OLIYEE GOLDSMITH'S LIFE AND TIMES. [BOOK i. 1755. remembered Ms fellow-student when years had made him #t..27. famous, and said (much, it may be confessed, in the tone of ex-post-facto prophecy) that in all his peculiarities it was remarked there was about him an elevation of mind, a -philosophical tone and manner, and the language and information of a scholar. * Being much in want of the philosophy, it is well that his friends should have given him credit for it; though his last known scene in Leyden showed greatly less of the philosophic mind than of the gentle, grateful heart. Bent upon leaving that city, where he had now been nearly a year without an effort for ^degree, he called upon Ellis, and asked his assistance in some trifling sum. It was given; but, as his evil, or (some might say) his good genius would have it, he passed a florist's garden on Ms return, and seeing some rare and high-priced flowers which his uncle Contarine, an enthusiast in such tilings, had often spoken and been in search of, he ran in without other thought than of immediate pleasure to his kindest Mend, bought a parcel of the roots, and sent them off to Ireland.-!- He left Leyden next clay, with a guinea in his-pocket, one shirt to his back, and a flute in his hand. * Prior, i. 170, f Pemy Memoir, 33, 34. an