Corpus of Modern Scottish Writing (CMSW) - www.scottishcorpus.ac.uk/cmsw/ Document : 574 Title: Letter from John Anderson, Regarding the Trial of Dr Moor Author(s): Anderson, Professor John Sir It is well known that the Lord Advocate's letter; and the petitions to the King, are lodged with the Court of Seſsion; and it was a mere oversight if Lord Sydney's letter is not there likewise. The other parts of the Demand in your letter of this day's date will be answered, and with equal ease, by my agent in Edinburgh. I write this in answer to the Postscript in your letter. The second trial of Dr Moor was in June, 1763. It made a noise on account of the behaviour of some of the Profeſsors. I refused to be present at it, though asked both by the meeting and by the Doctor. I showed you the inute of March 12th, 1773. I remember the form of the papers in which it was contained, and told you, I think, what it was. I have asked a sight of it in writing so often since mid-summer last, that I am almost ashamed to say, that I never got an answer to my Demands in writing, till the one which is in the Postscript of your letter this day. You will be pleased, therefore, to give me a sight of that trial without delay, and at any hour that is most convenient for you. Besides the collateral proofs of its Existence, and of the Faculty's being accountable for it, there are the following insurmountable words in their own record. March 12th, 1773 - "And whereas it appears from the records of the University that the said Dr Moor has on two former occasions been publicly rebuked for improper behaviour, namely, By a sentence of the University meeting upon the 14th day of August 1760 and a second time with certification by the sentence of an University meeting on the sixteenth day of June 1763, Therefore the Meeting hereby" I am, Sir, your most Obedient ServantJohn Anderson Glasgow College March 27th 1787