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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 03 November 2016
It seems to me that, no matter what doubts and perplexities may have assailed me in the selection of the subject and the contents of this Address, my primary duty on this occasion is obvious and inevitable ; it is to express my appreciation of the impartiality of the Council in so arranging this afternoon’s proceedings that my Address is subsequent to the discussion on Professor Neville’s motion, so that supporters of the motion were unable to use the Address as an argument in favour of limiting each President to one year of office.
page 8 note * Math. Annalen, 67 (1909), 459–461.
page 9 note * Journal für Math. 9 (1832), 1–26.
page 9 note † Gött. Nath. 1894, 170–186.
page 11 note * Trans. American Math. Soc. 21 (1920), 255–284.
page 11 note † Archiv der Math. und Phys. (3), 13 (1908), 305–312.
page 13 note * Journal für Math. 27 (1844), 75–79.
page 43 note † Journal für Math. 32 (1846), 210–212; see also ibid. 34 (1847), 285–328.
page 16 note * Republished in J de Math. (1), 17 (1852), 366–390.
page 16 note † Bull. de la Soc. math. de France, 24 (1806), 199–220.
page 16 note ‡ Ann. de la Soc. sci. de Bruxelles, 20 (1896), 183–356.
page 16 note § Berliner Monatsberichte, 1859, 671–680.
page 17 note * Comptes Rendus, 158 (1914), 1869–1872.
page 17 note † Journal London Math. Soc. 8 (1933), 277–283.