TO C.
J. MONRO, Esq.
Glenlair, Dalbeattie, 15th March 1871.
I have been so busy writing a
sermon on Colour,
and Tyndalising my imagination up to the lecture point, that
along
with other business I have had no leisure to write to any one.
I think a good deal may be
learned from the
names of colours, not about colours, of course, but about
names;
and I think it is remarkable that the rhematic instinct has been so
much
more active, at least in modern times, on the less refrangible
side
of primary green (lambda = 510 x 10e-9 inches).
I am not up in ancient
colours, but my recollection
of the interpretations of the lexicographers is of
considerable
confusion of hues between red and yellow, and rather more
discrimination
on the blue side. Qu. If this is true, has the red
sensation
become better developed since those days? Benson has a new book,
Chapman
& Hall, 1871, called Manual of Colour.
I think it is a great
improvement on the Quarto,
both in size and quality. It is the size of this paper I write on.
I have not asked you if you
wish to go to sermon
on Colour, for I do not think the R. I.(12) a good place to go
to
of nights, even for strong men. I have, however, some tickets to spare.
The peculiarity of our space
is that of its
three dimensions none is before or after another. As is x, so is y and
so is z.
If you have 4 dimensions this
becomes a puzzle,—for
first, if three of them are in our space, then which three?
Also, if we lived in space of m dimensions,
but were only capable of thinking n of them, then 1st, Which n? 2d,
If
so, things would happen requiring the rest to explain them, and so we
should
either be stultified or made wiser.
I am quite sure that the kind
of continuity
which has four dimensions all co-equal is not to be discovered by
merely
generalising Cartesian space equations. (I don't mean by Cartesian
space
that which Spinoza worked from Extension the one
essential
property of matter, and Quiet the best glue to stick bodies together).
I think it was Jacob Steiner who considered the final cause
of space to be the suggestion of new forms of continuity.
I hope you will continue to
trail clouds of
glory after you, and tropical air, and be as it were a climate to
yourself.
I am glad to see you occasionally in Nature. I shall be in
London for a few days next week,—address Athenæum
Club.
I think Strutt on sky-blue is
very good. It
settles Clausius's vesicular theory,
"for, putting
all his words together.
'tis 3 blue
beans in 1 blue bladder."—Mat. Prior.
The Exp. Phys. at Cambridge
is not built yet,
but we are going to try.
The
desideratum is to set a Don and a Freshman to
observe and register
(say) the vibrations of a magnet together, or
the
Don to turn a winch, and the Freshman to observe and govern him.