xvi. QUATERCENTENARY STUDIES IN PATHOLOGY 



researches of recent Pathology. It is the result of many years 

 of stringently scientific labour. It takes its place as one of the 

 most solid achievements of the School. 



But hitherto, I have been thinking of the strenuous, 

 commanding, irresistible, earnest teacher of Pathology. It is 

 all true ; but it is not all the man. He is, too, an artist in 

 music ; he studies pictures and cathedrals ; he sings, that in 

 listening to him you forget the world ; he lectures on Gothic, 

 that you imagine here is his real love. And now I realise how 

 much that voice stands for. If it was our trumpet-call on the 

 field, it was, too, our sweet song in the moonlight, by the camp 

 fires. Of all my twenty-six Professors, I hear the voices 

 speaking still, and I know how little I have learned that did 

 not come to me in those winged words. Some speak from the 

 dead. But some are of the living. And we are going up for 

 the Great Festival, where we shall hear them all again ! 



W. L. M. 



August, igo6. 



