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Introductory Address by the President, the Right Hon. Lord Moncreiff

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2014

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Extract

The subject of the address with which I am to open the present session of the Royal Society has been announced in your notices as the ‘Dawn of the Constitutional Principle.” Such, indeed, was the general tenor or complexion of the thoughts which led me into the field of inquiry on which I intend to dwell to-night, and such the topic round which I propose to weave a very fragmentary and imperfect excursus or dissertation. I had long thought that the rise and growth of the constitutional principle in this island,—a plant nurtured in many storms and watered by the best blood of the land,—might be worth tracing in these more stable and peaceful times. It might also be interesting to recall the gradual progress and direction of opinion in the two ends of the island, and of the conflict or concord out of which so powerful and thorough a fabric has been consolidated. But my theme to-night is necessarily less ambitious than its title indicates. I am limited both by the place in which and the audience to which I speak, and also by the time which it would be reasonable for me to occupy.

Type
Proceedings 1880-81
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1882

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References

page 146 note * Edition, Francofurti, m.dc.xxv.

page 158 note * “The Swedish ambassador again complained of delay in his business, and that when he had desired to have the articles of this treaty put into Latin according to the custom for treaties, that it was fourteen days they made him stay for that translation, and sent it to one Mr Milton, to put them into Latin.” (Whitelocke, p. 645, “Minutes of the House of Commons.”)