both through unwearied devotion to those whom he 

 formally instructed, and through the many offices and 

 relations by which he served and edified the bodies 

 with which he was officially connected, the community 

 in which he lived, and the friends whom he loved. 

 Through a gentleness that was strong, through a 

 patience that was courageous, through the great 

 sympathies of a heart in which abounded the 

 most cheerful mirth and the tenderest compas- 

 sion, he made life sweeter and better for those with 

 whom his life was spent. Scrupulous in all his 

 conduct, unwearying in fidelity, stainless in honour, 

 loving his fellow man, he also loved his God and 

 believed in Him, with the firm, but simple and child- 

 like faith of a Christian. To those who remain his 

 death seems untimely, for the world had need of 

 him, but after his faithful toil which has consumed 

 him, he rests in his God who in His infinite wisdom 

 and love has called him to Himself. 



His brothers of the Doctor's Club, remembering 

 him with great love, recalling fondly all their affec- 



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