OF THE OX. 333 



ment to medical education. The German 

 universities, the Faculty of Paris, have, for 

 several years past, incorporated a course of 

 comparative pathology, with the other series 

 of public lectures. 



It is not a mere Utopia that we propose, but 

 an extension and improvement, all the parts of 

 which are already prepared. If this College 

 could be thrown open to-morrow, competent 

 professors would be ready at the call of duty 

 to indite the programme for this instruction 

 within twenty -four hours ; and as for the pro- 

 fessors themselves, there would be enough to 

 choose among the large body of efficient 

 scholars who do honour to the country. 



If we have been rightly understood, we 

 desire to see established in London an institu- 

 tion which would afford an equivalent to what 

 exists in Paris, at the Museum and College de 

 France, where numerous courses of lectures on 

 anatomy, physiology, physics, and chemistry 

 are given. Only in London this special 

 college would be formed and organized on such 

 a scale as to bear away the palm from every 

 previous foundation of the same kind ; it would 

 be an institution unexampled 'in the world, out 



