TO MISS CAY.
Trin. Coll., Whitsun. Eve, 1854.
I am in great luxury here, having but
2 pups., and
able to read the
rest of the day, so I have made a big hole in some subjects
I wish to know. We have hot weather now, and I am just come from a
meeting
of subscribers to the Bathing Shed, which we organised into a
Swimming
Club so as to make it a more sociable affair, instead of mere
"pay
your money and use your key." A nightingale has taken
up his quarters just outside my window, and works away every night. He
is at it very fierce now. At night the owls relieve him,
softly
sighing, after their fashion.
I have made an instrument for seeing
into the eye
through the pupil.
The difficulty is to throw the light, in at that small hole and
look
in at the same time; but that difficulty is overcome, and I can see a
large
part of the back of the eye quite distinctly with the image
of the candle on it. People find no inconvenience in being examined,
and
I have got dogs to sit quite still and keep their eyes
steady.
Dogs' eyes are very beautiful behind, a copper-coloured
ground,
with glorious bright patches and networks of blue, yellow, and green,
with
blood-vessels great and small.
Trin. Coll., 24th
Novr. /54.
I have been very busy of late with
various things, and
[209] am just
beginning to make papers for the examination at Cheltenham, which
I have to conduct about the 11th of December. I have also to make
papers
to polish off my pups. with. I have been spinning colours a
great deal, and have got most accurate results, proving, that
ordinary
peoples' eyes are all made alike, though some are better than others,
and
that other people see two colours instead of three; but all
those who do so agree amongst themselves. I have made a triangle of
colours
by which you may make out everything.
You see that W lies outside the
triangle B, R, Y, so
that White can't
be made with Blue, Red, and Yellow; but if you mix blue and
yellow you don't get green, but pink—a colour between W and R. Those
who
see two colours only distinguish blue and yellow, but not
red
and green: for instance—
6 of blue and 94 of red make a red
which looks to them
like a gray made
of 10 W and 90 Black.
40 of blue and 60 of green make
34 of W and 66
Black.
I should like you to find out if
the Normans
have got Bishop Percy's
Reliques of Ancient Ballad Poetry, for if they have I would
not send them a duplicate; if not I think the book would suit one-half
of that family.
If you can find out any people in
Edinburgh who do not
see colours (I
know the Dicksons don't), pray drop a hint that I would
like
to see them. I have put one here up to a dodge by which he
distinguishes
colours without fail. I have also constructed a pair of
squinting
spectacles, and am beginning operations on a squinting man.