VI. 
None but Ordinary Fellows shall bear any office in the Society, or 
vote in the choice of Fellows or Office-bearers, or interfere in the patri- 
monial interests of the Society. 
Vil. 
The number of Ordinary Fellows shall be unlimited. 
VIL. 
The Ordinary Fellows, upon producing an order from the TREA- 
SURER, shall be entitled to receive from the Publisher, gratis, the Parts 
of the Society’s Transactions which shall be published subsequent to their 
admission. 
IX. 
No person shall be proposed as an Ordinary Fellow, without a re- 
commendation subscribed by Onze Ordinary Fellow, to the purport be- 
low*. This recommendation shall be delivered to the Secretary, and by 
him laid before the Council, and shall afterwards be printed in the circu- 
lars for three ordinary meetings of the Society, previous to the day of the 
election, and shall lie upon the table during that time. 
X. 
Honorary Fellows shall not be subject to any Contribution. This 
class shall consist of persons eminently distinguished for science or litera- 
ture. Its number shall not exceed Fifty-six, of whom twenty may be 
British subjects, and thirty-six may be subjects of foreign states. 
* « A. B., a gentleman well skilled in several branches of Science (or Polite Lite- 
“ rature as the case may be), being to my knowledge desirous of becoming a Fellow 
“ of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, I hereby recommend him as deserving of that 
“honour, and as likely to prove an useful and valuable Member.” 
This recommendation to be accompanied by a request of admission signed by the 
Candidate. 
