To
PROFESSOR CHRISTISON, M.D., V.P.R.S.E., &c.
My Dear Sir,
As one of my oldest, steadiest, and most valued friends, I beg leave
to inscribe to you this little volume.
Identity of tastes, in so far as recreation is concerned, has
prompted me to take this liberty; as, had we been otherwise placed
in similar circumstances, I am convinced I should in you have found
a formidable rival among the cairns and corries of the Grampians,
and the thunder-split peaks of Arran and Skye.
Your ambition, however, has instigated you to soar still higher, and
has now placed you on the pinnacle of professional and scientific
eminence.
That you may long be spared as one of. the brightest ornaments of
that University in which your excellent father also laboured — whose
memory as a man and a scholar I shall never cease to revere — is the
ardent wish of,
My Dear Sir,
Yours faithfully and affectionately,
THOMAS GRIERSON |