Xll 
MEMOItt, ETC. 
the Corps from its amalgamation with the Cavalry and Infantry of the army under Horse 
Guards rule. The second,—addressed to the Duke of Cambridge—reiterated the 
statements advanced in the previous pamphlet, and invited His Eoyal Highness* 
attention to the requirements of the Corps, in consequence of the interruption that 
had occured in the investigation by a Committee of the House of Commons, into 
the effects of the military changes in the Ordnance Department, concluding with 
suggestions on the training and uses of Volunteer Artillery. 
None could read these pamphlets without admiring the unflinching constancy 
with which Sir Bobert continued to point out the disabilities under which the 
Kegiment at that time suffered, and all must feel that in his death the Eoyal 
Artillery has lost not only one of its brightest ornaments, but also one who was 
unwearied in exerting all his powerful influence for that Corps of which he was so 
devoted and so distinguished a member. 
