DISCOURSE OF W. B. TAYLOR. 297 



The cataloo;ue should not be restricted to memoirs in Transactions 

 of Societies, but should comprise also memoirs in the Proceedings 

 of Societies, in mathematical and scientific journals:" etc. - - - 

 " The catalogue should begin from the year 1800. There should 

 be a catalogue according to the names of authors, and also a cata- 

 logue according to subjects," * The committee comprising Fellows 

 of the Royal Society of London finally succeeded in interesting that 

 grave body in the undertaking: and the result was that greatly to 

 Henry's satisfaction, the entire work was ultimately assumed by the 

 Royal Society itself. 



In the course of ten years that liberal Society aided by a large 

 grant from the British Government gave to the world its half 

 instalment of the great work, in its admirable " Catalogue of Scien- 

 tific Papers " alphabetically classified by authors, in seven or eight 

 large quarto volumes. In the Preface to this splendid monument 

 of industry and liberality, stands the following history of its incep- 

 tion. ''The present undertaking may be said to have originated in 

 a communication from Dr. Joseph Henry, Secretary of the Smith- 

 sonian Institution, to the ]\Ieeting of the British Association at 

 Glasgow in 1855, suggesting the formation of a catalogue of Phil- 

 osophical memoirs. This suggestion was favorably reported on by 

 a Committee of the Association in the following year. - - - 

 In March, 1857, General Sabine, the Treasurer and Vice President 

 of the Royal Society, brought the matter before the President and 

 Council of that body, and requested on the part of the British Asso- 

 ciation, the co-operation of the Royal Society in tlie project: where- 

 upon a committee was appointed to take into further consideration 

 the formation of such a catalogue. - - - No further step was 

 taken by the British Association or by the Royal Society in co-op- 

 eration with that body: but the President and Council of the Royal 

 Society acting on the recommendations contained in a Report of the 

 Library Committee dated 7th January, 1858, resolved that the prepa- 

 ration of a Catalogue of scientific memoirs should be undertaken by 

 the Royal Society inde])endently, and at the Society's own charge."t 



* Iteport Brit. Assoc. Cheltenham, Aug. 185G, pp. JO)], 401. 



t Preface to Catalogue of Scientific Papers, (1800-1803) vol. i. 1807, pp. ill. iv. The 

 second and most important division of this great and invaluable worli,— the 

 classified Index to Subjects, — still remains to be accomplished. 



