and lectures, by the Clinical Professor 
for the time: the rest are placed under the care of a physician 
appointed by the Governors. . 
The cases of the clinieal patients in the hospital are recorded. 
Every opportunity is also taken to examine the bodies of patients 
that die; the morbid appearances are explained to the Students, 
and preserved in the pathological collection of the School. 
At present, all pupils are permitted to attend the eutire prac- 
tice of the Hospital during a year, for three guineas. Formerly, 
this privilege was extended to those only who had studied at 
Seine) K 4 least 
