12 Intelligence and Miscellanies. 
something more of the structure of the human frame. 
ew Hampshire, a resorted sci n to Harvard, to attend the 
courses of Medical and Phijosophical lectures, under the 
eminent professors, who adorned that institution, among 
— was the elder Dr. Warren. Dr. Smith received a 
with. Dartmouth college, at Hanover, N. H. This light was 
raised in a region, where the darkness was before palpable, 
and its rays shone with such lustre as to attract the eyes of 
multitudes even at a distance. Professor Smith’s school 
soon became eminent, and it was esteemed both an honor 
and an advantage to have been his pupil. In the earlier 
years of this institution, Dr. Smith discharged the ge a es 
all the departments, and at the same time attended t 
extensive medical and shad practice, which led him, often 
night, almost always on horseback, and in every vicissi- 
tude of the seasons and weather, over the rugged mountains 
fect his knowledge, Dr. Smith left his practice and his 
school, and resorted to Edinburgh, where and in London 
place, he accepted, in-1813, an invitation to a professorship 
in the newly tated medical department of Yale College, 
