Page:The Harveian oration - delivered at the Royal College of Physicians, October 18th 1887 (IA b30475958).pdf/17

 Soe curst children by eager crying, grow black and suffo - cated, non deficiente animali facultate,

which again recalls to our memory Kate the Curst in the Taming of the Shrew. There is, how- ever, one page of this remarkable volume which requires more than cursory notice, as beyond illus- trating the character of our distinguished benefac- tor, which I am specially directed to do, it affords us from his example a valuable lesson for our own instruction. These are the canones anatomia generalis, rules which he evidently laid down to himself, and in which he has left us a precious legacy of advice. They are twelve in number, hastily, but evidently after mature thought, jotted down in the strange mixture of Latin and English which is throughout the book adopted (p. 4).

Canones Anatomiae Generalis I she as much Bno intuítu as can be Bt de foto Bentre: Bel foto aliquo quae accidunt deinde dißidere (propter fitus et conexiones 2 demonstrare propria illius CadaBeris NoBa Bel NoBiter inBenta 3 to supply only by speech Bhat cannot be [BeBn on your on credit and by authority