The Journal of nervous and mental disease . ished in shorthand anorgan of this society. Gowers gratefully emi)hasizcd the value of his early trainingwith a country physician and the foundation of botany then laidThis was always a source of interest with him and had proved apractical aid in medical training, accuracy and the like. He wasalso skillful in etching and exhibited at the Royal Academy. He was the recipient of many honors. Dublin recognized hisachievements with an , Edinburgh bestowed the degree , a number of foreign .societies included him among theirmembership, the Americ
The Journal of nervous and mental disease . ished in shorthand anorgan of this society. Gowers gratefully emi)hasizcd the value of his early trainingwith a country physician and the foundation of botany then laidThis was always a source of interest with him and had proved apractical aid in medical training, accuracy and the like. He wasalso skillful in etching and exhibited at the Royal Academy. He was the recipient of many honors. Dublin recognized hisachievements with an , Edinburgh bestowed the degree , a number of foreign .societies included him among theirmembership, the American Neurological Association being one ofthem. He was knighted on the occasion of the Queens Jubilee inrecognition of his family, professional and social greatness, for inall he represented the highest English type. He had been appointedalso to positions of increasing responsibility and importance andbeen made a fellow of the Royal .Society for his work on nervousdiseases. His last few years were lived in the (|uiel retirement SIR THOMAS SMITH CLOlSTON. OBITUARIES 487 SIR THOMAS SMITH CLOUSTON In the death of Sir Thomas Clouston on April 19, 1915, Scot-land has lost her great-hearted, painstaking leader in descendant of the Norsemen, born in the Orkneys, bore him-self proudly and freely in his relations with men, prizing more thanthe knighthood with which he was honored a few years before hisdeath, the freedom of Kirkwall, the capital town of Orkney, whichhe received in 1908, and the Norse galley in silver presented to himat the dinner given him by his assistants past and present, when heretired from the office of physician superintendent of the RoyalEdinburgh Asylum after thirty-five years of service. His fresh vigorous nature received an impetus to thorough honestwork at the grammar school of Aberdeen, which has turned out somany famous men, and he profited by the teachings of the brilliantcircle of men who in the middle of the last century heral
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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, booksubjectpsychologypathologic