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1. Biographical Notice of the late Sir John Robison, K.H., Sec. R. S. Ed

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 March 2015

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Extract

“A laudable usage was formerly more prevalent in this Society than it is at present, of recording the merits and services of persons who have conferred honour upon it by the one, or rendered themselves its benefactors by the other. Some very elaborate biographies have thus been communicated; but, in the old “History of the Society” (to which our published “Proceedings” are in some degree parallel), numerous short notices are to be found of a kind imposing less labour on the biographer, and admitting of more extensive application than the larger memoirs just alluded to. In the hope that such notices may be more frequently contributed, I beg now to offer, within the short compass in which the very limited materials now at my disposal enable me to condense my task, a brief notice of the Life of the late Sir John Robison, whose most energetic efforts were, for many years, constantly directed to the promotio of the welfare of this Society; a circumstance which seems to call for more specific notice than was comprised in the thanks and acknowledgment voted by the Society during his lifetime, and which naturally devolves upon me the duty of drawing it up, not only as his successor in office, but as having enjoyed his friendship, and having been, on several occasions, indebted to him, in no common degree, for personal kindness.

Type
Proceedings 1845-46
Copyright
Copyright © Royal Society of Edinburgh 1850

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References

page 69 note * It would appear from a letter addressed to him by Mr Watt junior, which is still preserved, that his first destination was to Ceylon.

page 71 note * Edin. Trans., vol. xi., p. 345. This paper was read 7th Feb. 1831.

page 75 note * I cannot affirm positively that Sir J. Robison's opinions were original to himself, but I understood them to be so: and I know that his conversation with me long preceded the date of Mr Airy's paper.

page 77 note * The method of naming the streets in a conspicuous and durable manner was a favourite topic with him, and it is a duty of the police certainly too much neglected, more especially in London. The substitution of our present cast-iron lamp-post, with the name of the street cast on each, replacing the expensive, ugly, and ineffective construction of the old ones, was, I believe, due to Sir John.

page 78 note * A letter to him, from one of the exiled French nobility, which arrived a few days after his decease, was filled with commissions involving no common trouble and responsibility, which he was requested to execute.