The British Association's Visit To Montreal, 1884: Letters, By Clara Rayleigh
















































































































































 -  (Applause) In
a young country such pursuits must be carried on in the face of some
difficulty and of the - Page 42
The British Association's Visit To Montreal, 1884: Letters, By Clara Rayleigh - Page 42 of 143 - First - Home

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(Applause) In A Young Country Such Pursuits Must Be Carried On In The Face Of Some Difficulty And Of The Competition Of That Material Activity Which Must To A Great Extent Engross The Time And Absorb The Attention Of A Rapidly Developing Community Such As This.

We may, however, claim for Canada that she has done her best, that she has above all spared no

Pains to provide for the interest of science in the future, and that amongst those who have done scientific work within the Dominion are men known and respected far beyond the bounds of their own nation. In this connection I cannot deny myself the pleasure of referring to the honours which have been conferred upon Sir William Dawson within the last few days. (Loud and long continued applause.) He is, unless I am misinformed, more responsible than any one person for the visit of the Association, and I feel sure that I shall command the acquiescence of all those who have worked in the cause of Canadian culture when I say that we regard the knighthood which Her Majesty has bestowed upon him as an appropriate recognition of his distinguished services, and as an opportune compliment to Canadian science. (Applause.) But the significance of this meeting is far greater than it would be if its results were to be measured merely by the addition which it will make to the scientific wealth of the empire. When we find a society which for fifty years has never met outside the British Islands transferring its operations to the Dominion - when we see several hundred of our best known Englishmen, who have acquired a public reputation, not only in the scientific, but in the political and the literary world, arriving here mingling with our citizens, and dispersing in all directions over this continent; when we see in Montreal the bearers of such names as Rayleigh, Playfair, Frankland, Burdon, Sanderson, Thomson, Roscoe, Blanford, Moseley, Lefroy, Temple, Bramwell, Tylor, Galton, Harcourt and Bonney, we feel that one more step has been taken towards the establishment of that close intimacy between the mother country and her offspring, which both here and at home all good citizens of the empire are determined to promote.

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