658 
REVIEW OF YOUATT’s LECTURES 
As some acknowledgment of gratitude, however, to those who 
would have constituted the class during this session, I beg to say, 
that I shall be most happy to see them at the private lectures, 
which will be delivered to my house-pupils, until the duties of the 
University can be resumed. I beg them to come, for we shall 
at least be getting on with our subject. This will also include my 
perpetual pupils. I wish my health would permit me to fix an 
earlier evening than Friday, December 6th, at five o’clock, at my 
residence. As soon as he can accomplish it without too great 
danger, Mr. Percivall will once more rejoin me, and we will try 
hard to continue both courses to the end. 
On the evening of the 19th, Mr. Sewell commenced his course 
of veterinary surgical lectures, and which are attended by the 
majority of the students. May the session be propitious to the 
cause of veterinary science! 
We have many subjects on which we wish to address our 
readers, and on which, indeed, we have received a friendly chal¬ 
lenge from some of them. These must form the principal matter 
of the leading article of the first number of the new year. 
Y. 
Quid sit pulchruin, quid turpe, quid utile, quid non.—Hon. 
Mr. Youatt’s Lectures on Farcy and Glanders,' as 
vered at the University of London, and afterwards ’published in 
The Lancet, and The Veterinarian : reviewed by Mr. R. Vines, 
F.^S., and Teacher of Anatomy and Physiology at the Poyal 
Veterinary College. 
These Lectures are now public property, at least they are the 
property of the profession; and, although it has been usual to 
deal rather leniently with these viva voce effusions, yet every il¬ 
lustration of their accuracy or their blunders, their worth or their 
humbuggery, is professional property too: I therefore, with the 
consent of my brother-editors, present our readers with a portion 
of this Review, extracted from a pamphlet published by Mr. 
Vines since our last Number, and entitled, An Appendix to a 
