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 John Cotter Morison, whose library is now being dis- .
persed, was one of the brilliant men that did not do as
much in life as he should have done He spent a great
many years in collecting materials for a mg-rmmlopus,
but the ears went by ; he was asked to write this an
that—“ Iacaulay,” for instance, for the “ English Men
of Letters Series ”-—with the result that he was diverted
‘ from the chief work of his life. He was one of the most
learned men of his time. and he had clear convictions“
leaning enerally to Comtism—Which ought to have

I found fu er expression.
2 He was the son of the Morison of pill fame ; and this
E left him all his life with an ample competence. Though
a Greek scholar, no man looked less like one. Ho was a
short thick-set man, with a strong face—a little militant
in appearance—~the more so as the nose looked as if it
had been severely bruised in a particularly determined
prize-fight, but the dominant expression was sweetness
, and gentleness. He had beautiful blue eyes—brilliant,
open, and tender. The story of his death was curiously
‘ athetic. He knew a. great deal about medicine among,
' clopmdic knowledge; and he was the firs-

isoover that he was stricken with fats.

‘ He used to tell of the first day he learned the

no longer evitahle truth.

He weighed himself on one of the weighing-machines
on an underground station ; discovered that in a few
days he had lost several unds ; and then knew that
the game of life was up. Vith the cheery cynicism of
the stoic he accepted the inevitable with the greatest
calmness. He was always astonished, and, so far as a
gentle nature like his could be so described, rather
exasperated, if his friends took the least notice of his ill—
ness. Even three days before his death he insisted that
people should talk to him about ordinary subjects in the
ordinary way, exactly as if nothing particular were going

.occur. ~ '