ong afterwards lectures on Anatomy, remarkable for an ele 
gance and a fluency of diction which have caused them to con 
tinue fresh in the recollection of many. Sir Christopher Pegg 
was succeeded by Dr. Kidd, who for several years gave course 
of lectures at Oxford on both the allied sciences, Mineralogy am 
Geology, and collected around him a knot of persons interest 
in similar pursuits, who formed themselves into a little club of 
Oxford Geologists. This club included amongst its members the 
late Dr. Buckland, the two brothers Conybeare, the late Rev. 
Philip Serle, of Trinity College, afterwards Rector of Addin 
xford, and many others, who, though less vigorously devot 
themselves to ite, Seon research, were still, from their emu 
ever, in the first rank of this little body, and stood so hig 
