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to walk about or to read or talk to any extent, or ev< 

 play games. I pass my hours on the ;i^h, 



>u may imagine. What little work I do is at the Auto- 

 biography. 



Though the day sui^ests it, it is absurd for me to \vi>h 

 you, or for you to wisli me, a happy New Year. There is 

 not much happiness remaining in store for either of us. 

 Tray dictate a few lines when you get this. 



Ever yours, HERBERT SPENCER. 



This sad letter found Youmans on his death-bed. 

 On the 1 8th of January he passed away without pain, 

 retaining even to the last something of the blithe drol- 

 lery that was always so charming. His burial place is 

 a beautiful site at Woodlawn. 



During Youmans's long illness abundant testimony 

 was borne to his singular capacity for friendship ; con- 

 stant inquiries, anxious and sympathetic, came not 

 only from within the bounds of the city where he 

 lived and laboured but from distant States and prov- 

 inces from beyond the sea. His friendship had a 

 rare quality : not only was it manifested in counsels 

 well considered, and in a generosity lavish in compari- 

 son with his means, but in a constant thoughtfulness 

 which deemed no service too slight to be worth ren- 

 dering. He was always magnanimous, patient, slow 

 to take offence, an ingenious framer of excuses for 

 others. To forfeit his good-will demanded an un- 

 usual case of meanness or wickedness. Mere folly or 

 failure in the conventional sense would not do it. It 

 he ascertained anything to the discredit of an ac- 

 quaintance he merely deducted it from what he knew 

 in his favour he never let it cancel a good record, as 

 so many people do. 



