TO C. J. MONRO, Esq.
Glenlair, Dalbeattie, 6th July 1870.
My question
to the
Mathematical Society bore
fruit in various forms. . . . It would give my mind too great
a
wrench just now to go into elliptic integrals, but I will do so when I
come to revise about circular conductors. . . . I can
cut the subject short with an easy conscience, for I have no scruple
about
steering clear of tables of double entry, especially when, in all
really
useful cases, convergent series may be used with less trouble, and
without
any knowledge of elliptic integrals. On this subject see a
short paper on Fluid Displacement in next part of the Math. Soc.
Trans.,
where I give a picture of the stream lines, and the distortion of a
transverse
line as water flows past a cylinder.
Mr. W.
Benson, architect, 147
Albany Street,
Regent Park, N.W., told me that you had been writing to
Nature,
and that yours was the only rational statement in a multitudinous
correspondence
on colours. Mr. Benson considers that Aristotle and I have
correct views about primary colours. He has written a book, with
coloured
pictures, on the science of colour, and he shows how to mix colours by
means of a prism. He wants to publish an elementary book
with
easy experiments, but gets small encouragement, being supposed an
heretic.
No other
architect in the Architect's Society believes him. This is interesting
to note, as showing the chromatic condition of
architects.
I made a great colour-box in 1862, and worked it in London in '62 and
'64.
I have about 200 equations each year, which are
reduced
but not published. I have set it up here this year, and have just got
it
in working order. I expect to get some more material, and work up the
whole
together. In particular, I want to find any change or evidence of
constancy in the eyes of myself and wife during eight years. I can
exhibit
the yellow spot to all who have it,—and all have it except
Col. Strange, F.R.S., my late father in-law, and my
wife,—whether
they be Negroes, Jews, Parsees, Armenians, Russians, Italians, Germans,
Frenchmen, Poles, etc. Professor Pole, for instance,
has it as strong as me, though he is colour-blind; Mathison, also
colour-blind,
being fair, had it less strongly marked.