117 



Language, by a gentleman of great attainments and of high station 

 in our national University : from which seat of learning, it seems 

 not too much to hope, that we shall soon receive many other con- 

 tributions in the department of Polite Literature, as well as in 

 other departments. It is, of course, understood that the awarding 

 of prizes is not to be confined to scientific papers, but is to be ex- 

 tended, as indeed it has always been, under some convenient regu- 

 lations, to literary and antiquarian papers also. 



I was to say a few words respecting that other department of 

 our Transactions, namely, Antiquities, or the study of the Old ; 

 and if, at this stage of my address, those words must be very few, I 

 regret this circumstance the less, because I know that the study is 

 deservedly a favourite here, and that I am surrounded by persons 

 who are, beyond all comparison, more familiar with the subject 

 than myself. 



In general, I may say, that whether the study of Antiquities be 

 regarded in its highest aspect, as the guardian of the purity of his- 

 tory, — the history of nations and of mankind ; or as ministering to 

 literature, by recovering from the wreck of time the fragments of 

 ancient compositions ; or as indulging a natural and almost filial 

 curiosity to know the details of the private life of eminent men of 

 old, and to gaze upon those relics which invest the past with 

 reality, as the paleeontologist from his fossils reconstructs lost 

 forms of life : in all these various aspects, the study is worthy to 

 interest any body of learned men, and to occupy a considerable part 

 of the Transactions of any society so comprehensive as our own. 

 The historian of the Peloponnesian war was also himself an anti- 

 quarian ; and prefaced that work which was to be '- a possession for 

 ever," by an inquiry into the antiquities of Greece. And while he 

 complained of the ovtu*; a.rx.Xotfmufos ro7<; noKKols ^ ^vrr,ffn; t%; a-Xri- 

 Gsia;, that easy search after truth which cost the multitude nothing; 

 he also claimed to have arrived at an ifiiis rsuurifiot , a linked chain of 

 antiquarian proof, by which he could establish his correction of their 

 errors. Indeed, the uninitiated are apt to doubt, — perhaps too they 

 may sometimes smile, — when they observe the earnest confidence 

 which the zealous Antiquary reposes in results deduced from argu- 

 ments which seem to them to be but slight ; nor dare I say that I 



