[BETHUNE] RECENT WORK IN ECONOMIC ENTOMOLOGY 17 
themselves the deepest sense of personal religion, unswerving devotion 
to the principles of Christianity, the fullest faith in the all-embracing 
loving Providence of God, the keenest insight into the mysteries of 
science so far as the human mind can at present reach, and the perfect 
confidence that all that may seem now to be at variance between revela- 
tion and science will surely be completely reconciled at last. 
The annals of the Royal Society, of which he was the first President, 
will contain, no doubt, an ample biography of our departed friend, and 
others are already recording the voluminous lists of his publications. I 
need only bear my feeble testimony to the nobility of his character, the 
charm of his personality, the greatness of his intellectual powers, the un- 
rivalled work that he did for his University, for education, for science, 
for religion, for Canada his native land. 
R Sec. IV. 1900, 2. 
