Abstract
thankful that my intellect is still unimpaired. Her beauty too she kept to the last day of her life. Her bust, by Chantrey, was placed by the Royal Society in their rooms in 1836; another was modelled in Rome in 1844 by L. MacDonald; a crayon drawing by James Swinton done in London in 1848 is said to be the best likeness of her.1 Her name is perpetuated in the second woman's Hail to be founded, in 1879, m Oxford and now known as Somerville College; the arms and the motto of her family, Donec rursus impleat orbem, have been adopted by the College as its seal.2
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