Page:Medical jurisprudence (IA medicaljurisprud03pari).pdf/379

 the 3d of May in the Year of our Lord 1759, at a certain Court then holden at Surgeons Hall in the Old Bailey Lon.don,

by Mark Hawkins then Master, and Christopher Fullagar and Edward Nourse then Governors of the said Company of Surgeons, (They the said Mark Hawkins Christopher Fullagar and Edward Nourse, having before that Time been duly elected chosen appointed and sworn into their said respective Offices, according to the Form of the Statute in that Case made and provided,) came the said Richard Guy before the said Court, and offered and presented his said Son Melmoth; And the said Melmoth did then and there offer himself to the said Master and Governors then being at that Court, to be admitted and bound, before them, an Apprentice to the said Richard Guy, for the Term of 7 years, in the said Art Science or Mystery of Surgery; And that the said Melmoth Guy, being so offered and presented as aforesaid, was then and there examined touching his knowledge in the Latin tongue; And his ability therein, in Pursuance of the Ordinance or By-Law aforesaid, was then and there fairly, candidly, and impartially by the said Edward Nourse, he the said Edward being then and there one of the Governors of the said Company of Surgeons: And that the said Melmoth Guy, such his Examination, and upon his Ability in the Latin Tongue being so as aforesaid tried by the said Edward Nourse (so being one of the Governors or Wardens of the said Company as aforesaid) was found, to understand the Latin Tongue, but to be thereof; and was then and there so and declared to be, by the said Edward Nourse, on such Trial.—Wherefore the said Court could not consent, but did then and there refuse to permit the said Melmoth Guy to be admitted and bound an Apprentice to the said Richard Guy, for the Term of 7 years, in the said Art Science or Mystery of Surgery, according to the Custom aforesaid, such Time as the said Melmoth should understand the Latin Tongue, as by the aforesaid Ordinance or By-Law is in that behalf required.