FROM
THE HON. J. W. STRUTT
(Lord Rayleigh).
Cambridge, 14th February 1871.
When
I came here last Friday I found every one talking
about the new
professorship, and hoping that you would come. Thomson, it seems,
has definitely declined. . . . There is no one here in the least fit
for
the post. What is wanted by most who know anything
about
it is not so much a lecturer as a mathematician who has actual
experience
in experimenting, and who might direct the energies of the younger
Fellows
and bachelors into a proper channel. There must be many who would be
willing
to work under a competent man, and who, while learning themselves, ould
materially assist him. . . . I hope you may be induced to come; if not,
I don't know who it is to be. Do not trouble to answer me about this,
as
I believe others have written to you about it.