TO LEWIS CAMPBELL, Esq.
Trin. Coll., 22d April 1856.
I have had many things to
attend to lately,
which have kept me from writing to you. I am glad you wrote to me.
I
got a very kind letter from your mother and Bob, for which you must
thank
them meanwhile. My uncles, Robert and Albert, stayed with
me
till the 15th. That day I got a letter from Cambridge about college
matters,
and so I had to set to work at home more vigorously. George
Wedderburn came in the afternoon, and we had two hard days' work of
various
kinds.
On Friday he and I left
Glenlair, and I got
here on Saturday, and since yesterday have been lecturing.
All things are as if I had
been up after a
common vacation, and I see them all the same as they used to be. I
have
got back among chapels and halls and scholarships, and all the regular
routine, with now and then some expression of condolence,
which
is all that strangers can or ought to afford. Neither they nor I enter
on a subject which must be misunderstood; but it seems to
me
that while all the old subjects are as interesting to me as ever,
I
talk about them without understanding the men I talk to.
I have two or three stiff
bits of work to get
through this term here, and I hope to overtake them. When the term
is
over I must go home and pay diligent attention to everything there, so
that I may learn what to do.
The first thing I must do is
carry on my father's
work of personally superintending everything at home, and
for
doing this I have his regular accounts of what used to be done, and the
memories of all the people, who tell me everything they
know.
As for my own pursuits, it was my father's wish, and it is mine, that I
should go on with them. We used to settle that what I ought
to be engaged in was some occupation of teaching, admitting of
long
vacations for being at home; and when my father heard of the Aberdeen
proposition
he very much approved. I have not heard anything very lately, but
I believe my name is not yet put out of question in the Ld.
Advocate's
book. If I get back to Glenlair I shall have the mark of my father's
work
on everything I see. Much of them is still his, and I must
be in some degree his steward to take care of them. I trust that the
knowledge
of his plans may be a guide to me, and never a constraint.
I am glad to hear of your
[Oxford] W[orking
Men's] Coll[ege]. The preparatory school here has at once got
from
seventy to ninety scholars all in earnest, and they have had to migrate
to a larger schoolhouse.
We might consider of you and
Bob and W. Cay
coming for a quiet week or two to Glenlair in summer, if all goes
well. Bob is with Willie and Charlie now touring.
I am getting a new top turned
to show my class
the motion of bodies of various forms about a fixed point. I
expect
to get very neat results from it, and agreeing with theory of course.