In selecting a topic for his annual address, your President has a wealth of choice sufficient to be an embarrassment. On the one hand there are the varied activities of the Association itself ; and though it may need courage and skill to deal with the delicate questions of the present moment, there is less need of exceptional virtues in reviewing the achievements of the past, or anticipating the enterprises of the future. On the other hand there are the doings in the world of Science outside the Association, with some one of which at least your President for the time being may be presumed to have a speaking acquaintance.
The front of the scientific army is long and straggling, and the lines of communication are thin and broken. If your President happens to have any news from the front he will probably be a welcome messenger among those whose duty keeps them elsewhere. If this is not too ambitious an aim, I propose on the present occasion to attempt a brief report on a recent successful movement by the Astronomical regiment which I trust may be of interest to their Mathematical comrades. I speak of it from the outset as a regimental movement ; for though the chief credit is undoubtedly due to individuals, even the brief report I shall make will shew how much one owed to another, and he to a third: how different lines of advance converged and coalesced: and, in short, how the whole movement was organised, not in the artificial manner which man has come to associate with the word, but in the sense in which the advances of Nature, including those of Natural Science, are organised.