FROM PROFESSOR J. D. FORBES.
Edinburgh, 31st March 1857.
MY DEAR MAXWELL—I have often
wished to ask
you to tell me how your first session had turned out;
consequently I was exceedingly glad to get your letter this Evening,
and
to find that you have not been disappointed in the results
of the step to which you kindly say that my assistance was of some use.
In what you say about the monotony of reiteration, I can
confidently
assure you that your conclusions are quite correct; certain
precautions being, taken which an active mind like yours is sure to
fall
upon.
We shall be delighted to see
you at the R.
S. on the 20th and to have your paper, which, if
convenient,
please to put into my hands, as a matter of form, when ready.
I have been at several
meetings of the Society,
but am feeling a little just now the effects of the season and
the
winter's work, so I shall not be there on the 6th. On the whole,
however,
I have got through the winter well.
I shall like much to see your
Top, of which
I read the account in the Athenæum.
Have you observed in that
same flippant paper
for last Saturday an attack upon Faraday (as it seems to me) of
a
most presumptuous and ignorant kind? Though by no means as yet a
convert
to the views which Faraday maintains, yet I have so far a
general
appreciation of them as to believe that this conceited mathematician
(some
fifteenth Cambridge wrangler, I guess) is ignorant altogether of what
Faraday
wishes to prove.—Always yours sincerely,
JAMES D. FORBES