s I. '..*. AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN LONDON , PRINTED BY *POTTI8WOODK AND CO., NKW-6T11EET SyfAEE AND PARLIAMENT BTBEET MEMOIB OF AUGUSTUS DE MOBGAN BY HIS WIFE SOPHIA ELIZABETH DE MORGAN WITH SELECTIONS FROM HIS LETTERS LONDON LONGMANS, GKEEN, AND CO. 1882 All rights reserved 3)5 PREFACE. I NEED hardly say that in the following pages I have not attempted a scientific memoir. My object has been to supply that part of my husband's life the material for which would not be within the reach of another biographer. The selection from his letters might have been much larger, if I could in all cases have inserted those of his correspondents. Without these many would have been incomprehensible. As it is, I may have over-estimated the attention which readers will be disposed to give to them. My rule in choosing the letters has been to take those which are most characteristic of the writer, and in this way to give to readers already acquainted with him through his writings a more familiar knowledge of him as a man. His connection with University College, and the events which led to his leaving it, are necessarily made promi- nent. So long a time has elapsed since their occurrence, and I have known so little during that time of the Institu- tion, that I cannot even surmise how the present Council would in like circumstances share the convictions or con- firm the action of its predecessors. After the lapse of sixteen years I trust that the narrative will provoke no revival of the somewhat acrimonious controversy which ensued. It might perha.ps have been in some ways vi PREFACE. better that Mr. De Morgan should have published a fuller statement of his views at the time, and have thus left less to be done by his biographer. But he had several reasons for not doing this. He refrained partly from reluctance to add to the censures which were being pro- nounced on the College, perhaps too emphatically, even by well-wishers, and re-echoed by its enemies with uncon- cealed satisfaction ; partly by the feeling that he had made no sacrifice of a pecuniary nature in resigning his Professorship ; but, as I think, chiefly from weariness and disappointment, and from a desire to have done with the Institution as soon as possible. Nothing, not even a dis- tinct recantation of the measure which made him leave, would have induced him to resume his chair, for he would have held such a recantation to be but another concession to expediency in deference to the storm unexpectedly raised. Should any portion of what I have written appear un- called for, it must be remembered that I could not touch my husband's side of the question without placing the whole before my readers. The insertion of the lengthy justifica- tion of the Council by members of the Senate will, I trust, exempt me from the charge of having suppressed arguments 011 the other side. SOPHIA ELIZABETH DE MORGAN. Cheyne Row, Chelsea, 1882. CONTENTS. SECTION I. FROM 1806 TO 1827. PAGE Place of Birth— Voyage to England — Family — Schools and School Days — Early Religious Teaching — Trinity College, Cam- bridge— Reading and Study — Mother's Anxiety — Teachers — College Friends — Choice of Profession — Degree — Lincoln's Inn 1-18 SECTION II. FROM 1827 TO 1831. William Frend — Religious Discussions — Stoke Newington — Can- didature for Professorship — University in London — Its Foundation — Its Principle — Opening of Classes — Introductory Lecture — Disagreements between Professors and Council — Paris — Colonel Briggs — East India Service — Dr. Briggs' Ghost Story — Opening of Session — Differences renewed — Letter of Remonstrance — Resignation of Chair . . 19-40 SECTION III. FROM 1831 TO 1836. Residence in Guilford Street — Astronomical Society — Efforts to raise Astronomy — Baily — Herschel — Airy — De Morgan elected Hon. Secretary — Astronomical Society's Charter — Captain Smyth — Sir James South — Friendships in Astro- nomical Society — Mr. Baily 's House — Sir James South's Quarrels— Nautical Almanac — Standard Scale — ' Elements of Arithmetic ' — Charles Butler — Archdeacon Thorp — Book- collecting — Hachette — Amicable Assurance Company — Troughton v. South — Challenges — Maps of the Stars — Return to Mathematical Chair 41-74 a viii CONTENTS. SECTION IV. r.uiK CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1831 TO 1836 . . 75-84 SECTION V. FROM 1836 TO 1846. Death of his Sister — His Religious Feelings and Opinions — His Mother's Anxieties — Church Rates — Marriage — Friends — Lady Noel Byron — Mrs. Fry — Introductory Lecture — Uni- versity of London — 'Theory of Probabilities' — 'Essay on Probabilities ' — Dickens' Works — Women's Rights—' Philo- sophers ' — Metaphysics — Lecturing — Distinguished Pupils — Cram — Outbreak of Students — Testimonial — Jewish Pupils — George Long — James Tate — ' Northern Lights ' — Francis Baily — The Cavendish Experiment — Blackheath — Death of William Frend — Obituary Notice — Commission on Standard Scale — Standard of Length — Henry Hallam — Birth of George Campbell De Morgan — Dr. Whewell — Cambridge Tracts — ' Differential and Integral Calculus ' finished — Limits and Series-^John Stuart Mill— Berkeley's Philosophy— Mill's Writings — Comte's System — Birth of Edward Lindsey De Morgan — Death of Francis Baily — His Epitaph — His Bust — Richard Sheepshanks — Micrometer Observations — Removal from Gower Street to Camden Street — Incapacity of a Professor — Class taken by Mr. De Morgan — Students' Gift — Malby's Globes — Mr. John Taylor's Astronomy and Work on the Pyramid — Old Mathematical Society — Historical Society of Science — Rev. Samuel Maitland — The Easter Question — Lord Brougham — Discovery of Neptune — Recep- tion of Discovery 85-138 SECTION VI. CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1836 TO 1846 . . 139-156 SECTION VII. FROM 1846 TO 1855. Formal Logic — Dr. Whewell — Cecil Monro's Remarks — Rev. Dr. Logan— The Hamilton Controversy— Mr. Herbert CONTENTS. IX PA OH Spencer — Berkeley's Metaphysics — Professor Boole — His System of Logic — Psychology — Chief Baron Pollock — Intro- ductory Lecture — Our Competitive Examination — Opinions of Friends — Astronomical Society — Admiral Smyth — Presi- dency— Royal Society — Acquaintance and Friends — Ladies' College — Over-teaching — Sir Rowland Hill — Postage- Museum Catalogue — Guglielmo Libri — Libri accused of Theft— De Morgan's Advocacy— Death of Thomas Galloway — Obituary Notice — Address on Negro Slavery — Cambridge Examinations — Physiology — Vivisection — University College — Dr. Peene's Legacy — Letter of Remonstrance to Council — Our Eldest Child's Death— City of London School— Death of Richard Sheepshanks— His Funeral — Anne Sheepshanks — Memoir — Table-turning — Mr. Faraday's Lecture on Mental Training — De Morgan's Criticism — Mr. Faraday's Indi- cator 157-193 SECTION VIII. CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1846 TO 1855 ... . 194-232 SECTION IX. FROM 1856 TO 1865. His Mother's Death — Her Sons — Accident to Shoulder — Decimal Coinage — History of the Movement — Government Commis- sions— Decimal Association — Deputation to Mr. Gladstone — Deputation to Board of Trade — Debate on Question — Sum- mary in 4 Westminster Review ' — Articles in ' Companion to the Almanac ' — Lecture on Coinage — Lord Overstone's Questions — Replies — Death of Mr. William Brown — Memoir of Newton — Brewster's Life of Newton — The Kaleidoscope — M. Biot — Catherine Barton — Lord Halifax — Article for ' Companion to Almanac* rejected — Savings Bank — Public Playgrounds — Rev. David Laing — Letter of Charles Dickens— Removal to Adelaide Road — Cab Drivers — Drink water Bethune — Ram- chundra — Hindoo Algebra — Non-acceptance of LL.D. Degree — International Statistical Congress — Retirement from Astronomical Society — Farewell Letter — Death of Biot — Foundation of Mathematical Society — Death of George Campbell De Morgan 233-286 SECTION X. CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1856 TO 1866 . . 287-335 X CONTENTS. SECTION XI. PAGE FROM 1866 TO 1871. University College— Chair of Mental Philosophy— Rev. J. Mar- tineau — Unitarians on Council — Report of Senate — Requisi- tion to Council — Appointment of Mr. Groom Robertson — Letter of Resignation — Acceptance of Resignation — Statement of Fifteen Professors to Proprietors — Annual Meeting — De Morgan's Last Visit to College— Letters of Old Pupils— H. C. Robinson— His Books— His Breakfasts— Death of George Campbell De Morgan — Mathematical Society — Illness and Removal to Merton Road — Latest Occupation and Interests— Greek Testament — The Free Christian Union — Christian Belief — Rationalism — Prayer — Death of Christiana De Morgan—Last Hours— Death— Extract from Will . 336-368 SECTION XII. CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1867 TO 1870 369-400 LIST OF WRITINGS 401 INDEX 417 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. SECTION I. AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN was born in the year 1806 at 1806. Madura, in the Madras Presidency. His father Lieu- tenant-Colonel De Morgan had held appointments, some of them staff situations, at several stations in India ; and at the time of his fifth child's birth had chosen Madura in preference to Yellore on account of its comparative quietness. This choice was fortunate, for the battalion of Colonel De Morgan's regiment commanded by Colonel Fanshawe was at Yellore during the time of the mutiny of the native troops ; and thus escaped the terrible out- break in which several English officers lost their lives, and Colonel Fanshawe was murdered. Even at the quieter stations there was cause for alarm from the general disaffection of the native troops, and my hus- band's mother told how she, being then near her con- finement, saw Colonel De Morgan, when the sentries were changed, creep out of bed to listen to the Sepoys, that he might learn if any plot were in agitation, about which information might be given with the pass- word. When Augustus was seven months old his father and Voyage to mother came to England with three children, two daughters and the infant. They sailed in the Duchess B 2 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1807. of Gordon, one of a convoy of nearly forty ships. The Commodore, Captain (afterwards Admiral) Sir John Beau- fort, was on friendly terms with my husband in after life. But Mr. De Morgan had no suspicion of having sailed under his convoy until after Mrs. De Morgan's death, when the notice of it was found in her journal. When Admiral Beaufort heard of this he wrote, in a letter dated Oct. 10, 1857, five weeks before his own death,— Admiral e Qur co-residence for three or four months, not in the Beaufort. same street or village or county, but in the same track along the ocean, is an amusing link in our two life- threads ; but not the less nattering to me as being claimed by you, and as finding myself one of the dramatis personce in your mother's journal of the Jane, Duchess of Gordon. You most correctly picture us as being * at the two ends of the chain,' for while it was my post to lead that gigantic fleet of upwards of thirty large vessels, I well remember that she was in all cases the sternmost, in spite of the number of hoarse hints that were given her through our guns. Passengers, even ladies, are never very tender in their criticisms on the poor commodore, and it would be charming to see how your mother retali- ated for his above coarse language by her sharp and witty castigation.' isos. Colonel De Morgan settled at Worcester with his wife and children, but returned to India in 1808 alone. Some disturbances in the Madras Army, causing the sus- pension from command of several officers, including him- self, gave him much trouble and anxiety for some time ; but the affair, which was settled by an inquiry at the India House, resulted in his complete and honourable acquittal. On his return to England in 1810, the family lived in the north of Devonshire ; first at Appledore, then at Bideford, then at Barnstaple. In 1812, one daughter having died, and two sons been born, they settled at Taunton in Somersetshire. The father again left England for Madras, and took the command of a battalion at EARLY EDUCATION. 3 Quilon. Being ordered home ill with liver complaint, he 1816. left Madras in 1816, and died near St. Helena, on his way to England. In a list given of his schools and instructors by Mr. De Morgan, his father's name occurs as his first teacher. He was then four years old, and learnt ' reading and nu- meration.' The heading of one column in this list, ( Age of the Victim,5 shows in a half- serious, half-humorous way the idea ' the Victim ' retained of his early schooling. He did not mean that it was worse in his case than in that of other boys, and he always spoke gratefully of his father; but he was no exception to the rule that most children, especially those of great intellectual promise, are more or less victims to our unenlightened methods of education. Of these exceptional children I have heard him say that those have the best chance who have the least teaching. At Barnstaple he learned, from a Miss Williams, 1813. reading, writing, and spelling; at Taunton, being be- Teachers- tween seven and eight, from Mrs. Poole, reading, writing, arithmetic, and (very) general knowledge. He always retained a painful remembrance of this school. .The Rev. J. Tenner, a Unitarian minister, was for a short time his teacher. The pupil was at that time about nine years old, and added Greek and Latin to his other studies. Mr. Tenner was the uncle of Henry Crabb Robinson, who died in 1867, aged ninety-one, and who had been at one time a pupil in the school. The next two teachers were, at Blandford, the Kev. T. Keynes, Independent minister ; and at Taunton, the Rev. H. Barker, Church of England clergyman, at whose school he was taught Latin, Greek, Euclid, Algebra, and a little Hebrew. His last school- master, a clever man, and one of whom, though he was not a high mathematician, his pupil always spoke with respect, was the Rev. J. Parsons, M.A., formerly Fellow of Oriel. At Mr. Parsons' school, at Redland, near- Bristol, Latin, Greek, and mathematics were taught. Mr. De Morgan B 2 4 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1820. was at this school from the age of fourteen to sixteen and a half, and at this period of his life his mathematical powers were first developed. It was strange that among so many teachers the germ of mathematical ability should have been so long unnoticed. It could not be quite latent or quite unformed in the brain of a boy of fourteen ; it can only be supposed that the routine of school teaching smothered and hid it from observation. Education means drawing out ; it often is keeping in, and it is well when it is no worse. In this case it was good for the pupil and for mathematics that the early germ should be left to its own resources of natural growth, uncrippled and undistorted by mistaken systems of teaching. It was accidentally developed, and indeed made known to its pos- sessor by the observation of a dear old friend, Mr. Hugh Standert, of Taunton. Seeing the boy very busy making a neat figure with ruler and compasses, and finding that the essence of the proposition was supposed to lie in its accurate geometrical drawing, he asked what was to be done. Augustus said he was drawing mathematics. ( That's not mathematics,' said his friend ; ' come, and I will show you what is.' So the lines and angles were rubbed out, and the future mathematician, greatly surprised by finding that he had missed the aim of Euclid, was soon intent on the first demonstration he ever knew the mean- ing of. I do not think, from what I have heard him say, that Mr. Standert was instrumental in further bringing out the latent power. But its owner had become in some degree aware of the mine of wealth that only required working, and as some mathematics was taught at Mr. Parsons' school, the little help that was needed was soon turned to profit. He soon left his teacher behind, and from that time his great delight was to work out ques- tions which were often as much his own as their solu- tion. I can only find one little mention of his first going to his school in his own handwriting. In a letter to Dean SCHOOL EXPERIENCES. 5 Peacock in 1852, he says apropos of Robert Young, of 1820. whom he had been writing, — 6 When I was sent to school near Bristol in 1820, I was consigned to E. Young, who especially warned me not to walk in my sleep, as there were no leads outside the windows ; they had been removed. The consequence was, that though I never walked in my sleep before or since that I remember, I was awakened by the wind blowing on me, and found myself before the open window, with my knee on the lower ledge. I crept back to bed, leaving the window open, and the family being alarmed by the noise, came into my room, and found me asleep and the window open, so that as their fenestral logic did not reason both ways, they forgot that the leads were not there, and searched the whole house for thieves.' Mr. Eobert Eeece, his old schoolfellow and constant friend of forty years, writes concerning these early school days : — ' I entered Mr. Parsons' school at Eedland, near Bristol, on August 12, 1819. I think dear De Morgan came among us at the latter end of the following year, or in January 1821. ' He was certainly a fine stout fellow for his age, and at once took a high place in the school. He had a grievous infirmity, the loss of one of his eyes,1 which provoked all kinds of gibes and practical jokes among the boys.' Mr. Eeece has told me how these cruel practical jokes were put an end to. One lad was in the habit of playing a trick upon his schoolfellow which deserves a worse name than thoughtlessness. He would come up stealthily to De Morgan's blind side, and holding a sharp-pointed penknife to his cheek, speak to him suddenly by name. De Morgan on turning round received the point of the knife in his face. His friend Eeece agreed with him that until the aggressor should receive a sound thrashing he 1 From birth. Both eyes were affected with the * sore eye ' of India, and the left was saved. 6 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. 1820-21. would never desist from his cruelty. c But how,' said the School tormented lad, ' can I catch him to thrash him ? I cannot days. see him. He comes up, and is gone before I can lay hands on him.* 'But you shall,' said Reece; and the arrangement was made. Reece, knowing that when his friend was quietly reading, as he often did, at a desk so placed that his blind side was near the door, the enemy would be likely to approach, hid himself in such a way that when the boy entered he could shut the door and prevent escape. All happened as he expected. De Morgan sat down at his desk with a book before him. Very soon the cowardly aggressor came quietly in, pointed his knife at his cheek, and said suddenly, ' De Morgan ! ' His intended victim did not turn round as he had done before, and in a moment the lad, a stout boy of fourteen, was seized behind by Reece, who gave him over to receive the c sound thrashing ' which De Morgan administered, and which proved effectual in making him keep the peace from that time. Mr. Reece tells how he and his friend, with another boy of similar tastes, contrived a late reading party, un- sanctioned by the master. One of the three asked Mr. Parsons to lend them Scott's poems, at that time just published. Having got ' The Lady of the Lake,' they waited till all the other boys were in bed, the lights out, and all things quiet ; then De Morgan produced a match pistol and a tinder, snapped a spark and lit the candle, and then read to his two companions till all three were too sleepy to take an interest in Ellen and Roderick Dim. I do not mention this as an example to be followed, but I hope my readers will forgive them. Mr. Reece says, ' I was impressed with his wonderful ability from the first, and I courted him, and gave him my admiration and my love. In return, he became at- tached to me, and invited or permitted me to sit by him in play-hours. He never joined in the sports of the boys, owing to his infirmity. He had a remarkable talent for CHOICE OF STUDIES. 7 drawing caricatures, of the kind that Gilray was so 1822. famous for. I took great interest in these drawings, and Carica- I had the privilege of suggesting a subject now and then. Two of them I remember— the one, " Charon's boat," with figures; the other, "The Devil," with the three black graces, Law, Physic, and Divinity. It seems an odd thing to record, but I well remember that I was advanced in " Eland's Quadratic Equations " when De Morgan took up that well-known elementary book, " Bridge's Algebra," for the first time. But it was so. He read Bridge's book like a novel. In less than a month he had gone through that treatise and dashed into Bland, and so got out of sight, as far as I was concerned. It is scarcely necessary to say that all his school work was admirably performed. Mr. Parsons had the highest opinion of him.' l Mr. Parsons being a good classical scholar, his aim was rather to make his boys good classics than mathe- maticians. If the mathematical power had not made itself apparent, and taken the place of all other interests in the pupil's mind, his studies would probably have taken the direction desired by his master. As it was, he was a good Greek and Latin scholar, and his classical reading was wide and varied. The teaching at Redland School was good, but abuses creep in everywhere. Here is an account of a way of saying the lessons, given to me by my husband in explanation of some remarks I had written on education. Like the midnight entertain- ment before mentioned, the story will afford hints to teachers rather than an example for pupils :— 'An ingenious application of the logical fallacy of a part for the whole was invented by schoolboys by the help of Providence, to moderate a mischief which would otherwise have been severely felt. It was thought neces- sary that boys should learn by heart Latin and Greek 1 The writer of the above died two years after his friend, his affection for whom was one of the strongest feelings in his mind while consciousness remained. 8 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1822. verses, to strengthen the memory. The poor ignorant jhooiboy Virgil and Homer scanners, and their subordinate Euclid icks and algebra drillers, had not the smallest idea that a memory is an adjunct of each faculty, that the training of one is of little or no help to another, and that the memory of words, which they over-cultivated, differs widely among young people. The allowance was forty lines a day, Latin and Greek alternately, for five days in the week, the whole two hundred to be repeated in one lot on Saturday. There was as much difference between the boys in the rapidity of committing to memory, as between the two pilgrims who went peashod to Loretto, the one with hard peas, the other with boiled, in his shoes. But the boys had the sense to learn their parts, as the actors do, and again, like the actors, they learnt the cues. This was carried on, at a school at which I was, year after year, without a single detection. Even the contretemps which arose when a boy was ill on a Satur- day, or when one who had been ill on a week-day came in on the Saturday, were adroitly got over. I am perfectly satisfied that the master, an old Fellow of Oriel, was a party to the whole proceeding, as a means of reconciling the appearances demanded by opinion with the amount of word-catching which he thought sufficient. And judg- ing by what I have heard of other schools, I suspect that such connivance was not infrequent.' The boys of Mr. Parsons' school attended St. Michael's Church, Bristol. Having heard something from Mr. De Morgan of his juvenile delinquencies, arising from think- ing more of mathematics than of the scarcely audible sermon, I searched out the school pew during a visit to Bristol, and there found, neatly marked on the oak wain- scot partition, the first and second propositions of Euclid and one or two simple equations, with the initials A. DE M. They were made in rows of small holes, pierced with the sharp point of a shoe-buckle, and are by this time probably repaired and cleaned away. EAELY DISPOSITION. 9 The testimony of Mr. Reece to the affection felt for 1822. their schoolfellow by most of his companions has been confirmed to me by one or two of the few who remain in this world, and I find in letters from friends many little confirmations. f I have known more of you than you of me,5 his friend Mr. Leslie Ellis wrote to him during the long and suffer- ing illness which preceded his death. 'Even while you were yet at Mr. Parsons' and I was a child I had heard of you, and of course in later years I have heard of you very often ; but though everybody spoke well of you, I was left to find out for myself how kind you could be to a sick man — how kind, I think I must infer, to all about you.' And another time, — c I had, since your recollection of Parsons, two brothers there, and I remember my father speaking of having seen you, and saying that the usher complained that you were " such a glutton," meaning in the matter of reading; but I cannot recollect whether he spoke of mathematical or classical reading, or of both.' But the boy was probably, at school, very like what he was at home, when his mother, who loved him fondly, described him as a quiet, thoughtful boy, occasionally but not often irritable, and never so well pleased as when he could get her to listen to his reading and explanations, and * always speculating on things that nobody else thought of, and asking her questions far beyond her power to answer.' One element of his early teaching strongly tinged his character in after life. Col. De Morgan, who was a strictly religious man, of a rather evangelical, as it is falsely called, turn of feeling, was premature, seeing the sensitiveness and grasp of the mind he had to deal with, in inculcating rigid doctrines, and insisting on formal observances. The religious training of his son thus begun, was continued, after his father left England, by his excellent mother, who, with the best intentions in the 10 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1822. world, was unable to adapt the spiritual food to the needs aligious of the recipient. He was made to learn by heart and repeat long Scripture lessons, so chosen that their mean- ing and connection with each other and with himself were quite imperceptible ; indeed, I have heard him say that, from frequent repetition, the words and phrases be- came meaningless to him. He was taken to church twice in the week, three times on Sunday, and required to give an abstract of every sermon he heard. Being thus administered, religion could not fail to become a source of misery. Sunday was the one wretched day of the week, to be got over somehow, and church was a place of penance. A worse result of the system even than this was the confusing together in an honest young mind all ideas of right and wrong, truth and falsehood, in con- nection with religion. The awful description of the Devil and his doings, and the eternal burning to be under- gone by all who did not believe what he could not then, and never was able to believe in the prescribed form, were set in the boy's mind against Jesus Christ's declara- tion that His Father was a God of love, and that repent- ance was the only condition of forgiveness. For a boy like Augustus De Morgan, whose clear perceptions, love of truth, and readiness to venerate, rendered him sensitive to every word spoken by those whom he loved, or who were in authority over him, such mental antagonisms must have been the cause of great anguish, and he could only escape, after he once began to think, by dismissing the whole from his mind. The problem of how to recon- cile the Divine idea of God's love with the human notion of God's justice was a harder one than he ever met with in after life, and he gave it up as insoluble. Not being yet able to detect the logical fallacies and critical errors which formed part of the arguments used to convince him, he could only receive those arguments in silence, but without assent. Happily the evil corrected itself, and no harm was done in the end. His innate sense of relation- ENTERS THE UNIVERSITY. 11 ship to his heavenly Father was too strong to allow him 1822. to become atheistical, and his reasoning power too sound to allow him to be sceptical as to the Christian revelation. But the process of pulling down and building up took time, and it was years before the impressions of his child- hood could pass away, and the natural, healthy working of the religious spirit could begin. Such an experiment is a dangerous one for parents to try, and the greater the early indications of religious feeling in a child, the more cautious and forbearing should they be in their direction of it. One lasting injury done to him by the compulsory at- tendance so often at public worship, was his inability in after life to listen for any time to speaking or preaching. He said that the old troubles of the three services on Sunday, and the ' dreary sermons ' came back to him, and to get rid of these memories he thought of something different from what was being said. In February 1823 he entered Trinity College, Cam- 1823. bridge. His old schoolmaster, Mr. Parsons, with other friends, had counselled his pupil's reading for honours in Classics ; and Mrs. De Morgan's wish was that her son should enter the Church as an Evangelical clergyman. She had had all the responsibility^ of her children's education, and, looking to the success of her eldest at Cambridge as a most important element of his future welfare, naturally trusted to the advice of her friends, and believed that all attention given to Mathematics beyond what was needed for his examination would be so much labour lost. He Age on was but sixteen years and a half old when he went to Cambridge, entering at a by -term. Though always studious and persevering, yet at his first examination, when his attention had been divided between the classical reading he had forced himself to attend to, and the Mathematics which he loved, he stood at the top of the second class only. But his failure, as ghe considered it, caused his mother great anxiety, and her letters to him 12 MEMOIK OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1823. 1824. Tutor s opinion of his capa- bilities. at the time are filled with earnest entreaties ' not to dis- regard good advice/ ' not to be so wilful/ &c. It is certain that her exhortations were not needed. He had exerted himself, as his tutor's letter to him shows : * I am sorry that I cannot congratulate you on being in the first class, though your merits and exertions richly deserved it.' We may remember that he was at this time under seventeen, that he had been at college only three months, and that he beat by many places his competitor of his own year, two years his senior in age. Moreover, he had been urged by his tutor, against his own conviction, to go in for examination at this time. It appears from some of his mother's letters that he had in reply assured her that he would comply with her wish with respect to his reading. But it cannot be wondered at that the University lectures opened the field into which he had long desired to enter. It was like new life to him when he listened to Dr. Peacock's explanations, and followed up the study he loved under the guidance of one who knew how to show the way. From the conflict between his own inclinations and the wishes of his friends it is certain that his path could not be quite smooth, but happily the University courses made it better during the second than in the first year. A greater amount of Mathe- matics was then required in the college examination, and he was found at the head of the first class. Mr. Higman, his tutor, wrote to his mother : ' Notwithstanding my disappointment last year, I had formed such a very favourable opinion of Mr. De Morgan's talent, and was so much pleased with his industry and the implicit attention he paid to every direction that I gave him, that I felt per- fectly assured that he would, on the next trial, when less depended on Classics, distinguish himself in a very extra- ordinary manner. Nor have my prognostics with regard to his success proved deceitful ; he is not only in our first class, but far, very far, the first in it.' For the first two years of his Cambridge life, owing to RELIGIOUS PERTURBATIONS. 13 the difficulty of getting rooms in Trinity College, he was 'J.824. in lodgings. After this his rooms were over the gateway. At this time his mother wrote to him : ( I hope I am mis- His taken in supposing from your letter that you go entirely ™idety. to " the chapel," and not with Mr. and Mrs. , to hear the Gospel on Sundays. . . . You are very young, my love, and will be likely to go wrong from being left to yourself so soon if you do not take advantage of the experience of those who have gone before you. I have less fear for you than I should have for many youths of your age, because you are studious and steady, because you love your mother tenderly, but above all, because you are the child of many prayers ; but I shall be most anxious if you do not hear dear Mr. Simeon.' In another letter she says, speaking of the same friends who had assisted him in small money arrangements at Cambridge : ' Mrs. tells me you are like a man of fifty in settling your accounts with her for things she has bought. Dear own son of your father and mother, go on through life with the same scrupulous punctuality ; it will be a means of keeping you from spending extravagantly ; it will make you respected and beloved, and preserve you from that sort of carelessness which brings many young men to ruin.' I would not put on record expressions showing the intense anxiety of a most energetic and loving mother for a beloved child, except to afford an instance of how the very best intentions may be acted on in such a way as to . frustrate their own fulfilment. Mrs. De Morgan had put some books, of what would now be called a ' Low Church' tendency, into a box with other things for her son, accompanying them with a letter, from which I extract the following : — ( I am so anxious that you should read occasionally the Religious books I send (unknown to you), and was so fearful you r might endeavour to persuade yourself and me that you had no time for such studies, that I thought the best way 14 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1824. would be to say nothing about it viva voce, but to send Doctrines them uninvited ; and, having determined on that, an of salva- tion. explanatory note became necessary. I beseech you, for my sake, to read with attention these books, to utter a prayer over them whenever you open them, "that they may be blessed to you as they have been to thousands," many of whom are now rejoicing in heaven, where you wish to go, Vut where you never can go while you remain wilfully ignorant of your state by nature, and of your need of a Saviour. Your believing an atonement necessary in a general sense ! will not avail you. You must go ly your- self and for yourself to Christ for pardon and grace, and until you do this you may rest assured you are in a most awful state — liable to be hurled into everlasting torment by every little accident, every disease, nay, even by a crumb of bread going the wrong way. Can you wonder that a mother, doting as I do on you, feels miserable when she contemplates a beloved child wantonly sporting on the edge of so tremendous a precipice ? . . . Can you picture to yourself any agonies like those which would take posses- sion of your mind were you assured that before to-inorrow morning you would be standing at the tremendous bar of an angry God ? ' The young man thus appealed to was dutiful and affectionate, and these exhortations troubled him much. His reason and instinctive love of God told him that they must arise from misinterpretations of Scripture, and from human notions of Divine things. In many less logical and fearless minds they would have produced disgust with religion altogether ; but the intellect of the future logician was too clear to confound the thing itself with its abuses, or with the misrepresentations of ill-judging advocates. 1 From this expression, and from what I have heard, I conclude that Mr. De Morgan had assured his mother of his belief in the atone- ment in the Scripture sense, namely, the reconciliation or at-one-ment of sinning and repentant man to a loving God, not the reconciling of an angry God to mankind, in consequence of intellectual belief. This was his creed in after life. DISCURSIVENESS IN STUDY. 15 These had not even the effect of making him dismiss the 1825. matter from his mind, for during the whole of his college life his mind was actively employed on questions con- nected with theology and philosophy. He never saw the gospel in any other light than as a professing declaration of God's love and mercy, but it was some time before he was convinced of its historical truth and supramundane origin. In 1825 Mr. De Morgan was again high in his class. He had had an illness, perhaps from reading too much and too late at night ; and his mother, whose gratification was damped by her great anxiety about his health, writes to him : 6 You are much higher than I expected from your humble account of yourself, and I rely on your letting me know if you should suffer materially.' In April Schoiar- a Trinity scholarship was awarded him. After this time some friends must have made his mother anxious by accounts of his general and discursive reading, for she writes : ' I have heard of you lately as a man who reads much, but who is not likely to do much, because he will not conform to the instructions of those who could assist him.' The indocility to which she refers consisted in extensive Mathematical reading beyond the bounds marked out by his tutors, and in the study of Metaphysics, Mental Philo- sophy, and even Theology. Berkeley's writings attracted him strongly; the immateriality of Berkeley's doctrine being suited to a mind instinctively resting upon a spiritual Father, and believing that we depend on His sustaining power as well for absolute existence as for support and guidance through life. It is far from im- probable that Berkeley's speculations, falling in in a great degree with his own, gave a strong bias to his subsequent thoughts on metaphysical questions. He never forgot what he owed to his teachers in the University. These were, as entered in his own book, his college tutor J. P. Higman, Archdeacon Thorp, G. B. Airy, A. Coddington, H. Parr Hamilton (Dean of Salis- 16 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1825. bury), G. Peacock (Dean of Ely), and W. Whewell (after- wards Master of Trinity). With all of these gentlemen he kept up a friendship and correspondence during their joint lives. Early His college friends of nearly his own age were William Heald, William Mason, Arthur Neate, and Thomas Falconer, all of Trinity College. Among those whose friendship he valued, none were more esteemed by him than his teachers — Dean Peacock, Dr. Whewell, Mr. Cod- dington, and Dr. Thorp, afterwards Archdeacon Thorp. Mr. Heald, afterwards Rector of Birstal, in Yorkshire, died in 1875. Mr. Mason, Rector of Pickhill, near Thirsk, died in 1873, and his companion and chum of Trinity College days, Arthur Neate, died at his rectory, Alvescot, near Oxford, in 1870. Some peculiarities in his college life were well known to Cambridge men of his year. The habit of reading through great part of the night, and, in consequence, getting up very late the next day, was notorious ; and fellow-collegians, coming home from a wine party at four in the morning, might find him just going to bed. One of these, better known in the University for TOWS than for reading, has told me how often he himself, being late next day from a different cause, has gone into De Morgan's rooms, just below his own, and begged for an air on the Love of flute to ( soothe a headache.' His flute, which he played exquisitel}', was a great source of pleasure to himself and his friends. He was a member of the ' Camus,' a musical club so called from the initials of its designation — Cam- bridge Amateur Musical Union Society ; and their meetings, and those at the houses of a few musical families, were his chief recreation. He was a born musician. His mother said that when listening to the piano, even when a very little child, a discordant note would make him cry out and shiver. I must not omit to record his insatiable appetite for novel-reading, always a great relaxation in his leisure time, and doubtless a UNIVERSITY DEGREE. 17 useful rest to an over-active brain in the case of one who 1826-27. did not care for riding or boating. Let it be good or bad in a literary point of view, almost any work of fiction was welcome, provided it had plenty of incident and dialogue, and was not over-sentimental. He told me that he soon exhausted the stores of the circulating library at Cam- bridge. Like his schoolfellows, his college friends loved him for his genial kindness, unwillingness to find fault, and quiet love of fun, always excepting practical jokes, with which he had no patience at all. During the last year and a half of his stay at Cambridge intention Mr. De Morgan had some thoughts of becoming a phy- medicine. sician. With his views on religion, his ordination was out of the question ; but he liked the study of medicine, and some friends advised him to read it with a pur- pose. This intention did not last long. His old friend, Mr. Hugh Standert, of Taunton, knew by experience what was generally needed for success in medical practice, and an acquaintance from infancy made him believe that Augustus was not pliant enough, and could not, or would not, be sufficiently ready to adapt himself to the fancies and peculiarities he would meet with to make him a popular doctor. Whether or not he had any special genius for medicine is uncertain. His mother agreed with Mr. Standert, and urged upon her son that his success in medicine might depend on an amount of tole- ration for ignorance and folly which, with his ' hatred of everything low,' he would find a great trial. She begged him to ' throw physic to the dogs,' and to turn his thoughts to law. He complied, but did not like his des- tination. Events proved that he was right, that he had not found his proper place in the world's workshop. In 1827 he took the degree of fourth wrangler, 1827. the order being Gordon, Turner, Cleasby, De Morgan. This place, as one of his scientific biographers truly says, ' did not declare his real power, or the exceptional aptitude of his mind for mathematical study.' He had c 18 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1826. been expected to be senior or second wrangler, and his lower degree was attributed by his contemporaries and competitors to the wide mathematical reading by which he was often led away from the course prescribed for examination. This failure, in a possibly fallacious test, was his own early, but unintentional, protest against competitive examinations ; for which he felt excessive disapprobation even before his experience as a teacher showed him not only their mischievous effect upon mind and health, but their insufficiency to determine the real worth of a candidate for honours. In saying this I do not detract from the merit of the gentlemen who stood above Mr. De Morgan in the Tripos of 1826. All three distinguished themselves in after life, but as he was un- doubtedly the first in mathematical ability, it is likely that their precedence of him might be due to the fact that his love of the study led him to read more widely and discursively than his friends on the very subject on which excellence was to be tested. At the time of his taking his B.A. degree he came to live with his two brothers, mother, and sister in London. He had determined to go to the Bar, and was beginning his legal studies, but he very much preferred teaching mathe- matics to reading law. Something like the objection urged by his friends to medicine was uppermost in his mind, and he feared or imagined that in practising at the Bar he might find it difficult to satisfy both his clients and his conscience. But these scruples were overcome, and he entered at Lincoln's Inn. 19 SECTION II. 1827 TO 1831. IT was at this time that he became acquainted with my 1827. father, William Trend. They first met at the office of William the Nautical Almanac, of which their common friend, Lieutenant Stratford, R.N., had been recently appointed Comptroller. Mr. Trend and Mr. Stratford were both members of the old Mathematical, and subsequently of the Astronomical Society. Though my father was, even at that time, far behind Mr. De Morgan as a mathe- matician, the two had a good deal of mathematics in common. My father had been second wrangler in a year in which the two highest were close together, and was, as his son-in-law afterwards described him, an exceedingly clear thinker and writer. It is possible, as Mr. De Morgan said, that this mental clearness and directness may have caused his mathematical heresy, the rejection of the use of negative quantities in algebraical operations ; and it is probable that he thus deprived himself of an instrument of work, the use of which might have led him to greater eminence in the higher branches. This same heresy gave occasion to many amusing arguments and discussions. But between these two sympathy in matters of morals and principle formed a stronger bond than similarity of pursuit. My father had sacrificed good prospects as a clergyman to his conscientious scruples about the doctrines of the Established Church, as ex- pressed in the Creeds and Articles, and had been through life an earnest advocate of religious liberty. These cir- c 2 20 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1827. cumstances won for him at once the respect and esteem °^ "^"r> ^e -^organ> wno> like himself, had thrown off the restraints of a creed which he could not hold, and which he refused to profess without holding. I think my father, who was a good Hebrew scholar, afterwards helped him to clear away some of the doubts and difficulties resulting from mistranslations of Scripture, and fostered by the early teaching of a sect not critically learned. We were living at Stoke Newington, in one of those old houses with wooded grounds, of which so few remain near London. It had formerly belonged to Daniel Defoe, and Isaac Watts had inhabited it. In my father's time it was the scene of many a pleasant gathering of men and women of all degrees of intellectual ability, and of almost every shade of political and religious opinion. The spot where the old house stood has become the centre of a district of streets and shops, built where the tall trees grew, and nothing now remains to commemorate its existence but the name of Defoe Street. Mr. De Morgan first came to our house with Mr. Stratford. He then looked so much older than he was that we were surprised by hearing his real age — just twenty-one. I was nineteen. We soon found out that this ' rising man,' of whom great things were expected in science, and who had evidently read so much, could rival us in love of fun, fairy tales, and ghost stories, and even showed me a new figure in cat's cradle. He was in person very like what he continued through life, but paler, probably from the effects of his recent Cambridge reading. His hair and whiskers were very thick and curly ; he was not bald till thirty years after. I re- member his having a slight pleasure in saying things which startled formal religionists, but which we, who were not formal, soon understood to mean what they ex- pressed, and no more. These sayings were humorous, and like the half-mischievous jests of a very young man. It was easy to see that a deep religious feeling underlay the STOKE NEWINGTON. 21 contempt for observance which his early training had 1827. caused, and that his consciousness of the care and father- hood of the Almighty was a sacred thing belonging to himself alone, not to be profaned by contact with human forms or inventions. My father, who, like people who have made their own belief, was a little impatient in argu- ment, at first thought him an unbeliever ; and so, in a certain sense, he was ; but it was only in such things as he could not find a reason for believing. I mention re- ligious questions because they entered much into our thoughts and conversation at that time. As to the Gospels, he waited for a better and more critical understanding of them than could be gained from his first instructors, and this a rather extensive reading of theology enabled him to acquire before he left this world. When I first knew him, I was puzzled by such books as Volney's * Ruins of Em- Antiqua- ri;ui science. pires,' Sir. W. Drummond's writings, and other works of antiquarian research, to which a great interest in our friend Godfrey Higgins's investigations had led me. Mr. De Morgan showed me the scientific errors of some of these writers, and the insufficiency of their theories to account for all that they have tried to explain. He was well informed in Eastern astronomy and mythology, and saw that much of modern doctrine has gained something of its form, at least, from ancient symbolism.1 Lieut.- Col. Briggs, his uncle by marriage, had begun his * Ferishta,' and his nephew's interest in the work had brought him much into the society of Oriental scholars. The ancient grandeur and simplicity of the East at once excited and satisfied his imagination. He sometimes said that India with its skies and mountains 'might be really worth looking at,' whereas he never saw any 1 All scholars must see that the time is approaching when a better knowledge of ancient religions will show that they have been misunder- stood, and that they are not entirely fictitious or entirely astronomical. If this were the place it would not be difficult to show the connection of all. MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1827. Music. London University, scenery in England than which he could not picture to himself something infinitely grander. He was proud of his birth in the sacred city of Madura, and at one time longed to visit his native country, and fancied that every one had the same instinctive desire. Luckily, his doing so when young was prevented by the defect of sight which justified his mother in refusing a cadet- ship for him. During the ten years which preceded our marriage, his delightful flute, accompanied by my sister on the piano, was a great pleasure to us. I lost the gratification of accompanying him then, and it was afterwards a sorrow to me that I was not a musician. Our acquaint- ance began just before he became a candidate for the Professorship of Mathematics, but he, like my father, took an interest in the foundation of the new University, of which, indeed, my father had been one of the first projectors. It has been observed that when the time is ripe for bringing forward any measure, ideas come at the same time to more than one mind fitted to receive them, and it is often difficult to find the author of the first suggestion. This is especially true in the case of the foundation of large institutions. In what follows I do not mean to assert that my father was the first suggester of a college or university in .London, but, being one of the few persons now living who can remember the beginning of University College and the expressed designs and hopes of its founders, I venture to give, more in detail than the scope of a biography would justify, a short account of its origin; and in thus contributing my share of its history I must speak of that part which I best remember. About or before the year 1820, some liberal-minded men, after long pondering on the disabilities of Jews and Dissenters in gaining a good education, came to the con- clusion that as the doors of the two Universities were closed against them, the difficulty could best be met by THE NEW LONDON UNIVERSITY. 23 establishing a University in which the highest academical 1827. teaching should be given without reference to religious First sug- differences. As this could not be done in an institution in which the pupils resided without excluding religion altogether from education, a necessary condition of the establishment was the daily attendance of students on college lectures, so that while living under their parents' roof they might be brought up in the religion of the family. My father's ideas of the proposed institution had been embodied in some letters signed ' Civis,' and published in a monthly periodical1 edited by Mr. John Thelwall, some- where about 1819, which did not survive a third number. The writer was well qualified by his own academical status, and by the subsequent abandonment of Church prefer- ment which led him into connection with intelligent Dis- senters, to estimate the value of University training, and the great loss and deprivation sustained by young men every way qualified to profit by it who were unable from religious belief to receive it. He looked forward to the day when all forms of religion should be held equal within the walls of the noble institution which he contemplated, in which good conduct and compliance with rules should be the only conditions of admission. A short time after the publication of the letters re- ferred to, Mr. Thomas Campbell, the poet, first visited their writer, and informed him that Lord Brougham (then Mr. Brougham) and Dr. Birkbeck, with himself and one or two others, believed that the time for making the attempt was come. I was about twelve years old when Mr. Brougham dined with my father to consult upon it. Some meetings took place, other liberal men joined them, and after some delay the first active committee was formed. Mr. Frend was prevented by long and severe illness 1 I have tried in vain to find the title of this periodical, which is not in the British Museum. It must have appeared between 1818 and 1822. 24 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1827. from taking an active part in the first movements, but he joined the general committee on his recovery, became a shareholder, and on the election of a council and officers was appointed one of four auditors. The establishment of University College, called at first the Loidon University, promised to fulfil the hopes of all friends of education, and was hailed as a forerunner of religious freedom. My father naturally took the liveliest interest in its progress. Mr. De Morgan welcomed the opening of the College, as not only meeting a great want of the time, but as offering to himself a prospect of leaving the study of Law, which he did not like, for the teaching and pursuit of Science. When the time came for the appointment of Professors he sent his name in as a candidate for the Mathematical chair. He was one of thirty-two candidates. The committee for examining tes- timonials found among his the highest certificates from Dr. Thorp, Dr. Peacock, Professor Airy, Professor Cod- dington, and others, his Cambridge teachers. He was much younger than any of his competitors, but his election to the chair of Mathematics was made unanimously, and afterwards confirmed by the Council on February 23, 1828, being formally communicated to him without delay. Election to It was a little characteristic incident connected with ship. the appointment of the future Mathematical Professor, that while the election was going on in one part of the college, and he with some others of the candidates were in the common room, he took up a volume lying on the table, which proved to be Miss Porter's ' Field of the Forty Footsteps.' The scene of this novel is laid in the fields which formed the site of the building and its surround- ings. It was said that, some years before, the marks of the weird 6 forty footsteps ' might still be seen in the ground, but builders and stonemasons had effectually removed them, and fanciful comparisons were drawn between the effacement of these marks of the brothers' rivalry and the barbarity of their lady love as the new NEED OF A LIBERAL UNIVERSITY. 25 foundations arose, and the disappearance of crime and 1827. ignorance under the work which the College had to do. The love of fiction was strong enough in the candidate's mind to make him forget his interest in what was going on, and he had run through the volume before a whisper reached his ears as to the result of the election. In looking at the past history of an institution it is useful to trace not only the successes, but the mistakes which have caused failure and disturbance; for even in cases where present prosperity may lead to imitation, a statement of errors committed and corrected will be as a chart of the rocks to be avoided hereafter. I shall try to give a truthful sketch of the early history of the College ; not entirely omitting those elements in its formation which created discord in the first years, and which had some share long after in the disastrous termination of my hus- band's connection with it. Had he lived long enough he would have himself done this, far better than any one else. His pen was held for a time by consideration for con- temporaries, most of whom are now gone. Circumstances connected with his memory have arisen since he was taken from us which make it imperative on me to do the work which he left undone. To learn this history fairly we must look back to the state of state of education, and to the needs and disabilities which at this time. led to the foundation of the London University. These disabilities and needs were felt, not so much by highly educated academical men wishing for a cheap school for their sons, as by the great body of enlightened Jews and Dissenters, held back by religious tests from sharing in University advantages, but intelligent enough to perceive the value of what they lost, and rich enough to supply the want for themselves. The wealth of this party was of course represented by commercial men. To these must be added some parents living in London and the neigh- bourhood who could not aiford to send their sons to college, and to whom the attendance on daily lectures 26 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1828. while living at home seemed more desirable. A few of the most liberal thinkers of the time gave their best help to the completion of the design, but the large body of men who had been trained under University discipline held aloof from an institution from which religious tests were excluded, and which might at some time compete with the two Universities, bound up as they were by old usage with the interests of the Established Church, whose foundations were laid in the time of a church older still. Thus, with the exception of the few enlightened scholars who generally held out a hand to their less Founders of fortunate brethren, the founders of the London Uni- University. versity were either liberal politicians, not always familiar with the details of academical discipline, or mercantile men, who, with the best possible intentions, had no ex- perience of the best way of securing concord and due balance in the relations of governing body, teacher, and pupil. The Deed of Settlement of the London University bears date 1826. The Institution was a proprietary one, the funds being raised partly by shares, partly by sub- Constitu- scriptions. The management was vested in a council of twenty-four gentlemen chosen from among the proprie- tors, and a general meeting of proprietors formed the highest court of appeal. The Professors were elected by the Council; and a Warden, who was to be the medium of communication between the Council and Professors, and superintendent of the household department, was ap- pointed. The duties of the Professors were confined to their class-rooms, in which, as it afterwards appeared, they were not absolute. It would have been well for the infant institution if a piece of advice given by Mr. De Morgan long after, and in a different connection,1 could have been acted on at this time. ' Never begin,' he said, ' by drawing up con- 1 On the establishment of the Ladies' College, Bedford Square. INTENTIONS OF ITS FOUNDERS. 27 stitutions. They are sure to prove clogs on the wheel. 1828. Let the work begin in good earnest, and with no needless machinery. If it is done well you will soon see what is wanted, and the constitution will be formed by meeting the needs as they arise.' The founders of University College, as of other public institutions, had not grasped the idea of this natural growth, and the effect of their arrangements was to put a clog upon the wheels, which shook the whole vehicle, and well-nigh overturned it at first going off. As I cannot enter into the history of this institution farther than is necessary to explain my husband's connec- tion with it, no names except those which belong to that part of the history will be brought forward. The design of the London University, as set forth in pamphlets, speeches, and the general understanding of the time, and repeated many years later in an official document,1 was to provide a liberal education in Classics, Mathematics, Physical Science, and Medicine, without regard to religious distinction either in teacher or pupil. The teaching was to be given in lectures attended daily by students, and the only condition of entry, beside the fee, was good conduct and compliance with the rules laid down for the maintenance of order in the college. In conformity with this avowed principle of religious neutrality we find, among the Professors first chosen, Professors. three Clergymen of the Church of England, one Inde- pendent minister, a Jewish gentleman, who in his place of Hebrew professor taught the reading of the Old Tes- 1 No reference whatever is made to religion in the Deed of Settle- ment, Regulations, or By-Laws. In these it is stated that the object of the University is to afford an education in Mathematical and Phy- sical Science, Classics and Medicine. The absolute determination to leave the subject of religion entirely untouched appears negatively from these documents, but positively from all the addresses given in the institution, in newspaper articles, and in the general understanding of all the parties connected with it, a great number of whom, being rich Dissenters, watched the proceedings with a jealous eye. 28 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, 1828. Letter to Mr. Frend. Appoint- ment tament, and other gentlemen nominally churchmen, but whose religious views were known to vary from strict orthodoxy to the widest latitudinarianism. The appointment to the Mathematical Professorship pleased some of Mr. De Morgan's Cambridge friends, who spoke and wrote of it as a boon to the London University and to himself. It would be untrue to say that all his friends rejoiced in it, for his own family and near rela- tions, who had anticipated a brilliant success for him at the Bar, felt that to take a position as yet doubtful, with a greater doubt of fitting remuneration, was really a sacrifice on his part. My father shared in this feeling, and, in reply to the expression of it, Mr. De Morgan wrote : — 6 You seem to fancy that I was going to the Bar from choice. The fact is, that of all the professions which are called learned, the Bar was the most open to me ; but my choice will be to keep to the sciences as long as they will feed me. I am very glad that I can sleep without the chance of dreaming that I see an " Indenture of Five Parts," or some such matter, held up between me and the Mecanique Celeste, knowing all the time that the dream must come true.' One false step due to the tendency in young asso- ciations to frame constitutions before their needs are known, was the appointment of a Warden for the new University. The next error arose from the same cause, and showed the inability of the governing body to per- ceive what was due to men of worth and education, if they meant such men to give them the weight of their character and influence. As a good friend to the new College wrote to Mr. De Morgan, speaking of two influen- tial members of Council : ' A. believes that the University depends on the Professors, B. that the Professors depend on the University.' Unfortunately the A.s were in the minority. Mr. De Morgan received the official notice of his FORMAL APPOINTMENT TO PROFESSORSHIP. 29 appointment on the day of the election, and was informed 1828. at the same time that c a formal certificate of appoint- ment will be prepared, in which the duties of the Pro- fessors will be specified, and they will be required to sign an acceptance of the authority of the Council and of the rules of the University on receiving them.' These conditions and obligations were not such as could Undue re- be accepted by men accustomed to academical discipline, Professors! and who knew the value of their work. They were the work of a governing body new to its own duties, and to the claims and rights of those for whom they were composed. But after a strong remonstrance the Pro- fessors were enabled to hold their diplomas on a simple declaration of adherence to the constitution as set forth in the Deed of Settlement. The classes opened on the following November, and on the 5th the Professor of Mathematics gave his introductory lecture, when, as he says, he 'began to teach himself to better purpose than he had been taught, as does every man who is not a fool, let his former teachers be what they may.' l This lecture ' On the Study of Mathematics ' takes a introduc- much wider view of that study, and its effects upon the ture. e° mind, than its title alone would imply. It is an essay upon the progress of knowledge, the need of knowledge, the right of everyone to as much knowledge as can be given to him, and the place in mental development which the culture of the reasoning power ought to hold. It is not only a discourse upon mental education, but upon mind itself. It was the work of a young man of twenty- two years and four months old, and the earnestness and sanguineness of youth may be seen in the strong deter-. 1 In this year he published a translation of the first three chap- ters of Bourdon's Algebra. This was afterwards superseded in his class-room by his own Arithmetic and Algebra. In his own copy of Bourdon is inscribed, after his name, 'Aged 22 years and 2 months, being the first work he ever published. — A, De M., Aug. 26, 1846.' 30 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1828. mination with which his work was begun, and the high hopes which he felt of the work the University had to do. How well his part was done, after years, and the con- senting voice of many pupils whose own work bore the fruit of his teaching, have given proof. What part he had in obtaining for the College its subsequent reputation it is not for me to say. How he was repaid, the judgment of the future must deter- mine. The Mathematical class during the first session con- sisted of nearly one hundred pupils. In the next year there was an increase of numbers. The Professor gave two lectures every day, the first from nine till ten A.M., the second from three to four in the afternoon. After each lecture he remained for a time at his desk, in order that pupils who had found any part obscure might come to him to have their difficulties cleared up. In this way the two lectures occupied about three hours in the day, and the pupils' exercises which were to be examined rather less than an hour more. Various proposals had been made by the most active among the Professors for improving the condition of the institution; among those which were carried into effect were the foundation of a day school in connection with the University, and the annual distribution of prizes and honours. But, as might be expected from the elements of which the new institution was founded, it could not go on long smoothly. Troubles began soon after the opening, due to arrangements which resulted from the forma- tion of a constitution and laws before the working neces- sities of the institution could be known ; and all the mis- apprehensions which soon arose among the component members were traceable to this cause. These were set forth chiefly in the following pamphlets, printed for private circulation : — 1. c A Letter to the Shareholders and Councillors of the University.' VISIT TO PAEIS. 31 2. ' Statements respecting the University of London, 1828. prepared at the desire of the Council by Nine of the Pro- fessors.' 3. ' Letter to the Council of the University of London, by Leonard Horner, Warden of the University.5 4. ' Observations on a Letter, &c., by L. Horner, Esq., &c., &c., by Nine Professors.' During the vacation of 1829, Mr. De Morgan spent a 1829. few weeks in Paris, chiefly at the house of Colonel, after- wards General John Briggs, of the Madras Army. Col. Colonel Briggs and his father, Dr. Briggs, also of the Indian army, had married two Miss Dodsons, sisters of Mr. De Morgan's mother. They were, therefore, his uncles by marriage. Col. Briggs, who, as a young man, had served under Sir John Malcolm during the time of the dissolu- tion of the Mahratta Confederacy, afterwards held suc- cessively a diplomatic post in Persia, and that of Resident at Nagpoor, and finally, for a short time, the place of Senior Commissioner of Mysore. He was an able officer and an indefatigable student of Eastern language, history, and Science. His work on the Land Tax of India was one of the earliest protests against some points of British misrule in the East. In the bringing out of this work his nephew Augustus gave him a good deal of assistance. Besides this work, General Briggs was the author of ' Letters on India,' an excellent guide for young men entering the army, even now when the army is under different rule ; and besides the ' Ferishta,' already men- tioned, he translated the work by Ghulam Hussein on the 'Decay of the Mogul Empire.' His knowledge of Eastern languages and Science had brought him and our friend Godfrey Higgins into intimate acquaintance. They visited my father together at Stoke Newington, and their animated discussions were always amusing and often instructive, though the two had a tendency to differ about Hindoo temples and topes and remains, which Mr. Higgins declared had been built and decorated 32 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1829. according to his theory of ancient Astronomy, and Colonel Briggs as firmly maintained were not so when he last saw them. Acquaint- The visit to Paris was paid just before Colonel Briggs Paris. left for India. It was a time of great enjoyment, and besidos the society of his uncle's family and the pleasures of Paris life, then quite new to him, whose time had been altogether given to study, he made acquaintance with many of the scientific men and scholars of the time. Among these were MM. Hachette (with whom he corre- sponded till M. Hachette's death in 1832), Biot, Chladni, the Due de Broglie, and others. With M. Quetelet he became acquainted two years later. M. Bourdon, whose work on Algebra he had translated, was in Paris, but the two never met. India. My husband's interest in his birthplace had always been kept alive by intercourse with his many relations there, some of whom were in the Madras army, some in the Civil Service. It is well known how frequent were the disputes and jealousies among the servants of the East India Company. Col. De Morgan had suffered much from accusations made against him by superior officers, for which the later justice done to him hardly compensated. Col. Briggs, who was acknowledged to be an able and well- informed officer, had his share of trouble. In 1829, great difficulties arose in the government of the Mysore, owing partly to the mixture of native rule, and partly to the province being under the direction of the Governor of Madras, who appointed Commissioners for it. Owing to these disorders, Lord W. Bentinck, the Governor-General, determined to separate the Mysore from the Madras Presidency, and appointed Col. Briggs and another officer Commissioners, with full powers over the province. Of these Col. Briggs was the chief. This appointment displeased the Governor of Madras, who left no stone unturned to reverse it, and after a year and a half succeeded in getting Col. 'Briggs removed, and another COLONEL BRIGGS. 33 officer put in his place. The difficulties and real hardships 1829. (for he was then ill) which Col. Briggs underwent during this time were communicated to his sympathising nephew and friend in England, who gave what help he could by calling the attention of the Directors of the Company to the case. Nothing could be done, however, and Mr. James Mill writes, 'From all I hear, I believe Col. Briggs' friends have reason to rejoice in his dismissal.' 1 The session of 1829-30 began nearly as the last 1 Dr. Briggs' ghost story, well known in the Madras Presidency ninety years ago, was one of the best authenticated incidents of the kind I ever heard. I give it here as it was told me, first by Mr. De Morgan, who heard it from his mother ; afterwards by General Briggs, who had it when a young man from Sir John Malcolm. His father could not be induced to speak of it. When my informant was a very young infant, Dr. Briggs, who was quartered with his regiment somewhere (I forget the place) in the hill country, used to hunt once or twice a week with the officers and others, whose custom it was to breakfast at each other's houses after the sport was over. On a day on which it was Dr. Briggs' turn to receive his friends, he awoke at dawn, and saw a figure standing beside his bed. He rubbed his eyes to make sure that he was awake, got up, crossed the room, and washed his face well with cold water. He then turned, and seeing the same figure, approached it and recognised a sister whom he had left in England. He uttered some exclamation, and fell down in a swoon, in which state he was found by the servant who came to call him for the hunt. He was of course unable to join his friends, who, when at breakfast on their return, rallied him on the cause of his absence. While they were talking he suddenly looked up aghast and said trembling, * Is it possible that none of you see the woman who stands there ? ' They all declared there was no one. ' I tell you there is,' he said. ' She is my sister. I beg you all to make a note of this, for we shall hear of her death.' All present, sixteen in number, of whom Sir John Malcolm was one, made an entry of the occurrence and the date in their note-books, and by the first mail which could bring the news from England the sister's death at the time was announced. She had, before leaving this world, expressed a wish that she could see her brother and leave her two young sons to his care. Dr. Briggs was a man of great nerve and courage, and one to whom the idea of a spirit's appearance would, until that time, have been utterly ridiculous. The death of General Briggs some years since, at the age of ninety, makes it allowable to publish the story, which, however, he gave me for the purpose forty years ago. D 34 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1829-30. had ended, and the dissensions in the institution were publicly known. In March 1830 the Mathematical Pro- fessor's share of the difficulties became serious, and a correspondence between himself and the Warden resulted in some modifications of the functions of that officer. But the disturbances on the Medical side continued through the year, the result of a series of alternate mis- takes on the part of the authorities and remonstrances 011 that of the Professors. One of these remonstrances is con- tained in a letter written by Mr. De Morgan, who had been asked by some members of the Council to lay before that body the views he had expressed in a conference with a Committee appointed to examine into some complaints pre- ferred by the Anatomical class against their instructor, Professor Pattison : l — 1831 • GENTLEMEN,— -In compliance with the wish expressed by you Letter to committee, when I had the honour of an interview with you, I lay before you the views which I entertain on a subject most essentially connected with the welfare of the University, viz., the situation which the Professors ought to hold in the establishment. This question is of the highest importance, inasmuch as upon the manner in which it shall be settled depends the order of education and merit which will be found among the Professors in future, and the estimation in which they will be held by the public. In order to induce men of character to fill the chairs of the University, these latter must be rendered highly independent and respectable. No man who feels (rightly) for himself will face a class of pupils as long as there is anything in the character in which he appears before them to excite any feelings but those of the most entire respect. The pupils all know that there is a body in the University superior to the Professors ; they should also know that this body respects the Professors, and that the fundamental laws of the institution will protect the Professor as long as he discharges his duty, as certainly as they will lead to his ejectment in case of misconduct or negligence. Unless the pupils are well assured of this they will look upon the situation of Professor as of very ambiguous respectability, and they will 1 I have avoided entering into details, leaving the principles at issue to be inferred from Mr. De Morgan's letter, BETTER TO COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL. 35 only be wrong inasmuch as there will be no ambiguity at all in 1831. the case. With the public the situation will be altogether as bad. Wherever the Professor goes, he will meet no one in a similar situation to his own — that is, no one who has put his character and prospects into the hands of a number of private individuals. The clergyman, the lawyer, the physician, the tutor or Professor in the ancient Universities, will all look down upon him, for they are all secured in the possession of their characters. Nothing but the public voice, or the law of the land, can touch them, and a security as good must be given to the Professor of the London University before he can pretend to mix in their society as their equal. If these were the sentiments of one individual only, they would merit little attention ; but if they be the opinions of a majority of the present Professors, or even of a large minority, the committee may be sure that they are prevalent among the class of men from which the University ought to expect to draw its Professors. The sense of the Professors on this subject can be readily ascertained, and the committee will incur a heavy moral responsibility should they, without the most attentive examina- tion, propose a change which may place the Professors, present or future, in the situation I have described. For mark the con- sequences. If I am right, every man who has the feelings of a gentleman will abandon the University in disgust ; the same feeling will prevent any person of considerable attainments from offering himself for the vacant chairs ; and the University, in the general school at least, will sink into the most paltry of all estab- lishments for education, if, indeed, it long continue to exist. I am not mentioning my own opinions alone ; such deductions are very common at present. I hardly meet one of my friends who does not seriously advise me to resign my situation on these very grounds. The committee has done me the honour to ask my opinion as to the principles to be laid down for the future regulation of the Professorships. I will state, in few words, my own convic- tions on the subject. The University will never be other than divided against itself as long as the principle of expediency is recognised in the dis- missal of Professors. There will always be some one who, in the opinion of some of his colleagues, is doing injury to the school by his manner of teaching ; and there will always be D 2 36 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1831. attempts in progress to remove the obnoxious individual. The medical school is peculiarly subject to this evil, owing to the very- frequent jealousies of one another which arise among the mem- bers of that profession. No man will feel secure in his seat ; and, consequently, no man will feel it his interest to give up his time to the affairs of his class. And yet this is absolutely necessary in the general school at least, for from the moment when a class becomes numerous the preparation, arrangement, and conduct of a system of instruction is nearly the business of a life; at least, I have found it so. If a Professor is easily removable, he will endeavour to secure something else of a more certain tenure ; he will turn his attention to some literary under- taking, or to private pupils, while he remains in the institution, in order that he may not be without resource if the caprice of the governing body should remove him — and this to the manifest detriment of his class, which, when it pays him well, ought to command his best exertions. In addition to this, he will al- ways be on the watch to establish himself in some less precarious employment, which he will do even at pecuniary loss, since, especially if he have a family, it must be his first object. In this way, the University will become a nursery of Professors for better conducted institutions of all descriptions, since no man, or body of men, desirous to secure a competent teacher in any branch of knowledge, will need to give themselves the trouble to examine into the pretensions of candidates as long as any one fit for their purpose is at the University of London. The conse- quence will be a perpetual change of system in the different classes of the University, and the eventual loss of its reputation as a place of education. These evils may be very simply avoided by mak- ing the continuance of the Professors in their chairs determinable only by death, voluntary resignation, or misconduct either in their character of Professors or as gentlemen, proved before a competent tribunal, so framed that there shall be no doubt in the public mind of the justice of their decision. But this, it has been said, will be to give the Professors a vested interest. I assert that, in the proper sense of the words vested interest, it ought so to be. Who have more interest in the well-being of the University than I and my colleagues ? Is it the Proprietary and the Council, on account of the capital invested by them, and their zeal for the advancement of educa- tion ? In the latter we yield to none of them ; and as to pecuniary risks, I, for example, have invested the whole results LETTER TO COMMITTEE OF COUNCIL. 37 of an expensive education, for the original outlay of which I 1831. might buy fifty shares at the market price ; and even omitting this, I have invested here my time, character, and prospects, all and every one of which is as truly an investment of capital as that made by any proprietor — with this addition, that it is my all ; whereas the portion of any proprietor is a very small part of his. Can it be expected, then, that the Professor should be the only person in the institution who has no interest. in it ? and that he, merely on account of the important part he has to play, should be placed in a situation not so respectable as that of a domestic servant ? These are truths which cannot but have the greatest weight with every person who shall hereafter think of embarking his fortunes here ; and the only way to secure proper Professors on the whole is to respect these truths, and not to let incidental advantages, even supposing them such now, be considered of more importance than general results. An institution such as ours is a machine meant to last for centuries, but this it cannot do if those who manage it are content to avail themselves of expediency, which is made for the day, in preference to fixed principle, which will never wear out. I have written these sentiments because I feel no trouble too great when the end proposed is so truly useful. Personally I feel but slightly interested, for I cannot conceal from myself that the chance of resuming my duties in the University is very small. The opinions which I have here given will be the guide of my conduct, and, I have reason to believe, of that of others also. But should the result of the present proceedings be that a Professor of the University of London need not hold down his head for shame when he hears his situation mentioned, and the terms on which he holds it, no one is more ready than myself to stand or fall with this institution. This is, I fear, not an un- meaning pledge, for past events have so fixed in the minds of men an impression unfavourable to our prospects, that I fear our number of pupils will be seriously diminished in the ensuing session. In conclusion, gentlemen, I have to thank you for the polite attention with which I was received by you when I took an opportunity of laying these sentiments before you in person, and I beg to subscribe myself, Your obedient servant, AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 90 Guilford Street, July 15, 1831. 38 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. Mr. De Morgan also wrote the following- letter, offi- cially addressed to the Council through the Warden :— SIR, — I beg leave to address the Council through you on a subject which I approach with great reluctance. It is well known to the Council that I have often differed from them on matters connected with the management of the University, and that, when I have done so, I have never hesitated to declare my opinions in the plainest language. The Council will therefore believe me when I say that I am convinced that they and the Professors have during the last session been coming to such an understanding as would have made the supremacy of the former quite consistent with the respectability and independence of the latter. A third body has, however, interfered in the ques- tion, whose declared intentions, if carried into effect, will render it impossible for me to continue in the situation I at present hold. Should the result of the labours of the Select Committee be the abrogation of the by-laws alluded to at the General Meeting, I respectfully inform the Council that it is my intention to seek elsewhere the subsistence and character which I had hoped to gain in the University of London alone. At the same time I feel it would not be dealing fairly with the Council if I let them remain in ignorance of my determination, considering that the deliberation of the Proprietors may possibly be pushed to a late period in the vacation, when a proper choice of a successor to my chair may be rendered difficult by the shortness of time re- maining for that purpose. Having announced my intention, I am therefore in the hands of the Council ; should they consider it unfair in me to offer a conditional resignation dependent on cir- cumstances over which they have no control, I will, on intimation to that effect, offer an absolute resignation immediately. My wish is decidedly to remain in the University, if that can be done consistently with my own notions of what is due to my character. Having thus shortly stated the predicament in which I find my- self placed, I leave the matter to the decision of the Council. I have the honour to remain, sir, Your obedient servant, AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 90 Guilford Street, July 1831. The whole was brought to a crisis a few days after by the dismissal of the Professor of Anatomy, the resolution FIRST RESIGNATION OF PROFESSORSHIP. 39 for which concluded with these words : — 'Kesolved — That, 1831. in taking this step, the Council feel it due to Professor Pattison to state that nothing which has come to their knowledge with respect to his conduct has in any way tended to impeach either his general character or profes- sional skill and knowledge.' Immediately on hearing of this resolution, Mr. De Morgan sent in the following letter of resignation : — To the Council. GENTLEMEN, — I have just seen Mr. Pattison, who has informed me of his removal from his chair, and has also shown me a reso- lution, of which this is a copy. [Copy of resolution as above.~\ Here is distinctly laid down the principle that a Professor may be removed, and, as far as you can do it, disgraced, without any fault of his own. This being understood, I should think it discreditable to hold a Professorship under you one moment longer. I have, therefore, the honour to resign my Professorship, and to remain, gentlemen, Your obedient servant, 90 Guilford Street, A. DE MORGAN. Sunday, July 24, 1831. The answer came in the words, ' The Council accept your resignation.9 In reply to a letter from my father, he wrote : — 90 Guilford Street, July 29, 1831. DEAR SIR, — I have just received your kind note, which I Letter to hasten to answer. B^ST The Council, in a session held after the meeting on Saturday, deprived Mr. Pattison of his Professorship, alleging at the same time, in vindication of themselves, I suppose, that nothing which had ever come to their knowledge had any tendency to lower their opinion either of Mr. Pattison's general character or of his professional skill and knowledge ; thus laying down the principle that a Professor might be deprived of his office without any fault of his own, and even under a fire of encomiums from the Council. I had long fully made up my mind not to hold any office whatever which was not absolutely my own during good be- haviour— not even in the service of Government, should such a 40 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. thing ever fall in my way. Immediately, therefore, on seeing the minute of Council containing the aforesaid removal, together with their most sufficient reason for the same as a rider, I ad- dressed a letter to the Council that, under the principle there advocated, I should consider it discreditable to hold their Pro- fessorship one moment longer. The resignation was of course accepted, and I have done with them. This step will be against my pecuniary interest should the University ultimately succeed very well, which the present pro- ceedings of the Council will not allow any man to think who knows how much such an institution depends on public opinion. For the present moment, and up to the present time, I shall be no loser, since I know that by my own private exertions I can gain as much as, thanks to the dissensions in the University and the conduct of the Council regarding them, I have ever done in my public capacity. With regard to an accusation and a hearing supposed by you necessary previous to the removal of a Professor, I must en- lighten you on a principle discovered in the University of London by the Council, and faithfully acted on by them up to the present moment ; viz., that a Professor in their institution is on the same footing with regard to them as a domestic servant to his master, with, however, the disadvantage of the former not being able to demand a month's wages or a month's warning. The proprietors, by their sense expressed at public meetings, have agreed with them, it appears to me. I have still some interest in the University on account of some valued friends who remain behind, having what the advertise- ments call encumbrances. They, however, have expressed their determination to remain only one session longer ; and feeling, as I do, that I never could send a ward of mine to an institution where it has been thus admitted by precedent that the student is a proper person to dictate the continuance and decide the merits of a Professor, I cannot wish the University to succeed, because I feel it ought not to succeed upon those principles. If there be a large body of the Proprietary really interested in the moral as well as intellectual part of education, their efforts may yet save that fine institution. As a proprietor of it I would gladly lend my humble aid. Yours most sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 41 SECTION III. 1831 TO 1836. AT the time when he left the College, Mr. De Morgan 1831. was living with his family in Guilford Street, but re- moved in the autumn of 1831 to 5 Upper Gower Street, where he lived till our marriage in 1837. His only sister had been married the year before to Mr. Lewis Hensley, a surgeon of ability and good practice. My own family left Stoke Newington and settled at 31 Upper Bedford Place, Russell Square, in 1830. In May 1828, shortly after his first coming to London, Mr. De Morgan had been elected a Fellow of the Astro- nomical Society, and in February 1830 took his place on the Council. Of the state of Science iust before that State of " [Science. period, Sir John Herschel said : ( The end of the eighteenth and the beginning of the nineteenth century were re- markable for the small amount of scientific movement going on in this country, especially in its more exact departments. . . . Mathematics were at the last gasp, and Astronomy nearly so — I mean in those members of its frame which depend upon precise measurement and systematic calculation. The chilling torpor of routine had begun to spread itself over all those branches of Science which wanted the excitement of experimental research.' In 1820 the Astronomical Society was founded by Mr. Baily in conjunction with Dr. Pearson, and from the time of its formation the joint efforts of many earnest intellectual men were given to raise the higher sciences 42 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. from the state of depression and inactivity described by Sir John Herschel. The work, however, had not been uninterrupted, and the difficulties attending their task were increased by some injudicious persons who liked better to attack old errors and abuses than to work harmoniously with those whose only aim was to introduce better methods and measures. This was inseparable from a condition of reconstruction — the same spirit of change and reconstruction that was at work in the political world — and the obstacles thrown in the way of reform by men whose efforts went either in the wrong direction or too far in the right direction, were not felt only in science. Of this time my husband wrote some years after : c I first began to know the Scien- tific world in 1828. The forces were then mustering for what may be called the great battle of 1830. The great epidemic which produced the French Eevolution, and what is yet (1866) the English Reform Bill, showed its effect on the scientific world.' The nature and extent of the scientific works begun before this time and carried out to completeness during the half -century which fol- lowed, can be but slightly mentioned. Mr. Francis Baily had effected the improvement in the ' Nautical Almanac,' and compiled the Society's ' Catalogue of Stars.' Sir John Herschel was engaged on his c Catalogue of Double Stars,' to complete which he left England for the Cape of Good Hope nearly three years later. The Royal Observa- tory, Greenwich, was in full operation, under the direction of Professor, now Sir George Airy. Astronomy was rapidly approaching that height on which it now stands, and the efforts of the Astronomical Society — a body of men working with earnestness and unanimity — did much to raise it to its present state. Mr. De Morgan was elected honorary secretary in 1831. He entered with zeal into every question brought before the Society, and his place was not a sinecure. It is not easy to say how much of the usefulness and pros- THE ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. 43 perity of the Society during the years in which Mr. De 1831. Morgan filled this place was due' to his incessant energy and effort, and to his steady judgment at difficult junctures. His work at the Society brought him into immediate Astrono- contact with all its transactions and with all concerned in Society. them, and as he never left London, and was known to be always at hand, much more than the routine duties of an honorary secretary would have fallen to his share, even if he had not voluntarily taken them upon himself. He drew up documents, wrote letters, and arranged for the meetings and the publication of memoirs. His obituary notices, written as one after another of his fellow- workers left the world, are biographical photographs, taken with a skill that makes the sunlight bring out all the finest as well as the most characteristic lines of the face. In the year 1831, the second of Sir James South's presidency, a royal charter was granted to this Society. It was made out in the name of the President, owing to a legal formality, which would have involved greater expense to the Society if others of the Council had been included. But though no mention of differences of opinion appears on the minutes of the Society, there was certainly any- thing but unanimity as to the manner of receiving this grant, for Mr. De Morgan has preserved the following letter from Captain, afterwards Admiral Smyth, in answer to the requisition officially made for another Council meet- ing to re-discuss the question. The style of the formal letter contrasts strongly with the friendly effusions to the 6 Esteemed Sec.' and f Dear Mentor ' of after times : — In answer to the requisition for a Council to meet on Satur- day next to re-discuss the subject of the charter, I regret to say that indispensable occupations prevent my attendance ; but, I must add, if leisure were at my command I should still strongly object to being called away from employment on account of the whims of an individual. I consider the point in question to have been already as well considered as the true spirit of our association requires ; that any objection that has been started is more specious than valid ; 44 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. and that any farther alteration will be merely a distinction without a difference. I firmly believe that every member of the Council has acted to the best of his ability and opportunity, and also feel that the Council, as a body, has ever shown itself more zealous about substance than about quibbling forms ; but they might as well frame laws and institutions for Mars or Jupiter as for thoue who are predetermined to be dissatisfied. I therefore trust, in order that tne vigour of the Society may not be fettered, that the Council will take effectual steps to repel every disorderly attempt to impute motives or impugn its conduct, as well as to stifle their rancorous disputes, which can only engender an atrophy of moral work. If this is not insisted on, the meeting, which was purely instituted for the propagation of Science, will quickly degenerate into a spouting club, in which, instead of the adduction of undistorted facts, we shall be exposed to all the artillery of premisses without conclusions, and conclu- sions without premisses, added to the iteration of undigested thoughts in all the turgidity of ill-taste; and even were the reasoning powers among us more perfect, we should only be making much noise and little progress, leaving the good uncer- tain and remote, while the evil would be certain and immediate. Moreover, the disputatious system, being both irritable and irri- tating, is altogether as absurd for astronomers as would be the dramatising of Newton's Principia. I therefore firmly hope that a perfect union in the cause we are embarked on will distinguish our efforts, for the straightfor- ward course of duty is as perfectly practicable as it is desirable. I have the honour to be, sir, Your obedient servant, W. H. SMYTH. Professor De Morgan, Sec. Ast. Soc. Who the individual was whose e whims ' Captain Smyth refers to I cannot say. But it is a significant fact that Sir J. South, whose Presidency had not expired when the charter was granted, was not re-elected in the new staff of officers, nor does his name appear on the Council after this time. Mr. De Morgan's acquaintance with his colleagues on the Council of the Astronomical Society became in several cases intimate friendship. His friends were Mr. Baily, FRANCIS BAILY. 45 Sir John Herschel, the Astronomer Royal, Lord Wrottesley, 1831. Rev. Richard Sheepshanks, Admiral Manners, Mr. Gallo- way, and a few others. Mr. Sheepshanks and Mr. Galloway had houses in the immediate neighbourhood of Gower Street, and Mr. Baily lived at 37 Tavistock Place — a pleasant house in a garden sheltered by sycamores. This house, rendered famous by the repetition of the Cavendish experiment, had formerly belonged to Mr. Perry, of the 6 Times.' In it my mother had met Porson, and heard him repeat Greek poetry.1 Mr. Baily was well fitted by his clear-headed steadiness of character, as well as by his excellent temper and geniality, to form the centre of a knot of friends sharing in the same pursuits. The same qualities made him an excellent host, and a better President of the Astronomical Society than if he had been a more brilliant talker. His kindly, simple bearing gained the love of those who could only look at his work with wonder. I remember feeling proud of having played a game of chess, in which I was of course beaten, with him. His house and appointments were just what they should be, made perfect to his friends by the cordiality of his reception. After his sister came to live with him, when this welcome was extended to his friends' wives and sisters, no house in London, I suppose, had held more happy parties than 37 Tavistock Place. I find an anecdote showing his characteristic order and neatness in a letter left by my husband for the Institute of Actuaries. The proposal referred to was made in 1835, and related to the Cavendish experiment. 6 That every rule must have its exceptions is true even of Baily's accuracy, though I should have thought the assertion must have failed if I had not known the con- trary. Few persons, however, know that this assertion contradicts itself. For, if it be a rule that every rule has its exception, this rule must have its exception ; that is, 1 This house was left by Miss Baily to Sir J. Herschel, and until very lately was inhabited by Mr. Digby Wyatt. 46 MEMOIR OP AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1831. there must be a rule without exception. Leaving this bone for logicians to pick, I go on with my story. About 1835 the Government made an important proposal to the Astronomical Society. Mr. Baily, the President, stated that he had summoned the Council to consider a com- munication from the Lords of the Admiralty, which he would forthwith read. He then put his hand in his pocket, and the paper was not there. This almost excited remark, for that Mr. Baily should not remember in which pocket what he looked for was to be found, was a very unlikely thing. But the other pockets also answered in the negative, and the end of it was that Baily announced that he must have left his papers behind him. The announcement of a comet with satellites would not have created half the surprise which followed. There was nothing for it but to take a cab and get back as quick as possible, leaving the Council to decide nem. cow., though it could not be entered on the minutes, that they liked the President all the better for being, to absolute demonstration, a man of like failings with themselves.' In the Supplement to the ' Penny Cyclopaedia ' Mr. De Morgan wrote of Mr. Baily : — ( The history of the astronomy of the nineteenth cen- tury will be incomplete without a catalogue of his labours. He was one of the founders of the Astronomical Society, and his attention to its affairs was as accurate and minute as if it had been a firm of which he was the chief clerk, with expectation of being taken into partnership.' Sir John Herschel, the most distinguished in general estimation of these co-workers, was not so often among them at this time. He left England for the Cape of Good Hope in 1833, and was of course unable during his absence to take part in the practical business of the Society. My husband's letters to him show how little his colleagues liked to consider him absent. This correspondence began in the year 1831, when Mr. De Morgan, as secretary, addressed him with official formality, and continued till KTCHAED SHEEPSHANKS. 47 1870, having for many years become the expression of 1831. affectionate friendship. The Astronomer Royal and Mrs. Airy were among the most welcome of this circle of friends, who often met at the house of Mr. Sheepshanks, where the presence of his sister, a woman full of genial kindness, made all feel wel- come and happy. All were fond of music, and Mrs. Airy's and her sister's ballads, sung with a spirit that gave them a character equal to Wilson's, were sometimes accompanied by Mr. De Morgan's flute, and are still among my pleasantest remembrances. Mr. De Morgan had a strong regard for Mr. Sheep- Richard shanks. Among many descriptive remarks, he says of shanks. him in the MS. before mentioned, ' He was the man from whom I learnt more than from all others of the way to feel and acknowledge the merits of an opponent. I have known many men cheerfully and candidly admit the good points of an antagonist, but hardly another, besides Sheepshanks, who would, in the course of opposition, systematically select them, bring them forward, maintain them against those of his own side ; and this always, year after year, when engaged in warm opposition as well as in jocose conversation, when in public discussion with several as well as in private conversation with a single friend.' And that which must be noticed is the vigorous and prac- tical character of his friendship. His active and unwearied assistance was as surely to be reckoned on as a law of nature, especially if to the cause of his friend was attached the opportunity of supporting some principle, or aiding some question of science. Nor was his kindness of feel- ing limited to his friends. It showed itself in real and thoughtful consideration for all with whom he came in contact. Had he been a physician, his fanciful and self- tormenting patients would have thought him the worst of their ills, his milder cases of real suffering would have been cheered by his bantering kindness, while severe and dangerous malady would have felt the presence of the 48 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1831. sympathy -which money cannot buy, shown with a delicacy which benevolence itself cannot always command. The reference to an opponent points to Sir James South, who had become before this time a general oppo- nent of most of his scientific friends. He joined Mr. Bab- bage, who had accused some members of the Astronomical Society of being in a conspiracy against him, and this accusation elicited from Mr. De Morgan the following description of his own relations with three of his friends : — The con- < The only conspirators named were MM. Airy and Sheepshanks. These two and myself lived together in intimate friendship, officers of the Astronomical Society through a long course of years, ... we three, and each for himself, deciding that he was a rational and practi- cable man, and that the other two, no doubt worthy and rational, were a couple of obstinate fellows. Francis Baily thought the same of all three. I suppose we were an equi-tenacious triangle. But never a sharp word, I am sure, passed between any two of the four. Men of Science are not always quarrelsome ; and, as often happens when obstinate persons are reasoners, we were generally of one line of action, with occasional repudiation of each other's views. In all the many pleasant laughs we have had together about the doings of the two common assailants, nothing ever emerged which gave me the least impression of the existence of any common purpose in the two other minds, with reference to the eccentric anomalies of the Astronomical world.' Captain, afterwards Admiral Smyth, soon after this time came from Bedford, and took up his abode in Cheyne Walk, Chelsea. He, assisted, I have heard, by his bowl of punch, was the life of the Astronomical Club, a little meeting of chosen friends who repaired after the business of the Society to the Piazza Coffee-house. Captain Smyth was a genial companion and a quaint, pleasant writer, devoted to Astronomical science. He also ASTKONOMICAL SOCIETY. 49 gave a good deal of attention to antiquarian research, pub- 1831. lished a quarto volume on the coins and other antiquities • of Hartwell House, whither he went some years after to take charge of Dr. Lee's observatory. I think that my husband's intercourse with his co-secretary, Admiral Manners, was at first chiefly official ; but in after years we saw more of him, and he continued till death our cordial friend. Mr. and Mrs. Bishop were living at South Villa, George Regent's Park. Mr. Bishop was at one time President and for many years treasurer of the Royal Astronomical Society. His love of science never abated while he lived, and it led him to undertake a difficult study at an age when most men hold elementary learning out of the question. Shortly after this time he came to Mr. De Morgan for lessons in algebra, in order to read the Mecanique Celeste. The little observatory in the Regent's Park was rendered famous by Mr. Hind's discovery of many asteroids. It was at Mr. Baily's suggestion that in the year 1827 Nautical or 1828, the state of the Nautical Almanac was made the subject of Government inquiry. This ephemeris, which was under the management of the Admiralty, had not, as to the information it afforded to navigators, kept pace with Continental works of the same character ; and its defects and errors were great in comparison with theirs. The Board of Longitude had suggested improvement, but this Board was dissolved in 1827, and there seemed to be no hope that the work, upon which the navigation of the country greatly depended, should be brought to that degree of perfection which the amount of scientific know- ledge in England rendered possible. A strong remon- strance from Mr. Baily drew attention to the matter, and after some discussion in various quarters, the Commis- sioners of the Admiralty entrusted to the Astronomical Society the task of revising and remodelling the Nautical Almanac. A committee was appointed and a Report E 50 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1831. 1830-31. Seconds pendulum. 1831-32. Society. drawn up by Mr. Baily, who had given the subject un- remitting attention. The recommendations of this Report were adopted by Government, and the Nautical Almanac, in its improved state, was the result. Lieutenant Strat- ford was appointed Superintendent. The pendulum experiments had been repeated by Mr. Baily in 1828, under conditions which precluded any but an almost imperceptible amount of error. Many other determinations depended on these, a most important one being the national standard of length ; for, in the event of the standard yard being lost, the length of vibration of the seconds pendulum was the only source from which a new measure could be constructed. In 1832 a new scale was formed by the Astronomical Society under Mr. Baily's superintendence. This, which was rigorously tested, was compared with the imperial standard, and with another made by Bird in 1758. It was well that this work was completed, as both these scales, as well as the national standard of weight, were destroyed by fire in the Houses of Parliament in 1834. In all these works, after 1828, Mr. De Morgan took a deep interest, but he was not an experimenter. He had a great love for scientific instruments, and in his various writings described their construction and work in such a way as to make them readily understood by any person of average intelligence. But his want of sight prevented his using them himself, and his share of the work done at this time of revival was, at least as to applied Science, that of an expounder and historian. I believe that every dis- covery, or determination of fact, of any importance, was made as clear to the world as the subject allowed in his articles in the ' Companion to the Almanac,' ' The Penny Cyclopaedia,' and many other works. The institution of the London University had been an effect of that quickening of thought and action which ac- companied what Mr. De Morgan called the social pot-boil- ing. Another result in the same direction was the formation POPULAR SCIENCE. 51 of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. It was 1831-32. founded in 1826 by Lord Brougham, Mr. J. Hume, M.P., and others, most of whom had also taken part in the establishment of the University. The object was to spread scientific and other knowledge, by means of cheap and clearly written treatises by the best writers of the time. Partly from the character of free thought ascribed to some of its founders, partly perhaps from its designation — for there is much in a name, and ' Diffusion of Useful Knowledge ' sounded to some undistinguishing ears like a parody of ' Promotion of Christian Knowledge ' — the Society was held by some timorous lookers on to be a sort of conspiracy to subvert all law and religion ; and the publication of the f Saturday Magazine,5 a markedly religious periodical, just after the appearance of the ' Penny Magazine * of the Society, showed the feeling of opposi- tion that was in people's minds. One reason given for this rival publication was that the ' Penny Magazine,' like the other works of the Society, was too dry and scientific for general readers. As for the Magazine itself, it spread far and wide, and the e Penny Cyclopaedia,' one volume of which appeared at the end of the first year, had a great circulation, and has taken its place as a high- class book of reference. The charge of dryness is not so easy to get rid of as regards some of the tracts ; but then it would not be easy to make light and popular reading of the higher branches of Mathematics, Chemistry, Hydro- statics, or the Polarisation of Light. The Society did good to its adversaries by making them give a better and sounder character to their own works of professedly reli- gious aim. A few words from the ' Address of the Com- mittee' in the year 1846,1 when the Society's labours came to an end, will give an idea of the principles on 1 This address was drawn up by Mr. De Morgan; Lord Brougham, Sir Isaac Goldsmid, and one or two others made a few slight altera- tions, amounting to about twenty lines, in his proof. 52 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1831-32. which it was founded, and to which it adhered through- out. Aims of the * At its commencement the Society determined with obvious prudence to avoid the great subjects of religion and government, on which it was impossible to touch without provoking angry discussion. At a time when the spirit which produced the effects of 1828, 1829, and 1832, was struggling with those who, not very long before, had tried to subdue it by force ; when religious disqualification and political exclusion occupied the daily attention of the press, and when the friends of education were themselves divided on the best way of adjusting these and other matters of legislation, any interference with theology or politics would have endangered the existence of a union which demanded the most cordial co-operation from all who wished well to the cause. That the Society took an appearance of political colour from the fact that almost all its original supporters were of one party in politics, is true ; but it is as true that if the committee had waited to commence operations until both parties had been ready to act together the work would have been yet to begin, and the good which so many of the Society's old opponents admit that it has done would have been left undone. But the committee remember with great satisfaction that this impossibility of combining different views in support of a great object extended only to politics. From the commencement the Society consisted of men of almost every religious persuasion. The harmony in which they have worked together is sufficient proof that there is nothing in difference of doctrinal creed which need prevent successful association when the object is good and the points of dispute are avoided.' Tracts. Mr. De Morgan, who became a member of the com- mittee in the year 1843, was from the first a very large contributor to its publications. His work ' The Differ- ential and Integral Calculus' formed a portion of the series of tracts. The long list of articles in the f Penny USEFUL KNOWLEDGE SOCIETY. 53 Cyclopaedia,' amounting in all to nearly one-sixth of the 1831-32. whole work, were begun by him at the outset, and con- Penny Cy- dODflBflll eluded with the last volume of the Supplement, in 1858. That his labours in this direction were fully appreciated is certain. He gave time, advice, and help in every way to the Society's work.1 I find on the title-page of the Address from which the extract is made, in his own handwriting, — 6 This Address was drawn up by me ; even as to p. 17, I had to blow my own trumpet, because those who insisted on its being blown, and proposed to do it for me, were going to blow louder than I liked. 6 A. DE MORGAN. ' Aug. 26, 1852.' P. 17 contained, to the best of my recollection, his own modified version of the laudatory expressions inserted in the rough draft by the President and Vice-President, who had taken it home for inspection. Private pupils occupied a good deal of the time which Mr. De Morgan had before spent in lecturing in Univer- sity College. He was also engaged in writing for the 4 Quarterly Journal of Education ' of the Useful Know- ledge Society, of which the first volume appeared in 1831. It was carried on for five years under the editorship of Mr. George Long, formerly Professor in University College. The ' Companion to the Almanac ' for this year con- 1831. 1 In 1867, Mr. Coates wrote to Mr. De Morgan, in answer to his inquiry as to the place where the relics of the Society were deposited, — ' Take my word for it, that I have the liveliest recollection of the U.K.S., mingled with some pride, that for twenty years of my life I was not altogether useless to mankind. Nor have I been since, as to that matter, in spite of your innuendoes/ * The archives, or papers of the Society, were deposited by Conolly in (I suppose the cellars of) University College ; in two boxes or chests, as I have heard. 1 The process was after my dynasty was closed. The common seal is in my hands, locked up in a little brass box, whereof Sir Isaac Goldsmid had one key and Lord Brougham had another. The original charter is, I suppose, in one of the two chests aforesaid.' 54 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1831. tains an article on Life Assurance, the first of a series of twenty-five articles contributed annually by Mr. De Morgan to this work. In this year the e Elements of Arithmetic ' was first published. The author's old pupil, Mr. Richard Hutton, says of this book : — Elements 'The publication of his " Arithmetic," a book which has not unnaturally been more useful to masters than to scholars, began a new era in the history of elementary teaching in England ; devoting, as all his books did, far more space and labour to the logical processes by which the various rules are demonstrated than to the more technical parts of the subject, though of these too, in their proper place, the writer was never unmindful, spending the greatest care on teaching the art of rapid and accurate computation, no less than of the true science of number. His exposition of the theory of limits, from the earliest stage at which it entered into algebraical conception, was so masterly and exhaustive, that it haunted his pupils in the logical tangle of their later lives, and helped many a man .through the puzzle of Dr. Mansel's conundrum- making as to * the Infinite,' in his ' Limits of Eeligious Thought.' l These few lines indicate the place which this book, an early fruit of his own methods of reasoning, held in rela- tion to the later writings, and show how, in his most elementary teaching, he laid the foundation of principles' which were afterwards fully developed, and which fur- nished a guide to thought on subjects whose connection with them was not at first apparent. He liked puzzles about numbers, as he liked riddles, and, when very good, plays upon words and puns. So all puzzles were referred to him, and gradually all attempts to do the impossible, by circle squarers and trisectors. One 1 For a list of all Mr. De Morgan's works see Appendix. The articles on education for the U. K. Society were reprinted in a book entitled The Schoolmaster, edited by Charles Knight, London, 1836. CHARLES BUTLER. 55 of the puzzles had a pleasant result. Mr. Charles 1832. Butler, the Roman Catholic author of ' The Revolutions of Charles the Germanic Empire,' &c., an old friend of my father's, was not only a very learned, but a very kind and genial man. He dabbled (by his own account not very deeply) in Mathematics, and was fond of algebraical and geometrical questions. He gave me one, declaring that he had puzzled over it in vain, and never yet had found a person who could solve it. The following in Mr. De Morgan's writing will tell the rest : — ' Mr. Charles Butler betted Miss Trend a coffee party A. wager. that she could not find a Mathematician who could make out a certain difficulty. Miss Trend referred it to Mr. De Morgan, who solved it. This letter is for the settle- ment of the bet.' ' Mr. Butler presents his compliments to Mr. De Morgan. . . . He has perused with great pleasure Mr. De Morgan's solution of the question proposed to Miss Frend. It is certainly satisfactory in the highest degree. Mr. Butler's great professional employment has prevented his giving the attention he wished to the exact sciences, but he has always entertained the greatest regard for them, lamented his inability to prosecute them, and looked with a holy envy on those who have time and talents to cultivate them. The proposed coffee party has been changed into a dinner party. It is fixed for Saturday, the 18th inst., at Mr. Butler's house, 44 Great Ormond Street. Mr. Butler requests Mr. De Morgan will do him the honour to join the party. ' February 11, 1832.' The party, a pleasant one, as the few now living who remember Mr. Butler will readily believe, dined together as appointed, and the solver of the problem was duly honoured. Everything belonging to education commanded Mr. De Morgan's attention from the time when he began to think. Many circumstances of his own University 56 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1832. career had shown him how much was needed in the Cam- bridge system to adapt the methods and processes of in- struction to the wants of learners of every degree and variety of ability. His own place in the tripos of his year was an evidence of the inadequacy of the competitive sys- tem, faulty as it was then, and as it is now, to ascertain the quantity or quality of mental power. Before he left this world he saw that the method of crowding so much learning into a short time, at an age when the brain needs vital strength to bring it to maturity, was not the right way to secure future excellence. Its results, too, were beginning to be seen in nervous and other diseases ; but he felt, and often said, that remonstrance as yet would be useless, and that those who saw the evil only too plainly must wait till the conviction of its reality should be forced upon all. I have not been able to get his letters Archdeacon to his old tutor, Dr. Thorp, but, judging by the replies, he must have felt and expressed this belief at an early period. The answers generally announce the reception of an essay or book, or a new pupil sent by the old one to a teacher to whom he held himself indebted. In one Dr. Thorp says :— You will see that I have taken some pains to attend to the spirit of your wishes about your young friend. We are going upon the plan of discouraging private tuition as much as possible, for the sake both of tutors and pupils, as I hold that a lecture- room ought to supply all that is necessary ; but as long as such a various crew is sent up to us as we get every year, part re- quiring the highest kind of scholarship and part unacquainted with the rudiments, the latter must avail themselves of some extra help to bring them up to the comprehension of such lectures as the former require. Surely the means and appliances now at work to pre- pare young men for Cambridge ought to make private tuition even less wanted than it was in 1832 ; and if stu- dents were examined only 011 the real knowledge legiti- mately gained in the lecture-room, which, as Dr. Thorp says, ought to supply all that is necessary, what would COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS. 57 become of cramming and coaching 91 If any supplementary 1832. teaching is needed, it should be only to explain difficulties in the lectures, not to introduce new subjects. At another time Dr. Thorp writes from Cambridge : — Believe me, ray dear friend, I fully sympathise in the pleasure you derive from reading classics in your own way only and for information, and would like nothing better than to keep pace with you in studying Aratus, Theon, and Euclid in the original ; though I doubt whether young men would be made better mathe- maticians, or as good classics or logicians hereby, as by the study of authors more remarkable for system, and for the perfection of language and of art. . . . You should come down and see us oftener, to prevent your losing the knowledge of our streets. Our streets, however, are not much more changed than our ways. Have you seen our Trinity lecture-rooms, which we built at a Trinity cost of 4,OOOZ. (besides a hole in the tutor's pocket, which a tutor in ancient times little thought of), and without asking any- body ? It would make you a scholar to see the men going in crowds every morning to be taught by fourteen tutors (that is our number : I have got four, viz., myself, Martin, Law, and John Wordsworth, on my side), each of whom gives two, and some three lectures a day. I rejoice to think that we have so much in common as — 1, some affection for the University ; 2, something to do with preparing young men for it ; and 3, some contempt for ' politics and stuff".' But, believe me, it gives me sincere pleasure to see a few friendly and familiar lines from, one whom, though I have no right to claim much merit for — which was his fault, not mine — I am not a little proud to speak of as my old pupil. Ever, dear De Morgan, * Your attached friend, 1 T. THORP.' This letter is dated 1833. 1 During the time in which this has been written, several cases have occurred which sadly confirm my assertions. One will suffice. A young man, a very high wrangler, full of intellectual power and aspiration, was obliged to give coaching lessons to undergraduates. The exhaustion which followed his taking his degree and his subsequent hard work led him to recruit his strength with stimulants, first opium, then liquor. He drank himself to death. Had he not done so, in all probability he would have been a victim to disease in some other form, the result of exhausted vitality. This would have been less dis- graceful perkaps, but equally lamentable. 58 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1832. With his keen interest in books and their history Mr. De Morgan had a great love for collecting rare or ancient ones. His little library was begun soon after he left Cambridge, and the Theon, Aratus and Euclid, of which he so much enjoyed the reading, were among the first he bought, and are now with his other books in the library of the University of London, in Burlington House.1 I have heard him say that he never laid out a shilling on a book which was not repaid with interest, even as a money transaction, from the use he made of the purchase. Had he been rich his collection would have been very large and valuable, but he was soon obliged to deny himself the luxury of buying, except the chance treasures which fell in his way at bookstalls. The first English book which he bought when a boy was ' The Pilgrim's Progress.' His researches in bibliography, which afterwards resulted in the ' Arithmetical Books,' the ' Budget of Paradoxes,' and many of the tracts, date from the time of his beginning to collect. Visitors to the University Library, who take down any of these works from the shelves, will almost certainly light upon some of the numerous marginal notes and illustra- tions, serious or otherwise, with which their former owner embellished them. The fly-leaves and insides of the covers are decorated with pictures from periodicals, notably Punch, and other collectanea, always having some reference to the contents of the work, although, to those unacquainted with the peculiarities of Mr. De Morgan's mind and style, the appropriateness of some of them may not at once appear obvious. M. Ha- M. Hachette, the French mathematician, whom Mr. De Morgan had visited in his stay at Paris two years 1 This Institution must not be confused with University College, Gower Street. The University of London is for granting degrees only. It was founded in 1836. The books were bought of me, after my husband's death, and presented to the University by Lord Over- stone. FRENCH CORRESPONDENTS. 59 before, was one of those who felt strongly on the struggle 1832. for freedom and enlightenment. The two authors had exchanged scientific brochures, and after thanking Mr. De Morgan for some sent in 1831, M. Hachette asks this question relating to the invention of the steam- engine : — Vous me ferez bien plaisir de m'eclaircir sur un fait relatif a M. Ha- la construction de la machine a vapenr. Je lis dans 1'ouvrage de M. Partington, ' An Historical and Descriptive Accomit of the Steam Engine,' London, 1822, p. 7, que Sir Samuel Morland etait fils du baronet de meme nom, qui suivit Charles II. dans son exil ; d'autres disent que ce baronet est le mecanicien qui a le premier mesure la densite de la vapeur d'eau ; cependant M. Partington est, dit-on, le bibliothecaire de F Institution Royale ; il n'a pas ecrit sans preuve un fait de cette importance. Tachez done de savoir la verite. Pour 1'honneur de la science, et de Fhumanite, je desire que le mecanicien ne soit pas celui qu'on accuse d'avoir trahi le parti constitutionnel. I have not Mr. De Morgan's answer, but it appears not to have settled his correspondent's doubts, though they were afterwards in some measure set at rest. In return for the answer to his own question, M. Vieta's ' Algebra Hachette made some inquiries for Mr. De Morgan touch- Nova.' ing a missing book, the e Algebra Nova ' of Vieta. In the letter giving what information he had gained I find the first mention of Count Guglielmo Libri, author of the ' History of Mathematics.' The last communication made by M. Hachette touching the lost work of Vieta is as follows : — ... J'ai re£u la lettre que vous m'avez fait 1'honneur de m'ecrire le 16 Juillet. Le fait concernant le manuscrit du Harmonicon Celeste, prete par Bouillaud au Prince Leopold de Medicis, est consigne dans les MSS. de Bouillaud, et M. Guglielmo Libri, savant geo- 'metre, m'en a donne 1'assurance. Les omissions de Montucla, ou les erreurs de Delambre, nous prouvent qu'il faut chercher dans les manuscrits, ou dans les ouvrages publics par leur auteur, la verite de Phistoire. . . . Paris, Aout 15, 1832. 60 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1832. The remainder of the letter contains a comparison of dates and facts, recurring again to his object of proving that Morland the mechanician was not the Eoyalist. M. Hachette was probably the more satisfied in some de- gree by the references Mr. De Morgan gave him, as I find in the Penny Cyclopsedia article, founded on those au- thorities, that the history of Morland's relations with the Eoyalists is very doubtful. His list letter to Mr. De Morgan is dated September 30, 1832. Mr. De Morgan had, I think, met M. Quetelet in Paris in 1830, but M. Quetelet had not remembered this when he wrote to Mr. De Morgan in 1833, — Mon cher Monsieur, — Je vons remercie beaucoup pour 1'obli- geance que vous avez eue de m'addresser la table que vous m'avez promise, et vos ouvrages que j'ai parcourus deja avec le plus grand plaisir. La rcethode que j'ai trouvee dans vos livres elementaires augmente encore le prix que j 'attache aux suffrages honorables que vous avez bien voulu exprimer pour les miens. Je suis tres charm e que notre ami commun, M. Babbage, m'ait procure le plaisir de faire votre connaissance : je desire beaucoup le cultiver. Je regrette de ne pouvoir aller moi-meme vous exprimer mes remerciments, mais, comme je vais aujonr- d'hui, j'ai du me borner a vous eerire, compfcant bien sur votre indulgence. Recevez, je vous prie, mon cher monsieur, 1'expressioii de mes sentimens distingues. Tout a vous, QUETELET. Amicable The place of registrar of the Amicable Assurance Office having become vacant about this time, Mr. De Morgan sent in his name as a candidate. He was of course well qualified for the situation, and it was a lucra- tive one, but he would not have liked the work so well as he did teaching and writing, and he had, as he afterwards told me, but one reason for wishing to succeed. Our friend Mr. Thomas Galloway, a distinguished Mathe- matician, and Fellow of the Astronomical Society, a man TROUGHTON AND SIMMS V. SOUTH. 61 every way suited for the place, was appointed, and held 1833. it until his death in 1851. The ' opponent ' referred to in Mr. De Morgan's little sketch of Mr. Sheepshanks was Sir James South, known as the owner of the Campden Hill Observatory, and having some name as an Astronomer on account of his dexterity in using his very fine instruments. In the year 1833 a trial of a curious character, in which Sir James South was the defendant, commenced. With other scientific men Mr. De Morgan was greatly interested in this affair, and has left the following notice of it : — 'Mr. Sheepshanks's visits to Campden Hill were in discharge of his duty as scientific adviser on the side of Messrs. Troughton and Simms, who in 1833 brought an action against Sir James South to recover payment for mounting equatorially a large object-glass. While the work was going on, Sir James thought it would not do, insisted on beginning again upon a new plan, with offer of payment of money out of pocket, and, on refusal, shut Messrs. Troughton and Simms out of his observatory. The Court of course recommended arbitration ; and this arbitration, which extended over 1833-1838, is the most remarkable astronomical trial which ever took place in England. The arbitrator was Mr. Maule, afterwards judge, the senior wrangler of 1810, a powerful Mathema- tician, and a man of uncommon sharpness of perception. The counsel for Troughton and Simms was Mr. Starkie, the senior wrangler of 1803, with Mr. Sheepshanks, who was a witness, for his scientific adviser. The counsel for Sir James South was Mr. Drinkwater Bethune, a well- known Mathematician, and a high wrangler of 1823, as sharp as Mr. Maule. Mr. Babbage was a witness and a sort of scientific adviser. The arbitrator began by insist- ing that Troughton and Simms should be allowed to finish the work; he also permitted certain additions to the plan proposed by Mr. Sheepshanks, on condition that they should only be paid for if they succeeded. The 62 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1833. instrument was made serviceable in the opinion of the arbitrator, and the whole claim was awarded, additions included. Sir James did not let the instrument remain to shame the arbitrator and the opponent witnesses; he broke it up, sold the materials by auction, and placarded the walls with a bill, headed " Observatory, Kensington ; " and addressed to " shycock toy makers, smoke-jack makers, mock coin makers, &c. &c.," and stating that " several hundredweight of brass, &c., being the metal of the great equatorial instrument made for the Ken- sington Observatory by Messrs. Troughton and Simms, were to be sold by hand on the premises ; the wooden polar axis of which, by the same artists, with its botchings cobbled up by their assistants, Mr. Airy and the Rev. R. Sheepshanks, was purchased by divers vendors of old clothes, and dealers in dead cows and horses, with the exception of a fragment of mahogany specially reserved, at the request of several distinguished philosophers, on account of the great anxiety expressed by foreign astro- nomers to possess them, was converted into snuff-boxes as a souvenir piquant of the state of the art of Astronomical instrument making in England during the nineteenth century, will be disposed of at per pound."' I do not mention these things with any wish to throw blame on one who, as after events proved, was in a state of mind which rendered eccentricity excusable. But at that time this was not known, and, as so often happens, that which would form an excuse for foolish conduct, and ought to give others the right of restraining it, was not suspected. The troubles arising from this cause among men of science, and reaching public associations, were as real as if they had been the result of wicked designs rather than of morbid impulse. The Astronomer Royal, who wished to visit Campden Hill for the inspection of Groombridge's transit circle, begged that no reference might be made during his visit to the trial then pending. Sir James insultingly accused him of having changed his SIR JAMES SOUTH. 63 opinions on that question, &c. On Mr. Airy's declining 1834. further correspondence till assured that no disrespect was meant, Sir James ( waited on a military officer of high sir James rank in her Majesty's service,' who, however, either refused to accept the office offered to him, or quietly stopped the aggression. Sir James afterwards published the whole account as an advertisement in the Times of Nov. 29, 1838, in an attack upon the Admiralty. But all persons who had taken part with the prosecutors in the arbitra- tion, or who had expressed an opinion contrary to that of Sir James, were held by him as enemies. Mr. De Morgan, * as the intimate friend of Mr. Sheepshanks, and honorary secretary of the Astronomical Society, was one of these. Meeting him one day at the rooms of Lieut. Stratford, then assistant secretary, Sir James, in a loud voice, asked the latter to show him the time when and recommenda- tion on which Mr. De Morgan had been elected a Fellow of the R.A.S., and added something about ' those gentle- men ignorami' by whom the election had been made. Mr. De Morgan took no notice of this, but afterwards addressed a temperate note to the speaker, saying that it had appeared to him that Sir James South asking in his presence for the time, &c., when he became a member of the Society was not in accordance with the sort of courtesy which parties who wish to behave distantly towards each other usually observe when they meet in private. He asked whether this was to be imputed to f orgetfulness, or to a desire to convey the impression that Sir James had no wish to practise towards himself that negative courtesy with which a stranger is usually treated. He begged for an answer, that he might know how to behave towards Sir James in case they should meet again, ' since, in any case,' he says, ( I should not consider such a breach of etiquette worth any further consideration.' Sir James South's answer is curious. It ends with — ( As to how you regulate your demeanour towards myself if we should happen to meet again, that is a point which, 64 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1834. though it may concern yourself, is to me a matter of the completest indifference. * After conduct such as I have recently received, and in which you have borne, I am told, no inconsiderable part, I beg to decline further correspondence with you, and must refer you for any further information you may require to my friend Captain Francis Beaufort, R.N., to whom I have confided the preservation of my character as a man, and my honour as a gentleman. 'I remain, sir, your obedient servant, ascension and declination are given ; and if letters referring to the constellations are used, such as /3 in Orion, y in Draco, &c., it is not now to direct the attention to any imaginary figure of an armed man or a dragon, but to a particular region of the heavens, which might with equal propriety have been called region A or region B. It is to the mythological antiquary that the figures are useful, as sometimes throwing light upon his pur- suits. Every ancient people has written its own account of the singular .fables, which are common to all mythologies, upon groups of stars in the heavens, and it might have been thought that some feeling of congruity, if taste were too much to expect, would have prevented the burlesque of mixing the utensils of modern life with the stories of the heroic age, presenting much such an appearance as the model of a locomotive steam-engine on the top of the Parthenon. But the Lacailles, the Halleys, and the Heveliuses have arranged it otherwise ; the water-bearer pours a part of the stream which should wash the southern fish into a F 2 68 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. sculptor's workshop; a carpenter's rule has got between old Chiron and the altar on which he was going to sacrifice a wolf; and the lion and the hydra, whose juxtaposition has made more than one speculator imagine he has found a key to the whole al'egory, are in truth two Astronomers fighting for a sextant, \\hich HeveJius has placed at their disposal. A great deal of the southern sphere is laid out in mathematical instruments. If figures are to be drawn at all, it is, as we have said, for the historian, and not for the Astronomer; and we imagine the former will think it no loss that in our maps the heavens of Poolemy have been restored, and in no one drawing exceeded. The names only, and boundaries of the modern constellations are given ; but all the figures are those of Ptolemy, so arranged as to represent his catalogue. The constellations are fortunately not in danger of being renamed before the origin and meaning of the old signs and symbols are well understood. Many Astro- nomers, however, were then watching the names of heavenly bodies newly dissovered with a jealous eye, fearing more mathematical instruments or other incongruities. Mr. Temple Chevalier wrote to my husband some time after : — ' Can there not be some proper protest against the introduction of earthly names among the heavenly bodies ? The heathen mythology, independently of lending itself to analogy, is exactly fitted to the purpose, by lending itself to allusions, (JHAVSVTCL O-VVSTOLO-I. Such are those contained in Parthenope, Hygeia, Calliope, Irene, and others. When a planet shall be discovered at Oxford, " Isis " will be another name of the same kind. In the Comptes Rendus it appears that " Lutetia " was given because no one exclaimed against " Massilia." It seems high time to avoid more mud being thrown into the skies ; or are we to have Lugdunum Batavorum, and other equally barbarous incursions ? ' Perhaps, barbarous as it is, the plan of calling constella- tions and planets after continental towns and scientific instruments is less mischievous as regards antiquarian research than mixing mythological words, ' lending them- NAMES OF CONSTELLATIONS. 69 selves to allusions' without reference to time, system, or 1836. symbol, with the ancient names, all of which bear some reference to the religions and philosophies of the earliest times, and furnish a key to some of the deepest mysteries of past ages. The death of one of my sisters in March 1836, while Death^oi we were at 31 Upper Bedford Place, called out all our sister. friend's sympathy and kindness. He had a very affectionate regard for her, and his warm-hearted friendship was deeply felt by my family in this time of sorrow. We left London in the autumn, to spend some months in the west of England. Mr. De Morgan undertook to forward letters, and in many other ways to give that useful help which those at home can always render to the absent. This occasioned frequent communications ; and in allusion to my own love for the country being about equal to his for town, his letters contained many ironical contrasts between our desolate condition in Devonshire and his own enviable life in empty London. Part of this time he was confined to the house by an illness which, however, was not dangerous, and which did not interfere with his writing. This illness occurred in August, and prevented his visiting us at Clifton during the Bristol meeting of the British Association. Before the end of this year he again took his place as Professor of Mathematics in University College. In October 1836, Mr. White, his successor, who had been spending Death of the vacation in the Channel Islands, ventured, with his White, wife and child, to cross from Guernsey to Jersey in a small sailing boat. The sea was unusually rough, and the re- monstrances of the boatmen were unheeded. The boat capsized, and all on board were lost. This grievous event took place at the end of the College vacation. The classes were to open immediately, and the Mathematical chair — in some respects the most important of all, as, independently of its own importance, that of Natural Philosophy de- pended on it — was without a Professor, and the difficulty of 70 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. filling it, either for a time or permanently, was greater tlian it would have been at another season of the year, when the authorities would have been in London. torafeunto ^r> ^e Morgan &!* tne great emergency of the case, University and immediately offered to supply the want until the Christmas following. Only one who, like himself, had filled the chair before, could have taken it on so short a notice, and I am certain that in acting on his first impulse he consulted the needs of the Institution, without any thought of the chances of a permanent return. But, once installed in his old place, it was foreseen by all his friends that an effort would be made to keep him there ; and he judged, from the changes which had been made in the management, that his former objections to holding office in the College would not recur. An intimation soon came that the offer would be made, unless it should be distinctly understood that it would be rejected. His thoughts on this occasion were set forth in a letter to his friend Sir Harris Nicolas, by whose opinion as a lawyer he deter- mined to abide. Letter to ^y DEAE gIR HARRTS) — i wiu not make any apology for asking Nicolas. of your friendship to consider the following case, and to give me your advice ; firstly, because I believe you will willingly give me your opinion ; and secondly, because I do not even make you run the risk of incurring the ordinary odium which unfortunate advisers are sure to meet with if they do not turn out to be right. For I do not want you to advise me what is right or what is wrong, or what is safe or what is unsafe ; but I only want to ascertain the effect upon the mind of an unprejudiced person produced by the following account, without reference to the question whether such effect could or could not be made the basis of safe and honourable rule of action. The London University opened in 1828, and I was one of the Professors. The tenure of the Professorships amounted to this, that they were removable by the Council with or without reason assigned, having right of appeal against such dismissal to the Court of Proprietors ; a body, as it afterwards turned out, not without materials for agitation, but the numerical strength of which could always be swayed by the Council, partly owing to PROPOSED RETURN TO PROFESSORSHIP. 71 its consisting of men of business, who could not, or would not, 1836. take any great interest, partly by the system of voting by proxy, Letter to the Council holding, as might be supposed, a great number of &}* **. proxies. Shortly after the commencement of the Institution various causes of irritation arose between the Council and Pro- fessors, partly owing, in my belief, to the desire of power and influence in an individual who stood in an ill-defined position ; partly to the jealousy of some members of the Council whose political bias led them to think the best way of preventing an administrative officer from going wrong was to tie him up so tight that he could neither go right nor wrong, but very much from a feeling among the Professors that their position was not safe, and in particular a suspicion, which suppose well founded, that the Council intended to divide the Professorships as soon as the income became considerable. In the course of the years 1828 and 1829 the Professors — that is, a considerable number of them — made such representa- tions to the Council of their unwillingness to remain in so ambiguous a position, backed with a declaration of their inten- tion to retire, as induced that body to subject themselves to by- laws in regard to dismissal of a Professor, requiring long notice, considerable attendance, and decided majority before a Professor could be dismissed. It is to be noticed that these by-laws, though rescindible at the pleasure of the body which imposed them, were honourably adhered to in the subsequent matters, and that no technical difficulties were thrown in the way of the appeal to the Court of Proprietors. This matter being settled for the present, though no great confidence in either body existed on the part of the other, disturb- ances arose in the Anatomical class, the pupils questioning the competency of their Professor. Suppose it admitted that these disturbances were excited in the first instance by insinuations of two other Professors in their lectures, and were culpably fomented by the individual already alluded to, and by certain members of the Council ; suppose also that repeated investiga- tions into the competency of the Professor in question failed in establishing anything against him, and that he was finally dis- missed in consequence of the Council not being able to quell the disturbance, and of the interference of the Court of Proprietors, under the name of a Select Committee, which resolved to the effect that there could be no peace in the University while 72 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. Mr. remained, and then denied that they had recommended Letter to his dismissal ? Nicolas On this dismissal, within twenty minutes of hearing it authenticated, I retired from the University, writing the follow- ing letter to the Council.1 This took place in July or August 1831. In consequence of the retirement of other Professors, and of the severe loss sustained by the classes, as I suppose, a different system of management was finally adopted. It is detailed in the printed paper enclosed, of which the parts in question are scored in black ink where they relate to the Professor and Council, and in red ink where they relate to the Professor and his pupils.2 My successor has, most unfortunately for the University, been lost at sea, which was communicated to me very suddenly by one of my old colleagues. My first impulse was to offer to perform the duties till Christmas, which I accordingly did, look- ing at the moment only to the inconvenience arid probable loss which would be sustained by the institution opening without one of its most material chairs. But on looking out into the world in this new character of a pro tewpore substitute of my former self, I find in the first place a wish on the part of all I have spoken to (or rather, who have spoken to me) that I should return to my old post per- manently, mixed, I suspect, with a strong notion that such is my desire. I am, therefore, if I do not choose finally to make any overture on this subject, or to allow any to be made, in a position to be supposed to have coquetted with this divorcee of mine, and unsuccessfully. This I mean to avoid by taking a very early opportunity of stating to anybody who thinks it worth while to ask the question, whether I will take it or not. I want the opinion of an unprejudiced person, who knows the world, on the following questions : — 1. Do the regulations here submitted amount to bond fide moral security that Professorships in the University of London are offices tenable during good behaviour, and not held at pleasure ? 2. In addition to the practical security, supposing it to exist, do they offer that exterior show of being so held which would place the holders in that advantageous position as to respect- ability which a gentleman (meaning only by education and 1 See p. 39. 2 The document itself is much too long for insertion. LETTER TO SIR HARRIS NICOLAS. 73 sentiments, for God knows all the rest is but leather and 1836. prunella) requires, one who believes that no independent man can hold at the pleasure of any individual or corporation, except perhaps the Crown, and then only because usage has made laws ? 3. Does the regulation relating to that case provide the security which a prudent man would think requisite against the subdivi- sion of the Professorship in the event of its becoming lucrative ? We will suppose it comparatively immaterial what shall or shall not be good behaviour, and who shall decide, presuming on the check of public opinion, which operated strongly though not effectually on a former occasion. And, on the one hand, let the affirmative of the question (1) have all the advantage of its having been found very difficult to remove a Professor, even under the old regime ; while, on the other hand, it must have all the disadvantage of the appeal to the Court of Proprietors being utterly worthless. Your opinion should be given on no supposition of the affirmative being desired, if possible. Should I accept any offer (for I shall certainly not be a candidate) I should rather lose than gain for the time ; and I do not consider the prospect of ultimate gain as greater than that I now have. The advantage would be the resumption of an occu- pation which is in itself pleasant to me, and which has some few pleasing associations. But in a thing so nearly indifferent to myself, the notion of what people in general would think would have some weight. If your answers are such as would not please any parties con- cerned, I will keep this communication entirely secret, and remain, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 5 Upper Gower Street, Oct. 10, 1836. N.B. — The appeal to the Court of Proprietors is abolished , which must be considered as increasing the respectability of the Professorships, since, entre nous, a body of commercial English- men got together upon a point of trade (and with these gentlemen, as was sufficiently evident before, the honour and character of a Professor was avowedly, and almost ipsissimis verbis, made a question of trade) knows neither right from wrong, nor reason from anything else. The answer must have been such as would please all 74 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. parties, for when, immediately after, an offer of the Mathematical chair accompanied the thanks of the Coun- cil for Mr. De Morgan's considerate "kindness, the offer was accepted, and the Professor once more settled in his old place. I dare not, in the face of his and my firm belief that all things are ordered for us by a wiser judg- ment than our own, express regret that this should have been ; but the six-and-thirty years of intense labour which followed, ill paid at the time, and terminated by a disappoint- ment which broke his heart, may well make me hesitate to record his return with satisfaction. But he loved his work, and his pupils were endeared to him by the interest they took in his teaching, and their efforts to profit by it. 75 SECTION IV. CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1831 TO 1836. To Sir J. Herschel. 5 Upper Gower Street, Oct. 16, 1832. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I have just duly received your Cata- 1832. logue, which must in course of things be the first paper ordered for press, after those already so disposed of. I shall be very much obliged to you for all you have offered on the Catalogue, the Comet, and the Herscheliana. The crumbs which fall from a rich man's table are good — astronomically, whatever they may be gastronomically. Have you got, or do you know anything of, Bouillaud's or Bullialdi's Astronomia PTiilolaica ? There is a copy in the British Museum which wants the Prolegomena, which is the very part I want. The matter has reference to Yieta's Har- monicon Celeste, which has been supposed to be lost, and which I have a faint hope might be recovered. Bouillaud is reported to say that somebody stole it from Mersenne, and certainly Vossius quotes words to that effect from the Prolegomena. But my good friend M. Hachette assures me that this is a mistake, and that Bouillaud, in his unpublished MS. at Paris, says that he himself lent Vieta's MSS. to Leopold, Duke of Tuscany. If this be true, some library at Florence may yet contain it. I am the more inclined to hope this, as Schootten, in the Preface to Vieta, gives as his reason for omitting the Harmonicon Celeste, not that no copy was to be had, but that the only one he could get appeared imperfect. Neither Montucla, Delambre, nor Kastner is to be trusted implicitly — at least with regard to Yieta. Neither of them was aware of the fact that Yieta during his life published a collection of his works, or rather I should say that the first publication of his works was in the form of a collection, and that they did not appear severally, but were 76 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1832. afterwards severed by editors, as Ghetaldi and others. The name of this book, which was quite lost, was Eestituta Mathematica Analysis, and it contained, among other things, the first seven books of the Bestituta Hatliematica, which all the above his- torians agree are lost. Perhaps this book may yet turn up somewhere. I would hope from these circumstances that people will thin£ it worth while to look a little more into these points. I remain, my dear Sir John, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 5 Upper Gower Street, Dec. 27, 1833. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I have a young relation going your way, and though my lucubrations generally speaking are little worth, yet as I know paper direct from England acquires a certain value by crossing the sea, I shall try to fill up this sheet with English news, or rather with what must pass for such in stag- nation of better. Thank you, in the first place, for your paper on nebulas, which I duly received, proving that you never went to look after the southern hemisphere till you had pretty well rummaged the northern. . . . I have written a note to Mr. Baily, informing him of this opportunity, but as I have only had twelve hours' notice of it, I am not sure that you will hear from him. In any case, he is in good health, and thriving as no man better deserves to be. The same as to predicaments of the Astronomical. Your papers, namely, Catalogues and observations of Uranus, duly received, and will be read in course. I shall take care of the proofs, and Mr. Baily also. The Royal has had several meetings about their funds. It appears that they are obliged to sell out to pay arrears, and also that their estimated expenditure exceeds their income. They do not seem to know where to reduce. I do not know whether you left England before or after Captain Ross returned. He was at the Astronomical in November in high feather. To judge by his case, the northern latitudes must be good for consumptive people. I am not aware whether you know Mr. I , though I sup- pose you do. A paper by him was read at the Astronomical, containing an account of Flamsteed, &c. As Captain Ross was there, the penny-a-liners got hold of the Astronomical, and com- CORRESPONDENCE, 1831-36. 77 mitted paragraph ology. They spelt Halley, Nalley, wherenpon 1833. Mr. I wrote to Captain Beaufort, whom he had no acquaint- ance with, and asked him whether the Astronomical had been attacking anybody under fictitious surnames. Captain Beaufort answered, I believe, that the paper would be published and he might see, and thereupon sent him our abstract when it appeared. Mr. I— — then said that the whole was an attack upon him, as having copied from Professor Airy in his paper 011 ' Physical Astronomy,' and reasoning very correctly, said it would have been much better in the Royal to have refused to print his paper in that case than to liave suborned the Astronomical to attack him, &c. From this and several other things I have heard I am very much afraid that he (I ) is decidedly wrong in his head. Of course you have heard of your medal from the Institute. How could they be so imprudent as to risk annihilation at the hands of Captain Forman ? l Health and prosperity to you and all yours. Catalogy to the nebulae of the southern hemisphere, I remain, dear Sir John, Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Hersckel. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — The bearer, Mr. Templeton, now going to the Cape, has offered to take this, whereupon I have ad- vertised Mr. Baily of the same, and his letter accompanies it. We have not up to this date heard of your arrival, or even of MacClear's, which I suppose we hardly could. I wrote you a gossiping letter by Mr. W. Bird, which I hope you got duly. Great is your loss if you missed it, for i£ was replete with on dits. I presume Mr. Baily has made you acquainted with all that has passed, which, as far as I know, amounts to very little. The anniversary of the Astronomical Society takes place on Friday (this is Wednesday), and I am just come from a preparatory meeting of Council. There is an old proverb that when the nose itches some one is talking of the wearer. I hope for your sake that the converse is not true ; but a very good way to test it will be to look in your diary, if you 1 An irrepressible paradoxer. 78 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1834. keep one, for the state of your nasal economy on February 14th, Your excellent friend, Captain Forman, has got a rise in the world. Sedge wick has mentioned him in the notes to a pub- lished sermon on the studies at Cambridge ; not, indeed, as an individual, but as the representative of a class, ' The Formans ' of the day. You know the story of Louis XIV., who noticed a merchant very much, and thereby emboldened him to ask for letters of nobility, which he got, and the King never spoke to him after, saying, ' You were the first of your class, now you are the last.' Would you rather be the first of the Formans or the last of the savans ? Your paper on Uranus and Co. is in course of reading at the Astronomical. The observations of Captain Foster will nearly fill Volume VII. of our Memoirs ; but if any paper is added to them, it must be your Test Objects which has been read, and this. You will therefore receive them before long. I forget at this moment whether you ordered extra copies, but I have your last letter and shall look ; I shall also ask Mr. Baily. I should not have troubled you with such a scrawl had I not Mr. Baily's letter to send, to which this shall be scum or dregs, according as you think it most flighty or stupid. * Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 5 Upper Gower Street, Wednesday, Feby. 14, 1834. To William Frend. Sept. 1, 1834. MY DEAR SIR, — I was not surprised to find on my return to town on Friday that you had decamped, seeing that you take pleasure in the wilderness. Neither must you be astonished that I did not exceed by a single day my estimate of the time I could bear the viridity of extra-urban scenery. I suppose you will let me know how to direct to you before long. While my health is recovering from the effects of the raw atmosphere I have been breathing, I write this in preference to more serious occupation. This is no joke, I assure you ; whenever I return from the coun- try I am knocked down for some days, and could be ill with very little contrivance or external instigation, which never hap- pens if I stay in town. And yet I have been only two days regularly in the wilds. To give you some account of my progress, CORRESPONDENCE, 1831-36. 79 I went to stay with a clerical friend,1 who lives six miles from 1834. any town or village, except the thing he calls his parish, and a lone house he calls his rectory. So, he having no vehicle except a four-legged apparatus called a pony, we slung my baggage across the beast, and crossed the country on foot like a gipsy migration, talking Mathematics over his head to his very great edification. Indeed he, the quadruped, looked as wise and pro- fited as much as some of my preceding pupils have done. How people live in such lone houses I know not. Conceive me reduced to clip hedges to pass away the time till dinner, which 1 did with great gout, seeing that it is reducing trees to some- thing like regularity, and diminishing the sum-total of foliage. From thence I went to Oxford, where I was thrown upon my resources for a whole evening. The only incident worth notice was that, having strolled out and picked up some second-hand books at a book-stall, rather Cornelius Agrippa looking sort of things, a good-looking old gentleman (a stout Church and State man, I'll swear) was so astourded that he changed his table to increase his distance, and looked at me as if he expected to see me carried away by an Avatar of the evil principle. Thence got I to Bedford, where I stayed some days with Captain Smyth, heard all the town politics, saw a jail with two men in it, father and son, charged with cutting the tails off fifteen pigs, dined with aclericus, and did various other things, not forgetting seeing a play acted by little children. Captain Smyth's observatory is the most beautiful little thing imaginable, mounting a 5-foot transit, a 3-foot circle (belonging to our Society), and an 8-foot equatorial. We had no very fine night, so that I could not know all the merits of the latter ; but judging from what I saw, it must be a very capital instrument of its kind. Thence got I to Cambridge inside a coach with a lady, whose history I wormed out of her, agreeably to a talent I have for doing those things when I like, which you will admit when I tell you that in a ride of twenty-five miles I ascertained , that she had married when very young an officer of 1st Light Dragoons, with him had gone to India, was stationed at Bangalore, where she travelled ; how he died, she came home, and married the vicar of some place which I now forget ; and, having stayed at some place, which I equally forget, was now moving, with furniture following in a waggon, and husband deposited outside the coach, to take pos- session of his living, first stopping to dine with a friend, whose 1 Rev. Arthur Neate. 80 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1834. name I forget. I also ascertained which of all my cousins in India she had danced with in her day, which was instructive to know. These, and a great many other things, did I ascertain ; so you may see that if I am not communicative myself, I know how to make other people so when they do not know what I am at. At Cambridge I found Sheepshanks, Peacock, and several new builiings, the former of whom drove me to Madingley, a place I never saw ir^ my life before, so you may judge how far my walks extended as an undergraduate. Came home as tired as a city mouse of hedgerows and cottages, and was more nearly in a good humour with the fiddler who stands opposite my window on a Saturday night than I could previously have thought possible. If the locomotives ever come to go so quick that one tree shall not be distinguishable from another, then, and not before, do I become a traveller. Mr. Stephenson (engineer) says he shall never be satisfied till two hours take us from London to Liverpool. Blessings on his heart, but either he or, better still, one of the minority who can be spared, shall try it first. I have not got a large organ of caution for nothing. I am delighted with the House of Lords for throwing out the hard bargain of 80 per cent, of Irish tithes to be secured upon the land. The I. P.1 will never get so good a composition again. I perfectly agree now with Lord that the Commons would sometimes blunder if it were not for the Lords. Can you imagine Lord , the quondam Liberal, instigating the House of Lords to put it in the power of Commissioners to hinder any pauper's religious instructors from having access to him unless he were of Parliament principles ? No letters from you, from which I conclude that your thoughts are of trees, only interrupted by the slopping of the waves, which are always fiddling at the sand till I long to give them a thump, and tell them to be easy. The prettiest thing about the sea is the straight horizon and the isochronism of the waves in deep water, but near the shore they do not keep time like my pendulum. . . . We have got our rooms (in part) given up to me, and about the end of September shall begin to stir in getting them ready. All the people are oufc of town except myself, and they might as well make me Secretary of State as set me painting, plastering, and whitewashing. Stratford is gone to Bamsgate with Mrs. S (as he calls her — I abominate initial letters) tratford, Baily to Edinburgh, Hender- son, &c., ditto. There is not a soul left that I know of, which is 1 Quaere Irish People I I cannot interpret these political allusions. CORRESPONDENCE. 8 1 a great advantage of being in town in the summer ; for, saving 1834. your absence, it is a good thing to be thrown upon oneself for a month or two, to say nothing of the quantity of work one does. I was very sorry to find when I came home that Mr. Woolgar had been very uncourteously received by B — - with my note. That unfortunate man will never rest until he succeeds in getting nobody's good word. He calculates very wrong (for a calculating machine maker) if he thinks such a thrower of stones as himself can stand alone in the world. It takes all his analysis and his machine to boot to induce me to say I will ever have any com- munication with him again, which nothing should induce me to do except the consideration that men of real knowledge should have more allowance made for them than some charlatans I know. I make no doubt Mr. Woolgar will detail to you the reception he received. . . . Apropos of logarithms, give my kind regards to all your circle, and believe me, dear sir, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 5 Upper Gower Street. To William Frend, Hustings. DEAR SIR, — I have nothing whatever in the nature of news to tell you, except that the Astronomical Society has ob- tained possession of its rooms l and moved into them, with nothing remarkable except that one of the secretaries, whom you know, had an opportunity of confirming an observation he has often made, that upholsterers, carpenters, and all concerned in furniture, are laudatores temporis acti, whatever may be their age. The bookcases of the Society are * such as are not made now ; ' and even the old orange chests, bought for a trifle to put books in, are * such as they doesn't make nowadays,' according to one of the workmen. However, the race of men are not degenerated, for four of them took up in their arms our large iron safety affair, and carried it slick right away into a van, whereas five men took two hours with iron rollers, &c., to get it into the chambers a year ago. I have got the care of all the churches upon me now ; that is, builders' estimates, &c., with a hitch as to prices. Mr. Baily is out of town, and workmen must be in the premises on Wednes- day at latest. We are in this condition. The Royal Society, 1 In Somerset House. G 82 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. which owns the upper storey, has cat a floor through what was a ntaircase, so that our rooms in part present a section like the fol- lowing.1 .... However, I suppose it will come right somehow or other. Our meeting-room will hold from ninety to a hundred com- fortably. Our largest meeting hitherto has been eighty. Give my kind regards all round, and believe me, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 5 Upper Gower Street. To Dean Peacock. DEAR SIR, — I send you herewith my series, corrected and revised in the newest manner. The result is so much generalised from that in the Calculus of Functions, that I think it may be considered as new matter. I send also a small work with a new kind of title, being an endeavour to make the fifth book of Euclid somewhat readable. It is meant to be the first part of a book on Trigonometry. The astronomical world here has been enlightened by a starlight Knight,2 at the Royal Institute. What Young and Faraday have there said of physics has been completely outdone. I did not hear the lectures, but am told that if I had I should have known how George III., surrounded by his Astronomers, went to Kew to see an occultation, foregoing the stag-hunt which was going on ; how a cloud hid the moon, and how the pious King, without a single murmur against Providence (a point dwelt upon as remarkable), turned the telescope at the hunters, and saw the stag killed, between the two horizontal wires. The second lecture was closed by a description of the unfitness of Mathema- ticians to be practical Astronomers, with the exception of Bessel. Now Sir James would have lectured at Cambridge with half the pains which were taken to get Airy. I remain, dear Sir, Yours very sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. Upper Gower Street, April 25, 1836. To Sir J. Herschel MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Some months ago, when the Calculus of Functions which I now send you was published, I marked 1 The reader's imagination will easily supply the omitted sketch from the context. 2 Sir Jaines South. CORRESPONDENCE. 83 one for you, which has been lying waiting opportunities. I am 1836, glad now of the delay, as I am enabled to send with it some maps of the stars which I have been charged to present to you in the name of the Committee of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. They are the first maps, I believe, in which Sir William's nebulae and your own are laid down from the Catalogue. You will find a great deal of new speculation about an old subject of yours in the Calculus of Functions, and in particular a discussion which concerns you in § 252, &c. The two books on Algebra and Number and Magnitude con- tain various metaphysical points, which I heartily wish were more attended to. I have not written your name in them be- cause non constat that it is reasonable to expect you to bring elementary books home again to England, where other copies will be much at your service. Present them, therefore, to any person or institution whom they will be of use to. We are getting up a picture of Mr. Baily by subscription, and the same is limited to a guinea. It has struck me that I do not remember that anybody has put your name down, and that you would not be pleased to be left out in any association which is to do honour to such a man. I shall therefore take care that the omission is remedied. The picture is to be presented to the Astronomical Society. Your sixth Catalogue has been printed, or will be struck off shortly. The extra copies shall be forwarded to Mr. Stewart. There is very little stirring in our world. You will have heard that Captain Smyth had already asserted that the two stars y Virgin-is were in peri-one-another, and was laughed at by some- body for his assertion, which laughter your letter has turned on his side. I should suppose you now can almost fix the time of your re- turn. I take it for granted you have learned the extraordinary discoveries you have made in the moon. It was a dull joke to republish the book in England, and I suspect in America it was done to raise the wind. I natter myself I did just as clever a thing, which, however, has failed through Mr. Warren's want of understanding ; at least, I have not seen it in print. I sent him anonymously the following : — 4 Sir John Ilerschel.' — This distinguished Astronomer writes this to a friend from the Cape of Good Hope : — ' The climate here is so bad that my mirrors tarnish immediately. I do not know o 2 84 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, 1836. what I should have done if I had not taken the precaution to bring out with me a large supply of Warren's jet blacking, pre- pared at his manufactory, 30 Strand, the polish of which is so exquisite that I can see the faintest stars in the haziest evenings.' With best wishes, I remain, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 5 Upper Gower Street, July 10, 1836. JST.B. — The Southern Hemisphere on the maps looks tolerably empty of nebulae. There is ample space and room enough the characters of He 1 to trace, whence it follows that you may mark the year and mark the night; that is, dot down nebulae through all the twenty-four hours of R.A., and the year and night will be near enough as to time. Do you not find it an awfully unromantic change to get out of the land of Hercules, Draco, Cepheus, &c., into that of Pyxis Nautica, Cselum Sculptoris, &c. ? If you have to make any new constellations, remember that the president and other officers of the Astrono- mical Society have an official claim. Presses Societatis Astro- nomicae would look pretty ; and a Praes., or ft Secret., would not be amiss in a list of moon culminating stars. Please to give my kind regards to Maclear and young Smyth when you see them. Maclear 's paper on the opposition of Mars has reached the Astronomical Society duly, but we wait about printing it till we hear of his observations. Of course you know Bachelier, the mathematical bookseller at Paris. All his stock has been burnt, and that of others at the same time. I wanted Libri's * History of Mathematics ' in July, and find it is all gone in the flames. 85 SECTION V. 1836 TO 1846. SOON after Mr. De Morgan's return to the college a great 1836. affliction befell the family in the sudden death of his sister Mrs. Hensley in her confinement. Her brother had left his home in Gower Street, satisfied that she was doing well, and on his return in the afternoon inquired as he entered the house how she was going on. The servant replied that Mrs. Hensley was dead. It had been quite unexpected, and was a terrible blow to her mother, her husband, and brothers. Mrs. Hensley left three daughters and the infant son whose birth immediately preceded her own death. It was many months before her brother Augustus recovered from the shock he received in hearing so sud- denly of the event. In writing to my mother of the affliction of his own, he added, 'As for me, I am stunned, and hardly know what I write.5 And it was far longer before the grief caused by this, his first experience of the death of one whom he loved most affectionately, abated. The religious doubts and difficulties created in his mind by the doctrinal teaching of his early years were not the only troubles arising from the same cause. It was natural that a mother, so anxious and true-hearted as his, should not see without pain anything like what she thought carelessness in religious matters, and that her anxiety to produce a belief like her own should be intensified by her recent sorrow. His sister had shared her anxiety. They looked upon him, of whose intellectual powers they were proud, and who had been enabled to give such loving 86 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. and dutiful help to his family, as one perhaps doomed to endless torment, because, using the power of head and inte- grity of heart which made him so dear to them, he rejected some orthodox creed, and the belief that his Father in heaven was more cruel and unjust than any earthly father. After his sister's death, his mother wrote to him with painful earnestness on this subject, begging him to read some writings left by his sister. His reply shows both what he thought of the question and what he felt on the sorrowful occasion which called it forth.1 From this letter it may be gathered that his opinions at this time were Unitarian, according to the meaning originally given by that word, and to the belief held by those who first bore the name.2 There is now so much confusion of ideas as to this, that it is necessary for me to say what I mean in calling my husband a Unitarian. He believed that Jesus Christ, the Son of God by the gift of the Holy Spirit without measure, was, as to his nature, a man like ourselves, except in His power of receiv- ing the Spirit of God. That His divinity was not, like that of the Father, the Source of all things, underived and self -existent. That the Father spoke through Him by the same Spirit, sending the message and the means of redemp- tion or bringing back erring man to God. That the mission was attested by His words and miraculous works, and that He rose from the dead, and was seen to rise to Heaven, from whence He sends the Spirit to those who are able to receive it. Mr. De Morgan never joined any religious sect, but I think he had most respect for the Unitarians, as being most honest in their expression of opinion, and having most critical learning. The writer's belief in the supremacy of reason to sift and interpret revelation, and his implicit 1 See correspondence following this section. 2 When a proposal was made to require the insertion in the census return of the various religious denominations, he declared that he should describe us as ' Christians unattached.' REASON AND FAITH. 87 faith, sufficient evidence having been obtained, are shown in 1836. the letter, The two are results of the same mental power, for reason enables us as well to interpret testi- mony as to judge of its value. This only applies to that religion which is of .the head. My husband had a deep instinctive spring of faith in his own soul, but with this, the bond of union between his heavenly Father and him- self, the world had nothing to do. Years after this letter was written, he was supposed to have accepted, on slight and insufficient grounds, facts pronounced unworthy of examination by less profound thinkers. It may be that the time will come when his guarded judgment of these phenomena will be in turn condemned as too cautiously expressed.1 Early in 1837, a measure for the abolition of Church 1837. rates, and the application of Church property to meet ™ the expenses for which they were levied, was proposed by the Government. Large calculations were, of course, necessary to show in what way the property could be so managed as to meet the necessities of the Church, without injustice to those dignitaries who were its present holders, and actuaries were engaged to make these calcu- lations, both on the part of the Ministers and on that of the Opposition. Lord Ellenborough, then in office, applied to Mr. De Morgan as follows : — Mr. Finlaison, not being authorised to communicate with Lord Ellenborough with respect to the details of the new plan for the management of Church property, has had the goodness to recommend to Lord Ellenborough that he should request the assistance of Mr. De Morgan as the ablest of actuaries in the elucidation of the subject, &c. A very intricate calculation was gone through involv- ing the values of leases for various terms of years, of the fines levied on change of holder, and of every part of the complicated question. Lord Ellenborough, between 1 See Preface to From Matter to Spirit. 88 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1837. whom and Mr. De Morgan several letters had passed, wrote (March 14) : — When the bill is printed and further information is obtained, I may have to trouble yon again with further questions ; but in the mean time I cannot delay offering my acknowledgment to you for tha most valuable assistance you have already afforded. This calculation occupied as many hours of several days as could be spared from his two lectures and his other work, and he had to sit up more than one night to complete it. The Bill was lost, and with it Mr. De Mor- gan's time and trouble. Marriage. In the vacation of this year we were married. Mr. De Morgan's religious views are by this time well known to the reader. I had been brought up in my father's belief, but had not adhered to it without much modifica- tion. My husband's objection to the marriage ceremony was much stronger than my own, but my respect for his scruples made me willing to comply with his wish that we should not be married by the form prescribed by the Church of England. We were married at the registrar's office by the Rev. Thomas Madge, and by a form of words differing from that in the prayer book only by the omis- sion of the very small part to which we could not assent with our whole hearts, and of the long exordium of St. Paul on the duties of husbands and wives. Settled in After a short tour in Normandy we settled at our first street. home, 69 Gower Street. The books, which were then tolerably numerous, had been taken from 5 Upper Gower Street, a few weeks before, when his mother went to a larger house in Manchester Street, Manchester Square. Our house was so near the college that my husband could come home in the intervals between his morning and afternoon lectures, instead of remaining away from 8 A.M. till 5 P.M., as he was obliged to do afterwards when we lived at a greater distance from Gower Street. My father was living in Tavistock Square at the time EARLY MARRIED LIFE. 89 of our marriage. My husband had long known almost all 1837. my father's circle of acquaintance. One exception — a dear and early friend of mine whom he did not know per- sonally till shortly before our marriage — was Lady Noel Byron, whose health kept her much at home, and whom he accompanied me to see at her house near Acton. She soon became as truly his friend as she had been mine. Lady Byron was always shy with strangers, es- pecially with those who excited her veneration. This shyness gave her an appearance of coldness, but she and my husband soon knew each other's worth, and she never lost an opportunity of showing her regard for him and trust in his judgment. He was rather surprised to find in one commonly reputed to be hard and austere, qualities of quite an opposite nature. She was impulsive and affec- tionate almost to a fault, but the expression of her feelings was often checked by the habitual state of re- pression in which the circumstances of her life had placed her. I had known her from my childhood. My father, whom she always held in the highest esteem, had taught her Mathematics, as a friend, before her marriage. My husband afterwards gave her daughter, Lady Love- lace, then Lady King, much help in her mathematical studies, which were carried farther than her mother's had been. I well remember accompanying her to see Mr. Babbage's wonderful analytical engine. While other visitors gazed at the working of this beautiful instrument with the sort of expression, and I dare say the sort of feeling, that some savages are said to have shown on first seeing a looking-glass or hearing a gun — if, indeed, they had as strong an idea of its niarvellousness — Miss Byron, young as she was, understood its working, and saw the great beauty of the invention. She had read the Differen- tial Calculus to some extent, and after her marriage she pursued the study and translated a small work of the Italian Mathematician Menabrea, in which the mathe- matical principles of its construction are explained. 90 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1837. Mr. Babbage's ' Ninth Bridgwater Treatise,' at this time going through the press, contained the development of an idea suggested by the working of the engine. In the series of numbers presented by the rotation of the cylinders, a regular order, which has continued for a long time, is suddenly interrupted by the appearance of a new number. The old series is again resumed, and at another interval a number bearing relation to the first interrup- tion makes its appearance. This process suggested to Mr. Babbage a reply to Hume's argument against miracles, founded on the experience of the world in the sequence of events. The idea of the intervention of a higher law in the processes of nature is now more familiar to the world than it was when Mr. Babbage gave his beautiful illustration. By theologians the book was condemned as heretical, as doing away with what was held to be the nature of miracle — an arbitrary suspension of the laws of nature. By some thoughtful men, who did not consider science and revelation incompatible, the suggestion was held valuable. My husband took a lively interest in the work, and the author, who was then on friendly terms with him, was a visitor at our house. Elizabeth In this year we made the acquaintance and gained the friendship of Elizabeth Fry ; of whom my husband speaks in the Budget of Paradoxes as ' one of the noblest of human beings.' Lady Noel Byron, who had heard of a scheme for a female benefit society and home, which seemed to promise great usefulness, and in which Mrs. Fry took an interest, introduced her to my husband for the sake of his advice on the calculations, and to us both, as likely to enter warmly into the design. He found the calculations utterly worthless, and loss or even ruin was prevented by the reference to him, for the projector had obtained promises of money for shares from persons who could ill afford to lose it; her vexation on the over- throw of her scheme was very plainly shown. Mrs. Fry allowed me to accompany her in a visit to this person. It OPENING OF COLLEGE SESSION. 91 was like witnessing an interview between an angel and the 1837. opposite character, and I could only compare the steady gentleness with which Mrs. Fry replied to the sharp, shrill arguments of Miss — - to sunshine clearing away a black frost. My husband, who was very sensitive on such points, was charmed with Mrs. Fry's voice and manner as much as by the simple self-forgetfulness with which she entered into this business; her own very uncom- fortable share of it not being felt as an element in the question, as long as she could be useful in promoting good or preventing mischief. T can see her now as she came into our room, took off her little round Quaker cap, and laying it down, went at once into the matter. e I have followed thy advice, and I think nothing further can be done in this case ; but all harm is prevented.' In the following year I had an opportunity of seeing the effect of her most musical tones. I visited her at Stratford, taking my little baby and nurse with me, to consult her on some articles on prison discipline, which I had written for a periodical. The baby — three months old — was restless, and the nurse could not quiet her, neither could I entirely, until Mrs. Fry began to read something connected with the subject of my visit, when the infant, fixing her large eyes on the reader, lay listening till she fell asleep. On the occasion of the opening of the Faculty of Arts introduc- my husband was appointed to deliver the introductory ture. lecture. The establishment of the University of London had altered the relations of University College with the public and with education generally, and, as Mr. De Morgan said, ' the circumstances under which this College (Univer- sity College) reopens its courses of instruction are more remarkable than any in which it has been placed since the commencement of its career.' The University of London had been founded in the year 1836 by Government 5 and to prevent the confusion consequent on similarity of name, the institution which 92 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1838. had been called the London "University took the name of University College. There were then two Colleges in London affiliated to the newly established university, which bore that name with more propriety, its object being not to give education, but to examine and confer degrees upon the pupils of Colleges. This lecture, given nine years after his first, shows the working of the same thought developed and extended over a wider field. He disclaimed being in any way the organ or representative of the College. The ideas were his own ; and the principles he laid down upon public education might be consulted now with advantage in this present stage of opinion on academical training. Our eldest child was born the year after our marriage. In the autumn of that year Lady Byron lent us her house, Fordhook, near Acton ; and for the ten weeks of our stay my husband was able to go on with his writing more easily than he could have done at a greater distance from London. During the years 1836 and 1837 he had been Theory of engaged in writing his Theory of Probabilities. This is the biiities. description taken from the agreement made with the pub- lishers of the ' Encyclopaedia Metropolitana,5 published in January 1838. his pupil and friend, Mr. Sedley Taylor of Trinity College, Cambridge— one who, like him self, held conscience to be above all things, and gave up his position as a clergyman of the Church of England because he could not assent with his whole heart to her doctrine. The following is extracted from Mr. Taylor's notice of his old teacher in the Cambridge University Reporter :— 'As Professor of Pure Mathematics at University College, London, De Morgan regularly delivered four courses of lectures, each of three hours a week, and last- ing throughout the academical year. He thus lectured two hours every day to his College classes, besides giving a course addressed to schoolmasters in the evening during DESCRIPTIONS OF LECTURES. 99 a portion of the year. His courses embraced a systematic 1838. view of the whole field of Pure Mathematics, from the first book of Euclid and Elementary Arithmetic up to the Calculus of Variations. From two to three years were ordinarily spent by Mathematical students in attendance on his lectures. De Morgan was far from thinking the duties of his chair adequately performed by lecturing only. At the close of every lecture in each course he gave out a number of problems and examples illustrative of the sub- ject which was then engaging the attention of the class. His students were expected to bring these to him worked out. He then looked them over, and returned them revised before the next lecture. Each example, if rightly done, was carefully marked with a tick, or if a mere inac- curacy occurred in the working it was crossed out, and the proper correction inserted. If, however, a mistake of principle was committed, the words ' show me ' appeared on the exercise. The student so summoned was expected to present himself on the platform at the close of the lecture, when De Morgan would carefully go over the point with him privately, and endeavour to clear up whatever difficulty he experienced. The amount of labour thus involved was very considerable, as the number of students in attendance frequently exceeded one hundred.' ' De Morgan's exposition combined excellences of the most varied kinds. It was clear, vivid, and succinct — rich too with abundance of illustration always at the command of enormously wide reading and an astonishingly retentive memory. A voice of sonorous sweetness, a grand forehead, and a profile of classic beauty, intensified the impression of commanding power which an almost equally complete mastery over Mathematical truth, and over the forms of language in which he so attractively arrayed it, could not fail to make upon his auditors. Greater, however, than even these eminent qualities were the love of scientific truth for its own sake, and the utter contempt for all H 2 100 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1 83R. counterfeit knowledge, with which he was visibly possessed, and which he had an extraordinary power of arousing and Taylor's67 sustaining in his pupils. The fundamental conceptions of each main department of Mathematics were dwelt upon and illustrated in such detail as to show that, in the judg- ment of the lecturer, a thorough comprehension and mental assimilation of great principles far outweighed in import- ance any mere analytical dexterity in the application of half-understood principles to particular cases. Thus, for instance, in Trigonometry, the wide generality of that subject, as the science of undulating or periodic magnitude, was brought oat and insisted on from the very first. In like manner the Differential Calculus was approached through a rich conglomerate of elementary illustration, by which the notion of a differential coefficient was made thoroughly intelligible before any formal definition of its meaning had been given. The amount of time spent on any one subject was regulated exclusively by the import- ance which De Morgan held it to possess in a systematic view of Mathematical science. The claims which Uni- versity or College examinations might be supposed to have on the studies of his pupils were never allowed to influence his programme in the slightest degree. He laboured to form sound scientific Mathematicians, and, if he succeeded in this, cared little whether his pupils could reproduce more or less of their knowledge on paper in a given time. On one occasion, when I had expressed regret that a most distinguished student of his had been beaten, in the Cambridge Mathematical Tripos, by several men believed to be his inferiors, De Morgan quietly remarked that he "never thought likely to do himself justice in THE GREAT WRITING RACE." All cram he held in the most sovereign contempt. I remember, during the last week of his course which preceded an annual College exa- mination, his abruptly addressing his class as follows : " I notice that many of you have left off working my examples this week. I know perfectly well what you are doing ; COLLEGE LECTURES. 101 YOU ARE CRAMMING FOR THE EXAMINATION. But I will Set 1839. you such a paper as shall make ALL TOUR CRAM of no use." ' His pupils' affection was not gained by any laxity of Enforce- discipline, for he was strict, especially as to quietness and punctu- punctuality. His own morning lecture began at nine. allty< That on Natural Philosophy followed it immediately, and punctuality in the first comers, to secure its full time, was important. Some of the pupils had fallen into the slovenly habit of coming into the theatre a few minutes after the bell had rung, and in this way lost, and prevented those present from hearing, the first sentences of the lecture. For the want of punctuality they could hardly be blamed, as an example was set by several of the Pro^ fessors, whose entrance was delayed, as they said, f to give the lads time to assemble.' Mr. De Morgan, after duly enjoin- ing punctual attendance, gave notice that if the pupils came in after he had commenced, they would find the door locked, which threat after two or three days' trial was put into effect. A few enterprising youths kicked and knocked at the door, trying to burst it open, but on the appearance of a policeman, and a threat of ( the Council,' which might mean removal, they were brought to order. At the end of this session nine pupils presented their Professor with a handsomely bound copy of Macaulay's Essays, with a letter begging his acceptance of it as 6 A small expression of gratitude for the liberal and most efficient assistance which his course of mathematical lec- tures had afforded them in preparing to pass the examina- tion for the degree of Bachelor of Arts in the University of London.' Among these nine gentlemen were three of the insurgents, and among the other six names were those of Jacob Waley and James Baldwin Browne. Some time had always been given after each lecture to clearing up diffi- culties, and rather more than usual was necessary after the outbreak, as those concerned in it were in greater need of help to make up for lost time. 102 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1839. Very soon after the establishment of the London University, young men of Jewish parentage began to distinguish themselves by their rapid acquirement of knowledge, thus justifying the hopes of their co-re- ligionists who had contributed so liberally to the founda- tion. During the years in which my husband was Professor, many Jews took the highest honours ; and among his most attached and valued Jewish pupils, the late Mr. Nuina Hartog was the last, and Mr. Jacob Waley the first. Mr. Hartog's career, unhappily cut short before he had applied his talents to the work of life, was a bril- liant one. After taking all the honours that could be given in University College, he went to Cambridge, and took his degree as Senior Wrangler. But the mental work was too much for his strength, and an attack of small-pox in 1872 left him too weak to rally. Jacob Mr. Jacob Waley, afterwards Professor of Law, was one of the first Jewish students, after my husband's return to his Professorship, of whom the College had reason to be proud. He was not only a successful student in class, but a diligent private pupil, and from the time of which I write till his death in 1873 a valued friend. His lessons at our house in Gower Street were pleasant to both teacher and pupil, and even to myself, for he would come to me when they were done, for a little talk about books, or a reading of his favourite writer Macaulay's Lays or Essays. Mr. Waley was the first M.A. of the University of London, -which in 1836 was ready to confer degrees on students of* its affiliated Colleges in London and else- where. Some of us now living may remember Lord Brougham's reference to this pupil in a speech made at a distribution of prizes at the time, and possibly too some may remember how the speaker dwelt upon the fact (which was a fact then, and we had heard it so often that we were tired of hearing it) that within those walls men of every religion were received, whether as teacher or student, without any reference to their beliefs or non-beliefs. The GEORGE LONG. 108 time at which these assertions were made was spoken of 1839. by iny husband as c before the Fall.' At the time of our marriage Mr. George Long, who had George resigned his Professorship of Greek in the University when Mr. De Morgan retired, was living with his family in Camden Street, Camden Town. He was editor of the Penny Cyclopcedia, and others of the works of the Diffu- sion Society, and the work brought him and Mr. De Morgan much together. The two had several qualities in common, — integrity of purpose and simplicity of character, indefati- gable industry, and a love of fun which brightened hard work and kept us always amused. Mrs. Long took great credit to herself for the fulfilment of her predictions on the subject of our marriage, which she declared she had foreseen from time immemorial. I believe her prophecies really dated from the year 1831, when my acquaint- ance with her began. It lasted as warm friendship till the year 1841, when to the great sorrow of all her friends she was taken from us. Among other visitors not connected with the College was Mr. Leslie Ellis, who left on my mind the impression of an almost perfect moral nature. This impression was confirmed when, some time after, his scientific studies were interrupted by an illness, which he bore for years with unexampled patience, trying to alleviate the intensity of his sufferings when possible by mental work, and when that was impossible, awaiting the end with perfect resig- nation. Dr. Logan, a learned Mathematician and after- wards Professor at the Catholic College of Oscott, was among our friends. When Mr. Leslie Ellis's sister left him on the occasion of her marriage with Dr. Whewell, the Master of Trinity, our friend Dr. Logan took her place near the sufferer, and attended him with unremit- ting friendship and affection till his death. I have none of my husband's letters to Dr. Logan, but I know that the correspondence was large. Mr. De Morgan was in- debted to him for the volume of Ploucquet which was 104 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 183?. afterwards of such essential service in his logical contro- versy with Sir William Hamilton. Kev. James Another and an older friend not connected with the College was James Tate of Richmond, Yorkshire, who at this time was living with his family at the residence as Canon of St. Paul's, Amen Corner. His own story was nearly connected with that of my mother's family. Mr. Tate, like so many of his own scholars — ' northern lights,5 as they were called — was of obscure or rather poor parentage. Archdeacon Blackbnrne,1 who lived at Eichmond, wanted a lad to act as amanuensis, and to read to him. Mr. Christopher Wyvill, his friend and contemporary, a noted Whig reformer of the time, re- quired a young man in the same capacity. Two lads were recommended by Mr. Temple, the head-master of Eichmond School. These were James Tate and Peter Fraser, the last a poor boy, but a lineal descendant of the beheaded Lord Lovat. My great-grandfather engaged young Tate, and Mr. Wyvill took Fraser. The two lads proved well deserving their appointments. Archdeacon Blackburn e became greatly attached to his young amanu- ensis, and found the means of sending him to Cambridge, Pupils of where he gained honours as a classic. Mr. Wyvill sent his School. protege to the University, with nearly the same success. In due time young Tate was ordained, and afterwards appointed to a tutorship in the school at Eichmond, of which at Mr. Temple's death he became head-master. Some of the most distinguished men of the beginning of this century were his pupils ; many of them, like him- self, owing all to their own ability and industry. Of these were Dean Peacock, Professor Adam Sedgwick, Professor Whewell, Eichard Sheepshanks, and many others. 1 Archdeacon of Cleveland. His work The Confessional gave him a distinguished place among the writers on Divinity of his time. Mr. Fraser afterwards married his granddaughter, and died rector of Keg- worth in Leicestershire. ARRANGEMENT OF STUDY. 105 Many as were our friends, we had but very little 183!). visiting, my husband's time being so fully filled with Orderl r his work. The last was done with exceeding order and habits. punctuality. .He has himself described Mr. Baily's habits of order ; and his own, though less apparent, were equally characteristic. He had the faculty of arrangement in an unusual degree, but it showed itself more in classification than in tidiness. In looking at any undertaking for scien- tific or practical purposes, he could not go on till all his materials were ready and arranged. This faculty is seldom so well proportioned to the power of carrying out the work projected. Mr. Baily had order of every sort, from the classification of formulse or facts to the perfect arrangement of his house and appointments. In Mr. De Morgan it showed itself differently. Not having the means to indulge in the luxuries enjoyed by richer and more affluent writers or experimentalists, he could rot furnish his library with all the writing appliances and handsome bindings that ornament rich men's studies, and his old table and desk, and other cheap contrivances, looked shabby enough. Any one who went into his room would be struck at first by the homeliness of the whole, and the quantity of old and unbound books and packets of papers. But when it was seen how the books were ar- ranged and the papers labelled and put into their proper places according to subjects, the adaptation of means to ends became as apparent as in the clearness and precision with which he laid down principles, and showed what was to be done before making a beginning on his work. His contrivances in the way of inkstand, penholder, and blotting-block, had none of them a new or unused look, but all showed that every contingency had been carefully provided for. After gutta-percha came into use he employed it in every possible way, moulding it into pen- holders, caps, covers, and all sorts of fastenings. He says, in The Budget of Paradoxes, ' I never could spell, the word, but if cowc/wJce goes, I go too ; ' and being 106 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1839. once disrespectfully told that he would fasten on a head, an arm, or a leg, if he lost one, with gutta-percha, he said, ' I should like to see you do as much.' When the repetition of the Cavendish experiment was undertaken by Mr. Baily in the year 1837 at his house in Tav.^ stock Place — a house thereby rendered memorable — Mr. De Morgan gave so many clear descriptions of it and its object^ that Mr. Baily's work in 1838 and 1839 requires a longer notice than I have given to those Astro- nomical achievements with which my husband had less to do. A grant of 500L had been made by Government, at the representation of the Astronomical Society, for defraying expenses. The forerunners of this effort to ascertain the mean density of the earth are mentioned by Mr. De Morgan in the Life of Maskelyne, written some time before, and will give some idea of the nature and objects of the undertaking. Cavendish ' The labour of deducing an approximation to the men"" earth's mean density was undertaken by Dr. Hutton. By getting the best possible estimate of the materials of which Schehallien is composed, and comparing what we must call the weight of the plumb-line towards the mountain with its weight towards the earth, it appeared that the mean density of the latter is about five times that of water. This, considered as a numerical approximation, alone and unsupported, would have been worth little, owing to the doubt which must have existed as to the correctness of the estimation of the mountain's density. It would prove that there was attraction in the mountain, but would give no very great probability as to the value of the earth's density as deduced. But a few years after- wards Cavendish made an experiment with the same object, and by an entirely different method. By producing oscillations in leaden balls by means of other leaden balls, and by a process of reasoning wholly free from astro- .nomical data, he inferred that the mean density of the REPETITION OF CAVENDISH EXPERIMENT. 107 earth was five and a half times that of water. The ex- 1839. periment of Cavendish was published in 1798. It is much to be wished that it should be repeated on a larger scale, but the expense of the apparatus will probably deter in- dividuals from the attempt.' In a pencil note in the margin of the same page I find- c This was, I believe, the remote cause of the repetition First sug. of the experiment. Being, a few months afterwards, in the year 1335, on the Council of the Astronomical Societ}r, something was said about the mean density of the earth, and I happened to say, " I wish Cavendish's experiment could be repeated." Mr. Airy immediately said, "Ah, that would be a good thing." Others agreed, and a committee was appointed on the spot " to consider of the practicability," &c. The result was the repetition of the experiment.' The history, the nature of the formulse for the calcu- lations, and the results of the discovery, are all given by Mr. De Morgan in the articles ( Attraction,' ' Caven- dish Experiment,' ' Weight of the Earth,' and others, in the Penny Cyclopcedia, and in a sufficiently popular form in an article in the Companion to the Almanac for 1838. Mr. Baily's repetition, commenced in 1838, was carried on in a small upper room twelve feet by twelve, as far removed as possible from the noise and shaking of street traffic. It was, of course, an object of interest to all scientific friends, and Mr. Baily's genial kindness in explaining his beautiful apparatus and showing his pro- gress was one of the pleasant accompaniments of his important work. The apparatus designed and con- structed by Mitchell, who did not live to use it, had been used by Cavendish, and afterwards by Mr. Baily, but so greatly improved and added to by the last ex- perimenter that it could hardly be called the same. I saw 108 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1839. the progress of the experiment, and my husband's visits were frequent to the little room in which the world was weighed. The Life of Maskelyne, from which the mention of my husband's suggestion is taken, is one of a series of lives o2 Astronomers written by him for the Gallery of Portraits, published by C. Knight two or three years before this time. They are those of Bradley, Delambre, Descartes, Dollond, Euler, Halley, Harrison, W. Herschel, Lagrange, Laplace, Leibnitz, and Maskelyne. They are bound up together, and illustrated in his own way, under the title of ' Mathematical Biography, extracted from the Gallery of Portraits, by Augustus De Morgan, H.O.M.O. P.A.U.C.A.R.U.M. L.I.T.E.R.A.R.U.M.' The letters of his literary tail were only B.A., F.R.A.S., besides those expressing membership of one or two lesser Scientific societies. On account of the declaration of belief at that time required by the University he never took his M.A. degree. In November our eldest son, William Frend De Morgan, was born. We had spent five weeks at Boulogne in the summer. I hoped that, as my husband always liked the sea, a French watering-place would be less irksome to him than English country or sea -coast ; but he soon got tired of it, and felt glad to get back to his work. 1840. He bore a few weeks at Blackheath next year with equanimity. He was near the Observatory, and Mr. and Mrs. Airy were good neighbours, so were Mr. (afterwards Lord) Wrottesley and Mrs. Wrottesley, the former being , on the Council of the Astronomical Society, and, be- sides his other excellent social qualifications, being a good musician. My husband liked the steamboats, of which he made much use ; but the heath, which he called desolation, was a trial to him. After this summer he begged me to take the children without him ; and I found that this arrangement, which I disliked, was the best. DEATH OF AUTHOR'S FATHER. 109 He required a letter, reporting health, &c., and sent me 1840. one in return, every day. On our return to Gower Street I went with my two little children to Highgate for a very short time to be near my father, who had had a stroke of paralysis. He died early in the next year, 1841, at the age of 1841. 84. His Cambridge life and early difficulties on the subject of religion have been slightly referred to. He had taken his degree as Second Wrangler, and had after- wards had a Fellowship and a College living till scruples of conscience led him to leave the Church ; and his sub- sequent publication of a pamphlet entitled Peace and Union was the cause of a prosecution by the University. He was tried and sentenced to non-residence, but he re- tained his Fellowship till his marriage with my mother, a granddaughter of Archdeacon Blackburne. He had been a pupil of Dr. Paley, for whom he always retained an affection; and among his own pupils were Dr. Edward Daniel Clarke, the traveller, Lord Lyndhurst, afterwards Lord Chancellor, and Mr. Malthus, in whose social tenets he entirely disclaimed any share. My father's political opinions, as set forth in Peace and Union, were held to be extreme eighty years ago ; they are as milk for babes in comparison with the strong stimulants given by the Liberal party now. He was after he left Cambridge a friend of Sir Francis Burdett during the reforming portion of his life, of Home Tooke, and of other reformers. What place he would have taken in politics had he lived till now I can only conjecture. He was a good Hebraist, and was trustee for Mr. Robert Tyrwhitt's Hebrew Scholarship at Cambridge. His largest work was on popular Astronomy as it was known then. This book, entitled Evening Amusements, came out, a volume every year, for nineteen years ; each volume show- ing the relative positions of all the heavenly bodies for every month in the year. My father's ideas on Algebra were peculiar; his re- 110 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1841. jection of the use of negative quantities in algebraic operations being probably the result of the same straight- forwardness and clearness rather than great depth of intellect, which had led him, with more show of reason, to reject the doctrine of the Trinity in the form in which he had received it. He was an upright and noble-minded man, generous and disinterested to a fault, if that can be, with a vigorous perceptive mind, but little imagination. His religion was real and practical ; and his death was an event to which he had always looked forward with cheerfulness and happy anticipation. My husband wrote a short biography for the Athenaeum, and a longer one to the Astronomical Society's Obituary Notices. Mr. De Morgan was at this time, I think, consult- ing actuary to the Family Endowment Assurance Office, which afterwards merged with another office in the Mutual. I do not think he held this place more than two years. Accident to During this summer an accident occurred which nearly Francis proved fatal to our friend Mr. Francis Baily. He was crossing Wellington Street, Strand, when a man on horse- back, riding furiously, knocked him down and stunned him. He was taken in an unconscious state to the Charing Cross Hospital, and was found to have a severe scalp wound and to be a good deal bruised. As soon as he could bear the removal he was taken home to Tavistock Place ; and after a few weeks his recovery seemed to be complete, though he remained weak for some time. But the injury to the head left more serious results than were expected, for it is most probable that the disease of which he died three years after, and which is now believed to be often the result of a shock to the nervous system, was caused by this blow. My husband was, as were all Mr. Baily's friends, extremely anxious as to the possible con- sequences ; but their anxiety was allayed when he got up again, received his friends, resumed his work on the IIALLAM'S HISTORY OF LITERATURE. Ill Cavendish experiment, and even took some part in the 1841. Keport on the Commission for restoring the National Standards, to which he had devoted so much time and thought. This Commission was appointed in 1838. The Report was sent in in 1841. On the appointment of a new Commission in 1843 to reconstruct the Standard Scales, Mr. Baily recovered sufficiently to undertake the Standard of Length, but did not live to complete it. Mr. Hallam's History of the Literature of the Middle Ages was at this time coming out, and after the publica- tion of the first edition Mr. De Morgan sent the author some observations on the history of the Mathematicians of the period embraced in the first volume. What his criticisms were can only be guessed by Mr. Hallam's reply, as I have not his own letter. Dec. 12, 1841. I am much obliged by your correction of some inaccuracies in the first volume of my History of Literature, which will be of use to me in the new edition which I am now preparing. I am always thankful for such communications, which are at least a sign that the book is thought worthy of them. In reply to further criticism, further correspondence took place two years later, Mr. Hallam's letter touching on the subject of Logic, which had assumed so definite and important a form in Mr. De Morgan's thoughts, and which was afterwards treated in connection with points of original discovery in his Formal Logic. I shall pay all attention to them (your remarks) in any new H. Hallam. edition, and will look again at some of the works in which your more expert eye lias detected rny errors. I certainly searched in vain for the triangle of forces so called in Stevinus, and I was a little more led to doubt of his using it, as Montucla says, be- cause the only demonstration with which I am acquainted involves the third law of motion ; but that, according to the general opinion, was not laid down till long afterwards. Perhaps Stevinus might assume it on metaphysical principles without experiment. 112 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1841. The early history of algebra is a very interesting subject, and I shall be glad to return to it again with more leisure. I was forced to copy writers of credit, not always seeing the full force of what they said. But it seemed to me that a sound mathematician would find that field not exhausted. . . . As to your observation about logic — that is, the syllogistic logic — perhaps I was a little influenced by the impression that more attention was paid to it at Oxford. That, I believe, is now much less the case. But though what I have written on it is inconveniently concise, and leaves more for the reader than an ordinary author has a right to expect, I thought I had given to that logic what it can best claim, its quality of perfect demon- stration ; all geometrical demonstration being, in fact, one species, or rather one application, of the fundamental principle. Nor did I distrust the usefulness, to a certain degree, of an acquaint- ance with syllogism, though I have not found that the best reasoners are very familiar with it. However, if I have gone too far in lowering this art or science — for it is not settled which — I am very willing to retract. Let me add that I have received much pleasure from some of your writings, such as are most familiar to me, especially that on the ' Connection of Number and Magnitude.' You need not fear going ultra crepidam, for your crepida is very extensive. Believe me, dear sir, Tour much obliged servant, HENEY HALLAM. In October oar second son, George Campbell, was born. We lost him at the age of twenty- six, not before his mathematical talents were developed sufficiently to entitle him to notice in his father's scientific history. Of this I must speak later. He was a lovely and seemingly healthy child, sweet-tempered, quiet, and thoughtful ; and though sound and certain in all, he was not quite so quick in learning as his sister and brother. Our society was diminished by the loss of Mr. Sheep- shanks, who left London to live at Reading with his sister. The correspondence with Dr. Whewell, which had begun soon after the pupil left Cambridge, related at first DIFFERENTIAL CALCULUS. 113 to Mathematical questions. But when Mr. De Morgan 1841. began to make the application of Mathematical principles to Logic, Dr. Whewell was naturally one of the first to whom his ideas were communicated. In many in- stances the letters were written on the occasion of sending tracts to the Cambridge Philosophical Transactions. The first of these, ' On the General Equation of Surfaces of the Second Degree,' is dated 1830 ; 'On the Foundation of Algebra,' No. I., read 1839 ; Nos. II. and III., 1843 ; No. IV., 'On Triple Algebra,' 'On the Structure of the Syllogism, and on the Application of the Theory of Probabilities to Questions of Argument and Authority,' 1846. The work on the Differential and Integral Calculus, 1842. which had been published by the Useful Knowledge Society, appeared in 1842 in his complete work, a closely printed octavo volume of 770 pages. The series, which had commenced in the year 1836, consists of twenty- five numbers, each containing thirty-two pages, and to the book is added an appendix and two num- bers of elementary illustrations which had been pub- lished by the Society before. Of the work he says in the preface : — 4 The method of publication in numbers has afforded time to consult a large amount of writing on the different branches of the subject; the issue of the parts has ex- tended over six years, during two of which circumstances with which I had nothing to do stopped all progress. The first number was preceded by a short advertisement, which I should desire to be retained as part of the work, for I have no opinion there expressed to alter or modify, nor have I found occasion to depart from the plan then con- templated. ' The principal feature of that plan was the rejection of the whole doctrine of series in the establishment of the fundamental parts both of the Differential and Integral Calculus. The method of Lagrange, founded on a very 114 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1842. defective demonstration of the possibility of expanding (x + h) in whole powers of h, had taken deep root in elementary works ; it was the sacrifice of the clear and indubitable principle of limits to a phantom, the idea that an Algebra without limits was purer than one in which that notion was introduced. But, independently of the idea of limit being absolutely necessary even to the proper conception of a convergent series, it must have been obvious enough to Lagrange himself that all application of the science to concrete magnitude, even on his own system, required the theory of limits. Some time after the publication of the first numbers of this work, four different treatises appeared in the French language, all of which rejected the doctrine of series, and adopted that of limits. I have, therefore, no occasion to argue further against the former method, which has been thus abandoned in the country which saw its birth, and will certainly lose ground in England when it is no longer maintained by a supply from abroad of elementary treatises written upon its principles.' The doctrine of series in opposition to that of limits was practically overthrown before the completion of the work, and the new principle had engaged the attention of Mathematicians. As might be expected, a volume embody- ing them, important in its bearing upon metaphysical as well as mathematical thought, excited great interest in the minds of the few who could enter into the question. Of these Dr. Whewell, who had written on it in 1838, was one of the most pronounced. But with one exception the ideas of cotemporary thinkers must be gathered from the letters.1 A full review of the subject, if it were within my power to make it, would not be in place here, and an imperfect one would be useless. But some of the bearings of the principles developed in my husband's Differential Calculus were thus referred to by Mr. John Stuart Mill, 1 See next Section. INFINITELY SMALL QUANTITIES. 115 thirty years later, in an admirable article ' On Berkeley's 1842. Life and Writings : ' l — It is difficult to read without parti pr is 'The Analyst,' and the admirable rejoinder to its assailants, entitled 'A Defence of Free-thinking in Mathematics,' and not to admit that Berkeley made out his case. It was not until later that the Differential Calculus was placed on the foundation it now stands ^jj' ®* on — the conception of a limit, which is the true basis of all Differential reasoning respecting infinitely small quantities, and properly Calculus- apprehended, frees the doctrine from Berkeley's objections. Nevertheless, so deeply did those objections go into the heart of the subject, that even after the false theory had been given up, the true one was not (so far as we are aware) worked out com- pletely in language open to no philosophical objection by any one who preceded the late Professor De Morgan, who combined with the attainments of a mathematician those of a philosopher, logician, and psychologist. Though whoever had mastered the idea of a limit could see, in a general way, that it was adequate to the solution of all difficulties, the puzzle arising from the conception of different orders of differentials — quantities infinitely small, yet infinitely greater than other infinitely small quantities — had not (to our knowledge) been thoroughly cleared up, and the meaning that lies under those mysterious expressions brought into the full light of reason by any one before Mr. De Morgan. My husband died shortly before this was written. He * Philosophy. had, as his letters show, a sincere respect and regard for the writer, though they had met only on one occasion, and lie had corresponded with Mr. James Mill, his father. But though, as was truly said, his mathematical reasoning had deprived Berkeley of an argument drawn from the mystery of infinitely small numbers, his sympathies were in many ways more on the side of Bishop Berkeley than on that of Mr. Mill.2 The works of Berkeley had been, as 1 Fortnightly Review, Nov. 1871. 2 I am aware that the principles of Berkeley's philosophy have been found by some thinkers to lead to a pantheistic materialism. Much depends upon words, but more on the minds of those who use the n, and a spiritual pantheism must be a near approach to truth. When the words spiritual, material, theistic, pantheistic, and atheistic i 2 116 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1843. aforesaid, among his earlier studies, and his absolute con- viction, or, as he said, consciousness, of the fatherly care of God was directly opposed to the scepticism (I use the word as expressing doubt, not disbelief) of one whose work in many directions he valued highly. He wrote with great respect of Mr. Mill's Logic, and the essay on Liberty had his cordial admiration. The essay on Comte, too, he thought very valuable. His own ideas about this great fabricator of society may easily be con- jectured. I should like to give them in his own words, but can only remember their import. Just in proportion to the strength of that part of a system which is founded on the principle of love to the neighbour is the weakness of that part of it which sets aside the Divine Disposer of events, and puts an arbitrary classification in place of the na.tural order of the world. I hope I have not mis- represented the principles of Comtism ; T know, however, that this fairly represents my husband's interpretation of them. Our third son, Edward, was born about Midsummer in this year. His father gave him his second name, Lindsey, to perpetuate that of my mother's uncle, Theophilus Lindsey, a good man, and one of the earliest English Unitarians who, like my father, seceded from the Church, and Avho gave up the lucrative living of Catterick, in Yorkshire, where he was much beloved, because he could not conscientiously carry on the duty in accordance with prescribed doctrines. Such secessions, united with such strong religious belief, do not often happen in these days ; but we cannot judge of the motives of those who do not feel them to be neces- sary for conscience' sake. Many distinguished clergymen who hold the doctrines of Christianity far more loosely, find their proper places, there will be an end to these confusions, which result from the various ways in which the great subject is looked at by speculators whose mental eyes are differently placed in relation to it. This is only saying that the true knowledge of words will be the true knowledge of things. FRANCIS BAILY'S DEATH. 117 and give a far less literal assent to the New Testament 1843. narrative than either my great-uncle, my father, or my husband, remain in the Church with a belief that their moral influence will be of greater use than their intel- lectual scruples. In this case the possibility of the Church becoming too broad to hold together is not felt to be an evil, as even should it through this cause die a natural death, its work will have been well done. Mr. De Morgan felt that the profession of belief of every clergyman im- plies so absolute and entire an adhesion of the whole soul to the doctrine which he undertakes to preach, that should that animus be altered, membership, in the sight of God, has ceased with it; and the outward and visible sign can really stand for nothing when its inward and spiritual essence is gone. But he judged no one rigorously but himself, though he was happy in knowing that he had been connected with the memories of men of worth and learning, who never hesitated when their choice lay be- tween truth as it appeared to them and any other con- sideration. Shortly before Edward's birth we lost our old friend 1844- Francis Baily. Early in this year his usually fine robust health had given way, and a disease of the kidneys, pro- bably the remote result of the shock given to the brain by his accident, declared itself. He lingered some weeks, always cheerful and hopeful, but perfectly ready for what- ever turn his illness might take. His friends were less prepared to lose him than he was to go. His death occurred in June, and was a loss to Science l which could not well at that time be filled up. Sir John Herschel wrote that he was a man sui generis; and the letters 1 I have throughout this memoir used the word science in reference to Mathematics and Logic, and those branches of knowledge in which processes of reasoning are applied to subjects of observation. This is the older meaning of the word. It is generally, though of course not exclusively, ^used now to express knowledge gained by observation alone. I remember the" time when, in preference to Dalton's atomic theory, it was said that chemistry had_6eco*ne a Science, 118 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1844. which passed among his friends contain a repetition of this feeling, with an expressed determination to do by their united effort what he had done for so many years. This refers especially to the Astronomical Society, of which he had long been President, and the members of which found it difficult to appoint a successor. Mr. Airy, Sir J. Herschel, Mr. Sheepshanks, and Mr. De Morgan composed his epitaph. It was, I think, drawn up in the first instance by Sir J. Herschel or Mr. De Morgan, and carefully revised and altered by the others.1 standard Mr. Sheepshanks, who had accurate knowledge and experience of scientific instruments, undertook to complete the construction of the Standard of Length. In a letter to my husband he says : — I think Airy's paper on the supports of the standard scale should be printed forthwith. . . . This naturally leads me to the final clause, the inscription Regula mensurarum in perpetuutn Baily's definita. One would not (where Baily is concerned) even in a epitaph. Latin epitaph (and the language and mode of employment are not mendacious) use exaggerations. When I undertook the scale I hoped and believed a good deal was done ; but when I got from Airy a precis of facts I found that it was chiefly of a nega- tive character, viz., that our scale had changed its form, &c., and the only positive advance (beyond preparation) was, that 1 There is a bust of Francis Baily in the apartments of the Astro- nomical Society in Burlington House. If the time should ever come when observations of the form and size of the different parts of the head and face are systematically made with a view to determine the elements of character, any conclusion drawn from this bust would be a great injustice to our dear old friend. It was taken from the por- trait, which is weak and inadequate, and has exaggerated these defects. While it was in progress. Mr. Baily the sculptor asked my husband and myself to see the clay model at his studio. He invited criticism, and at my suggestion added so much to the forehead that it bore a strong likeness to the subject ; and Miss Baily when she saw it burst into tears, exclaiming, ' It's himself.' But the sculptor after- wards found that the penthouse brow and large forehead were not * ideal ' enough. He said his work had been spoiled, removed all the added clay, and left the weak and characterless head which professes to be a likeness of Francis Baily. CHANGE OF RESIDENCE. 119 two iron bars prepared by Colby had maintained their difference. 1844. There were, indeed, some good measurements of expansion, but these were by Simms and his nephew, and I intend repeating them with, if possible, greater rdcety. If this subject is men- tioned (and it should be), say that he was unhappily arrested in the act of definitely fixing the national measures. In the execution of his work, which was carried on in ^ard a cellar under the chambers of the Astronomical Society shanks's in Somerset House, Mr. Sheepshanks recorded 89,500 observa- micrometer observations. Only those who understand the tlons< nature and object of these can estimate the enormous labour involved. He had to make frequent visits to London for this purpose. We saw him often at the time, but I have only my own memory for the statement that much discussion on the experiments and observations passed between him and my husband, and that when difficulties occurred, Mr. De Morgan was often able to assist in their solution. We moved in July from Gower Street to Caniden Camden Street, Camden Town. My husband walked to the College in time to be there every morning at 8.30, that he might look over the pupils' papers before giving his lecture. He could not come home, as before, in the middle of the day, and on this account I was sorry for the change; but in other respects it was far better, as the house was roomy and convenient for a young family, and the air I thought fresher than in Gower Street. His readiness to serve his pupils and the College had brought him some extra work, and some pleasure in consequence. The Professor on whom the teaching of Mathematical Physics devolved proved quite unequal to his task. The pupils who came to him from the Mathe- matical class were already much his superiors in know- ledge, and in their strait they appealed to my husband. With the approbation of the Council, he at once undertook to meet the difficulty. He gave, during the remainder of the session, e^tra time and instruction to these young 120 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1844. men, who at the end of the session presented to him a handsome copy of Wilkinson's Ancient Egyptians. The letter accompanying the gift is signed with names of Henry Eobert Reynolds, Joseph Eees, Richard Holt Hutton, and C. Howard. In this year the Useful Knowledge Society came to an end, having completed its work. Its farewell address has been already mentioned. Mr. De Morgan's last under- taking for it was a book entitled The Globes Celestial and Terrestrial, written as a description of the Society's globes, published in 1844. Maiby'8 The Society, which had already brought out the ' Maps of the Stars,5 had turned its attention to the want of accu- rately made globes of the heavens and the earth. These were constructed by Mr. Malby, under the direction of several men of Science. The celestial globe needed most revision and improvement. Up to the year 1828 the 21 -inch globe by Gary and the 18-inch globe by Bardin were the best in use ; and of these two, Gary's, ' having annexed to every star its proper numerical or charac- teristic valuation,' 1 was judged to be the best. Both were founded on Wollaston's Catalogue of 1789; and Gary's globe contains the stars extracted from Flamsteed's Catalogue by the two Herschels. Mr. Baily had laid down, though not with the full alteration which he thought necessary, the lines which bound the constellations. Sir J. Herschel, being appealed to by my husband on behalf of the nebulae, wrote : — Why globe-makers will persist in laying down nebulae of Classes II. and [II. is to me astonishing. There are but half a dozen of Messier's and my father's 1st class which can be seen with the naked eye, and the 2nd class ones are for the most part invisible with a 3 -inch object-glass. The per-centage of Dunlop's nebulae which can be seen with the naked eye is still smaller. 1 Letter from Mr. J. W. Woollgar, of Lewes, to the Philosophical Magazine. MALBY'S GLOBES. 121 Indeed, with the 20-foot reflector, out of 629 1 of which his cata- .1844. logue consists, I have succeeded in observing only 207, and of these I have great doubts of the identity of between twenty and thirty. What sort of objects Mr. D. has set down as nebulae in the other 422 cases I have no idea. All I can say is, that out of 1,700 more or less observed by myself at the Cape, the above are all of Dunlop's which have not proved coy. You will judge by this whether or not to recommend your globe-undertakers to map down Dunlop's catalogue in its integrity. As to double stars, I think Struve's great catalogue will go far to saturate a 36-inch globe. Let me know whether you are very much interested in Mr. Malby's undertaking, as in that case I would send you the list of those Nos. of Dunlop's nebulas which I either know certainly to exist in or near his places, or have found nebulae which, by a stretch of good-natured identification, I should be disposed to admit as observed by myself. Some large and showy globes had been made in 1823, the trustworthiness of which was not guaranteed by the name of any scientific authority. As Mr. Woollgar, in writing of these, said, c globes are oftener purchased as articles of furniture than as philosophical instruments,' and these large globes fitted the purpose. Mr. Malby's globes could not lie under this reproach, for even as articles Of furniture they were not showy enough to suit the upholsterer, while their accuracy was beyond question. But as a globe can never be even quite up to the amount of astronomical or geographical knowledge at the time of its completion, it must from time to time require additions, if not corrections, and in course of discovery will at length be superseded for practical use, as the globes made in 1844 may be at this time. From their improved construction, great accuracy, and careful measurements, questions concerning ancient Astronomy, depending for the most part on the preces- sion of the equinoxes, could be determined by these 1 The figures are slightly blotted in the letter, and I have not Dunlop's Catalogue to ascertain the number. 122 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1844. globes. One who rejoiced greatly in them was Mr. John Tayfor. Taylor, known for his inquiry into the authorship of Junius, and for his speculations on the Great Pyramid. He had made some suggestions on the formation of the Astronomical globe, and wrote to my husband : ( I can now cell up all the phenomena recorded by Aratus or Hipparchus, not to forget Homer, Hesiod, Virgil, Ovid, and Columella, and I may even venture to correct the great constructor Ptolemy, when he makes a slip in his notations. Ulugh Bey, too, and Tycho, and old crusty Flam steed, may come in their turn to the spherical ordeal. All this I owe to you, for had it not been for your friendly interference and sanction, I might never have seen my attempt submitted fairly to the world.' Mr. Taylor's large claim to original suggestions in this work might not perhaps be fully acknowledged by the Astronomers who helped to complete it. Notwith- standing his practical and extensive dealings with the old philosophers, and his satisfaction in correcting Ptolemy's slips, he was himself far from sound in his scientific knowledge, and subjected himself to a severe castigation from Mr. Sheepshanks for meddling with the Liverpool Observatory and its manager. He also set Astronomers right about the comet of 1848, which he declared to be the same as that of 1556. ' This,' Mr. Hind says in a letter to Mr. De Morgan, ' is the last of Mr. John Taylor's Astronomical extravagances.' The motion of the first comet was direct, that of the one observed in 1848 retro- grade. Mr. Taylor's announcement was made in the Liverpool Mercury, and corrected, I think, by Mr. De Morgan in the Athenaeum. But his researches on the Great Pyramid are of value. Mr. De Morgan said of him : ' He is by temperament a discoverer of hidden things, and has employed much ingenuity in discovering what we may call two crack secrets, because they have never been fairly cracked.' The other crack secret was Junius. ASTRONOMICAL TEACHING. 123 The moving picture of progress in any study has for 1845. its background a series of ignorant guesses and foolish conclusions. A specimen of what was taught as Astronomy in the fourteenth century is not more grotesque and is less simple than what was called teaching within our own memory, and perhaps may still be so called in some remote young ladies' school. Referring to the works of Astronomy a class of authors who seem to think that the pretext fif of writing for the especial instruction of young ladies is backl more than a sufficient excuse for any amount of nonsense, Mr. De Morgan adduces the following examples. The book from which the extracts are made had reached its fourteenth edition. Among the questions on Sagittarius are the following : — 'To what sin were the Athenians addicted? What reflection does Dr. Doddridge make on the occasion ? ' Apropos of the constellation of Ursa Major is this question : * Who drove stags in his phaeton instead of horses ? ' and the answer is, * Lord Orford, who died in 1791.' The concatenation is that bears can be tamed, and that Prince Radzivil drove them in his carriage at Warsaw. On Musca the questions are, ' What are the distinguishing characteristics of flies ? In what manner, demonstrating his propensity to cruelty, did Domitian treat them ? Hence what sarcasm was passed upon him ? How has Sterne represented the humanity of a feigned character to a fly ? How did contrary behaviour in a female (according to Darwin) break off an expected matrimonial connection?' There were a few other books of a better sort pub- lished, but they did not reach fourteen editions, and, we may believe, seldom found their way into girls' schools. There had existed from the year 1817 a Mathematical Old Mathe- Society, or club, which met in Crispin Street, Spitalfields. society. It was originally composed of working men, many of them silk weavers, and among the early members had been some men of known name. The conditions of member- ship were that each member should have his pipe, his pot, 124 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1845. and his problem. A short account of this society is given in the ' Budget of Paradoxes.' It gradually declined as the harder life of the working man deprived him of leisure time, or perhaps as the pot took the place of the problem ; and in this year 1845 a proposal was made to incorporate what was left of it into the Astronomical Society. Only nine- teen members remained, and they were not working men. Those who were not already members of the Astronomical were received without payment of fees, and it only re- mained to convey the books and other property of the old society to the rooms at Somerset House. Mr. De Morgan undertook to look over and to superintend the removal of the books, which now form a small portion of the library of the Royal Astronomical Society. Two or three years before this time, some gentlemen, interested in the history of Science, had projected a society to be called the ( Historical Society of Science.' Mr. Pettigrew, Mr. Eichard Taylor, the printer, and Mr. De Morgan were among the first of these. Mr. J. O. Halliwell, the archseologist, had taken a prominent part in the scheme, and became the secretary. My hus- band, who had looked forward to useful results from the work of this society, found in this year that it was be- coming extinct for want of attention in collecting sub- scriptions, and from general neglect. He immediately called the attention of the other members to this state of affairs, and the society came to an end without undue pressure on the Secretary, who was not in circumstances to meet it, but who incurred some blame from one or two of the persons concerned. Rev. s. When my husband was a boy, living at Taunton, the Maitiand. j^ey> gamue} Maitland, not then in orders, was his mother's friend and neighbour. He afterwards became a friend and correspondent when the subjects of his works formed part of those over which my husband's studies extended. f His series of essays " On the Dark Ages " was the most read of all his works. He was one of a class of whose writings REV. SAMUEL MAITLAND. 125 it must be said that wherever they take they bite. They 1845. are imbued, but not in excess, with a kind of humour which seems almost their own. It has more likeness to the peculiar humour of Pascal than is seen in any writer of our day.'1 Though Dr. Maitland was not a Mathema- tician, the subjects of mutual interest were man}r, and their correspondence touches upon all kinds of questions, from those of Dr. Maitland's works which involve much sound learning on the theology of the dark ages, to his latest little volume, Superstition and Science, in which the phenomena of spiritualism and the miracles of the Catholic Church are considered in relation to Scientific inquiry. The attention which Mr. De Morgan had Date of given to the question of Easter was shared with Dr. Maitland. My husband had contributed an article to the Companion to the Almanac fur 1845, giving the reasons why then, as in 1818, Easter Sunday had fallen on, instead of after, the first full moon after the Vernal Equinox. There had been much fruitless discussion on this in 1818, and to avoid a repetition of it — for the question was already agitated in Parliament — a fall expla- nation was given, in the above-mentioned article, of the cause of deviation from the rule, and the relation of the whole subject to the Christian and Jewish calendars. In the next year, 1846, an article On the Earliest Printed Almanacs gave further information, and his Book of Almanacs, published in 1851, left no means of knowledge wanting. Dr. Maitland's letters at this period showed his interest in the Easter question. He was then librarian to the Archbishop of Canterbury, and the library at Lambeth Palace afforded him means of research in it, and experience on another question, which was valuable a few years later, when the British Museum Library Cata- logue occupied the thoughts of scholars. My husband's acquaintance with Lord Brougham, 1 From an obituary notice by Mr. De Morgan on the Royal Society's Memoirs. » 126 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, 1845. who never visited us, arose out of the business of the Lord Useful Knowledge Society and of University College. Brougham. The correspondence? which lasted from 1830 to Lord Brougham's death, is chiefly on Scientific subjects, on many of which the statesman consulted the Professor.1 One cf these was the properties of curves in Optics, on which Lord Brougham had experimented and written. He was also the author of a life of Newton for the Society. Mr. De Morgan had, in this year, brought out a memoir of Newton (to be noticed further on), in Charles Knight's British Worthies; and many of Lord Brougham's letters refer to the claims of Newton as set forth by dif- ferent writers. When, shortly after this time, the injuries inflicted on Guglielmo Libri by an unjust accusation of the French Government aroused the indignation of most English men of Science, Lord Brougham expressed his sympathy, and tried to help M. Libri's cause by commu- nicating with his own friends having influence in France as well in politics as in Science. He, like others, found and acknowledged the unjust bias of M. Arago wherever his national prepossession could come in. This showed itself in political antagonism (supposed, in M. Libri's case, to arise from his Italian birth and proclivities), as well in scientific questions as in the case of the simultaneous discovery of the planet Neptune by Adams and Lever - rier. Discovery The year 1846 was made famous by the announce- ment to the world of this discovery. From every point of view its history is an interesting one, but it is so familiar to most readers that I must ask pardon for reverting to its principal points, that the part taken by 1 I regret that I have none of Mr. De Morgan's letters to Lord Brougham on the subject of Newton, or on any question of general interest. I am greatly indebted to the present Lord Brougham for his kindness in sending me a few letters, but the mass of documents is, I understand, so great at Brougham Castle as to render a thorough • search exceedingly difficult. DISCOVERY OF NEPTUNE. 127 my husband on the reception of the news by Astronomers 1846. may be understood. This discovery was an instance of that law of progress by which we find that a truth, when the time has come for its reception, is seldom the prize of one mind only : it may be that some far-seeing solitary minds have early anticipated the knowledge for which the world is not pre- pared, but in its full advent a new truth has more than one recipient. It was so in the case of Neptune. In observing the place of Uranus early in this century, Aberra- Astronomers had found that the observable course of the Uranus, newly discovered planet did not coincide with that given by mathematical calculation. This appeared from M. Bouvard's tables of Uranus from 1781 to 1821. Other irregularities were found, but the idea of a large dis- turbing body wa,s not generally entertained ; and M. Poinsot, who had called the attention of the French Institute to the observation of a star, supposed to be a new planet, by Messrs. Wartmann and Cacciatore, was laughed at. It is true that in 1834 Dr. Hussey wrote to Mr. Airy that he had conjectured the possibility of some disturbing body near Uranus, and that he had found that MM. Bouvard and Haussen had corresponded on the subject. Mr. Airy, however, was doubtful of the possibility of determining the place of the planet until the nature of the irregularity should be better known. Eight years before the actual discovery Bessel gave it as his opinion to Sir John Herschel that the disturbances in question could be due only to the action of a large body beyond the orbit of Uranus. The direction of investi- gation was thus to a certain extent pointed out ; it was no less, when attained, ' the greatest triumph of inductive Science which Astronomy has yet to record.' This great- ness consisted in the fact that the exact place of the planet was obtained not by actual observation, but by mathema- tical calculation, founded upon the elements furnished by the action of the disturbing forces. ' Two Mathematicians 128 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. had worked out the problem, the English Astronomer communicating his results in November 1345 to the highest authorities in the astronomical world, by whom they were reserved for further confirmation ; the French Astronomer, with more confidence in his work, making it known to the world at once. Mr. Adams' calculations antedated M. Leverrier's by eight months, but M. Leverrier's promptitude of publication secured for him the honour of the discovery.' 'Mr. Adams,' adds Mr. De Morgan, ' furnished Mr. Challis with the means of actually ••securing two observations of the planet previously to any announcement by M. Leverrier.' M. Leverrier's communication was followed immedi- ately by recorded observations of Neptune by M. Galle, the Berlin Astronomer, who wrote in September that the planet had been seen by him as a star of the 8th magni- tude not marked upon any chart. There could be 110 question of M. Leverrier's discovery; it remained to be seen why, when the English discoverer was so nearly the first known to be such, he had been anticipated by the French Astronomer. Mr. Airy explained that in answer to the letter in which Mr. Adams had announced it to him, he had requested Mr. Adams to give him some further explanation. This letter of inquiry had not been answered till long after ; hence the delay, deeply regretted by all. On these facts, arid on the discussion which followed in the Astronomical Society, Mr. De Morgan wrote : — No blame need be attributed to any one ; but I think it will turn out that the Mathematicians of this country had not faith enough in their own Science. And, most assuredly, we may look forward to seeing the wise men who never believe until the thing is done — the sober men to whom everything that is to be is a figment in the brain of a visionary — the practical men who are not sure that there is a future until it comes to them in the shape of time present, all loud in their outcry, some against one, some against another, for not having done that ADAMS AND LEVERRIER. 129 which, six months ago, they would have been the first to have 1846. laughed at them for doing.1 ... The planet That M. Leverrier is to all intents and purposes the dis- coverer of the new planet is beyond a doubt. No evidence in his favour could be stronger than that of Messrs. Adams, Challts, and Airy. It is quite within probability that it might have been discovered in November 1845, from the true elements given by Mr. Adams in October, as stated by Mr. Airy. That it was on Mr. Challis's papers before it had been seen abroad is certain. Why, then, is this remarkable discovery French, and not English? Simply because there is not sufficient faith in Mathematics among the Mathematicians of this country. I should not say this upon one instance involving only three men ; I know it otherwise. Our men of science too often think it wise and practical to doubt results of pure Mathematics, and the French who run into the other extreme have a decided triumph in this instance. The results will do much good among us. Few of our philosophers are deep Mathematicians, and those who aspire to the character without laying the foundations of exact science, are apt to take a tone with respect to it to which its culti- vators have deferred until their deference has acted on their own minds, and affected the rising generation. In one sense, we may rejoice at the check which this spirit has received. For a long time to come, in every instance in which it shall show itself, it will be put down by the magic word Leverrier. Sir John Herschel, who declared at the British Association that the movement of the planet had been felt (on paper, mind) with a certainty hardly inferior to ocular demonstration, is precisely the person who thirteen years ago (Cabinet Cyclo- pcedia, 'Astronomy,' p. 5) published what there can be no doubt was meant for a rebuke to this want of faith, and also to the con- fidence of those who made themselves judges of what they could not possibly understand. The history of this discovery, and of the way in which it was received, is a notable illustration of national cha- racter. At first, on hearing how nearly Mr. Adams had anti- cipated him, M. Leverrier felt some apprehension that his 1 Athenaeum. I have changed the editorial we in one or two places; he never allowed these articles to be altered by the editor. K 130 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. glory might be taken by another. These apprehensions Neeumenet were SOOn (lu^ete(^ ^J tne generous and graceful statements of the three persons most concerned — Mr. Adams, the Astronomer Boyal, and the Cambridge Astronomer. But there appeared violent articles in some of the French newspapers, which, however, were disclaimed by MM. Arago, Leverrier, and others. There was, nevertheless, some amount of irritability displayed on the first an- nouncement to the Institute, though the more forbearing majority concurred with M. Libri, who said : ' En atten- dant, il est essential de proceder avec la plus grande calrne a 1'examen de cette affaire. Plus on y mettra de reserve et d'urbanite, plus nous en avons Passurance Peffet sera favorable aux Astronomes Fran9ais.' The Academy itself suppressed any feeling of jealous^-, and showed itself perfectly ready to discuss the question of the relative merits of the discoverers with fairness. But M. Arago refused to allow the Englishman's claim, saying that Mr. Adams ' was not entitled to the slightest allusion in the history of the discovery.' In reference to this access of national feeling, which was afterwards carried out by M. Arago's persistent effort to have the planet named Leverrier, Mr. De Morgan wrote : — Arago. Let M. Arago refrain. There will be one part of this matter the less subjected to his distorting mirror of national bias, in which the distortion is rendered less perceptible by brightness of style and clearness of illustration. We should be the last to deny the varied talents, deep knowledge of present science, ad- mirable enthusiasm, and concentrated power of producing effect, which the distinguished Secretary of the Institute brings to his part. But as an historian of science, he may be held to be the Bailli of the day, his mania, however, being French and not Hindoo. And we may be satisfied that among the French them- selves this Bailli will some day find his Delambre. His ideas are so confused by the state in which the fear of an English claim has put him, that he styles his own determination to call the new planet by no name but that of Leverrier, an undeniable proof of his own love of the sciences, and an adherence to a legitimate sentiment of nationality. ADAMS AND LEVERRIER. 131 But on this feeling of nationality there were other 1846 voices raised. Mr. De Morgan himself says : — N All the elements of M. Leverrier's discovery were laid else- where, as well as in France ; let it be enough for his satisfaction, as it is for his fame, that he worked out the problem first. Wo may wish that the complete honour of this great fact had fallen upon the English philosopher, but far beyond any such merely national feeling is our desire that philosophers should recognise no such distinction among themselves. The petty jealousies of earth are things too poor and mean to carry up amongst the stars. . Light and unmeaning as they are, they would be found heavy incumbrances on a voyage so long as that to Uranus. M. Biot, writing of the address in which Mr. Airy M. Blot, narrated the facts, says :— Thus, in the first week of October, 1845, precisely eight months before M. Leverrier's first announcement, the new planet was predicted by Mr. Adams, and he alone was in the secret of its position. . . . I do not speak here in accordance with the narrow sentiments of geographical egotism, improperly called patriotism. Minds devoted to the culture of science have, in my opinion, a common intellectual country embracing every kind of polar elevation. Professor Striive threw in his vote of equal justice : — Far be it from me to have any intention of withholding our Professor entire admiration from the eminent merit of M. Leverrier. Bat striive' impartial history will in the future make honourable mention of the name of Mr. Adams, and recognise two individuals as having, independently of one another, discovered the planet beyond Uranus. In the same way it attributes the discovery of the Infinitesimal Calculus at once to Newton and to Leibnitz. . . . Iri Mr. Airy's report we see thit, in September 1845, Mr. Adams arrived at a result, and in October he transmitted to Mr. Airy a paper containing the elements of the present planet, so nearly approximating that it might have been found in the heavens ten months before it really was. Mr. De Morgan's belief that the failure — which is almost too strong a word— on the English side was due to K 2 132 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. the want of confidence in their science among Mathema- ticians, received confirmation from the report, by Mr. Challis, of observations at the Cambridge Observatory, founded on Mr. Adams's calculations. The statement was laid before the Senate in December, and in it was men- tioned a memorandum made in 1841, and shown by Mr. Adams to Mr. Challis, recording the writer's intention to solve the problem as soon as he had taken his degree of B.A. The unusual character of the question is adverted to in this first statement of Mr. Challis : — Mr. The usual character of perturbations is to find the disturbing observa-8 action of one body on another by knowing the positions of both, tions. In the case of Uranus, Mr. Adams's problem was the inverse one ; from known disturbances of a planet in a known position, to find the place of the disturbing body at a given time. ... It will appear by the above account that my success might have been more complete if I had trusted more implicitly to the indications of the theory. It must, however, be remembered that I was quite in a novel position; the history of Astronomy does not afford a parallel instance of observation undertaken entirely in reliance upon deductions from theoretical calculations, and those, too, of a kind before untried. . . . We may certainly assert to be fact for which there is documentary evidence, that the problem of determining from perturbations the place of the disturbing body was first solved here ; that the planet was here first sought for; that places of it were here first recorded, and that approxi- mate elements of its orbit were here first deduced from observa- tion. And that all this, it may be said, is entirely due to the talents and labours of one individual among us, who has at once done honour to the University and maintained the scientific reputa- tion of the country. Both discoverers in due course received every possible distinction at home and abroad. M. Leverrier, besides other honours given to him, was elected an Associate of the Eoyal Astronomical Society, and, immediately after the discovery, proposed for the medal. And here a difficulty arose. It was usual to give only one gold medal at any ADAMS AND LEVERRIER. 133 time, and in order to secure the certainty of merit in the J 847. candidate, this could not be adjudged by a smaller ma- xeptune!et jority than three to one on the Council. On the present The Astro- occasion the Council, which for the adjudication of the Society's medal met always in January, was so divided in opinion on the question that the requisite majority was not ob- tained. It was felt that although M. Leverrier's claim was unquestionable, the acknowledgment of it in this form would be a manifest injustice to Mr. Adams, whose claim in one way was possibly greater, though it failed in the requisite element of success — that of its being publicly made known. On this arose a great difference of opinion among members as to the right steps to be taken. All were anxious that full justice should be done to both dis- coverers, and all were naturally desirous that the Astro- nomical Society should not be behindhand in its acknow- ledgment of the great gain to Science of the discovery, made, as it had been, by Mathematical calculation. No decision was come to, though the discussion had been long and anxiously carried on in the Council, and the time for the award went by. But the great body of the members could not readily submit to leave things as they were without further explanation, and a special general meeting was called to consider the propriety of suspending the by-laws and of reconsidering the whole question. There were some members of the Society who took no part in the usual work, but attended meetings on great occasions, when it might be expected that their names would give weight to their opinion. One of these was Mr. Babbage, who was known to have a strong predilec- tion for French science, and as strong a feeling against that which had any connection with Cambridge. He also attached much importance to the distinction of a medal, and thus was led strongly to support the claim of M. Leverrier, to the exclusion of that of Mr. Adams. Not succeeding in his efforts to reverse the decision, or rather 134 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. no-decision of the Council by proposing a vote of regret uPon ^s measures, he wrote to the Times giving his own views of the matter, and thus complicating the difficulties of the position. The most active members of the Council declared that they would not work on the possible con- dition that a vote of f regret,' or, which was the same thing, ' censure,' should be passed upon their measures. Mr. Sheep- Mr. Sheepshanks, on the occasion of the South and opinion. Troughton arbitration, had given offence to Mr. Babbage, and his strong desire that justice should be done to Mr. Adams only increased Mr. Babbage's displeasure at the non-award of the medal. Mr. Sheepshanks was happily more prudent in his expressions, and though amusingly sarcastic in his letters, temperate in his public behaviour. If he had not been so at this time, the concussion in the Society might have ended in a complete disruption. He was a fellow of Trinity, with a strong love for his own University, and a desire that the glory so fairly earned by one of its members should not be quite lost to Cambridge, He says, in a letter to my husband dated November 20, 1846 :- As to the medal, I will tell you my mezzo-termine. To give the medal in due course to Leverrier, and, if the Council think fit, after due deliberation, to grant, by means of a special meet- ing, a medal to Adams, who did undoubtedly discover the planet nine months before Leverrier, and it was by no fault of his that we did not catch it first. His communication to the Astronomer Royal and to the Plumian Professor on an astronomical subject is surely a publication so far as Adams is concerned — according, at least, to all rules hitherto recognised. He saves us, I think, all real difficulty by waiving his claim to the discovery ; for if we were called upon to decide by Waring's rule we should be compelled to decide in his favour, at least, after verifying the postmarks of the letter quoted by Airy. Now, as he has not raised this very thorny point, it seems to me that quiet and good-tempered and sensible people, who have not committed themselves to a positive opinion before they had heard all the story, may come to some conclusion satisfactory to all parties except the ultra-French or the anti- Cambridge. THE ASTRONOMICAL MEDAL. 135 On the part taken by his three friends, Mr. Adams, 1846. Mr. Airy, and Mr. Challis, Mr. Sheepshanks says : ' I am far better pleased with the perfect candour and simple gentlemanlike feeling of these men, than by anything I have heard of for a long time.' The writer conceded his opinion on the medals when he found how utterly impossible it would be to bring all parties to unanimity. He soon after wrote, ' If we don't get rid of the medal, it will capsize us.' And Mr. Airy, who had expressed his feeling that if no medal was given on this occasion the Society could never give one here- after, also yielded to the present necessities of the case. My husband, from having given close attention to the whole question from the beginning, and seen its great difficulties and complications, advised a course which was taken. After the meeting, while the matter was pending, he wrote : — This question of medals is almost the only one that can Mr. De come before the Council, into the discussion of which may enter that question of right and wrong on which an honest man never allows his opinions to be overruled by considerations of expediency. On the knowledge of this, a wise by-law was enacted, which requires a majority of three to one in favour of the award of a medal. The consequence is, that when opinion is much divided no decision can take place. It was an unwise thing to force back upon the consideration of those who had long and anxiously deliberated without coming to any con- clusion, the discussion of a question involving so many disputed points. It would have been better if the meeting had taken the matter into its own hands, and called a special meeting, not to enlarge the powers of the Council, but to do the thing itself. The meeting, however, showed, on more points than one, a strong feeling that so large a body, and so mixed, was not a proper court for the hearing of such a case. It does not follow that the special meeting when called need of necessity adopt the conclu- sions of the general meeting which called it. No one Parliament, though it may send business to its successor, can dictate how that business shall be done. And if the Society will take a little advice very respectfully offered, they will allow the matter 136 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. to rest where it is, and not compromise the working utility, The planet perhaps the very existence, of their very useful body by persist- ing in demanding a decision from those who have the best possible reasons to know that they cannot agree. And afterwards : — The Society has given to both M. Leverrier and Mr. Adams the full value of twenty medals, or rather, a prize of a higher order than any medal. All the bases of the discussions take for granted that both those gentlemen possess much more than the ordinary share of merit to which, under usual circumstances, medals are awarded. All the varieties of opinion are formed upon this nucleus, and could not have existed without it. In all but the mere gold which goes to the manufacture, the dis- coverers have had their medals over and over again. But, as was natural, the Astronomical Society could not feel quite satisfied to do nothing, and though gold medals were not given in the year to the two discoverers, their merits were not long afterwards acknowledged by Testimonials from the Society to each gentleman, ' For his Researches in the Problem of Inverse Perturbations, leading to the Discovery of the Planet Neptune.9 ' I have said more of this discovery than may be thought to belong to my husband's work in the Society. But all that he said and wrote on the question was strongly characteristic, expressing his high estimation for all the intellectual and, I may add, moral qualities of the parties concerned, and his exceeding disregard of distinctions. But besides this I have heard that the way in which many of the impediments were surmounted was due to his . counsel. Other questions connected with the Astronomical Society had arisen during the year 1846 in which Mr. De Morgan was involved. The old difficulty of organisation was strongly felt at 1 Testimonials were given in the same year to the Astronomer Royal, Prof. Argelander, Mr. Bishop, Sir J. flerschel, Prof. Haussen, Mr. Hencke, Mr. Hind, Sir J. Lubbock, and Mr. Weisse. PRESIDENCY OF ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. 137 this time, because the real working men had done their 1846. parts so long and so thoroughly in the face of many em- barrassments caused by the more officious but less prac- tical members, that their time of rest was overdue. My husband never slackened in his exertions. What °r^[d^c others could not do he undertook ; but when in this year to Mr. De the place of President was vacant, and there were good reasons outside of the working part of the Council and one or two turbulent spirits within which made it neces- sary that a liseful President should be secured by those who could work with him, my husband was entreated, as he had been before, to take the chair. His reasons for refusal will be found in his letters to Sir J. Herschel and Mr. Sheepshanks. The latter, who had the organ of firmness fully developed, but who considered himself ' anything but obstinate,' replied to the programme and refusal thus : — DEAR DE M., — One evening after supper John Hind of Sydney addressed Whewell thus : — * I don't quite hear what you say, but I beg to differ entirely with you.' Now I have heard and do understand all that you say, and more that you would say, and I differ with you. But I have given up trying to convince people against their will, ' 'cos I never found no good come of it.' So, just beholding your countenance as your wife painted it (decidedly obstinate if wrong, which most people are who are re- solute when right), I give up all hope that my first best mode of combination will answer. I see and have seen for a long time a little cloud or two rising. Poor S has risen and pelted, and is, I suppose, now exhausted. We have excellent men, who don't understand or make allowances for others (I ex- cept self and you), and we have no sufficient bond of union. If you and others can prevail on Herschel, well and good. You certainly can do a good deal as Vice, though by no means so much as if you were President. I shall look twice before I consent to continue Secretary, not merely for the trouble which this occasions to a man disliking all work (except such as he takes a whim to do), living forty miles from town, but really because a more methodical and resident person is actually re- quired just to keep things in order. 138 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. A few days after the writer added some exhortation and remonstrance to his former missive :— ' Omne ignotum ' — how can you fancy that a practical or gazing Astronomer is wanted for our Pres. ? Airy and Main and Challis and Johnson are the only members within reach who are strictly practical Astronomers, though several have, each in our way, practical knowledge. But I don't remember any instance where this knowledge was required in a Pres., nor can I well conceive a case wherein it would be required. I say, as a nailer, how dare you report the proceedings of the R. A. S., not having sufficient knowledge, as you say, for Presi- dent ? Answer me that, good man, ' and thou shalt be to me a very stout Apollo.' I may just ask here, with reference to my old friend's allusion to my husband's Athenceum reports — did Mr. Sheepshanks credit all the reporters of the learned So- ciety's proceedings with knowledge which would qualify them for the President's chair ? But Mr. S. at length gave in. If Sir J. H. will take the Presidency, it being understood not merely that he is not required, but really not wanted, except on anniversaries and when he can make it convenient, it is the best move we can make. Pearson would do very well if we could be sure he would never come at all. Lord Wrottesley is a capital fellow, but, considering some of your arguments, is scarcely the person you should choose. Airy will take it if necessary, but I don't like to propose him for several reasons, one of which is that I dislike tasking his time and health so severely. Sir John Herschel terminated the embarrassment by consenting to the wishes of his friends. Mr. De Morgan's views of the subject will be found in his letters. 139 SECTION VI. CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1836 TO 1846. To his Mother.1 MY DEAR MOTHER,— I hare read your letter carefully ; and the 1836. paper?, and as much of the book as was necessary to show that it contained no argument, and was in fact addressed to those who already believe all it contains. If I can make you see clearly that our modes of arriving at what we believe to be true are so totally different that an attempt to discuss the subject together would be an impossibility, it is all I expect. If your knowledge of the New Testament had been of your own getting, unwarped by the devices of a Church of which it has always been the avowed doctrine to use every means which the age will allow to force men to agree to its own interpretations, I could go much farther, and could show you that taking every book of the New Testament to be an authority to that extent only in which it was recognised as an authority in the first three centuries, and taking the words in their most probable meaning, there is no ground of fear for any honest man who uses the best means in his power to come at truth. But between us there is in this matter no common ground oil which to argue. Nothing is more easy than to be positive and certain, or to affirm the perdition of all who cannot see any par- ticular system of doctrines to be true : but before you declare that you must be right and I must be wrong, consider the following points, and ask yourself what part of the whole New Testament has more right to a literal interpretation than this : 1 In the measure which you measure with, you shall be measured.' I take the most literal translation, and not what your misleaders are pleased to call their ' authorised version.' 1. You have a number of books bound up ioto one, which you call the New Testament. You never meddled with the * 1 See p. 86, ante. 140 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS BE MORGAN. 1836. question whether all these books are genuine, and were really written by the persons whose names they bear. Still less with the question whether being written by different persons, at different times, to different persons, &c., they can be used in interpreting each other in the same manner as the different parts of a book written by the same person. I have been obliged to consider this. 2. These books are written in a foreign language, and more than that, in a dead language, of which every one knows that it is utterly impossible to render any phrase exactly into corresponding English. This question no way concerns you. You dwell upon a single English word in the translation just as much as if it were the original itself. To me your version is useless, as I know that those who made it were utterly incom- petent to take that view of the original language which the sub- ject requires. 3. These books have come down to us in manuscripts which differ from each other repeatedly, and in one or two instances, if not in more, there is proof, which theologians of all parties unite in admitting, that additions have been made to the writers' text. You care nothing for this ; I doubt if you knew the fact. I have been obliged to know it. 4. Your expressions amount to the following : — If you do not take it for granted that King James's translators chose the right Greek,- and turned it into the right English, and more than that, drew all their inferences correctly, God Almighty will punish you to all eternity. 5. Out of all that precedes you have got a complicated creed, on implicit belief in which you insist. I recommend you to follow the plan adopted by Locke, when he wanted to ascertain what the Christian religion was. He looked carefully through the Acts of the Apostles, and collected every single instance in which a Christian was made by the Apostles ; for, he argued — and in so doing he upset every church which has existed since A.D. 300 — if I can become as much of a Christian as the first converts of the Apostles, I shall certainly obtain the essentials of Christianity. Do this yourself. Construct a creed out of all which the Apostles required, without adding a single word, and compare it with your own. For what else was so precise an account given of so many admissions into the Church ? And this not with a view to changing your own opinions, for if your creed gives you comfort I would not change a letter of it ; but with a view to the follow- CORRESPONDENCE, 183G-46. 141 ing question : Do yon believe that the God of truth has so mis- 1836. led the world as to give it a religion the essential parts of which cannot be gathered from the manner in which those who first taught it admitted proselytes ? Certainly a newly baptised Christian, if sincere, did not perish everlastingly if he died the moment after his baptism. But your Church positively declares he did unless he believed what they call the ' Catholic faith.' N"ow ask of yourself in sincerity, where is it set down in such a manner that a wayfaring man, though a fool, could not err, that the Apostles taught this creed, or anything like it ? Again, take another test. Certain of the Apostles wrote accounts of the life and doctrines of Jesus Christ. Matthew wrote in Hebrew, no doubt for the Jews ; Luke in Greek, for the Gentiles. These books were never collected into one till centuries after Christ, nor is there any proof that the earlier Jews ever saw the Greek Gospel, or the Greeks the Jewish one. It is most obvious that each of these accounts must contain the essential parts of the Christian religion. It is also most obvious that an epistle of Paul to a town in Greece must not be joined with one written to Romans, both of which were never seen for many years in Judea (so far as can be shown), to make up a doc- trine essential for the salvation of Jews. Now try again. Make up your creed out of any one of the Gospels, if you can. Surely two fairer tests cannot be proposed to any person who knows what reason is; and still more when it is merely a question whether one person ought to believe that another must suffer eternal punishment because he will not treat as one book a number of different books in a manner which would be laughed at if applied to Livy and Tacitus. And yet they both wrote Roman history at periods as near to each other as those at which the books of the New Testament were written. All this has no reference to the question whether the creed could be got out of the whole New Testament together if per- mitted. Before God I declare that I have examined closely the history of the early Church, together with abundance of contro- versy on both sides, not forgetting the books of the New Testa- ment on which they are written, and can find nothing like the creed of the Churches of Rome or England. The former does not pretend to find what you call the essential doctrines of Christi- anity in the New Testament, but appeals to tradition. It is easy to rail at them, but to the best of my knowledge and belief, derived from historical reading and actual observation, the 142 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. Church of Rome contains as much honesty as that of England, and a vast deal more knowledge. It would not take one quarter as much evidence to make me a Catholic as to make me a Church of England man. I should have no objection to be better acquainted with Mr. Baptist Noel, but you are grievously mistaken if you think any discussion with him could have any effect on me. 1. Because he has never studied either side of any contro- versy, or at least of those on which such a discussion would turn, as he himself avowed to me, though he must have been at that very time meditating a controversial work, or one meant for such, which he shortly afterwards published, and which took the point in dispute for granted on his own side in the title-page. 2. Because he would be better employed in meditating how to reply to the complete and conclusive reply which he received from a Unitarian minister, whom I blame very much for replying to so weak an attack. Your letter, my dear mother, was quite as good logic as the Rev. B. Noel's book, and indeed would make a pretty abstract of it. And yet you could see that you did not profess to be able to argue the question ; but the Rev. B. Noel was not able to see so much. He is, nevertheless, a liberal and amiable man, but he mistook his ground altogether when he thought he was a fit match for the head of a body so learned (compared with Church of England clergy) in the history of his own creed as the Unitarian ministers. If you want an opponent for me, take some one, if you can find him, who has studied both sides of the question. But even then I should object to discuss with him — 1. Because I never saw or heard of any one who was made to change his opinions by discussion. 2. Because such subjects are best discussed between a man and himself in retirement, and with the real original accounts before him. 3. Because I see in all that is orthodox a lack of that charity which Paul considers as more essential than everything else, coupled with what virtually amounts to a claim of infallibility. 4. Because number- less unanswered arguments lie before me, which the Established clergy have left off attempting to answer. Instead of attempting to drive me, an individual with little time on his hands, to go through the oft-repeated job of cutting the flimsy web of an Athanasian Christian, move your own clergy to print their assertions, and leave those who have leisure for answering to deal with what they shall advance. I shall then be able with CORRESPONDENCE, 1836-46. 143 little trouble to verify both sides ; and as what is called Christi- 1836, anity by the Church of England has never failed to meet with its answer, even when it was declared felony to answer it (for such were the arguments used at one time), I have little doubt any person who shows a respectable knowledge of the history of the Church will meet with a speedy reply if he will venture into the field. Now with regard to these matters, you may surely, my dearest mother, collect from what I have said, that there will be little wisdom in attempting to revive this subject. Appeals to my feelings, whether from the bitter stroke we have lately had, or from your distress that I cannot believe as you believe, are trying to wound the wrong parts. It is impossible you can be in earnest when you think that I who have been for the full half of my animal, and the whole of intellectual life, accustomed to con- sider doubtful things by help of reason alone, should be moved • to any opinion because any person alive believes it so strongly that he or she is grieved that I do not believe it also. Such appeals might be made to induce a person to examine that opinion, but I have examined it, and I conscientiously believe more than most of the clergy on whom you pin your faith. Still more weak are your implied assertions that my late illness, &c., are chastisements from God. How could you know this if it were true ? or how can a very slight consequence of that want of tendency to inflammation which it has pleased God should preserve me from colds, fevers, cholera, &c., and which forms a constituent part of my power to sit at work many hours without headache or pain, be considered as a chastisement ? Believe me, I see nothing in it but a very slight and easy composition for the want of liability to many worse things. In the name of common sense let the Almighty manage His own world. The presumption with which modern Christians explain all that happens, and point out the intention with which it all came, is one of the strong marks by which the perversion of the system may be known. If the tower of Siloam were to fall precisely upon one hundred people, all Calvinists, it would never enter my head to suppose that they were thereby declared to be objects of God's particular displeasure. As long as my reason lasts I ishall never want a better argument than that. I have looked over dear Eliza's papers with the interest with which everything that concerns her affects me at this moment. They relate to points which have now been in discussion fifteen 144 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1836. hundred years, and on which she had to form her own opinion with such means as she had ; as have you and myself. But such matters are not with me matters of feeling, they are to be tried by reason and evidence — that is by me, for I do not object to any one who thinks he can find truth by another method trying what he can do. You are to judge yourself, I myself, and it is im- possible that any two people can usefully discuss any subject, one of whom believes that a conviction of the truth of opinions is an argument in their favour. Yours most affectionately, A. D. M. To Dean Peacock. •69 Gower Street, Nov. 13, 1838. DEAR Sm, — I would not trouble you, generally speaking, to notice an undergraduate just arrived, but I think my young friend M., the bearer of this, has merit enough to be an exception. He has gone through a good course of reading, and is something like a low wrangler in his present attainments, or rather higher, with very good chance of being made into a high one. He stood a stiff examination for our Flaherty scholarship, as we call it, at Univ. Coll., and though second came off with great honour. I remember with great gratitude and pleasure the notice I used to receive myself from those in high station, when I was an undergraduate, having no other claims than of the same de- scription as those which M. now has. I should have left him to find his way in his own College, not doubting that his acquire- ments and industry would soon make him marked ; but I find he is almost entirely without acquaintance. If, then, you will introduce him to one or two of your good men, as we used to call them, his future competitors, you will do a service where it is well deserved, and I shall feel very much obliged. I should like him early to know some reading men out of his own College, from whom he may learn that its system is not necessarily that of the University. I do not doubt you found a letter from me containing my proposed test of convergency and divergency. You are, of course, interested in all that concerns Dr. Young. A publisher in London has bought or will buy the plates of the Lectures. He proposes to republish them (catalogue excepted) in parts, transferring the copper to lithograph. My colleague Sylvester is to put notes, which with reading he will do very well. I am now proposing it to the Soc. for the Diff. of Useful CORRESPONDENCE, 1836-46. 145 Knowledge. Do you think favourably of the plan ? My own 1838. opinion is that Young's lectures are an unsearched mine of good things, often very happily expressed. But two quarto volumes frighten most people. It is of course a work which any one would like to see republished, but should your opinion be as strong as mine the expression of it would materially forward the object. I remain, dear sir, Yours faithfully, A. DE MORGAN. 69 Gower Street, Nov. 13, 1838. To Francis Baily. MY DEAR SIR, — The word rapa or rapum means a turnip, or any small white root. There is in Italian rapa, a turnip, and in English the same word is seen in rape-seed. Raparium and rapina (both words are used) mean a collection of many rapae, a turnip-store, or turnip-field. Consequently your rapina must mean a cluster of stars. What a capital new word for the starry heavens — a turnip- field ! Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. 69 Gower Street, Monday Morning. To Sir John Herschel. 69 Gower Street, Nov. 22, 1842. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Thanks for your letter and the compli- ments— non omnis moriar — with that big book. I shall be the tenant of some old book-stall a hundred years hence, arid some one, perhaps myself, Lethed and transmigrated, will give half a crown for me — as I have done for others, or perhaps for myself again in some pre-transmigration — and will put me down hi a bibliographical list, with a slight mistake of the name (non omnis moriar), and of a hundred years or thereabouts in the date. As to Lardner's ' Cyclopaedia/ you must address direct to Long, man, who is the real editor now. I think a second edition stuck full of southern plums, with some nice nebulae, neat as imported, would be a capital dish. When shall we begin to see the southern heavens through your spectacles ? 146 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 18-42. I f°rg°t my hieroglyphic of Uranus ; I told you, I think, that the baronetage draws Mars instead of Uranus in your shield. I pointed out the mistake of latitude to Charles Knight's people to-day. They told me they were partly aware of it already. What is meant by being partly aware of the pole-star not being exactly on the pole ? 'In order to be sure that a general proposition is true we must be sure that all its particular applications are true.' If ' in order ' means previously I deny the assertion. Certainly, to be sure that a general proposition is true we must be sure that all its particular cases are true, for a general proposition =S (par- ticular case). I suppose it is meant that there is no surety without exami- nation of all the particular cases ; this I admit too, but I suppose it is farther meant that there is no surety without enumeration of the particular cases : if so, this I deny. For example, the angles at the base of an isosceles triangle are equal. In the proof I have moral certainty that I examine every isosceles triangle ; any one 'whatsoever is every one. Ab- straction and rejection of all that distinguishes one particular case from another is the mode of induction, if people like to call it so, which general reasoning employs. ' Consequently it is reasoning in a circle to include the truth of the particular from that of the general.' I deny the conse- quence. If any one likes to say, on the preceding view, that general reasoning is induction of particular cases, which I do not in a certain sense deny, he must not say that I conclude or infer, but only that I go to a drawer in which I have laid up all the cases ready for use, for this must be the correlative meaning of inference. But shall the very man who found out that I had got my drawer full be the one to deny me liberty to take out the contents, because the etymology of the words I use to describe such out- taking rather seems to describe making the goods, as wanted, by a machine, than taking them out ready made from a receptacle ? No, if he goes and alters my words of first process, he must allow me either to resist or to alter the words of second process to match. Again, how dares any one say, ' To be sure of the general, we must be sure of all the particulars ' ? Epimenides said all the Cretans are always liars. Now Epimenides was a Cretan him- self ; how could he establish his proposition ? If it were true, it was therefore false. CORRESPONDENCE, 1830-40. 147 * Has he examined all the particular cases of his proposition ? ' 1842. He either knows this a priori or he has examined (that is, if he knows it to be true) ; if he knows it a priori, then he opens the net, and out we jump; but I will answer for it he has not examined all the possible cases. Is there not a confused way of talking about truth ? When we prove a truth, that is, give ourselves certain knowledge of its being a truth, we talk as if we had made a truth. We say ' one proposition is the consequence of another ; ' when it should be ' our knowledge of one proposition is the consequence of our knowledge of another.' He who said peace among men forbade Metaphysics. When their cloudinesses the axioms of mental philosophy declare war against ' two straight lines can't enclose a space ' they remind me of the Chinese trying to take an English battery. Here are some undoubted truths : — sin oo =0, cos co =0 ; tan oo ^^v" — 1, cot co = + «/ — 1. As to sec oo and cosec oo I am doubtful. They are either 0 or oo . I suspect the former. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 69 Gower Street, Dec. 30, 1842. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Many thanks for the reduction of Schiller's observations to the latitude of London. I dare sav j you have applied the correction — -f (English — German) very skilfully, but I am so ignorant of that language that I shall not find you out if you were to err in the first place of gutturals. When your missive arrived, I was engaged with a young Turk whom I indoctrinate in differential equations and matters arising thereout. I gave him your wafer as a sort of auto- graph, whereupon the following dialogue took place : — He. Oh, Sir John Herschel ! what is it he has done with the L 2 148 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS HE MORGAN. 1842. Moon at. the Cape of Good Hope ? I have got his" book, and I have read it with the greatest delight. J. It's a hoax. He. A hoax ! Well, I was so delighted to think it was all true. I told our Ambassador of it yesterday, all that had been seen in the Moon, and his Excellency only laughed at me and said it must be a hoax. Depend upon it there are thousands in the condition of this young man. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. Camden Street, Oct. 7, 1844. 1844 MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — A certain man, named Malby, who makes and edits globes, has procured the copyright and plates of certain 36-inch globes, on which he means to lay down nebulae, to wit, — Messier, W. Herschel (1786, 1789, 1802), Dnnlop (1828), J. Herschel (1833) ; also double stars, &c., &c. Now it strikes me that if by waiting any reasonable fraction of a revolution of the equinoxes he would have your southern patches to dig into his copper, it would be wisdom in him to wait. Can you tell me within two or three revolutions of the Moon's node when the world is likely to have your work ? To tough jobs long periods ought to be applied, both for safety and solemnity. But if you are able to reply that you will be ready in a jiffy, or a crack, or less than no time, or a brace of shakes, or the twinkling of a bedpost, or before you can say Jack Robinson, or even the sum of them, of course he must wait. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, October 1844. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I take much interest in Malby's globes. 1. Because I am writing a ' Use of the Globes ' for them, of which I send you an old proof to destroy at your leisure. CORRESPONDENCE, 1836-4G. 149 2. Because Baily's last printed work is the set of revised 1844. boundary lines for constellations which appears on them. 3. Because Malby is a very spirited fellow. A man proposed a feasible way of mounting the globe so as to adjust it for any era, giving in fact the pole of the equator a motion round the pole of the ecliptic. Malby immediately set to work, got the globe made with an additional contrivance for solar apogee, and I have a specimen now in my hands. They are soon to be adver- tised. If I were your mortal enemy I should like nothing better than to dispute with you about heliacal risings, &c., of 3,000 years ago. How I should grin to think that you were at your spherical trigonometry while I was getting within more accuracy than an heliacal rising is good for, by two or three motions of the hand, and a squint or two along wooden horizons and brazen meridians ! Malby has also a very neat planisphere with one revolving surface and one fixed, and on bringing the hour of the day on the edge of the revolving surface to the day of the month on the edge of the fixed, the hollow part of the revolving surface shows the visible heavens for that hour and day. These planispheres usually have three surfaces and two adjust- ments. But whether I shall in a month or two claim your kind offer about Dunlop's nebuloe depends upon Malby 's decision about the whole scheme. I shall recommend him to defer ifc altogether till your work appears. What can Dunlop have been at ? Your optical power must have been incomparably greater than his. Are there any atmospheric minutiaB which last long enough for a careless observer, who never looks for a thing a second time, to note as nebulae ? Banqiio. The air hath bubbles as the water hath, And these are of them — whither are they vanished ? Macbeth. Into the air, and what seemed nebula; melted As breath into the wind ; would they had stayed ! No more at present from Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 150 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1845. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, May 19, 1845. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — As I gave you rather a bad impression about the Mathematical Society from their old clay and pewter days, I feel bound to tell you that Captain Smyth, Galloway, and myself went down and examined their library and them- selves, and saw a good many, and got the names and occupations of all. We found an F.B.S., an F. Ant. S., an F. Linn. S., a barrister, two silk manufacturers, a surgeon, a distiller, &c. ; and we found that all had really paid attention to some branch of Science. One Mr. Perrott is, I am told, a man of note as a chemist". We certainly shall not lower the average knowledge of our Fellows by accepting their proposition. I went down rather against the scheme, but was perfectly changed by what I saw and heard. Their library is a good one. The matter will soon be dis- cussed at a Council. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, May 28, 1845. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — No difficulty at all. Our by-laws permit a general meeting, called by the Council, with a week's notice, to destroy every by-law, and make a complete new set. The Charter is liberty itself in this particular. A general meeting will be called after the next ordinary meeting. Of course, we could not depart a hair's-breadth from the statutable mode of election without. As to the Cambridge Transactions, I have not got them, and know little of them as a whole. In addition to what you name there are Murphy's papers, which are remarkable, particu- larly those on definite integrals ; but were I you, I should consult Hopkins, the secretary, on the details. The transactions generally may be described as having had a tendency to bring forward discussions of principle among the members of the University. There is, you may safely say, sufficient proof in them that the ordinary system of University reading, which crams details of methods, put together in exami- nation form, with fearful rapidity upon the young student, does CORRESPONDENCE, 18,16-40. 151 not destroy the power of reflecting upon the basis of mathe- 1845. matical knowledge, or physical. Strongly objecting, as I do, to that system in many points, I should admit the Cambridge Transactions as a decisive fact against me if there were more of it, so that the contents could be cited as a proof of the general consequences of the system. You should not forget the Cambridge * Mathematical Journal.' It is done by the younger men. Four octavo vols. are published. It is full of very original communications. It is, as is natural in the doings of young mathematicians, very full of symbols. The late Dr. F. Gregory, whom you must notice most honour- ably— I send you a mem. of him, which please to return — gave his extensions of the Calculus of Operations what used to be the separation of the symbols of operation and (quantity) in it. He was the first editor. He was the most rising man among the juniors. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Master of Trinity. 7 Camden Street, June 9, 1845. MY DEAR SIR, — I am much obliged to you for the misprint and the supposed misprint.1 ' Nineteenth century ' is a bad misprint ; and I ought to have detected it by the absence of the words * march of intellect ' in the immediate neighbourhood, for how can the first phrase come in without the -second ? As to the second, I may say with Fouchy, * C'est pire qu'une crime, c'est une faute.' For it was Rheticus who published it, the work being Copernicus's. But I have phrased it as if Bheticus wrote a work of his own with the title cited, whereas I meant to say that he had published one of Copernicus's, who was like Newton, and wanted a kind of half -godfather, half-mid- wife, for all he published. There is another misprint which vexed me more, because context will not help. It is the old accusative decenniom for decennmm in the title of the canon. This was the printer's doing, after revise returned, I fully believe, for I know that I read the title most carefully. 1 I have not found these misprints. I suppose them to be in one of his Cambridge tracts. — ED. 152 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. 1845. I have not anything to retaliate upon the Hist. Math. Sc. at present, but if you are preparing a new edition I will look at it in the vacation quoad Mathematics and Mathematical Physics. You duly acknowledged the receipt of my corrections about Milbourne and Horrocks. I remain, dear sir, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, July 21, 1845. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I hope you have found rest agreeable after your Cambridge labours. I have had a book by me for years called ' An Original Theory or New Hypothesis of the Universe,' by Thomas Wright of Durham, London, 1750, 4to, 30 mezzotinto engravings. I had always supposed it to be Ocular and Elizabethan,1 if you know what that means, and so put it among my curiosities of that kind. But overhauling my limbo to write an article about quiddities I began to examine this book, and I find it is at great length the true theory of the milky way as a resolvable nebula, with distribution of the universe into patches of starlight. It was a book published by subscription, and therefore not much repandu. It was seeing Dr. Smith's (Harmonic Smith's) name among the subscribers which first made me suspect it was not a heaven-born genius who wrote it. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Captain Smyth. 7 Camden Street, Nov. 3, 1845. MY DEAR CAPTAIN SMYTH, — I find there is a circumstance about * Poliphilns ' which Brunet does not mention. The author's name is Francis Colonna; if the thirty-eight initial letters of the thirty-eight chapters be written down, they make Folium/rater Franciscus Columno, peramavit. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. 1 Those accustomed to the writer's expressions will see in this a paraphrase of the slang, ' My eye and Betty Martin.' CORRESPONDENCE, 183G-46. 153 1845. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, Nov. 29, 1845. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — First as to things in general, that yon may have a piece to tear off about life insurance, if you like, and send to the managers. I have undertaken the Annual Report again. Have you any subjects to suggest ? Have you anything to say about your own printing ? Have you actually put metal to paper in anything more than a steel pen ? Do you know anything more than mankind in general about Count Cassini, who is gone, leaving you the sole hereditary Astronomer ? Will the fourth Herschel start as he did, and go and be a botanist ? Ask H' what he thinks H" will do. I hope you are using proper means for your cold, and getting rid of it accordingly ; when it comes to loss of sleep and appetite it must be dealt with sec. art. It is not true that a man of forty is either a fool or a physician ; he may be both, or neither. But according to that rule, I am '9854 of a physician * myself, and in that capacity I beg you to take care of yourself. . . . If you want a laugh read Sheepshanks's pamphlet, if you have not read it already. A man who acknowledges his own name to be an ugly one must be a hero of moral courage. If ho had lived in the Middle Ages he would have been vir clarissimus eruditissimusque Bicardus de Ovium Oruribus, which would not have sounded common at all. There was one Middle Age name which I could not make out. I searched and searched, you can't think how much. It was Jacobus Humus, Scotus Theagrius, James Hume, a Scot — of what ? I tried every part of Scotland, and endeavoured to Latinise it into Theagrius. At last I hap- pened to mention it to a Scotchman (they all know all their lairdships), and he said, 'Oh, of course, Hume of Godscroft, petty estate. 1 I omit the correction for folly. To Captain Smyth. 1846. Nov. 26, 1846. Letter n Capt. MY DEAR CAPTAIN SMYTH, — Sheepshanks has written to me on Smyth. the same subject, and I have given him at length reasons why I will not be President. I will vote for and tolerate no President but a practical astronomer. Besides which, the chair would bring 154 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. me more in contact with certain parts of our glorious constitution than I could any way stand. But I have offered either to do the work of a Vice-President, if Herschel or some other good man will be President, or to take every duty of Secretaryship except the editing of the Monthly Notices and Memoirs. I sent Sheepshanks the following programme, which I amend for your use : — President : Herschel, absent. Quiet enough when present. Acting Yice-President : Capt. W. H. Smyth — too fond of cigars and black-puddings, but otherwise a capital quarter- master. Secretaries : Rutherford, for the Memoirs. A. De Morgan — well enough in his way, but cranky — for all miscellaneous work, from wax candles to Council minutes. Foreign Secretary : Rev. R. Sheepshanks (composition not wax by any means. A President overdue, but won't dub up — ought to go through the court) for the Monthly Notices. If Galloway would take Rutherford's place, who wants to get off, we should be in capital force. And we look forward to Hind being a famous man. II n'y a que moi qui a toujours raison. Think of the above, and see if it won't work. I will work, but in my proper place. The President must be a man of brass — a micrometer-monger, a telescope- twiddler, a star- stringer, a planet-poker, and a nebula-nabber. If we give bail that we won't let him do anything if he would, we shall be able to have him,1 I hope. We must all give what is most wanted, and his name is even more wanted than his services. We can do with- out his services, not without loss, but without difficulty. I see we shall not, without great difficulty, dispense with his name. Kind regards all round. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — We have just been making our arrange- ments for the Society for the ensuing year, and one thing is that you are not to be asked to do anything, or wished to do anything, or wanted to do anything. But we -want your name, 1 Herschel (understood).— S.E.De M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1836-46. 155 and when you hear the precise state of things I hope you will 184G. see that you can give it, and can see that you will give it. Baily, as you know, was the fly-wheel of the Society ; there was an inexhaustible fund of momentum in him, which he im- parted as wanted, and to the amount wanted. Since his death there is nobody of whom we can say that he is always good for D — V ; D being the duties of any office, and V the amount of them which the holder happens to discharge. And we find it necessary to put our shoulders to the wheel, and to bestir ourselves. Certain persons wanted to make me President, which I posi- tively refused, holding that to appoint a person who has never promoted astronomy otherwise than as promoting mathematics is indirectly doing so (there wants a word more strong than indirectly, and less strong than directly — say ^ directly and in- directly)— would be ToW (direct and indirect) confession of weakness. But I have proposed a plan of administration which I am sure of as to the working part, and which I hope you will sanction as to the proemium. Seriously, it is a dignus vindice nodus. President: Sir J. Herschel. No duties. If he likes to attend anniversary meetings all the better, but nobody expects even this, except quite convenient. Work all parcelled out. None left for him. Name the thing wanted. Acting1 Vice- President : Captain Smyth. Will do it with pleasure ; ascertained. Secretaries : Galloway takes the printing of the Memoirs. Consents if the plan holds. Has been Sec. some years. De Morgan takes the routine management of the Society, all but Memoirs and Monthly Notices. Has had eight years of routine, Memoirs, and Notices, all three, and would not meddle with it again except for the conviction that the Society would go to pieces forthwith if something energetic were not done at once. On condition that the President is a man of practical astronomy. Foreign Secretary : Sheepshanks. Takes the Monthly Notices. Has had the Secship. for the last year. Assistant Secretary : Williams. Seems a working man, but new. • 1 Includes making up a party for the cigar divan after every dinner. 156 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 184C On *kis case I hope yon will consent to your part of our Cabinet. The rest of the Council we fill up in the best way we can — no great difficulty. If you feel able to consent, I am tolerably sure that we are safe for two years, during which time we must keep our eye upon the future. Trusting to the nascitur non fit principle will give the Society a fit of moritur. I remain, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 7 Camden Street, Nov. 29, 1846. 157 SECTION VII. FEOM 1846 TO 1855. < IN the year 1846,' Mr. De Morgan wrote, ' I had begun to collect various matters which had suggested themselves at different times, connected with the theory of the Syllogism losism in Logic.' In the year 1847 the Formal Logic was published. The memoirs On the Syllogism, Nos. I., II., III., IV., and V., are Mathematical workings of the principles developed in the Formal Logic] and the tracts On the Structure of the Syllogism, and On the Application of the Theory of Probabilities to Questions of Argument and Authority, immediately preceded it. The first chapter of Formal Logic consists, with a few alterations, of the tract entitled First Notions of Logic preparatory to the Study of Geometry ; London, 1839. The work as a whole, and in its higher parts, is original, but the author has been careful to distinguish between what he claimed as exclusively his own and the work of others by printing in italics, in the Table of Contents, the head- ings of those articles which refer to his peculiar system. A reference to this table will show how large and essential a portion was claimed as entirely new. After working these points out in his own mind, the author found that he was able to explain by their means passages of Aristotle till then obscure to himself as well as to others. The two principal features of his own system were the intro- duction of contraries or contradictories, and the idea of definite quantity, into the syllogism. Where all, none, or some had been the utmost quantification employed before, 158 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1847. the ideas of more or less with their contradictories formed Formal an essential part of the Formal Logic. The tract On the Syllogism, &c., read at Cambridge in ^November 1846, excited great interest in the minds of those Logicians who were following out the application of Mathematics to Logic. Dr. Whewell had wished the writer to read it himself, and kindly begged him to visit him at Trinity Lodge for the time. This he was not able to do. I wish it had been practicable for him to mix more freely and frequently with the friends who shared his interests ; but on looking back to the great variety of subjects he treated, and the work he was engaged in at the time, it is evident that this would have been impos- sible. The memoir On the Dispute between Keill and Leibnitz was printed in this year. I hoped, on first con- sidering in what way to mention the Logical works, to be able to supply some of my own deficiencies by inserting the letters which were addressed to him both on the re- ception of the tract and the publication of the volume. But they are too numerous to form a part of this work. I am, however, very thankful to be able to insert here some excellent strictures on that which I dare not myself have attempted to describe — the relation of Psychology and Mathematics in my husband's mind. These remarks were kindly given to me by Mr. De Morgan's friend and former pupil, Mr. Cecil Monro:— Such attention to Logical method is not to be confounded with mere accuracy and explicitness of statement and demon- stration. These are vital qualities, indeed, of Mathematical exposition, qualities which every one sees to be characteristic of Mr. De Morgan's work ; which are, in fact, characteristic of it in an extraordinary degree ; but it is in a more important sense than this that he was at least as great in Logic as in Mathematics. Even in his most strictly Mathematical writings the examination of mental processes is visibly an end in itself, as distinguished from the exhibition of mental products. In its psychological aspect his end is pursued through historical and even bibliogra- phical inquiries, which, independently of their value as informa- NEW QUANTIFICATION OF PREDICATE. 159 tion, are perhaps still more interesting as episodes in that pursuit. 1847. Upon its Logical side the end may be said to have been attained, Letter of and with a completeness upon which I believe high authorities would not as yet be forward to pronounce, in a series of works of which the well-known Formal Logic is but a part. If, as is certainly true, his other works could only have been written by a Logician, these last could only have been written by a Mathe- matician. Everybody knows that Mathematics are an admirable model of exactitude ; but not everybody knows that they also furnish an admirable type of generalisation. Indeed, generality is often confounded with vagueness, and therefore treated as incompatible with exactitude. The fact is known that, having very thoroughly worked at the generalisations of Mathematics in theory and practice, Mr. De Morgan was enabled to establish with perfect precision the most highly generalised conception of Logic, perhaps, which it is possible to entertain. It is no new doctrine that Logic deals with the necessary laws of action of thought, and that Mathema- tics apply these laws to necessary matter of thought ; but by showing that these laws can and must be applied with equal precision and equal necessity to all kinds of relations, and not only to those which the Aristotelian theory takes account of, he so enlarged the scope and intensified the power of Logic as an instrument, that we may hope for coming generations, as be must have hoped,1 another instalment of the kind of benefit which history shows we ourselves owe to the Aristotelian theory, not merely in the analysis of one mental operation, but in the every- day practice of them. Mathematics are, meanwhile, and perhaps will always remain, the completest and most accurate example of the generalised Logic. At any rate, in the mind of the author, Logic and Mathematics as * the two great branches of exact science, the study of the necessary laws of thought, the study of the necessary matter of thought,2 were always viewed in connection and antithesis. C. J. MONRO. Mr. De Morgan had written to Dr. Logan in Sep- Corre tember 1846 that he was ' making a vigorous onslaught on the Aristotelian syllogism, which,' he says, 'I find has 1 Syllabus, § 96, note. 2 Chi the Syllogism, No. v. &c. (Camb. Ph. S. vol. x., Part 11, 1803), the last page. 160 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 84?- wanted the interference of a Mathematician very much.' conTro-°n He asked Dr. Logan to tell him of any place in which the versy. history of the syllogism is given — anything about Barbara, Celarent, &c., their birth, parentage, and education. He also gave him some of the results of his recent inquiry into the application of the Theory of Probabilities to ques- tions of argument and authority. In reply to this, Dr. Logan sent him a short note on the history of Logic. On September 30 he wrote to Sir William Hamilton, the Professor of Logic in the University of Edinburgh, ' inquiring about the history of the Aristotelian theory of the syllogism.' l This was answered in a friendly tone, Sir William Hamilton sending Mr. De Morgan f a copy of the requisites for a prize essay,' given out to the students at the close of last session, and offering further information if required. But in all the state- ments of what had been taught by the Edinburgh Pro- fessor my husband did not find any reason for believing that his own discoveries on the syllogism had been antici- pated; and he was able to bring forward distinct proof that, even on the quantification of the predicate, which had been taught in a form less complete than his own by Sir William Hamilton, he had himself never had the opportunity of gaining a suggestion from the Edinburgh lectures. However, after the Cambridge tract had been in Dr. WhewelFs hands, and in answer to a letter on the subject from Mr. De Morgan, Sir William says that he (Mr. De Morgan) is wholly indebted to himself for infor- mation on the subject; and in his own words, 'should you, though recognising always my prior claim, give forth that doctrine as a speculation of your own, you will be guilty — pardon the plain speaking — both of an injurious breach of confidence towards me and of false dealing towards the public.' To this the following reply was sent :— 1 I have always used, as far as possible, Sir William's own words from his subsequent letters on the transaction. — S. E. De M. FORMAL LOGIC. 161 DEAR SIR WILLIAM,— Your letter of the 13th inst., which I 1847. have read with astonishment, shows me the propriety of abstain- Hamilton ing from correspondence npon the subject in question. When my paper appears, which I expect it will do in a few days, I shall have the honour of requesting your acceptance of some copies, that you may be able to put them into the hands of those with whom you may think proper to advise. I will not further allude to the hasty manner in which you have expressed your suspicions of an odious charge, except to state that it does not diminish the sincere respect with which I subscribe myself Your most obedient servant, A, DE MORGAN. These few lines show the temper in which the contro- versy began. I purposely refrain from attempting to record in detail the arguments used on both sides. The statement appended to the Formal Logic will give to inquirers a full insight into my husband's reasons for believing himself the originator of those Logical pro- cesses which he claimed as his own. So far as the dis- cussion assumed a personal character it is his biographer's duty to record it; but the questions raised were of too technical a nature to be dealt with in a work like the present, even if I were competent to discuss them. Besides the statement in the Formal Logic, Mr. De Morgan made some mention of the controversy in the Budget of Paradoxes. Sir William returned, unread, the copy of the Formal Logic which Mr, De Morgan presented to him ; but in the year 1852 controversial warmth must have abated, for books and courteous letters were then exchanged between the Logicians. I cannot deny that he rather enjoyed such encounters, but no one ever engaged in them with less feeling of personal animosity. It was like a game of chess — a pas- sage of arms. But he did full justice to Sir William's splendid metaphysical powers, and says, in reference to the controversy, ( of which I suppose that the celebrity of my opponent, and tbe appearance of parts of it in a M 162 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS BE MORGAN. 1847. journal so widely circulated as the Athenceum, lias caused Hamilton. many students of Logic to hear or read something.' He himself was a mathematical Logician. Sir William's philosophy might be called poetical. I have heard his pupils speak of him as ' inspired ; ' and the clear mental sight which enabled the one to develop the doctrine of limits in the Differential Calculus was more at home in the quantification of parts of the syllogism than the genius which enabled the other to bring out his admirable analysis of cause and effect. After Sir William's death Mr. De Morgan wrote an obituary notice of him in the Athenceum, in which his intellectual powers and great research were set forth so luminously as to excite wonder in persons not acquainted with the writer's character.1 1 Readers of Mr. Herbert Spencer's volume on Sociology may have been puzzled by a passage (p. 412) in which the subject of this memoir appears to be accused of a misquotation, in his own interest, of some matter relating to priority of Logical discovery. It runs as follows :— One further point only will I name. Professor Baynes says: 'Professor De Morgan's emphatic rejection of Mr. Bentham's claim after examining the relevant chapters of his "outline" is in striking contrast to Mr. Herbert Spencer's easy- going acceptance of it.' Now, though to many readers this will seem a telling comparison, yet to those who know that Professor De Morgan was one of the parties to the controversy, and had his own claims to establish, the comparison will not seem so telling. To me, however, and to many who have remarked the perversity of Professor De Morgan's judgments, his verdict on the matter, even were he perfectly unconcerned, will go for but little. Whoever will take the trouble to refer to the Atheneeum, November 5, 1864, p. 600, and after reading a sentence which he there quotes, will look at either the title of the chapter it is taken from or the sentence which succeeds it, will be amazed that such recklessness of misrepresentation should be shown by a conscientious man, and will be there- after but little inclined to abide by Professor De Morgan's authority in matters like that here in question. The reader who ' takes the trouble ' to search out the passage in this Athenaeum a quarter of a century old will not find a ' matter like that here in question/ But he will be enabled to form a juster estimate of the above passage when he learns that the victim of Professor De Morgan's inaccuracy or unconscientiousness was neither Bentham nor Hamilton, but Mr. Herbert Spencer himself. The quotation itself occurs in a brief notice of Mr. Spencer's Principles of Biology, which I here reprint in full : — This is one of two volumes, and the two but part of a larger work : we can FORMAL LOGIC. 163 I have mentioned my husband's early interest in 1847 Berkeley's philosophy, and Mr. J. S. Mill's opinion of the manner in which some of Berkeley's arguments were affected by Mr. De Morgan's enunciation of the principle therefore but announce it. Biology means the Science of Life. As to what con- stitutes life, we expected to have to remain in the dark. Schelling says it is ' the tendency to individuation.' Richarand says, 'Life is a collection of phenomena which succeed each other during a limited time in an organised body : ' a very good definition. But is champagne alive as long as it fizzes, and a top as long as it spins ? De Blainville says, ' Life is the twofold internal movement of composition and decomposition, at once general and continuous.' Mr. Spencer formerly defined life as ' the co-ordination of actions.' Mr. Lewes says, ' Life is a series of definite and successive changes, both of structure and composition, which take place within an individual without destroying its identity.' Mr. Spencer ends with ' The definite combination of heterogeneous changes, both simultaneous and successive.' We have heard other definitions. Time was when life, bon ton, and the thing, were synonymous terms ; and, according to the City lady, it consisted in — Drinking tea, on summer afternoons, At Bagnigge Wells, with china and gilt spoons. All the definitions we have given apply to the life of organised material beings. Thus restricted, our definition is, that life is that state of a material being in which structure which performs functions is maintained by matter which the living being has power to draw from without, and which, when a man and an Englishman, he calls nutriment. In a later edition of the Sociology Mr. Spencer has, in answer to remonstrance, added a note of self-justification. This note is to the purpose so far as that it will enable readers to discern the real gravamen of Mr. De Morgan's offence. Whether Mr. Spencer had just cause for annoyance in his reviewer's evident want of respect for the science of Biology (that is, so far as it undertakes to define the nature of life) may be an open question. But with respect to the misquotation, a reading of Mr. Spencer's chapter containing his defini- tion will show that it was the result of a simple oversight. It appears that the quotation should have stood ' the definite combination of heterogeneous changes, both simultaneous and successive, in corre- spondence with external co-existences and sequences.' I do not pre- sume to enter here into any discussion of the definition, and therefore only cite it that those who understand- it (which I do not profess to do distinctly) may know the nature and extent of the injustice done to it in the review. I abstain from expressing an opinion as to the propriety of Mr. Spencer's mode of presenting his case, preferring to leave the decision to my readers. It is proper to add that Mr. Spencer has in private correspondence disclaimed all intention of imputing unconscientiousness. All that can be said of this is, that better ways of not imputing unconscien- tiousness might be suggested. M 2 164 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1847. of limits in the Differential Calculus. But his views of Berkeley's the psychology of Berkeley as compared with his own are philosophy. r J 5r • j j_- more generally interesting. In the chapter On Objects, Ideas, and Names in the Formal Logic, the writer says :— That our minds, souls, or thinking powers, use what name we may, exist, is the thing of which of all others we are most certain, each for himself. Next to this nothing can be more certain to us — each for himself — than that other things also exist ; other minds, our own bodies, the whole world of matter. But between the character of these two certainties there is a vast difference. Any one who should deny his own existence would, if serious, be held beneath argument ; he does not know the meaning of his words, or he is false or mad. But if the same man should deny that anything exists except himself — that is, if he should affirm the whole creation to be a dream of his own mind — he would be absolutely unanswerable. If I (who know he is wrong, for I am certain of my own existence) argue with him, and reduce him to silence, it is no more than might happen in his dream. . . . A celebrated metaphysician, Berkeley, maintained that with regard to matter the above is the state of the case ; that our impressions of matter are only impressions communicated by the Creator without any intervening cause of communication. Our most convincing communicable proof of the existence of other things is, not the appearance of objects, but the necessity of admitting that there are other minds beside our own. The external inanimate objects might be creations of our own thought, or thinking and perceptive functions. They are so sometimes in the case of insanity, in which the mind has fre- quently the appearance of making the whole or part of its own external world. But when we see other beings performing similar functions to those which we ourselves perform, we come so irresistibly to the conclusion that there must be other sentients like ourselves, that we should rather compare a person who doubted it to one who denied his own existence, than to one who really denied the external existence of the material world. In his interleaved copy of Formal Logic is a pencil note alongside of the foregoing : — To read Berkeley so as to give him a fair chance, some one GEORGE BOOLE. 165 else should turn the page over ; for, unphilosophical as it may 1847. be, the touch of the paper periodically intervening is a snake in Berkeley's the grass — an unphilosophical snake. It is hard to make philo- p L sophers of the fingers. No doubt it would favour Berkeley's scheme if no appeal to the external, through the senses, were possible to his reader. But surely this would be giving him more than a fair chance. Another interleaved note :— Personal identity is what every one has a clear conception of until he reads physiology and metaphysics. In that process he learns that the knife sometimes (gradually) gets a new handle, and sometimes a new blade, and all his notions of identity vanish, with nothing but memory left to puzzle him. ' Mais quand je me tate, et quand je me rappelle, il me semble que je suis moi.' If physiology teaches that we are automatic, it ought to find a new nam'e for the nightingale and chess-player, which can be wound up when they have run down. Dr. George Boole,1 author of The Laws of Thought, had introduced himself in the year 1842 to Mr. De Morgan by a letter on the Differential and Integral Calculus, then recently published. His character and pursuits were in many points like those of the author, who found great pleasure in his correspondence and friendship. He was a Mathematician as well as a profound and original stadent of Logic and Metaphysics. In 1839, the same year in which the First Notions of Logic appeared, he had sent hia Mathematical paper, Researches into the Theory of Ana- lytical Transfer, to the Cambridge Philosophical Journal, and in 1844 received the gold medal of the Royal Society for a paper On a General Method in Analysis. In the course of these speculations he was led to consider the possibility of constructing a calculus of deductive reason- ing; and he found that logical symbols conform to the same fundamental laws which govern algebraical symbols, while they are subject also to a special law. * Mental 1 Professor of Mathematics in Cork College. 166 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1 847. science,' says his biographer, c then became his study, Dr. Boole. Mathematics his recreation; yet it is a remarkable fact that his more important and valuable Mathematical works were produced after he had commenced his Psychological investigations.' ! In 1847, his attention having been drawn to the subject by the publication of Mr. De Morgan's Formal Logic, he published the Mathematical Analysis of Logic, and in the following year communicated to the Cambridge and Dublin MathematicalJournal a paper on the Calculus of Logic. His great work, An Investigation into the Laws of Thought, on which are founded the Mathe- matical Theories of Logic and Probabilities, was a develop- ment of the principle laid down in the Calculus, its design being ( to investigate the fundamental laws of those opera- tions of the mind by which reasoning is performed ; to give expression to them in the symbolical language of a calculus, and upon this foundation to establish the Science of Logic and construct its method ; to make that method itself the basis of a general method for the application of the Mathematical doctrine of probabilities ; and, finally, to collect from the various elements of truth, brought to view in the course of these inquiries, some probable inti- mations concerning the nature and constitution of the human mind.' I have given Dr. Boole's own statement of the design of his work at length because it conveys in few words, not only some idea of the aim of his investigations, but of the relations between the three sciences of Psychology, Mathe- matics, and Logic. An estimate of his mental work and its value to science was given in a few words, after his death in 1864, by my husband : — 6 His first paper in the Cambridge Mathematical Journal contains remarkable speculations which can here be described only in general terms, as extensions of the power of algebraic language. These papers helped to 1 Taken substantially from a notice of Dr. Boole in the Obituary Notices of the Royal Society, by the Rev. R. Harley. GEORGE BOOLE. 167 give that remarkable impulse which algebraic language 1847. has received in the interval from that time to the present. . . . That peculiar turn for increasing the power of mathematical language, which is the most characteristic point of Dr. Boole's genius, was shown in a remarkable way in his writings on Logic. Of late years, the two great branches of exact science, Mathematics and Logic, which had long been completely separated, have found a few common cultivators. Of these Dr. Boole has produced far the most striking results. In alluding to them we do not say that the time is come in which they can even be generally appreciated, far less extensively used. But if the public acknowledgment of progress and of genius be delayed until the whole world feels the results, the last century, which had the lunar method for finding longi- tude, ought to have sought for the descendants of Apollo- nius to reward them for his work on the Conic Sections.' ' Dr. Boole's system of logic shows that the symbols of algebra, used only to represent numbers, magnitudes, and their relations, are competent to express all the transformations and deductions which take place in inference, be the subject what it may. What he has added may be likened to a new dictionary, by consultation of which sentences written in the old grammar and syn- tax of a system take each a new and true meaning. No one is ignorant that the common assertion, " Nothing is both new and true," is a perfect equivalent of " Everything is either old or false, or both." Dr. Boole showed that a schoolboy who works a certain transformation, such as occurs in many a simple equation, has the form, though applied to very different matter, of this logical passage from one of two equivalents to the other. Taken alone, this is a pretty conundrum, if any one so please. But when looked at in the system of which it is a part, and when further considered as the produce of a mind which applied the same power of thought with rare success over the whole of the higher Mathematics, those who so look, 168 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1847. and so consider, are justified in presenting it as a type of Booief5 genius, and as a specimen which may give those who are not mathematicians a faint notion of an originality of speculation which, applied to the progress of science, has attained most useful results, and made a lasting name.' l My husband's regard for Dr. Boole was founded not only on admiration of his originality and power, but on sympathy with the moral and religious basis of his psychology ; for Dr. Boole, like Mr. De Morgan, believed that every system which rejected the existence of God as a constantly sustaining cause of all mental as well as physical phenomena, was like a consideration of the nature and growth of a tree without reference to the root. They did not often meet, for Dr. Boole's life was passed in Ireland after his appointment to the Mathematical chair in Cork ; but when his visits did occur, they were a real enjoyment to both — I believe I may say to all, for I shared in the pleasure of his conversation, ranging as it did over a wide field of thought, and touching poetry and metaphysical as well as mathematical science. My husband was, I believe, instrumental in some degree in obtaining the appointment at Cork, where Sir Robert Kane, who had married our friend Mr. Baily's niece, was Principal. sir My husband's friendship with Sir Frederick Pollock, Pollock. then Lord Chief Baron, had begun some time before this. Sir Frederick, who had been Senior Wrangler of his year, kept up his mathematics in the midst of his legal avoca- tions. He was a good Mathematician, among other matters interested in the properties of triangles and in magic squares, and, I believe, made some original dis- coveries. He often communicated these to Mr. De Morgan, who occasionally gave him a lift when any stumbling- block came in his way — at least, so he told me. He was a most agreeable companion, full of interest in all sub- jects of thought, and of all men I ever knew he seemed to 1 From a MS. unpublished paper, drawn up by Mr. De Morgan. COMPETITIVE EXAMINATION. 169 me to have highest value for talent of all kinds ; and of 1847. all well-read persons no one was so ready with an illus- tration or a quotation, either in prose or poetry, suited to the occasion. The Introductory Lecture given by the Mathematical 1848. Professor on the opening of all the classes in University tory College at the session of 1848, was on a question in education on which he had thought much, and 011 which his opinion had strengthened as his experience in teaching increased. He considered competition — the striving one against another for the highest place among boys or young men — to be among the crudities of an imperfect system, and to be as ineffectual in gaining the end either of making the best scholar or showing the best scholar, as its moral tendency is bad. It is quite true, as he himself has said to me in talking of this subject, that the boys are generous and sharp enough to see who deserves the prize, and very little ill-will or jealousy ever comes into the competition; but they do not know, any more than their teachers, how much easier the work is for some than for others ; and as the teacher cannot take this into account, injustice in one way can hardly be avoided. Hence his objection to marks in look- ing over examination papers. He said he could judge of the merits of the competitor from the whole work, but he could not reckon it up by marks, and he always refused to examine in this way. But he also felt and often ex- pressed his opinion of the terrible mischief to health done by urging a young man to go a little beyond what he could accomplish with interest and success if no undue pressure were put upon him, and by the e cramming ' to answer questions set at the pleasure of the examiners, in place of the natural and well-directed effort to learn the subject which an enlightened teacher can always evoke in an intelligent pupil. He himself, a most successful teacher, to whose instructions his pupils always looked back with the consciousness that to him they owed the 170 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1848. habits of sound thought and correct reasoning which were Education, among their best mental possessions, believed and said that it is owing to the imperfection of the teacher, not to the want of effort in the pupil, that the boy or young man fails to make progress. There are doubtless cases in which the capabilities are naturally wanting, and when a strain to do what cannot be done is useless ; but this only shows the necessity of discernment. Some of his friends, who greatly liked the lecture of this year, saying that all his arguments were unanswerable, still hesitated to give in to all his conclusions. His old friend and fellow- collegian, the Eev. Arthur Neate, among others, asked, if the stimulus of competition were taken away, what would be put in its place. I do not know what he replied to Mr. Neate, but I know what he said to me at the time. ' With such young men as those who struggle to be highest, and who suffer in the struggle, no stimulus is needed beyond their own pleasure in learning ; and if a teacher cannot make them feel this, he does not deserve the name of teacher.' Rev. Baden Among those who fully concurred with him was our competitive friend the Eev. Baden Powell. His thoughts on the tk>nsUna subject were suggestive. He wrote : — c Accept my thanks for a copy of your admirable Introductory Lecture. I wish it could be more widely circulated among our candidates here and at Cambridge. Perhaps there was something in this respect better in the system of our ancestors' Disputations, in lieu of examinations. I have often wished there were something like making a man read a dissertation on a subject of his own choosing, and then cross-examining him on his own argu- ment. Many would be plucked from not understanding their own meaning.' And Sir John Herschel wrote, ' I was greatly delighted with your protest against the cramming system in your opening lecture.' So also Dr. Whewell : ' I see you have been kicking against examination read- ing. So far good. But is your College going to do COM PETITIVE EXAMINATION. 171 anything which will really diminish it ? I should like to 1848. hear how any attempt of this kind prospers. I think the *kj- Dr- object an excellent one, and have some notions of my own as to the way in which it may be forwarded.' Such declarations of opinion from such men ought to have weight with their successors. Mr. De Morgan, while fully agreeing with Mr. Baden Powell on the wisdom of letting the student show what he can do by his original work, did not disapprove of examinations, not competitive ones, to test the amount of knowledge really gained. At that time his arguments were unheeded. The torrent of competition carried all before it, and not seldom swept down its victims to de- struction. Wiser notions are coming into men's minds, and the evil is acknowledged, though, from what I hear of the state of things at Cambridge, better methods are not yet found. Educators have to learn that the aim of education is to develop power, not to cram knowledge; and also, what is now never thought of, that mental and moral faculties come into activity at different times in different individuals, and that a talent which is inert or unnoticed in a boy of twelve, may be a brilliant element of the mind at twenty, if not forced up or crushed out by- mismanagement. The Astronomical Society's difficulties in obtaining Astrono- good and efficient chief officers were not over. It is so ™ety. long ago that I can betray no confidence by telling of these embarrassments in Captain Smyth's language : — SIR AND SEC., — I am but a temporary V.P., it is true, and therefore have little authority to shove my oar into others' row- locks, but the Sulus Eeipublicce shakes me to the centre. . . . The anniversary approaches, and so do our difficulties. The last time I saw friend Galloway he swore like a Flanders soldier that he would not serve another year ! This oath fills me with consternation, and my eloquence having failed, will you exert yours ? Then, again, there's the Council ! Did you ever ? Pray 172 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1 848. think of these things, exert your energies, and preserve us. So shall you deserve well of your contemporaries, of posterity, and of yours very truly, — W. H. SMYTH. The writer had filled the President's chair after Sir John Herschel and since the last difficulty, but it was again vacant, and Mr. De Morgan was very earnestly begged to take it. But he refused, for, while working harder than ever, if possible, to keep up the character and usefulness of the Society, his old reasons were still in force. He always feared the love of rank and money finding its way among the honest, useful workers who had hitherto composed it. He held up the example of the Royal Society as one in some ways to be avoided, and resisted every measure that would tend to bring in the sort of influence which had fettered its scientific work during the last century. His commentary on the Royal Society's history in times past will be found in the Budget of Paradoxes, as well as some allusion to the fact of his never having sought for membership. Touching the charge against Sir John Hill, that his animus towards the Society was occasioned by his failure to obtain admis- sion to its ranks, he says, ' Whether I could have been a Fellow, I cannot know ; as the gentleman said when asked whether he could play the violin, " I never tried." On the last point, however, Admiral Smyth gave evidence :— Know that I dined yesterday with the Philosophical Club, where was an ominous growl about your not being in the Royal Society, and, on the entreaties of several warm friends, I under- took to state the same to you. My own regret you are fully aware of. Pray, therefore, reconsider the case, for it is declared to be no favour at all to you, but a signal one to the Society, to allow your name to be hung up. Pray grant this, and your Petitioner will ever pray, &c. At this time a good many friends used to meet peri- odically at our house, and my husband enjoyed the opportunity they gave him of seeing them in an informal VARIOUS FRIENDS. 173 way. Besides several of those I have named, many of the 1848. Professors of University College and their families of course visited us. At this time the Rev. Alexander Scott, afterwards Principal of Owen's College, Manchester, filled a chair in University College. Mr. Arthur Hugh Clough was Principal of University Hall. M. Libri and his wife, Dr. Westland Marston, Miss Mulock, now Mrs. George Craik, Mrs. Follen, the abolitionist, and Mrs. Catherine Crowe, of ghostly renown, were among our guests. As rny husband was connected with the Athenceum, his vic- tims and co-reviewers were a lively element in these mixed assemblies, and we found in the meeting of persons of very opposite pursuits, that some who seemed the farthest removed from each other would often rejoice to meet, and were found in unexpected connection. Several friends addicted to what are called mystical studies, found their way to us, drawn partly by my own love of trying to unveil mysteries, partly by the sounder know- ledge which my husband, who did not quite despise the obscure sides of early science and mediaeval philo- sophy, could bring to the subject. Of these, I think the Rev. Jas. Smith, author of 'The Divine Drama of History,' was the most learned and the least appreci- ated by the world at large ; for his estimate of Sweden- borg as an authority on spiritual questions, and his admiration for Joanna Southcote as a ' typical woman,' were thought to throw discredit on his good sense. Swedenborg is not held utterly contemptible now — though, as Mr. Smith said then, he is least understood by his own followers. A not infrequent visitor on these evenings was Mrs. The Ladies Elizabeth Reid, a widow lady of property, whose father Bedford^ had been an influential Nonconformist, and who had long s'. w^ remember the feelings excited in England on negro slavery by < Uncle Tom's Cabin' — how it brought to a climax the sympathies and efforts of those who had long worked in the same cause, and how it stimulated those who had been inactive, because ignorant of what was going on, to consider how she or he could contribute towards diminishing the sufferings of the negroes. My husband felt intense interest in this question, and pity for the sufferers on both sides. I remember his sitting up the greater part of one night reading f Uncle Tom's Cabin,' and it was evident that the subject pressed heavily on his mind. We found several friends, among them some active abolitionists from the United States, who liked our idea of a National Address from Great Britain to the United States of America, to be signed by every one who could think and feel upon the subject. Mr. De Morgan drew up an address such as appeared to these friends calculated to encourage a wise effort at gradual but certain emancipation. It claimed for us, the writers, a right to offer sympathy and assistance, inasmuch as our countrymen and women had, until very lately, been accom- plices in the enslavement of the negro. It invited mutual consultation and counsel, and promised what help could be afforded by one nation to another in the tremendous work of getting rid of the burthen of slavery with as little injury as possible to slave-owners and slaves. One or two friends, men of worth and learning, gave some suggestions in the writing of this document, of which I have not now a copy. Had it been sent in its original form, and ac- cording to the wishes of its promoters, its influence would have been hardly a drop in the ocean ; and, as it after- wards proved, the time for remonstrance and argument was nearly over. But our design was not carried into COMPETITIVE EXAMFNATION. 183 effect as we intended. Before it could take form other influential opponents of slavery heard of it, and drew up an exhortatory address from the women of England to their sisters in America. This address was in the main moderate and good ; the feeling it expressed was unexcep- tionable, but it was couched in slightly religious terms, which gave it the appearance, as we thought, of an assumption of spiritual superiority over those addressed; and we, who had hoped for the concurrence of thoughtful and influential men, felt that our effort lost strength by being made exclusively a woman's movement. Accord- ingly the original promoters of the plan withdrew. I do not think the Address of the Women of England, which was well introduced and signed, did either good or harm in America. Our abolitionist friends lamented our failure, but beyond causing some slight irritation among the American ladies, who did not like its tone, and did not see in it the good feeling of the writers, it had no effect at all. In the Introductory Lecture on the opening of the 1853. session of 1848 my husband had distinctly stated some S of his strong objections to competitive examinations, and examina- their preparatory cram, with other parts of the educa- tional system as it was (I wish I could add, and is no longer) carried on. He had strongly expressed his disapproval of the course proposed by the University of London on its first establishment, and refused to take part in the examina- tions. At that time the enormous variety of subjects on which a young man was required to answer questions, without reference to any special ability, was stultifying and confusing even to the brain which could receive them all without damage to physical health. Apropos of this reckless and fruitless waste of mental effort, my husband wrote an illustrative ' Cambridge examination : ' — 184 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. Q. What is knowledge? Xondoif ^* ^ thing to be examined in. :amina- Q. What is the instrument of knowledge ? sns. . n . _. A. A good grinding tutor. Q. What is the end of knowledge ? A. A place in the civil service, the army, the navy, &c. (as the case may be). Q. What must those do who would show knowledge? A. Get up subjects and write them out. Q. What is getting up a subject ? A. Learning to write it out. Q. What is writing out a subject ? A. Showing that you have got it up. His objection to the methods pursued by the Univer- sity of London will be found in his letter (p. 222) written in answer to a request. In his strictures on the teaching of Physiology he had evidently not contemplated the possibility of the dissection of living animals for demonstration, now hap- pily forbidden by Act of Parliament. Had the question of its expediency for the sake of Science been put to him he would have said, as he always did on such occa- sions, that no imaginary end could justify means which were opposed to a positive law of humanity. And his own words on the subject of vivisection show what he thought of it. A surgeon had been describing to us some of Majendie's atrocities (since equalled by those of English and Scotch physiologists), and after our friend was gone I referred with horror to what he had said. My husband, who had been silent some time, said, c Don't talk of it;' then, in a minute or two, pausing between the sentences, he added, ' They will learn nothing by it. It's all of a piece. There is no God in their philosophy.' Some few years after this time he came home one day from the College evidently amazed, and told me that some pupils had applied to him to interfere in the following UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 185 circumstances. A cat had been poisoned ' for Scientific 1853. purposes ' before one of the classes. I asked him whether a repetition of this could not be prevented. He said, 'Certainly: it must not happen again. It was too bad. I shall speak to ,' another Professor on the medical side, ' and he will see to it.' Accordingly he spoke to - — , who satisfied him somehow that the thing would not recur. He had little notion that the Professor appealed to was and had been performing experiments before his pupils on living dogs and cats. These were of so cruel a nature that I will not describe them. They were detailed to me by a highly respectable surgeon, who had been a student of the class referred to. In November a circumstance which showed an un- Dr- Peene's egacv'. certain interpretation on the part of the College Council of the main principles of the foundation, made my husband look forward with abated confidence to the future of his Professorship. During the first years of University College, its prin- ciple of non-interference with religion had been well adhered to ; indeed, we received so many assurances on the subject at distribution speeches, opening lectures, and in many other ways, that no fear was felt, and my husband worked on in the happy conviction that he was aiding the great cause which he had most at heart. But for some little time before this he observed indications that the monetary success of the classes would be held a stronger motive in deciding questions connected with the working of the College, than its fulfilment of the pledges given of thoroughness in instruction and adherence to principle. He told me of these things with some anxiety. He saw, or thought he saw, a more decided tendency to temporise to secure the monetary success of the Institution in other directions ; and in the year 1853 an occurrence fraught with danger to the principle on which it had been esta- blished proved that his fears were well founded. 186 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. 1853. Dr. William Gurdon Peene, of Maidstone, left seven- legacy611 * ^een hundred pounds for the purchase of books for the library of University College. These books were to be works on foreign literature and science, and the choice of them was to be entrusted to the Professors of Greek, Latin, and Mathematics, provided these three were members of the Church of England ; ' Otherwise ' (as expressed in the will), 6 one or more shall complete their number by choosing qualified persons from the other Professors, private teachers, or quondam alumni resident in London. If none of the three named be members of the Church of Eng- land, I beg the Council to appoint.9 On hearing of this bequest, and learning that some members of Council were inclined to accept it with the prescribed conditions, Mr. De Morgan wrote to the chair- man of the Council as follows :— University College, Nov. 5, 1853. SIR, — A proposal now before the Council, and to be discussed this day, involves the application of a religious test to certain Professors, with a view to their exclusion from a certain office to be founded, in the event of their opinions not being of a certain class. I beg you will draw the attention of the Council to the following personal statement. The matter in question may never come before the Senate ; and if it did, I could not expect the Senate to convey to the Council remarks which refer entirely to my own personal position. If, when I first sought the honour of a chair in this College, I ha4 asked what security existed for my never being excluded from anything on account of my opinions, I should have been told, and with reason, that if so many public declarations as had been made, both printed and oral, uttered with every mark of sincerity and received with every appearance of enthusiasm, were not sufficient guarantees, I should do well to reconsider my intention of acting under those whom it was clear, by my question, that I mistrusted. Again, admitting that the College, corporately, would never institute a test or create a disqualification, if I had asked whether it would allow any one else to do so within its walls, or' if, giving credit for the full determination to maintain a perfect PEENE LEGACY. 187 religious equality among the students, I had asked whether it was 1853. possible a Professor might be placed under disqualification, I Lettertothe should have been told, and with reason again, that if the length Council« and breadth of the declarations I have alluded to were not sufficient to contain these and any other possible cases, all the lawyers who ever varied the counts of an indictment, or reckoned up the rights which pass with a freehold, would not be able to frame anything which would satisfy so suspicious a person. I joined the College in the full conviction that the plain English of scores of declarations would have warranted the pre- ceding replies. To my utter surprise, on the very first occasion on which money is offered on the condition of establishing a religious test, all I hear seems to indicate that it is far from certain that the offer will be rejected. What the Council has ever done to warrant such a want of certainty I cannot imagine; for if ever any Institution in this world honoured its faith and practised its professions, University College has done so, up to this moment, in the matter of religious equality. I myself should never have imagined the necessity of stating that my connection with this College was the consequence of the good and sound and religious principle shown in its leading maxim, but for the doubt to which I have referred. No one is so humble that faith need not be kept with him. In the name of all the declarations which the College has put forth from its first institution, I claim the performance of the obligation therein undertaken to maintain every student, every Professor, every officer in perfect religious equality with the rest, from the President of the Council down to the sweeper of the floor. This I claim with the most perfect respect for the Council, which, among many other reasons, I feel because the principle of the College has always been maintained, and, I fully believe, will still be maintained. Bnt I think it possible that the strength of the individual claim of those who have trusted the College, and have spent the best years of their lives in its service, may be overlooked, and for this reason only I trouble you with these remarks. — I am, sir, your most obedient servant, A. DE MORGAN. P.S. — The only precedent which bears on the matter, within my recollection is as follows : At the opening of the College, each student was desired to state whether he was Churchman or Dissenter, and the answer was affixed to his name in the list. The motive was the most innocent in the world ; it was the 188 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. statistical one. Great objection was raised. It was affirmed Peene that the College on its principle could have neither need to know nor right to inquire the religious status of any student. In deference to this objection, the force of which could not be denied, the practice was discontinued. This letter was laid before the Council. In reply to it a copy of the resolutions passed in the following month was received. My reason for giving them here will be found in the first resolution, which contains a full ac- knowledgment of the principle of religious equality. Copy of Resolutions passed by the Council on December 10, 1853. 1st. That the Council cannot but regret that the late Dr. Peene should have accompanied his valuable legacy by a direc- tion with regard to the function of choosing the books, which can, by any construction, be supposed to infringe that principle of religious equality to which the present Council and their pre- decessors have invariably adhered, as well in the appointment of Professors,1 the admission of students, and the award of honours, as in the general administration of the affairs of the College. Considering, however, that the function in question is totally unconnected with the ordinary duties of the Professors, and might have been assigned by the testator to persons unconnected with the Institution, and that it is to be regarded as a trust under Dr. Peene's will, and not as a duty imposed by the authorities of the College ; Considering, also, that any Professor will have the power of declining the trust altogether if he should for any reason think proper so to do, without being required to make any profession of his religious opinions ; And, lastly, considering that the value and utility of the proposed annual addition to the library are not likely to be in any degree impaired by the terms of the bequest — The Council have determined to accept Dr. Peene's legacy, being of opinion that in so doing they do not violate that prin- ciple of religious equality on which the College was founded.1 2nd. That, as some difference of opinion has existed on this question, the Council, being anxious to prevent any misappre- 1 The italics are mine.— S. E. DE M. PEENE LEGACY. 189 hensioii as to the grounds of their decision, have thought it 1853. right to record their reasons in the foregoing resolution. The prin- 3rd. That the Secretary be directed to communicate the fore- universit going resolutions, together with a copy of the extract from Dr. College. Peenc's will, to the three Professors named in the will. It will be seen by this that the principle of religious equality was still fully recognised twenty-six years after the foundation of the College, as having been that ' on which the College was founded,' and as having been ' in- variably adhered to by the present Council and their predecessors, as well in the appointment of Professors, the admission of students, and the award of honours, as as in the general administration of the affairs of the College.' I wish I could find, for the reason advanced for passing by a principle so distinctly acknowledged, any other word than that which my husband applied to it — ' a shuffle.' The determination to accept the books on the prescribed terms confirmed his fears, and on hearing of it his first impulse was to resign his chair. He was induced to remain by the consideration that the classes were not numerous, and that he wished to see the College in a more pros- perous state before quitting it altogether. I did not, for iny part, endeavour to influence him in this matter. Indeed, at this time my whole thoughts were filled most painfully by the illness of our eldest child, whose danger was not at first realised by her father. I think that when he spoke to me of the condition of affairs at the College, I did not strongly urge his leaving it, for I knew that his doing so would be a trial, and that he was then unpre- pared for the one already hanging over us. But, with reference to the resolutions, he said, ' They have got in the thin end of the wedge ; the next move will be a stronger one.' And so it proved. The end of this year was the beginning of a long period of sorrow and suffering to us. Our eldest dear child, Alice, who had caught cold after a severe attack of 190 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. measles, died before Christmas. I had feared the termi- Death of nation of the great weakness and delicacy which I had daughter, vainly tried to prevent. Her father did not realise the degree of illness till the end was near, and the blow fell heavily upon him. He was not then so used to death and sorrow as we afterwards became, and his want of sight and natural hopefulness of disposition made him unaware of the degree of danger in this and in other cases. This hopefulness left him after repeated sorrows. He always dwelt on the belief that those whom God loves are the early taken, but after we lost Alice his cheerfulness diminished, and I do not think he ever laughed so heartily, or was heard whistling and singing merry snatches of songs as he used to do when all our children were with us. I cannot write of these events. A few references to them will be found in his letters. 1854. The next year passed with scarcely any incident worthy of recording. After our loss my husband re- mained very much at home, seeing scarcely any one but his fellow-Professors in his daily visits to University College. An application was made to him to examine and give certificates in the City of London School, but this he de- clined on grounds connected with the methods and subjects of examination. In July he gave a lecture to the Society of Arts on a kindred subject, namely, On the Relation of Logic and Mathematics to other Branches of Science. This lecture, which was rich in argument and illustration, was only reported in abstract in the Society's Journal. One of its strongest positions was the insufficiency of Mathematics as a mental discipline for inducing logical habits of thought, unless in conjunction with some amount of direct Logical teaching. 1855. Mr. Sheep- jn ^ne autumn of 1855 our dear old friend Mr. shanks s de.ath Sheepshanks died at Reading. For the last few years DEATH OF RICHARD SHEEPSHANKS. 191 we had seen him but seldom, for he came to London only 1855. for the Royal Astronomical Society's meetings after the work on the Standard Scale was completed. This work had been very severe, and probably reduced his strength, which was never great. His death was a blow to many friends, to none more than to my husband, who went to Reading to the funeral — a painful duty, made less pain- ful by his habitual manner of looking at death. He wrote afterwards to me (for I was with the children at Eastbourne), — I returned this evening. I saw the body of my good old friend safely into a bricked vault, specially made for him and his sister, in the cemetery a mile out of the town. There were Airy, Johnson, Simms, myself, and some others. I saw Miss Sheepshanks for a few moments. . . . S. has, of course, made her his sole heiress and executrix. She Intends to give all his books and instruments where they may be most useful — perhaps to the Astronomical Society. The house is a very nice one, with a garden so full of rich coloured flowers as to make me almost admire it, with greenhouses, which I did not go into, and a little observatory. Miss Ann Sheepshanks, who had lived with her brother since the time he left Cambridge, lost with him her great interest in life. She devoted all the energy of a vigorous and self-sacrificing nature to the perpetuation of- his name and memory, and the honour due to his unostentatious but most useful efforts to promote Astro- nomical knowledge. There was much self-denial as well as exertion in her efforts to attain her end. She gave 10,000£. to the University of Cambridge for an Astro- nomical scholarship, to be called by his name. She pre- sented his instruments and books to the Astronomical Society, being in return elected to an honorary fellowship, and she collected materials for a memoir, which was drawn up by Mr. De Morgan. At this time the phenomena to which I have before slightly referred began to attract general notice, chiefly under the form of table-turning ; and natural philosophers, 192 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. to whose experience this and all its kindred manifestations were so completely opposed, sought for explanation in the credulity and inability to observe of the believers. Mr. Faraday combated the influx of superstition in a lecture On Mental Training., given in the spring of 1854, at the Royal Institution. In this lecture he affirmed a principle, which Mr. De Morgan commented on two years after in a review of the printed lecture in the AthenoBum. Will the time ever come when the reviewer's caution will be needless P The lecturer has laid down in the strongest and plainest terms the principle of Physics, which was the bane of what is known as the Philosophy of the Schoolmen. It occurs in a lecture On Mental Training, delivered May 6, 1854, at the Royal Institution. These are his own words : — ' The laws of nature as we understand them are the founda- tions of our knowledge of natural things. Before we proceed to consider any questions involving physical principles we should set out with clear ideas of the naturally possible and impossible.1 We stared when we read this, — ' set out in physical investiga- tions with a clear idea of the naturally possible and impossible ' ' We thought the world had struggled forward to the knowledge that a clear idea of this was the last acquisition of study and reflection combined with observation, not the possession of our intellect at starting. We thought that mature minds were rather inclined to believe that a knowledge of the limits of possibility and impossibility was only the mirage which constantly recedes as we approach it. We remembered the Platonic idea, as clear as the crystalline orbs it led to, that the planetary motions must be circular, or compounded of circular motion, and that aught else was impossible. We remembered with how clear an idea of the impossibility of the earth's motion the first opponents of Galileo started these maxims into the dispute. We doubt if in any mediaeval writer the principle on which they acted has been so broadly laid down as by our author in the phrases above quoted. The schoolmen did indeed make laws of nature the foundation of their knowledge, and clear ideas of possibility and impossibility helped them in the structure. But they rather did it than professed it. — Athenaeum, March 1855. Mr. Faraday believed that a full explanation of the SCIENCE AND SUPERSTITION. 193 movement of tables might be found in the unconscious 1855. action of the muscles of those present, and devised an instrument which he believed adequate to detect it, and to bring to the involuntary operators the conviction that the phenomena, imagined spiritual, had been caused by themselves. I remember hearing him at an evening party at Sir John HerschePs explain the action of this instrument, the indicator. A number of ladies and gentle- men listened with interest and attention ; the explanation seemed satisfactory, and was received with the respect due to the great fame of its author. Mr. De Morgan, who was known to be one of those whose credulity required a check, stood by with some amusement on his face. I almost wished him to tell some of those things which he had seen which made him doubt the sufficiency of the explanation. But he said it would be useless. This occurred before the lecture was printed, but it had, I think, been delivered. 194 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. SECTION VII. CORRESPONDENCE 1846-55, To Rev. Dr. Whewell. Camden Street, Oct. 21, 1846. 1846. MY DEAR SIR, — First, I am very much obliged by your kind invitation, but my lectures are imperative, and I cannot leave town in November. Next, as to Athenaeum police report, you have made worse guesses, unless indeed you never were mistaken in your life.1 Now as to the papers, The only wish I have for them to appear in one is that I may get my copies all at one time, and get them disposed of with one trouble. Whether, this condition being fulfilled, they are printed in the form of two papers or one does not matter, and I agree with you that they are distinct enough to be two, and might better be so. I am going to publish a work on Logic, which, as I told you, will appear soon after the paper. This is sufficient reason for not developing in the paper. Indeed, the Society must know that fact, and take it into consideration in deciding on the printing. There is of course an advantage in new things going first through the usual channels in which scientific matters are propagated, and so I should like the Transactions to have them. But, tola re perspecta, the Society may think otherwise, par- ticularly if there is heavy matter, typographically speaking, on hand already. Your suggestion about taking a subject I will think of, but what subjects run very thickly in syllogisms ? They are mostly full of proof of a very few. Some of Butler's Analogy or a chapter of Chillingworth would perhaps be promising. The syllogistic examples in books of Logic are literally nothing more than terms of one word or so substituted in the formal syllogism — I gave some examples (one of each mood) in the Penny Cyclopaedia, article Syllogism — which (a few 1 The l Athenaeum police report ' was a humorous skit upon the discovery of the planet Neptune. CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 195 at least of them) are more like ordinary sentences involving a 1846. syllogism. As to subjective and objective (I shall say ideal and objective, as subject-ivQ will not do for logic) I see your difficulty, and must consider whether I have not shown that I see it when the proof sheet comes. I have a great fear of not using the word in the sense of anybody else. The object itself, as far as we can think of it, is the idea of an object. The first step I make is the exist- ence of my own mind ; the next, that of other minds. If every- thing in existence be a dream of my mind, a thing of which I have ideal possibility, there are no objects. If you attempt to argue me into belief of your existence and beat me (not argue by beating me, which is the sort of argument by which Berkeley has been answered before now), I may not be able to answer you ; but all that is no more than might happen in my dream. I might sleep, as it is, and dream that I was arguing with some- body who proved to me most satisfactorily that I was awake. But getting by the argument of analogy the existence of other minds, I then begin to know objects — other minds get the same as I get, from somewhere. A source of ideas to more minds than one, or to all minds under the same circumstances, would be what I should call my definition of an external object, if, unfortunately, an external object under the same circumstances did not imply objects already. Call it then a test of objects ; material or not, is of no consequence. Hence the idea of external objects. By the idea I merely mean that which is in the mind. I should distinguish a horse in the mind from that which is in the mind about from whence a horse comes into the mind; idea of mental state produced, and idea of producing external cause ; idea of idea, and idea of object. When I speak objectively, I refer to my idea of the object ; when ideally, to my idea of the idea. But should not objects be divided into external and internal ? What am I to call an idea, looked at as presenting me with the idea of itself ? I talked of the idea of a horse ; I spoke then of my mind in the state of looking at itself picturing a horse ; another mind would have done. All this, I believe, is common enough. I have put it down that you may see how far our language agrees. Now as to my paper, pray observe that my notion, if such must be inferred of the case of the words subjective and objective, refers to the case in which all they have to do with formal Logic is stated. And my paper is wholly on formal Logic. The writers on this o 2 196 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. subject, so far as their confusion on this point entitles one to say they speak one way or the other, speak ideally, and not objectively. Nay, more, they even admit contradictory propositions as ideally enunciable, and subject to contradiction like others. Thus, * every collection of two and two is five ' is properly convertible into * some fives are collections of two and two.' Accordingly they give and take no denial except contradiction ; nothing with them overturns ' every A is B,' except ' some A's are not B's.' But when we come to apply Logic to the working wants of the mind we find another kind of denial, namely, denial by non- existence ; necessary non-existence, or contingent, as the case may be. When we speak objectively, there may be denial by contingent non-existence perfectly distinct from denial by con- tradiction. Thus objectively I deny that 'all unicorns are animals,' not by saying that there are unicorns which are not animals, but by saying that there are no such objects as uni- corns ; and so far as a unicorn is not, so far it cannot be animal, or anything else. Ideally, I admit, unicorns are animals ; my notion is the notion of animal. I distinguish, then, denial of the terms from denial of the copula. A is B ideally, objectively, or (say) x-itively. No ! for A has no x-itive existence. No ! for B has no x-itive existence. No ! for the x-itive existence of A and B belongs to is not, not to is. Formal Logic usually is made only to treat of the copula. To be strictly formal I need not introduce ideal and objective, more than English and French, black and white, x and y. Two species ot existence implied as belonging to the terms brought forward would do as well. But ideal and objective is the important dis- tinction in practice, and as to assertion or denial, so far as I want it, is easy. I should now ask you to consider some phraseology. There are seven definite relations of term and term. I do not call x ) y definite, for it consists equally well with y ) x and y- x- 1, 2. Start with identical and contrary, complete co-existence or complete mutual exclusion containing all things between them. As (man being the universe) North Briton and Scotsman, or Briton and alien. CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 197 3, 4. Suit -identical and super-identical, complete content or 1846. complete containing. Thus Londoner is a sub-identical of man, man a super-identical of Londoner (man being itself a sub- identical). The case in which the super-identical is the universe may give rise to the extreme super-identical and its extreme case of extreme identity. 5, 6. Sub-contrary and super-contrary. The first complete exclusion of one term from the other, both terms not filling up the universe as (man being the universe) Englishman and Frenchman. The second contrary overlapping, or where every- thing in the universe is either one or the other, and some things are both. As (terrestrial object being the universe) man and irrational being, if madness and idiocy be included under irra- tional. 7. Mixed (what ought to be the name ?), where each term has part in common with the other part not in common, and both terms do not fill up the universe. The usual form of asser- tion, as : — Some animals are dark-coloured. I want the word for mixed, and better ones for the others, if any. Mixed is : — Both have part in, part out, and there are which are neither. There is no hope of a word for all this. Some word formed to contain the idea of common part must do, and it should be Latin like the rest. I tried an experiment yesterday with my daughter of 8^ years old as to the ideas of necessity, and there was a dialogue as follows : — Q. If you let a stone go, what will happen ? A. It will fall, to be sure. Q. Always? A. Always. Q. How do you know ? A. I'm sure of it. Q. How are you sure of it ? Would it be true at the North Pole, where nobody has been ? A. Oh yes, people have been to the North Pole, else how could they know about the people who live there, and their kissing with their noses ? Q. That's only near the North Pole. Nobody has ever been at the Pole. A. Well, but there's the same ground there and the same air- Hotter or colder can't make the air heavier so as to make it keep 198 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. np the stones. Besides, I've read in the Evenings at Home that there is something in the ground which draws the stones. I am quite sure they would fall. Now, is there anything else you want to be a little more convinced of ? Q. How many do 7 and 3 make ? A. Why, 10, to be sure. Q. At the North Pole as well as here ? A. Yes, of course. Q. Which are you most sure of, that the pebbles fall to the ground a,t the North Pole, or that 7 and 3 make 10 ? A. I am quite as sure of both. Q. Can you imagine a pebble falling upwards ? A. No, it's impossible. Perhaps the birds might take them tip in their beaks, but even then they wouldn't go up of them- selves. They would be held up. Q. Well, but can't you think of their falling up ? A. Oh yes, I can fancy three thousand of them going up if you like, and talking to each other too, but it's an impossible thing, I know. Q. Can you imagine 7 and 3 making 12 at the Pole ? A. (Decided hesitation.) No, I don't think I can. No, it can't be ; there aren't enough. Here her mother came into the room. As long as the ques- tions were challenges from me it was all defiance and certainty, but the moment Mrs. De M. appeared she ran up to her and said, ' What do you think papa has been saying ? He says the stones at the North Pole don't fall to the ground. Now isn't it very likely they fall just as they do here and everywhere ? ' But she did not mention the 7 and 3=12 question, nor appeal to her mother about it. I remain, dear sir, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Rev. Dr. Whewell. Cam den Street, Camden Town, Oct. 26, 1846. MY DEAR SIR, — I have intended for some days to be at you once more in enunciation, on the remaining point of your letter. But I have been hindered by the necessity of looking sharply at the proofs of an account of Newton, which will appear shortly. In this matter I am the avvocato del diavolo, as he is called, who is the ex-offirio opponent at Rome of canonisation. There is CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 199 only one matter in which the facts, in the most objective sense, 1846. come out differently with me from other people. The Biog. Brit, says (copied by Brewster) that Whiston says that Newton was so offended by being represented as an Arian, that he therefore refused W. admission into the Royal Society. Refer- ence is made to the edition of W.'s memoirs of 1753, which bibliographers know to contain addit ions. This edition is scarce, but on consulting it, I find that the representation is an absolute falsification ; for W. gives the same reason as in the edition of 1749, which has nothing to do with any ism at all, or arian either. Sir D. Brewster has had a lucky escape. It was by mere accident I looked at the Biog. Brit., a work which I never trust in the life of Newton. He gives the same account, with the same reference, without saying he has taken it from anywhere else. Had I not happened to have found his source, I should have left him to clear himself by confessing copying without verification, or otherwise at his discretion. This failing of copy- ing references without acknowledgment has cost me hundreds of hours uselessly employed. Now to enunciation. We must define. If I carry a mes- sage out of my mind into yours, and you receive it, and know that I meant to send it, and if, moreover, I did mean to send it — I certainly enunciate, if the etymology be to give the meaning. But if logical enunciation in pure form be required, there must be subject, predicate, and copula (is or is not), all duly announced. According to Aristotle there must be in enunciation either truth or falsehood. Thus prayer, he says, is not enunciation. I say there is truth or falsehood, may be either. Are we on a question of definition of words, or on one of separation of things ? If I shut up my window, meaning to have you believe I am out, I enunciate ' A. De Morgan is not at home ; ' not verbally, if by enunciation is meant what I call verbal enunciation. So if I know you to be searching for, say your hat, and I point to the chair on which it lies, I do not say, 1 Your hat is on that chair,' but I convey, or mean to convey, the message to your mind. If I were to chalk an X on the great gate at Trinity, meaning to charge the management with peculation, and if others so understood it, the Judge would leave it to the jury to say whether both facts were proved, my intention and others' reception. If they were satisfied on 200 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1846. these points, he would instruct them that the X was a libel, and would leave them to find damages accordingly. There is no doubt that in law the enunciation of a libel is wholly independent of the symbols used. The rule of law is very distinct; writing, signs, pictures, &c., are equally libels, when intention is proved ; and in the civil matter the law decides, not the jury, whether the matter is libellous. The message intended, and received as intended, constitute with me enunciation. If others object to the word, I must choose another word ; but this is the thing I mean. Provided always that there is in reality subject, predicate, and copula. Whether message intended but not received is enunciation, that is, whether the difference should not have been a distinctive term, is matter of convenience. If I understood Arabic, to make what the French call a fiere supposition, and thinking you did, wrote you ^_ ^ ^ jj or whatever it might be (if more dots are wanted pray stick 'em in), and if you did not understand it, there might well be a word to denote this imperfect message. If I were only to raise an image or single idea, not affirma- tion of agreement or disagreement — as, if I were merely to call your attention by uttering the single word book, apropos of nothing, I could not be said to enunciate. If yon took it as my saying, ' It is my pleasure to say a word, viz. book,' you take an enunciation. If that were what I meant, the enunciation is perfect. But if I meant nothing but to set you wondering what I meant, there would be nothing going between us. This mere utterance would, I suppose, be the Xoyos o-^/xavn/cos of Aris- totle, as distinguished from the aTro^avrtKo?. What I contend for is, that that which is absolutely considered semantic may be apophantic by the understanding of the parties. I do not see how ' A is B ' is in any other way more apo- phantic than -* > which is no enunciation to you, but for what you know may be to another. This is enunciation to me — L >-^j- and to all who understand Mavor's short-hand. If prayer be not enunciation, as Aristotle says it is not, how does the other party know it is prayer ? Does not the pray-er say — I pray this? I have got some further development of my Logic in definite syllogisms, derived from the classification in my last ; with some curious entrance of a principle corresponding to that of like CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 201 signs give plus, unlike minus. Common a fortiori reasoning will 1840, take its place in a class of distinct syllogisms. I remain, dear sir, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir Rowland Hill. Camden Street, Cainden Town, May 5, 1848. MY DEAR SIR, — I am much obliged to you for the notice. 1848, I believe you when you say there are difficulties, because you get over them. Still, to my untutored mind, it is wonderful the Post Office should imagine that anybody would write in a book at 6d. a pound to save postage. I hope that the end of it will be that anybody may write anything, and I have reason as follows : — There is an old book I want ; for example, the first edition of Wingate's Arithmetic, 1630. If one of my country friends finds it, what will be in the inside of an old Arithmetic ? A hundred to one, something like — Ann Price, her booke, God give her grace therein to looke,1 scrawled over the inside of the cover and the fly-leaf — that is, over more than one page. Now it does not consist with the fit- ness of things that Ann Price's aspirations after Arithmetic in the seventeenth century should prevent a professor of Mathematics in the nineteenth from ascertaining the exact share of Wingate in the invention of decimal fractions. You stop the circulation of old books. However, as I said, if you say it can't be, I will believe you, provided the impossi- bility may be interpreted as temporary. But for the love of order, and the Constitution, and the other things that were dusted on the 10th ult., don't compel all the old-book people to stand up for equal rights and against class privileges. You'll make Chartists of Sir H. Ellis, and Hallam, &c., &c., to say nothing of, Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. 1 Ann Price's (probable) handwriting imitated. — S. E. 202 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. To Dean Peacock on his Marriage. 7 Camden Street, Oct. 21, 1847. 1847. MY DEAR SIR, — This morning I found two cards for me at the College, which informed me of your marriage, of which I had heard nothing. In fact, for anything I knew, you might have been as confirmed a Benedict as any Pope of that name. But owing to the practice which ladies have of not putting the name they leave as well as the one they take, I had no guess who Mrs. Peacock had been ; and the theory of probabilities does nothing in the way of inferring the probable name which a bride quits, having given that which she takes. So I resolved on writing hearty congratulations and warm good wishes on the existing a priori (or if you will have it that priors are out of question by their vows, say a diaconiori) presumption that you were well able to know what was good for yourself. But it so happened that an Ely man saw the cards in my hand, and, as the phrase goes, told me all about it; and I was enabled to conclude from other evidence that I might just keep my good wishes, and put good prophecies in their place. Take them both, however. As to this practice of putting only one value of the variable on wedding cards, I object to it altogether ; in fact, I denounce it, and will prove my objection good. I suppose 110 one will deny that the cards represent the instant of the ceremony at which the contract becomes indissoluble ; for before that moment the announcement would be presumptuous, and to suppose that any time elapses after it would be to suppose that a man takes that time to consider whether he will acknowledge his marriage, which is absurd. This being granted, let A B represent the duration of the lady's life, and let M be that moment of the ceremony at which the contract becomes indissoluble. Let the lady's name during A M be Selwyn, and during M B Peacock ; then, because by common courtesy a lady is not a discontinuous fraction, it follows that what is true up to the limit is true at the limit, therefore at the moment M her name is Selwyn. But for a similar reason her name at the same moment is also Peacock ; therefore at the instant M she has both names, whence both ought to appear on the wedding cards. Q.E D. I have your books on arithmetic in safety and memory, and am only waiting to return them till I have put a copy of my CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 203 Logic into the parcel, which I hope to do in about a fortnight. 1847. As matters are, I feel no compunction at having kept them so long. I beg to offer my best compliments to Mrs. Peacock, and my apologies for introducing myself by inserting her name into a demonstration. But first principles must be carried to their full extent ; and I remain, my dear sir, Yours most sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To T. K. Hervey, Esq. Dec. 1848. DEAR HERVEY, — .... A man named Lacroix, a French 1848. bibliomaniac, has been over here. He came over with strong prevention against Libri, but examined his case here, and is gone back very angry with his accusers. He is preparing a pamphlet de son chef in defence of Libri, of which the latter promises me an early copy, or proofs if he can get them. So far good. But if you could light on any information about Lacroix (nicknamed Jacob Bibliophile in his own country), or any one of his biblio- graphical publications, so much the better ; for this Lacroix must be looked after. Panizzi and Libri unite in declaring that of upwards of 1,700 manuscripts, sold by Libri to Lord Ash- burnham some years ago, Lacroix named them all, with a few exceptions, and described where they originally came from, merely from his knowledge of existing manuscripts and their localities, thus negativing from his own personal knowledge the charge of theft as to very nearly the whole lot. This story is so extraordinary that, if true, as I cannot doubt it must be in the main, this same Lacroix should be brought forward in Eng- land and his works noticed. I can believe such a story, for I have heard such things well attested of people who pass their lives in studying the physics of books and MSS. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To T. K. Hervey, Esq. Dec. 1848. ' And serve it with Hervey's sauce.' JERDAN. DEAR HERVEY, — That unconquerable mania which you have for thinking yonr puns as good as mine (you say better, but I don't believe you think that — the most singular fancies are 204 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS UE MORGAN. 1848. sometimes carried further than they go, out of mere bravado) is a study for the psychologist. I shall forward a statement to Sir W. Hamilton. Pray when within two years have yon mentioned Lacroix ? However, since you know him. which I didn't, yon now know that he has a memory. And what makes you say that I never read any papers but those of a mathematician ? Mathematica ! quoth he — are you a mathematician ? and did I not read all the we-should-gladly- forget-them-if-you-would-let-us articles, which procured you the memorable rebuke (which you will never get over) with which I have headed this letter ? And as to preventions, was I not talking of a Frenchman ? and if he had described himself, would he not have used the word ? And did I not get the word from Panizzi, and was I not assured of an Italian borrowing a Frenchman's phrase — who deniges of it ? Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Capt. Smyth. 7 Camden Street, Dec. 19, 1848. MY DEAR CAPTAIN SMYTH, — Pray what is the matter with yon ? Pray write and say yon are quite well ; but mind, I detest lying of all things, so be snre yon speak the truth. I took a solitary glass of porter yesterday to your recovery, for I did not choose to admit any of the profane dogs about me to the ordinance, which is quite above their appreciation. Airy gave ns a very good telegraph lecture. I mean on telegraph, not by telegraph. But time may come when we shall sit down in our own room and hear him lecture from Greenwich.1 Seriously, let me know how you are. With kind regards to all, I am yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. March 18, 1849. 1849. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Sir H. N. is as correct as his authori- ties. Censorinus, who gives the most distinct account, says that 1 I do not suppose the writer had the smallest conception of the wonderful literalness with which his prediction would be fulfilled. It must be remembered that the telephone was not even dreamed of thirty -three years ago. — S. E. DE M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 205 there was leap-year every fourth year, but does not say from 1849. whence the years were reckoned. We have no authority for saying which particular years were leap-years — either in the pre- Augustan piece of the Julian Calendar, or at the start made after the Augustan reformation. Nevertheless, I think a little train of reasoning will bring us to the following theorem. The Julian Calendar starts with what, by reckoning back, we should call January 1 of the year — 45, on the supposition that 0 does not exist, but that we pass from 4-1 to — 1 consecutively, on the supposition that every fourth year is leap-year. There is much reason to suppose that Caesar began his year on January 1 because there was a new moon on this day. Other- wise it is likely he would have commenced it on the shortest day preceding. He is thought to have gratified the feelings of the Romans by making his start on a new moon day, and Macrobius, in the words ' Annum civilem Caesar habitis ad unam dimensi- onibus constitutum, edicto palam proposito publicavit,' is held to have alluded to this. Now the fact is that January 1, —45, back-reckoned as before noted, is found to have been a day of new moon. Dr. Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (a book you ought to have — there is a good article on the Calendar) says it was at 6h. 16m. P.M. My rough calculation gives lOh. 55m., which I take to be within a quarter of an hour. Now, as our tables reckon back (old style) upon the suppo- sition of uninterrupted leap-year every four years, I take it that, as to the interval, we may depend upon knowing the exact number of days that have elapsed. But how are we to explain the dropping into leap-year at +4? Diagram I. shows us — J. Julian leap-year. P. Priests' mistaken leap-years. A. Augustan leap-year after the suspension. At the end of the year 4, the priests' leap-years and one Augustan make 13, just what there ought to haye been by our back-reckoning. If, then, +4 was Augustan leap-year, we are all right. I assume that the first year of the reckoning was cer- tainly not a corrected year. Accordingly the first priests' leap- year was —42 J., showing the Julian intention was never carried into effect. 206 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1849. Diagram II. shows how, according to the well-known Roman mode of counting, the edict of Augustus in —8, there shall be no leap-year for twelve years, would be accounted to make +4 leap- year. If a man had been sentenced on Monday evening to six days' imprisonment, he would have been let out on Saturday morning. This seems to me to explain how we may reckon intervals from our January 1 —45, but from thence to +4 inter- vals must be corrected, though not after. The dates — 45 and — 8 are well fixed by the consuls being named. The general impression is that the first of Caesar's years, — 45, itself was his bissextile. This seems to me absurd. Caesar did not care about equinoxes. All he wanted was to keep an average of 365J, and correcting before the error had accrued would surely never have struck him or Sosigeues. Moreover, the preceding theory accounts for 4w, and shows how the new moon may be made to fall where we know it did. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Wm. Heald. DEAR HEALD, — .... Talking of curious powers, tell me what you think of the following story. It quite beats me. I have seen a good deal of mesmerism, and have tried it my- self on for the removal of ailments which required much medicine, but which mesmerism met without medicine from the time it was employed. Of the curative powers of this agent I have no more doubt than one has of things which he has con- stantly seen for years. But this is not the point. I had fre- quently heard of the thing they call clairvoyance, and had been assured of the occurrence of it in my own house, but always considered it as a thing of which I had no evidence direct or personal, and which I could not admit till such evidence came. One evening I dined at a house about a mile from my own — a house in which my wife had never been at that time. I left it at half-past ten, and was in my own house at a quarter to eleven. At my entrance my wife said to me, ' We have been after you,' and told me that a little girl whom she mesmerised for epileptic fits (and who left her cured), and of whose clairvoyance she had told me other instances, had been desired in the mes- meric state to follow me to Street, to 's house. The thing took place at a few minutes after ten. On hearing the name of the street the girl's mother said, — CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 207 1849. ' She will never find her way there. She has never been so far away from Camden Town.' The girl in a moment got there. * Knock at the door/ said my wife. 'I cannot,' said the girl ; ' we must go in at the gate.' (The house, a most unusual thing in London, stands in a garden ; this my wife knew nothing of.) Having made the girl go in and knock at the door, or simulate it, or whatever the people do, the girl said she heard voices upstairs, and being told to go up, exclaimed, ' What a comical house ! there are three doors,' de- scribing them thus.1 (This was true, and is not usual in any but large houses.) On being told to go into the room from whence voices came, she said, * Now I see Mr. De Morgan, but he has a nice coat on, and not the long coat he wears here; and he is talking to an old gentleman, and there is another old gentleman, and there are ladies,' This was a true description of the party, except that the other gentleman was not old. * And now,' she said, 'there is a lady come to them, and is beginning to talk to Mr. De Morgan and the old gentleman, and Mr. De Morgan is pointing at you and the old gentleman is looking at me.' About the time indicated I happened to be talking with my host 011 the subject of mesmerism, and having mentioned what my wife was doing, or said she was doing, with the little girl, he said, ' Oh, my wife must hear this,' and called her, and she came up and joined us in the manner described. The girl then proceeded to describe the room ; stated that there were two pianos in it. There was one, and an ornamental side- board not much unlike a pianoforte to the daughter of a poor charwoman. That there were two kinds of curtains, white and red, and curiously looped up (all true to the letter), and that there were wine and water and biscuits on the table. Now my wife, knowing that we had dined at half-past six, and thinking it impossible that anything but coffee could be on the table, said, ' You must mean coffee.' The girl persisted, ' Wine, water, and biscuits.' My wife, still persuaded that it must be coffee, tried in every way to lead her witness, and make her say coffee. But still the girl persisted, ' wine, water, and biscuits,' which was literally true, it not being what people talk of under the name of a glass of wine and a biscuit, which means sandwiches, cake, &c., but strictly wine, water, and biscuits. 1 A little diagram is given of these doors (she counted three, but indicated more) in the letter. — S. E. DE M. 208 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1849. Now all this taking place at twenty minutes after ten, was told to me at a quarter to eleven. When I heard that I was to have such an account given, I only said, ' Tell me all of it, and I will not say one word ; ' and I assure you that during the narration I took the most especial care not to utter one syllable. For instance, when the wine and water and biscuits came up, my wife, perfectly satisfied that it must have been coffee, told me how the girl persisted, and enlarged on it as a failure, giving parallel instances of cases in which the clairvoyants had been right in all things but one. All this I heard without any interruption. Now that the things happened to me as I have described at twenty minutes after ten, and were described to me as above at a quarter to eleven, I could make oath. The curtains I ascertained next day, for I had not noticed them. When my wife came to see the room, she instantly recognised a door, which she had forgotten in her narration. All this is no secret. You may tell whom you like, and give my name. What do you make of it ? Will the never-failing doctrine of coincidence explain it ? I find that there are people who think that the house in the garden, the number of doors on the landing, the two gentlemen beside myself, and ladies, the red and white curtains, the singularity of the loops, the two so-called pianos, the lady joining myself and one old gentleman apart from the rest, the wine, water, and biscuits, the truth of the whole and the absence of any- thing false, are all things that may reasonably enough arise by coincidence, when the daughter of a poor charwoman (twelve years old1) undertakes to tell a lady all about where her husband is dining, in a house where neither has ever been. I have seen other things since, and heard many more ; but this is my chief personal knowledge of the subject. Yours very sincerely, A. DE MosGAN.2 1 She was turned eleven — in her twelfth year. 2 I heard all about the house and furniture, &c. , before the girl told me what was going on. Mr. De Morgan has represented it to Mr. Heald as occurring after, and it is quite possible that I told him in this order. But I never heard of this letter till after his death. — S. E. DE M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 209 To Sir John Herschel. 41 Chalcot Villas, March 26, 1850. MY DEAE SIR JOHN, — I never heard the polar axis approxima- 1850. tion. Pray throw it out in type, for it is quite a fanny thing that we beat the French after all. And the polar axis is the only sensible diameter the earth has got. He keeps snug and quiet, and lets all the others spin about him. I think a dialogue might be written between the polar axis and an equatorial diameter — quiescence against restlessness. And so Logical systems are bothersome. I have got sixty- four more syllogisms symbolised, in which terms take quantity from others. As — For every Z there is an X, which is not Y. Some Y's are Z's. Required the inference. Symbol ('((). Inference (. ( . Some X's are not Z's. These are really h ard. To give an instance. ' To say nothing of those who succeeded by effort, there were some who owed all to fortune, for they gained the end without any attempt whatever, if indeed it be not more correct to say that the end gained them. But for every one who was successful with or without effort, at least one could be pointed out who began, but abandoned the trial before the result was declared. And yet so strangely is desert rewarded in this world, there was not one of these faint-hearted men but was as fortunate as any of those who used their best endeavours.' I will answer for it that if this were presented to any writer on logic without warning, he would pass it over as not self- contradictory at least. But for all that, it contains the same error as the following : — ' All men are animals, and some are not.' Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Whewell. 7 Camden Street, May 25, 1850. MY DEAR SIR, — I am much obliged to you for the continuation of the chain of events. I see you are propagating an undulation P 212 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. inform the English, public how the matter stands. All this is written without communication with him. Yon will, of course, take care to be well informed as to the nature of the above proceeding. That being the case, I think you will probably find that the matter stands, to any reasonable mind, just where it did. If you ' state the position in which the case stands,' I think it most likely that you will do nothing which any friend of M. Libri can regret. On casting my eye over your note, I marked the words, which I missed at first, ' Thai proof has been given in a court" of law ; on what amount of valid evidence I cannot say.' Now I say that you will be able to ascertain that there has been neither proof nor evidence — only indictment — allegation and judgment by default of appearance. Of course, a tender of evidence is implied in the indictment, and, for aught I know, in the recital. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Whewell. July 12, 1850. MY DEAR SIR, — I have got my paper on logic out of hand, and have begged the Pitt Press to retain one of my copies for you, and to send it to you ; which if they neglect, I shall be much obliged by your reclaiming, as the French say. I have to-day got Sir W. Hamilton's system for the first time in a full and acknowledged form. His pupil, Spencer Baynes, has published the essay on it which got the prize in 1846 ; the very essay, the requisites for which, sent to me, made the founda- tion of Sir W. H.'s charge of theft.. It has appendices and a note by the arch-syllogist himself. I and Boole come in, without being named, for a lecture against meddling with logic by help of mathematics. Pray get this work and read it care- fully. My next thoughts about the subject will be on the relation between the laws of enunciation and the laws of thought, and particularly with reference to certain invasions of each other's province which I imagine to exist. I shall return to an objection of yours to my assertion that prayer enunciates. (You may have forgotten it, but I have all my logic correspondence together, and have been looking over it.) You say that under such an extension a man who shuts up his window enunciates that he is not at home. I dispute your CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 213 example as to matter, though not as to form, if you choose a 1850. better one. Closed windows may denote death or absence, &c. But change it thus. A man who ties a ivliite glove on his knocker enunciates that a child is born in the house. I believe there is no ambiguity of meaning here. I hold that he does enunciate. However, this is all for consideration. I remain, dear sir, Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. Oct. 15, 1850. DEAR SIR JOHN, — .... I always advance the following as the infinitely small quan- tity which is the most puzzling of all. All others are mental creations, but this one seems different. Let ifc be granted that a target which must be hit can be con- ceived. It may be the whole enceinte of the room, ceiling, floor, walls, &c. Let it granted that the fixing of an arrow with a mathemati- cal point can be distinctly conceived. I don't ask for workman- ship. Let A be a point in the target. Since some point must be hit, and all are equally likely, there is some chance of hitting A — that is, it is not impossible to hit A, which is synonymous. But the chance of hitting a given point is certainly less than any that can be assigned. Therefore there does exist in the mind an idea of a quan- tity which, not being nothing, is less than any that can be assigned. In geometry we do not meet the same difficulty, because we learn (how correctly I give no opinion on) to know the point, line, surface, and solids as different species of magnitude, but belief cannot be subdivided into different species. Is not an expecta- tion of hitting A homogeneous with that of hitting some point within a given area ? I do not know whether you have returned. I hope all your clan are well, and you yourself not disposed to give any hints about your scientific life being terminated, as you did a while ago. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. From my examination room, where I shall sit two hours and a half more, without anything to do except just what I please, 214 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1850. so don't say I write in a hurry. University College, London, October 5, 9h. 30m. A M. + the error of my watch, 1850, the last year of the first half of the nineteenth century, let who will call it ihe first year of the second half. To Rev. W. Heald. 7 Camden Street, Aug. 18, 1851. 1851. DEAR HEALD, — It has become quite the regular thing for the depth of vacation to remind me — not of you, for anything that carries my thoughts back to Cambridge does that, — but of in- quiring how you are getting on, of which please write speedy word, according to custom, once a year. For myself I have nothing particular to report. My wife and seven children are all at Broadstairs— as they were when I last wrote — so that the in- formation is that they really eame back in the interval. 1 pre- sume you really have not come to town to see the Exhibition, supposing that you would surely have let me know. Are you not coming ? Whether I with my short sight should know you again after a quarter of a century, plus a quarter of a year, is a problem I should very much like to solve. But you seem determined not to furnish the data. It seems to me that I must have written to you just before the Pope made his onslaught, which has occupied people ever since. I remember, soon after the Catholic Emancipation Bill was carried, reminding a friend of mine, a Catholic barrister, that that Bill was an experiment — a very proper experiment — one it was disgraceful not to have tried before ; but still an experiment, in trial of whether it really was practically possible that people with any foreign allegiance, call it spiritual or any- thing else, could permanently exercise the rights of citizenship here. The occasion was his speaking very seriously and earnestly of it being a matter of discussion among the Roman Catholic body whether they had not in right of the E. Bill a right to proceed in Chancery against the Colleges at Oxford and Cambridge, which were founded on condition of praying for the souls of the founders, to make them either so pray or give place to those who would. It gave me at the time (the man being neither a san- guine man nor a fool) a fixed idea that from the very time of the Emancipation Bill passing there was a settled purpose of legal invasion. And I have never since faltered in the opinion that, be it settled how it might, the time would come when, on poli- tical grounds, the question would be reopened ; and I prophesy it OOBBESPONDENOE, 1846-55, „ 215 now within a few years — that is, I foretell a discussion whether 1851. the mere circumstance of owning a foreign power in any sense and manner whatever is or is not to be an absolute disqualifica- tion from even voting for a member of Parliament. I have just heard from Arthur Neate, who with a wife and two children is doing near Alvescot what you are doing at Leeds, saving that his two parishes put together would not soul a tenth part of the bodies in your one. His father and mother are still both alive, though both very old and failing. Of other people I know nothing, I mean of your and my contemporaries. It is long since I have seen any one. I met Farish the other day, old and deaf. I am not sure I do not remember his father looking younger. I dare say you, like myself, look not very old of your age, for we both looked older than we were at Cambridge, so that if you have a provincial synod, you will hardly look ancient enough to be one of the patres couscripti. But you have not a Bishop, I am afraid, who will bring your part of the world abreast of H. Exon. Peace be with him, I was going to say, but I know she won't. Resolve me this. If our old friend P were alive, would he be Puseyite or not ? The only one Cambridge man that I ever annoyed by taking it for granted that he was not Puseyite when he really was a strong one, was a man of whom I could tell the following story, but I won't (that is to say, you are not to repeat it, for it might get round) . I knew him at Cambridge when he was a great friend of B , whom you perhaps have met at Neate's. A few days after he was ordained he came to see me, and being fresh off the anvil he could not but talk a little theology. So as he got over the ground he came at last to the following sentence, which brought him up all standing, as they say at sea — you are to imagine a sudden start of recollection at the *, I having stared at f : — ' But you see those Catholics made a sacrament of baptism t *. Oh, by-the-bye, so do we.' Fact, upon my honour; no exaggeration. But he is now with the Bishop of Exeter on the point. I wish you would do this : run your eye over any part of those of St. Paul's Epistles which begin with IlavAo? — the Greek, I mean — and without paying any attention to the meaning. Then do the same with the Epistle to the Hebrews, and try to balance in your own mind the question whether the latter does not deal in longer words than the former. It has always run in my head 216 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1851. that a little expenditure of money would settle questions of authorship in this way. The best mode of explaining what I would try will be to put down the results I should expect as if I had tried them. Count a large number of words in Herodotus — say all the first book — and count all the letters ; divide the second numbers by the first, giving the average number of letters to a word in that look. Do the same with the second book. I should expect a very close approximation. If Book I. gave 5-624 letters per word, it would not surprise me if Book IT. gave 5*619. I judge by other things. But I should not wonder if the same result applied to two books of Thucydides gave, say 5713 and 5728. That is to say, I should expect the slight differences between one writer and another to be well maintained against each other, and very well agreeing with themselves. If this fact were established there, if St. Paul's Epistles which begin with ITcuAos gave 5*428 and the Hebrews gave 5'516, for instance, I should feel quite sure that the Greek of the Hebrews (passing no verdict on whether Paul wrote in Hebrew and another translated) was not from the pen of Paul. If scholars knew the law of averages as well as mathema- ticians, it would be easy to raise a few hundred pounds to try this experiment on a grand scale. I would have Greek, Latin, and English tried, and I should expect to find that one man writing on two different subjects agrees more nearly with himself than two different men writing on the same subject. Some of these days spurious writings will be detected by this test. Mind, I told you so. With kind regards to all your family, I remain, dear Heald, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, Aug. 29, 1852. 1852. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — . . . Induction seems to lead to the conclusion that an astronomer who is Master of the Mint gets some odd mode of chronology. The first cut a great piece off the beginning, the second will cut a great piece off the end, and doom us all to be squabashed in 1865. The next, I suppose, will cut a great piece out of the middle, which will be the most CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 217 singular job of the three. What if he should say that the 8th, 1852. 9th, and 10th centuries never existed ? I wish they hadn't. When De Gasparis gets his next planet, he and Hind will be six of one and half a dozen of the other. Do you mean to say that just as we have got the place snug, drained, lighted, and electro- wired and railed, that as soon as we shall just have learnt to have an idea of behaving to each other like people whose posterity may in time be Christians, we shall have to become fossils, and megatheriums, and such like, for smarter chaps than ourselves to write books upon ? 1 will never believe it till I see it, and then only half. Why, it is only just four hundred years since printing was invented. A book, with ordinary care, will last a thousand years. It is astonishing what good condition those of 1480 are in, even after a course of bookstalls. Surely the nature of things is to live their lives out. . . . Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Dean Peacock. 7 Camden Street, Aug. 30, 1852. MY DEAR SIR, — . . . All I know about Young personally is, that one evening in 1828, when I first pushed my nose into the scientific world, I was presented to Young, Davies Gilbert, and Wollaston. Wollaston said, when I was introduced as Professor of Mathematics in the University of London, * Are they to have a Professor of Mathematics ? ' I told him they had one, and that I was he. Nothing more passed. Young lifted his eye- glass, and made his bow serve the double purpose of acknow. ledging the introduction, and bringing his eyes to the lenses. He made me certain that he saw me, and impressed me with an idea from his manner that he was fine. Perhaps he was only shy — shyness takes every other form to avoid its own. Davies Gilbert was the only one of the three who had the manners of a man of the world. I believe I never saw the two first again. I never knew till many years afterwards that I was well acquainted with some members of Young's family. His brother, Robert Young, was a Quaker, who married, as I was told when a boy, a lady, who was not a Quakeress, and was disowned by the sect. This lady was a most intimate friend of my mother, and Robert Young is one of the earliest persons I can 216 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOKGAN. 1851. ^a* a little expenditure of money would settle questions of authorship in this way. The best mode of explaining what I would try will be to put down the results I should expect as if I had tried them. Count a large number of words in Herodotus — say all the first book — and count all the letters ; divide the second numbers by the firnt, giving the average number of letters to a word in that book. Do the same with the second book. I should expect a very close approximation. If Book I. gave 5*624 letters per word, it would not surprise me if Book II. gave 5' 619. I judge by other things. But I should not wonder if the same result applied to two books of Thucydides gave, say 5713 and 5728. That is to say, I should expect the slight differences between one writer and another to be well maintained against each other, and very well agreeing with themselves. If this fact were established there, if St. Paul's Epistles which begin with TlavXos gave 5*428 and the Hebrews gave 5!516, for instance, I should feel quite sure that the Greek of the Hebrews (passing no verdict on whether Paul wrote in Hebrew and another translated) was not from the pen of Paul. If scholars knew the law of averages as well as mathema- ticians, it would be easy to raise a few hundred pounds to try this experiment on a grand scale. I would have Greek, Latin, and English tried, and I should expect to find that one man writing on two different subjects agrees more nearly with himself than two different men writing on the same subject. Some of these days spurious writings will be detected by this test. Mind, I told you so. With kind regards to all your family, I remain, dear Heald, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John HerscheL 7 Camden Street, Aug. 29, 1852. 1852. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — . . . Induction seems to lead to the conclusion that an astronomer who is Master of the Mint gets some odd mode of chronology. The first cut a great piece off the beginning, the second will cut a great piece off the end, and doom us all to be squabashed in 1865. The next, I suppose, will cut a great piece out of the middle, which will be the most CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 217 singular job of the three. What if he should say that the 8th, 1852. 9th, and 10th centuries never existed ? I wish they hadn't. When De Gasparis gets his next planet, he and Hind will be six of one and half a dozen of the other. Do you mean to say that just as we have got the place snug, drained, lighted, and electro- wired and railed, that as soon as we shall just have learnt to have an idea of behaving to each other like people whose posterity may in time be Christians, we shall have to become fossils, and megatheriums, and such like, for smarter chaps than ourselves to write books upon ? I will never believe it till I see it, and then only half. Why, it is only just four hundred years since printing was invented. A book, with ordinary care, will last a thousand years. It is astonishing what good condition those of 1480 are in, even after a course of bookstalls. Surely the nature of things is to live their lives out. . . . Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Dean Peacock. 7 Camden Street, Aug. 30, 1852. MY DEAK SIK, — . . . All I know about Young personally is, that one evening in 1828, when I first pushed my nose into the scientific world, I was presented to Young, Davies Gilbert, and Wollaston. Wollaston said, when I was introduced as Professor of Mathematics in the University of London, * Are they to have a Professor of Mathematics ? ' I told him they had one, and that I was he. Nothing more passed. Young lifted his eye- glass, and made his bow serve the double purpose of acknow- ledging the introduction, and bringing his eyes to the lenses. He made me certain that he saw me, and impressed me with an idea from his manner that he was fine. Perhaps he was only shy — shyness takes every other form to avoid its own. Davies Gilbert was the only one of the three who had the manners of a man of the world. I believe I never saw the two first again. I never knew till many years afterwards that I was well acquainted with some members of Young's family. His brother, Robert Young, was a Quaker, who married, as I was told when a boy, a lady, who was not a Quakeress, and was disowned by the sect. This lady was a most intimate friend of my mother, and Robert Young is one of the earliest persons I can 218 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1852. remember. He was a banker, and something else, I think, at Taunton ; he afterwards went to Bristol, and was in some business. When I was sent to school near Bristol in 1820, 1 was consigned to R. Y., who especially warned me not to walk in my sleep, as there were no leads outside the window — they had been removed. The consequence was that, though I never walked in my sleep before or since that I remember, I was awakened by the wind blowing on me, and found myself before the open window, with my knee on the lower ledge. I crept back to bed, leaving the window open, and the family, being alarmed by the noise, came into my room, found me asleep and the window open ; so that as their fenestral logic did not reason both ways, they forgot that the leads were not there, and searched the whole house for thieves. Long afterwards I met R. Y. in Stratford's room, negotiating about some papers of Young referring to the R. A., and there 1 learnt whose brother he was. John Young, I am pretty sure, was a brother, if not a cousin. You will remember that it has been said that Somersetshire has been very deficient in great men ; and the exceptiones fir- mantes regulam have been Roger Bacon and John Locke. It is time that Young should make a third. I do not know whether you have all your information about Young's family. If you want any inquiries, I have some old friends still at Taunton, and will ascertain what you want. Milverton, Young's birthplace, is a few miles from Taunton. I hope you will not overwork yourself; and remain, clear sir, Yours sincerely, &c., &c. To Rev. W. Heald. 7 Camden Street, Sept. 11, 1852. DEAR HEALD, — I make my annual renewal of correspondence, which I have got into a habit of doing when my wife and chil- dren leave town. They have gone this year to Herne Bay — not so far from London as last year, when they were at Broadstairs. By the way, a scientific friend of mine directed to me at Broad- stairs, near London, when near Ramsgate would have been nearer the mark. On my asking him what he meant, he said he remembered some very broad stairs down to the river just below London Bridge, and he had a vague idea that they were the Broadstairs. Doubtless there are very broad stairs there- abouts. This put me on asking the etymology of Broadstairs, CORRESPONDENCE, 1840-55. 219 and I find that by stairs are meant passes down the cliff — 1852. natural passes. What are you and yours doing ? Do not fail to tell me all about yourself, without my drawing it all out of you by specific questions. By the way, is the Mr. Prickett I see in the papers on whom somebody has been forging, any relation of our old friend ? Of myself and family, nothing particular. We're all about a year older since I last wrote to you. I have been looking over and sorting correspondence of more than twenty years, and I do not see any particular marks of growing old in your handwriting. Are you not seriously contemplating the necessity of calling yourself 50 years old if things go on as they have been doing ? By my estimate of your age, you will be saying 49 next birthday. I am 46 past, buf, between our- selves, 1 have two of my wise teeth still to cut. I looked ont in the papers to see if you were moving or seconding anybody into Convocation, or being done the same to yourself. What do you think about the revival of Convo- cation ? Did it ever happen to you to study any of their old pro- ceedings ? Where are they all ? I remember that, a propos of the Easter Question, I wanted the acts of the Convocation which met next after the Restoration ; but, though Maitland did all he could for me in the Archbishop's library, the return was non est inventus. Maitland is now settled at Gloucester again ; what doing I don't know. He is now well stricken in years : thirty-five years ago he had completed Cambridge, had been educated for the bar and practised, had got sick of it, had retired, had married, and sat himself down comfortably at Taunton, next door but one to his father, my mother being the intermediate. I doubt his being less than thirty-five then, so that he must be seventy, I should say, at least — and he looks it. At Taunton he used to collect books and play the fiddle, and my first acquaintance with Haydn's twelve was made through him and his sister-in-law. He also bound his books himself, and he bound the upright of his bookshelves, and lettered them ' Maitland's Works,' at which his friends used to pull with great curiosity to know what he had written ; and those who did not pull thought it very odd that he should write so many thin volumes on equidistant subjects. I wrote you a note to see if you knew who A. E. B. of Leeds was. I suppose you do riot. He shines in a publication called Notes and Queries, which I take in, and find a great deal of mis- cellaneous in it. Did you know James Parker, the vice-chan- 220 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS BE MORGAN. 1852. cellor, who is jnst dead ? He was a great friend of Parish's. Of our old friends I know but little. Neate is thriving. His father and mother are still living, which few men of forty-five or thereabouts can say. He vegetates, I am afraid ; his parishes are not very populous, and though he does everything in the way of looking after them, his grasp is not full. For aught I know your parish would make fifty of his in number of souls. August 31. — I see to-day that Maitland has published a new ittle book, combining several tracts with mediseval pictures. I bought an auctioneer's lot the other day for one book, and found, among the rest, Hone's Trials, which I had never read through, though, when I was a boy, I had my curiosity greatly whetted by the sharp way in which they were kept out of my sight, while I was admiring the presence of mind of the defend- ant, and the circumstance of a man not regularly educated sticking logically to one point (a great rarity), namely, that the non-pro- secution of parodies in favour of ministers proved that the ani- mus was political, and that religion was a pretext. There came into my head a long-forgotten story told me by Place, the cele- brated political tailor, more than twenty years ago, which shows that Cobbett, with all his pen-assurance, had not the nerve of poor Hone. When Place and some friends went to consult with Cobbett about his defence to the action for seditious libel which was coming on (on which he was convicted and imprisoned), Place told him that if he wanted to escape conviction he had only to produce the letters which public functionaries had written to him on points of his paper —bar, judges, the Speaker of the H. of C., &c. ; that if he did this he would prove that he was not considered a common libeller even by the friends of Government ; and that having thus made a locus standi he could deal with the specific charge as a fair political comment, and compare ifc with others. Cobbett was hardly able to speak of this plan, so great was his agitation at the boldness of producing these letters, which would have made a great sensation, for there were very curious private applications for his good word. He did not dare to do it, was regularly browbeat by the judge, even in what he did ven- ture, and was convicted. Such is the difference between pen- courage and tongue-courage. Pray present my best compliments to Mrs. Heald. I am sorry I cannot say remembrances. There ought to be a prospective mode of address. It would sound very odd to say, in the case of a person whom the writer had not seen, ' Present my most san- CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 221 guiue anticipations ; ' but what would be so odd as ' compli- 1852. ments ' if used for the first time ? Surely the time must come when the vortex of London will suck you in for a few days. In the meantime let us speculate on the question whether we should know each other if we met in the street after twenty-seven years of non-visual intercourse. Yours most sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To. Rev. W. Heald. 7 Camden Street, July 1853. # * * # * * I remember giving you my experience in regard to clairvoy- 1853 ance. I will now tell you some of my experience in reference to table-turning, spirit-rapping, and so on. Mrs. Hayden, the American medium, came to my house, and we had a sitting of more than two hours. She had not been there many minutes ] before some slight ticking raps were heard in the table apparently. The raps answered by the alphabet (pointing to the letters on a card), one after the other (a rap or two coming at the letter), to the name of a sister of my wife, who died seventeen years ago. After some questioning, she (I speak the spirit hypotheses, though I have no theory on the subject) was asked whether I might ask a question. 'Yes,' affirmative rap. I said, ' May I ask it mentally ? ' * Yes.' * May Mrs. Hayden hold up both her hands while I do it ? ' 'Yes.' Mrs. H. did so, and in my mind, without speaking, I put a question, and suggested that the answer should be in one word, which I thought of. I then took the card, and got that word letter by letter — C HESS. The question was whether she remembered a letter she once wrote to me, and what was the subject? Presently came my father (o&. 1816), and after some conversation I went on as follows : — * Do you remember a periodical I have in my head ? ' ' Yes.' * Do you remember the epithets therein applied to yourself ? ' ' Yes.' ' Will you give me the initials of them by the card ? ' 1 This is true. About ten or fifteen minutes elapsed after we sat down before the raps came ; but Mr. De Morgan has not mentioned in this letter that for a few, perhaps five minutes, we sat waiting for them. On his leaving the room they were heard at once, and went on when he returned.— S. E. DE M, 222 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. ' Yes.' I then began pointing to the alphabet, with a book to conceal the card, Mrs. H. being at the opposite side of a round table (large), and a bright lamp between us. I pointed letter by letter till I came to F, which I thought should be the first initial. No rapping. The people round me said, ' You have passed it ; there was a rapping at the beginning.' I went back and heard the rapping distinctly at C. This puzzled me, but in a moment I saw what it was. The sentence was begun by the rapping agency earlier than I intended. I allowed C to pass, and then got ~D T F 0 C, being the initials of the con- secutive words which I remembered to have been applied to my father in an old review published in 1817, which no one in the room had ever heard of but myself. C D T F 0 C was all right, and when I got so far I gave it up, perfectly satisfied that some- thing, or somebody, or some spirit, was reading my thoughts. This and the like went on for nearly three hours, during a great part of which Mrs. H. was busy reading the ' Key to Uncle Tom's Cabin,' which she had never seen before, and I assure you she set to it, with just as much avidity as you may suppose an American lady would who saw it for the first time, while we were amusing ourselves with the raps in our own way. All this I declare to be literally true. Since that time I have seen it in my house frequently, various persons presenting themselves. The answers are given mostly by the table, on which a hand or two is gently placed, tilting up at the letters. There is much which is confused in the answers, but every now and then comes something which surprises us. I have no theory about it, but in a year or two something curious may turn up. I am, how- ever, satisfied of the reality of the phenomenon. A great many other persons are as cognizant of these phenomena in their own houses as myself. Make what you can of it if you are a philoso- pher. Now I must shut up. Give my best regards, &c. Yours very sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Professor Michael Foster. November 15, 1853. University DEAR SIB, — You have asked me for a sketch of my chief Examina- objections to the system pursued in the University of London. tions. This is a matter into which I have not time to enter in great detail ; nor would it be necessary. I have always looked forward CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55, 223 to the time when the graduates of the University would them- 1853. selves feel that their Alma Mater will not take its proper place among the Academies of Europe until its requisitions are based upon higher views of education than appear to have prevailed at its foundation. I say at its foundation, not among its founders ; for the first institution preceded by several years that revival of serious thought upon mental subjects in which we now live, and which is far from having attained its full development. With great respect for many who have been and are mem- bers of the Senate, I do not feel the slightest diffidence in opposing my opinion to the results of their collective delibera- tions. No man who has thought on a subject for a quarter of a century, with daily power of testing his opinions, need fear to oppose himself to a system which has not emanated from one mind. Solomon said that in the multitude of councillors there was safety ; safety, not wisdom. A numerous body always compromises, and never works out a sound principle without limiting its application by considerations drawn from the ex- pediency of the moment ; practicability is the word, freedom from present difficulty is the thing. The plan of the Universities of the Middle Ages, to which in a great degree we owe both the thought and the operative ability of the last two centuries, rested on a simple principle, which stood ready for any amount of development which its own good consequences might make possible. All existing knowledge, the pursuit of which could discipline the mind for thought and action, was collected into one system, and declared to be avail- able for the purpose of a University. And in this manner reason, language, and observation were cultivated together. Every means was employed for forming the future man in his relation to himself, to other men, and to the external world. The worst thing, if not the only thing, that can be said against them is, that at some periods they thrashed the chaff after the corn had been beaten out. The worst thing that can be said against their successors in England is that they have not sufficiently allowed the development of the old principle in reference to branches of knowledge which progress has converted into disciplines, and that, each in its own way, they have given undue prominence to one of the ancient disciplines. The sciences of observation occupied rather a subordinate place, because in the disciplinatory sense they had attained but little efficacy. To which it is to be added, that the very wants 224 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. of daily life, in a rude state of co-operative power, made daily life itself such a discipline of observation as we have now no idea of. Every savage has all the knowledge of his tribe in matters to be drawn from observation and applied in practice. The man of the fifteenth century, much nearer to the savage than ourselves, had a considerable share of it. The man of our da}*- has just as little as he pleases, and no more than his indi- vidual temperament and opportunities may lead him to acquire ; the temperament not being fostered by education, and the oppor- tunities being mostly subsequent to it. The great point, then, in which the old Universities ended by ignoring the progress of the world around them, the great point on which it might have been the privilege of a new one to show them that the world could teach them something even on the fundamentals of education, was the neglect of the discipline of observation, of language as connected with it, and of inference as immediately derived from it. And how has the University of London fulfilled its especial mission ? It has granted the existence of the deficiency, proclaimed its own intention to provide a remedy, and set its alumni diligently to work to read words and to look at diagrams about the way in which other people have used their eyes and their hands. This is no ex- aggeration. Because observation of phenomena had been neg- lected, and ought to have been a part of all sound discipline, the University of London demanded of its candidates a knowledge of the manner in which those who have seen things for them- selves describe them to others. For example, a candidate for the B.A. degree is required, in addition to matters which enter the ancient disciplines, to be examined in animal physiology. And he may pass this examination without knowing more from his own observation of what is under the skin of any animal, than he 'learns from the words of a book or the lines of a drawing, which no one can understand except he be familiar with the original object. I will venture to say that a large majority of those who have passed the examination in physiology know nothing about the interior of the body from their own observation except that blood follows a cut in the finger. I appeal to the examiners whether it be not as I say, and whether the answers given do not clearly show it. Thus, for the first time in the annals of liberal education, a University has proclaimed that mere words, as words, with no CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 225 meaning attached, are a worthy discipline. In learning languages 1853. words are things ; they are the things to be studied, and the student compares the unknown with the known, the strange language with that which he has spoken all his life. In the exact sciences the notions treated of are present and living realities. In the common branches of physics the student has a daily knowledge of the species of phenomena which he is to study in their systematic relations ; he knows air and water, and his stick is a lever. But in the physiology of the University of London he has only words descriptive of what he neither knows nor can know by words alone ; if there be any shadow of ad- vantage to be gained, it is that species of advantage which he gains to better purpose from ordinary physics. The great thing wanted, the training of the faculty of observation in connection with language and reason, is wholly left out of sight. Will it be replied that students cannot dissect ? that they have no opportunities, that they have no skill ? that without such teaching as they cannot get, and such time as they cannot give, their researches into the textures would be of as much avail as those which are made with a carving-knife upon the roast or boiled joint ? I freely admit it all ; but I deny the con- clusion that therefore the University of London should supplant observation by reading. I say nothing is proved except that physiology is a very unfit subject for the purpose, as seems to me clearly proved on other grounds. The proposal for reform which I should submit is that actual examination upon natural objects should be a part of the trial for the B. A. degree ; and that the objects should be of the vege- table world. These are accessible to all ; and the matter to be tried should be, not whether the student has this or that amount of acquirement, but whether he has gained the powers of observing for himself, and stating and reasoning of the results. There are various reasons why vegetable structure is better fitted than animal for the commencing observer ; but it is enough that the newly gathered plant is always within his reach, and that the newly killed animal is not. The next point I will mention is that of the examinations for honours. There are two systems in this country, — that of Oxford, in which the candidate for classical honours is examined against his subject ; that of Cambridge, in which the candidate for mathematical honours is examined against his competitors. At Oxford, his class determines his qualification ; at Cambridge, Q 226 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. his place determines whether he is above or below any given competitor. At Oxford his mind may, though not without certain wholesome restraint, develop itself in reading and thought dictated by its natural bent. At Cambridge the exami- nation realises the bed of Procrustes. The Oxford system has a tendency to develop the useful differences between the varied types of human character. The Cambridge system is an unconscious effort to destroy them. I shall not be suspected of any original bias against the Cambridge system. I once thought that the race for the place in the list was a valuable part of that system, but I have slowly arrived at the full conviction that the Oxford plan is greatly superior. The system of private tutors, the drill in writing out, and the mode in which so many of the elementary books are got up, are well worthy the attention of all who are interested in the subject of this letter. They are the natural consequences of the personal competition for honours ; and if ever the number of candidates in the University of London should bear any considerable proportion to that in the University of Cambridge, the same cause will produce the same effect. I hope this subject will receive some attention, Why, because political tendencies have thrown the University of London almost entirely into Cambridge hands at the outset, should all that is from Cambridge be received as of course, and without a discussion of what is to be found at Oxford ? Probably it will be objected that the medals and honours cannot be awarded without a competitive examination. To this I answer that the existence of medals and scholarships is of very small importance compared with that of the evils I have alluded to. If I am right, they had better be abolished than allowed to introduce the evils of competition into the main examinations for honours. And the natural consequence would be that they should be given, not for general proficiency, but on special grounds, to be tried some time after the elementary career has closed. My view of the advantages of a liberal education is most assuredly not peculiar to myself. Let it be supposed that the former student has forgotten everything, that not a word of Latin is left, and not a proposition of Euclid. What remains to him ? If little or nothing, then his education has not deserved its name. But if, in spite of the loss of all that acquirement which he has had no daily need to recall, he be a man of trained mind, able to apply vigorously, to think justly, to doubt dis- CORRESPONDENCE, 184G-55. 227 erectly, and to decide wisely, he has been well educated, and the 1853. loss of the positive knowledge which I suppose him to have lost is comparatively a small matter. I do not underrate knowledge ; I would educate for it, even if it gave no powers ; but I am sure that if we take care of the habits, the acquirements will take care of themselves. Throughout the whole of the requisitions runs a tone which would give anyone the notion that the study demanded is sought only for its results, and that it will be tested only by the know- ledge of results shown. I look at the programme of the mathe- matical propositions required, and I find the implication that as long as a certain list of truths is known, it matters not how. I admit that the examiners by setting this list at defiance, by pro- posing questions which try the knowledge of principles, and which necessarily require them to travel out of the list, have done much to neutralise its evil tendency. But I cannot suppose the necessity for a complete alteration is thereby done away. We are informed that the principal properties of triangles, squares, and parallelograms (when did the square cease to be a paral- lelogram ?) are to be treated geometrically. Among the principal properties of parallelograms are those of similar parallelograms ; their study involves a doctrine of proportion. But only the first of the six books of Euclid are demanded. Must similar paral- lelograms be treated by what is called a geometrical theory of proportion ? If not, how are the principal properties of parallelograms to be treated geometrically, as demanded? If yes, what is that geometrical theory of proportion, other than Euclid's, so well known that it may be trusted to implication ? The only proportion alluded to in any part of the list is alge- braical proportion, which, as usually understood, is the doctrine of the ratios of commensurable quantities, expressed by letters, with either every possible amount of gratuitous assumption about incommensurable quantities, or else a total refusal to consider them. Might not what we may well hope, and what I am inclined to believe, will be the greatest University founded in the nine- teenth century dare to promulgate definite views on the mode in which study should be conducted, its ends, its uses, and the proofs of its efficiency ? Is it not the duty of that University to make it apparent that she receives and cherishes the sound principle so long maintained by her predecessors without pledg- ing herself to the abuses which time and negligence have allowed Q 2 228 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1853. to creep in ? I hope the graduates will show that their colleges have trained them to ask these questions. If they be not asked, and asked to good purpose, the University may gain a parlia- mentary voice, but it will not gain the respect of that highly educated world to which the common sense of common people teaches them to look up for opinions on the higher education. And the old institutions which are rousing themselves into activity will have it delegated to them, a century hence, to teach the University of London what it was hoped by some the University of London would teach them. I am, dear sir, Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Admiral Smyth. 7 Camden Street, January 5, 1854. 1854. MY DEAR ADMIRAL, — You probably know why your note has remained unanswered. I and Mrs. De Morgan are just beginning to recover the shock it has given us. Your sheets may come as usual if you have any to send, I congratulate you on the news you conveyed to me, though, having mislaid your note, I cannot remember the name. You have twice had to bear a loss similar to mine, and I hope you will depart yourself in the course of nature before the distant time comes when you would have to face it a third time. If you have anything to contribute or to suggest for the Annual Report, now is the time. Our kind regards to Mrs. Smyth and the young ladies, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Whewell. January 24, 1854. MY DEAR SIR, — Your book on the * Plurality of Worlds * reached me at a time when I could only throw it by for better days, and I believe it would have remained on one side as an anonymous attempt to prove what every one believed — without knowing anything about the matter — if I had not been told, casually, that you were the author, and that the title ought to have been 'On the Singularity of the World.' Accordingly, knowing whom to thank, I thank him ; and learning that the argument is singular, I read the book. CORRESPONDENCE, 1840-55. 229 I have always held that when the phrase * there is a good deal to be said on both sides ' applies, it means that we do not know much about the matter. Your book is a converse instance ; that when we do not know much about the matter there is always a good deal to be said on both sides. Not that I mean to give up the poor dear lungless lunarians, or the jovial cinder- sifters, altogether, quite yet. I admit the argument from time to space ; but, granting that the human world is only d t out of t of the whole of time existence, we may grant it to be d s out of s, of space existence ; and all the stars and planets may be in their several progresses from — oo to +00, and every one at a different part of it, with at least the chance of two given ones being within m of each other, only ra =00 — (— oo). And this on the supposition that there is but one kind of progression ; it being more likely, however, that this progression is infinitely varied in space, so that, instead of diminishing the immensity of creation — as usually taken — namely, for one time, the idea of one mode of existence infinitely varied in space, you have made prominent a system of triple entry, time, space, law of pro- gression. I find in your book the germ, or more, of a notion which I have had for twenty years — and which may have occurred to many others, and probably has. I have been laughing all that time in the sleeve at the clergy, for not seeing that the infidel geology, as they call it, is in truth the most unanswerable proof of su/pernaturalism that ever was propounded. Between an un- intelligibly self-existent Creator, and an unintelligibly self- existent order of things — self-reproductive natura rerum, — my reason never saw a priori choice ; not having the slightest idea which of two wholly inconceivable things was most conceivable. But the straightforward impossibility of human existence at some calculable time brings us to the alternative of an absolute creation — or the growth of some lizards or fishes into men — through various stages. I do not read controversies about the pros and cons, of the Book of Genesis, and this argument may for aught I know be common ; but it never oozed into any conversa- tion in my hearing, though I have frequently looked out for it when I heard the orthodox and the heterodox fighting about the matter. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 230 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. To Rev. Dr. Whewell. May 21, 1854, 1854. MY DEAE SIR, — I have to thank you for the dialogue. If you deny a plurality of worlds I presume you admit a plurality of opponents — to judge by the letters. You seem to be expressing your an ti- pluralism more posi- tively than before. Your work seemed to say — don't be so sure ; your dialogue seems to maintain something more like a leaning to the other positive conclusion. I suppose you will not object to the conclusion that the stars either are inhabited, or that they are not. This is mine, with a leaning to the affirmative of this kind : — Let it be granted that each planet has upon it, or in it, or around it, some things which have a destiny of their own, for which they might be conceived to exist independently of the other planets or stars. These things I should call inhabitants of that planet, but whether conscious or unconscious, intelligent or unintelligent, &c., &c., I could have no opinion. But I cannot divest myself of the idea that they have uses independent of us — and these uses are inhabitants. I strongly suspect that, to use law phrases, these uses are also trusts, and therefore suppose Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Admiral Smyth. 7 Camden Street, July 16, 1854. MY DEAR ADMIRAL, — Here you see the balance of blue queen's heads forwarded to me on a special service. I hope a larger proportion of Napier's blues will find their way home again from the Baltic. All is going on well as to the Government proceedings.1 We shall not be stirred these ten years, I augur. You know the story of the birds in the nest listening to the farmer plotting how to cut the corn. Now Government is a man who cannot work for himself. He acts through people who report. Deep calleth unto deep — that is, one office reports to another, and the other refers back, and then they consider, and red tape becomes grey before they have settled how to proceed. And if you then give them six months' start, and set a snail after them, the 1 Referring to a proposed removal of the Astronomical Society from their rooms at Somerset House. CORRESPONDENCE, 1846-55. 231 snail beats them by a thousand lengths ; and then there is a 1854. change of ministry and a new report to ' my lords,' and ' my lords ' make a minute which means in time a year, and so on ad infinitum. Kind regards all round. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Whewell. October 27, 1855. MY DEAR SIR, — M. Biot presses for the meaning of Newton 1855. buying a supersedeas. He wants to give it in a forthcoming article. (Brewster, vol. i. p. 18.) Could you ask any one in college to see what it may have meant ? I am pretty sure no such thing was for sale in college in my time, for freshmen or any other. Excuse my troubling you again. The world has so passed by that I am not sure I know the name of any office-bearer in college. I have only an indistinct remembrance that Prof. Sedgwick is Vice- Master. I told Biot that China ale was tea, and reinforced it by tell- ing him that water was often called Adam's ale in England. This, he says, has amused the French philologers very much. Pray come to the rescue of a Frenchman in a fix about a college phrase. I must send the French philologers the phrase Henry Soph. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. November 10, 1855. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I am glad to see your signature, failing more, and also that ycu are in pretty good spirits. We shall see yon come out in chemistry yet, with the discovery of a new prin- ciple, Uncommonly-impossible-to-get-ine, obtained by treating the singular Takes-a-week's-cookingic Acid with all the salts in suc- cession of your new metal Descrilable-in-six-foliopagesium. I shall not bother you with the proofs of your memoir.1 I shall respect the text as if it were Horace — and there are no 1 Memoir of Francis Baily. 232 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1855. lections that I am aware of — and I shall add a few editorial n oes ; one must notice the new moon-bobbery which has upset the eclipse of Agathocles and every other, and perhaps some other little matters. I made a few additions to the biography in a subsequent Annual Report, which I shall append, but not incorpo- rate. You shall have revises — not to correct, but to protest against, pro re nata, and your protests shall meet with more attention lhan such things usually meet with. The Sheepshanks inscription is now in Whewell's hands. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 233 SECTION VIII. 1856-65. MY mother-in-law died after a long illness this year, to 1856. the great sorrow of her three sons. Though there was Mr&De° great difference of opinion, chiefly on doctrinal matters, between my husband and herself, there was strong mutual affection, and some resemblances of character. He shared with her the quality which he used to find troublesome when he lived in her house ; namely, anxiety to a morbid degree about those she loved when they were out of her sight. If he came home an hour later in the evening than she expected, she conjured up all kinds of terrible accidents which he might have met with. One reason of this, on Augustus's account, was his want of sight on the right-hand side. He was very like her in this morbid anxiety, so that those who left the house in the evening had to be punctual in the time of their return if they wished him to be easy. From his mother he inherited his musical talent, and most probably his mathematical power, for she wras the granddaughter of James Dodson, the author of the Mathematical Canon, a distinguished Mathematician, the friend of Demoivre, and of most other men of science of his time, and an early F.R.S. But he was Mathematical master at Christ's Hospital, and some of his descendants seem to have thought this a blot on the scutcheon, for his great-grandson has left on record the impression he had of his ancestor. When quite a boy he asked one of his aunts * who James Dodson was ; 3 and received for answer, ' We never cry stinking fish.' So he was afraid to ask any more questions, but settled that 234 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 185(5. somehow or other James Dodson was the c stinking fish ' of his family ; and he had to wait a few years to find out that his great-grandfather was the only one of his ancestors whose name would be held deserving of record. My husband also inherited his love of a city life from his mother, who declared that a night in a country house, with ctne dreary trees moaning all round,' made her sleepless. Mrs. De Morgan's death occurred while she was living in the house of her second son, Mr. George De Morgan, the barrister and conveyancer. My husband, of course, visited her almost daily, and was struck with the reality of her conviction, constantly asserted, of the presence of Jesus Christ. He spoke to me of the frequency of this appearance, or supposed appearance, to the dying, and wished that the instances should be always carefully recorded. Mrs. De Morgan was one of eleven children and nine daughters of Mr. John Dodson, of the Custom House. Eight of the daughters married officers of either the Military or Civil service in India. At the time of her death there was living, besides her sons Augustus and George, Campbell Greig De Morgan, who was Senior Surgeon to the Middlesex Hospital — a man much beloved and highly distinguished in his profession. He survived his brother Augustus four years, dying in 1875. Dislocated A few days before our return from Eastbourne in the autumn, I was startled by receiving a long letter from my husband, written in pencil and in the middle of each page. He always wrote every day, but it was often not more than to ask after me and the children, and to tell me whom he had seen, with occasional information about the cat or the canaries. This pencil letter was a dramatic description of how he had the day before fallen off the ladder in his library and dislocated his shoulder; how the doctor had been fetched and had replaced the the move- ment. DECIMAL COINAGE. 235 shoulder in the socket, which the patient said had given 1856, him no pain. His account would have amused me if it had not frightened me so much. On hurrying to London I found him reading comfortably in his arm-chair. Happily he neither suffered from pain nor fever, and the weakness in the arm caused by the accident did not last long. As early as the year 1824 Sir John Wrottesley, father Decimal of the first Lord Wrottesley, had introduced the question of History 'of Decimal Coinage in the House of Commons.1 His pro- posal was to retain the pound as the unit, dividing it by tens until it reached 1,000 farthings. The motion was not pressed to a division. In 1832 Mr. Babbage's work On the Economy of Manu- factures was brought out. In this the plan of a decimal system was advocated, and lesser attempts by other writers followed. In 1833 the first number of the Penny Cyclopaedia was published, and Mr. De Morgan in the article Abacus gave a good summary of the advantages of the proposed change. It [the abacus] never can be much used in this country owing to our various divisions of money, weights, and measures. 1 A very early suggestion on this subject is to be found in a little book of my father's, long out of print. Speaking of the abacus, the use of which he had described, he says, ' The Chinese use this toy in the common concerns of life ; and they can do it with great ease, since in their nation the decimal arithmetic is preserved in the weights, measures, and money. The French and Americans have returned to their ancient and best mode of counting ; but it will be difficult to establish it in this country on two accounts : first, it would be considered an innovation, and it is almost incredible how great is the number of persons who prefer their father's mumpsimus to a modern sumpsimus. Secondly, it is a question of mere public benefit, without reference to party politics ; and it must be a fortunate concurrence of circumstances to produce an individual resolute enough to bring forward a motion that would get rid of our troublesome modes of numbering, and introduce that which is the simplest, the best, and the most ancient.' (Tangible Arithmetic, by W. Frend, 1806.) 236 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. We should need one abacus for pounds, shillings, and pence, another for avoirdupois weight, a third for troy weight, and so on. In China, however, where the whole system is decimal — that is where every measure, weight, &c., is the tenth part of the next greater one — this instrument, called in Chinese schwanpan, is very much used and with astonishing rapidity. It is said that while one man reads over rapidly a number of sums of money, another can add them so as to give the total as soon as the first has done reading. First Com- General Pasley tried to bring forward the question in mission on J ° weights 1834 in a volume On Coinage, Weights, and Measures, and sures. on the Advantages of a Decimal System. Four years after, Mr. Spring Rice, then Chancellor of the Exchequer, obtained the appointment of a Royal Commission on weights and measures. In the Companion to the Almanac for the year 1841, Mr. De Morgan showed the advantages that would arise from the adoption of a decimal coinage.1 He insisted on the introduction of an entirely decimal system of accounts, in combination with such change in the coinage as should be best adapted to, and be the means of introducing such a system of accounts. He showed how easily our present system might be changed to a decimal one by retaining the pound sterling, and dividing it into 1,000 parts ; and recommended the reten- tion of as many of our coins as bore a relation to the pound, and the very small alteration in the value of six- pences and shillings needed to bring them into the new system. The plan of the proposed change is explained, and names of coins suggested. He strongly advised that the change be made first in the coinage, believing that the complications which would arise from carrying it into weights and measures would throw everything into con- fusion. He saw that the minds of the mercantile and working classes must be made familiar with the decimal 1 ' On the Use of Small Tables of Logarithms in Commercial Calcu- lations, and on the Practicability of a Decimal Coinage.' Companion to the Almanac, 1841. DECIMAL COINAGE. 237 reckoning in money in the first instance. ' Education,' 1856. he said, ' must promote the demand for a complete decimal system, but the application of the principle to coinage only must first promote education.' In answer to the question, ' how much of the time spent in education in Great Britain and Ireland is spent in overcoming the disadvantage of our present system of coinage ? ' he said, ' I believe that five per cent, is under the mark, taking in all classes ; that in purely commercial schools it is a great deal more ; but that in all together, from Oxford and Cambridge down to the lowest village school, more than one-twentieth of the whole time passed in every kind of learning and practising is lost, by the having two systems of Arithmetic to learn, the common decimal, and the monetary.' At the end of the year 1841 the Report of the Commis- Report of sion of 1838 was made. In it the Commission strongly Sion!ra recommended the adoption of a decimal scale of weights and measures preparatory to a change in the money ; than which, the Report says, ' no single change which it is in the power of our Government to effect would be felt as equally beneficial when the temporary inconvenience attending it had passed away.' The details of the change recommended are those set forth by Mr. De Morgan in the Companion to the Almanac. In the year 1842 he gave more extensive information on the subject in the same work, and in the next year (1843) another Commission to inquire into weights and measures was appointed. It consisted of the Astronomer Royal, Lord Wrottesley, the Dean of Ely, the Speaker, Sir John Herschel, Sir J. W. Lubbock, Rev. R. Sheepshanks, and Professor Miller. The next step was taken in 1847 by Dr. Bo wring, afterwards Sir John Bowring, who brought forward the subject in the House of Commons. The florin, or one- tenth of a pound, now in circulation, was in consequence issued by Government, but no further attempt was made 238 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. to decimalise the money, and Sir John Bowring soon after went to China. There is an article in the Companion to the Almanac for 1848 by Mr. De Morgan.1 He describes the state of feeling at that time on the question as compared with what it had been when it was first agitated. Eeferring to the debate on Sir John Bo wring's motion, which re- sulted in the introduction of florins, he says ' the Chancel- lor of the Exchequer, in yielding the first step, rested his non-acquiescence in the whole extent of the motion on the want of public interest in favour of the question, and the slow growth of belief adverse to existing usages. He said, as plain as a Chancellor of the Exchequer could speak, " Force me, and here I am ready to be forced." Since issuing the florin Government had taken no further steps towards the complete decimalisation of the coinage, but Sir John Bowring, who was in England in 1853, was still hopeful for more, and many of the most enlightened friends to the measure, both mercantile and scientific, were anxious that the efforts already made should not be lost. In 1852 Mr. William Brown called the attention of the Liverpool Chamber of Commerce to the importance of the question as regarded currency and accounts, and a memorial was presented by the Chamber in favour of the proposal already made. About the same time the Royal Commission last appointed made its re- port, which confirmed all the recommendations that had been made by the Commission of 1838. The Com- missioners expressed their hope that no new coins should be issued except such as should be expressible by one figure in the decimal scale, descending from the pound sterling, and that every new coin should have marked upon it its value with reference to the pound sterling. Early in the year 1853, Mr. (afterwards Sir) William 1 In this article the Commission of 1838 is spoken of as the last Commission on the subject, but it must be remembered that that of 1843 was still sitting, and did not report till 1853. DECIMAL COINAGE. 239 Brown, M.P., as representative of the Liverpool Chamber 1856. of Commerce, had interviews with the Chancellor of the 0f°Houseee Exchequer and the President of the Board of Trade, to Commons- suggest the appointment of a Committee of the House of Commons to consider the whole subject of decimalising the money, weights, and measures. Mr. Gladstone saw, with the most practical of those who had dealt with the question, that to include the subject of weights and measures at that time would throw needless difficulty in the way. Taking up one subject at a time, it would be more easily understood ; and when the plan should be adopted and its advantages felt, the difficulty of securing a uniform system throughout would be removed. This Committee was appointed, with Mr. William Brown for Chairman. My husband's correspondence at this time shows how large a share he had in the uphill work in which he was at once expounder, adviser, and referee. He was applied to for information on every part of the question — on weights and measures, on foreign money, on the history of the change to a decimal coinage in other countries, and on the changes that would be required to decimalise our accounts and coinage in such a way as to cause least difficulty in our money transactions both at home and with our neighbours abroad ; for references to books of authority ; — in short, for every sort of information that would enable the advocates of the reform to support their cause. All this he gave freely and readily, more perhaps in answer to private inquiries even than in print ; and the amount of work done by him in this way — all extraneous to his lectures and other occupations — can only be guessed at by those who were with him at the time, or who have seen his correspondence since. Here is an instance. Sir John Herschel asks — What book, report, or resume contains what you would refer any one to, who wanted to get a clear vie\v , in a short time, of the history of the change to a decimal system of currency in 240 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. France, and more especially in the United States ? I should like to have a reference to some authentic report as to the latter, and indeed to anything official as regards the former ; but what I chiefly want to be able to point out is an historical view of the origin of the thing, the order of procedure, the course of action of the Governments, the way it was met on the part of the countries, and the steps by which it ultimately rooted itself. I know you are as full of information as an egg is of meat. On receiving the answer : — I am really sorry I have plagued you about it, but I thought you would very likely have been able at once to name a work which, referred to, would do the needful. Such a work I now perceive is yet to be written, unless Dr. Bo wring's now forth- coming one be that work. He has called twice on me about it. What an ardent creature he is ! He seems to me as if he lived on live birds. Tntema- Many people who had pet schemes of their own as to Associa- ^e Pr°P°se(i coinage brought them to my husband, and tion. several of these had influence enough to get their plans considered by statesmen. These formed impediments in the way. The various views on the change of coinage were numerous, and I shall only refer further on to that which, though well meant, formed the greatest obstacle — the International Association for a Decimal System in Weights, Measures, and Coins. In the year 1854 the Parliamentary Committee reported in favour of the decimal plan which ha,d been proposed by scientific men, and, on the issue of this report, the Decimal Association was formed. Its first meeting was held in July 1854. Sixteen members of Council were chosen, all influential in Parliament or commerce. Their number was afterwards increased by seven, one of whom was Mr. De Morgan. The Association recommended the adoption, or reten- tion, of the pound as the unit of account ; the only new coins which would be required to complete the scale being the cent, a silver coin ten to the florin, and the mil, a copper DECIMAL COINAGE. 241 coin ten to the cent : the decimalisation of weights and 1856. measures to be afterwards considered. A deputation from this body (among whom were Lord Deputation Monteagle, Mr. Cobden, Mr. Bright, General Pasley, Gladstone. and others) waited on Mr. Gladstone, the object being to urge the coinage of a sufficient number of cents and mils to circulate with the present money, of which the coins which did not come under the system should be gradually withdrawn. Mr. Gladstone ( saw in the deputation a great deal of power, as well as of intelligence, represented/ but hesitated as to the adoption of the pound as the unit of account, and believed the nation was hardly ready for the change. Mr. William Brown, who was the commercial leader of the movement, wrote to Mr. Gladstone, showing how all the various objections had been met. 1. As to the adjustment of railway fares, by the fact that several directors of leading lines were members of the Association. 2. As to the Post Office, by Mr. Eowland Hill, who was an advocate of the measure. 3. As to the turnpike tolls, by Professor Airy. 4. As to the Customs and Excise duties, which had been supposed to be a great difficulty. Mr. Brown pointed out that nowhere would the convenience of the change be more rapidly felt, both in saving labour and securing accuracy, than in the accounts and returns of the national income and expenditure. 5. In the wages of working men, wherein the difficulty was shown to be imaginary. But Mr. Gladstone still thought the time not ripe for the change. Another deputation waited on the President of the Board of Trade. It consisted of men who represented every phase of the subject, each one taking his own special part in the discussion. The recommendation in which all concurred was that the sovereign should be re- ft 242 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. tained as the unit, the florin one-tenth of the sovereign, the cent, a new silver coin, one-tenth of the florin, and the mil, or old farthing, one-tenth of the cent. There would be no difficulty as to the change of value of the farthing, for, as the copper coin is circulated at a nominal value far beyond its intrinsic worth, its current value might be declared each time by proclamation. Among other things it was said that * men with the rare facility of explanation possessed by Professor De Morgan might fix the attention of meetings of the work- ing classes upon the value of the easy road that would be opened to a knowledge of Arithmetic by the proposed change ; but by those who had to legislate for the people the fact was known, and there was no need to withhold the advantage until the masses, becoming informed of its value, should seek it for themselves ; it was, on the con- trary, precisely a case in which the Government, supported by those best informed, should take upon itself the responsibility of conferring a practical boon upon the people in advance of their knowledge.' These proceedings of the Decimal Association, of which I have only made a slight mention, were printed with an introduction by Mr. De Morgan, which touches all the most important points of the subject. It concludes with these words : — c The Chancellor of the Exchequer says that Govern- ment holds an impartial position, and is ready to be guided by the decision of the public. Every one knows that, in his own circle, the opinion in favour of a decimal coinage, based on the pound sterling, is that of a very large majority of all who know what it means. What, then, is leftP Nothing, but that the public should let the Chancellor of the Exchequer know that it has decided, and what the de- cision is.9 The writer was over-sanguine as to the adoption of the measure. Delays, unfounded objections, and, more than all, the obstacles created by injudicious reformers of the DECIMAL COINAGE. 243 whole, put a stop to the work, and rendered all the efforts 1856. which had been spent on it of no avail. After more meetings and much correspondence it was Renewed agreed to bring the question again before Parliament, p^n! °f This was done on June 12, 1855, by Mr. Wm. Brown, who ment- moved, after referring to the recommendations of the Commission of 1838 for restoring the standards, to those of the subsequent Eoyal Commission, and the Committee of the House of Commons, that an address be presented to her Majesty, praying her to complete the decimal scale (already existing in the pound and the florin) by authorising the issue of silver coins to the value of l-100th of a pound, and copper coins to represent 1-1 000th part of a pound, to be called respectively cents and mils, or such other names as to her Majesty should seem advisable. The motion was seconded by Lord Stanley, now Earl Derby, who cited the authorities of Babbage, De Morgan, Pasley, and Huskisson, on the practicability and advantage of the change. After showing the defects of several plans proposed, he advocated that supported by the Decimal Association, and introduced to the House by Mr. William Brown. Mr. J. B. Smith moved an amendment that a humble address be presented to her Majesty, praying that she would be pleased to invite a congress of all nations in some convenient place, with the view of considering the practicability of adopting a common standard of money, weights, and measures. Mr. Lowe (then M.P. for Kidderminster) made a very amusing speech, to show, first, that the present system of coinage did very well, and that the mischief of a change would be greater than any good which could result from it. Secondly, that the method proposed of decimalising by division and not by multiplication was fallacious. He would have a low unit, and multiply by tens. He made humorous illustrations and allusions, and caused much laughter. The then Chancellor of the Exchequer, B 2 244 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. Sir G. C. Lewis, expressed his belief that the time was not come for the change, and recapitulated other plans as possibly preferable to the one before the House. He spoke of the opinion, already reported, of Sir J. Herschel, the Master the Mint, as involving great difficulties. Finally two resolutions were carried : — 6 That in the opinion of this House the initiation of the decimal system by the issue of the florin has been eminently successful and satisfactory.' And— ' That a further extension of such system will be of great public advantage.' But the practical resolution for an address to her Majesty, praying for the completion of the scale by the issuing of cents and mils, was withdrawn. The question was therefore left by the House of Commons much as it had been before, with the exception of the greater publicity given to the arguments on both sides by the debate. But a Commission was appointed to investigate the whole subject of weights, measures, and coinage. In an article in the Westminster Review, in which a sum- mary of the question was given, Mr. De Morgan, writing of the Chancellor of the Exchequer, ' the chief of our financial Arithmetic,' says, — The right honourable gentleman, after saying that 'there are differences of opinion,' proceeds to give ' some of the plans ' which have come under his observation. One is the tenpenny plan; others are as follows: — 1st. 10 farthings or mils, one cent ; 10 cents one dime ; 10 dimes one prime. 2nd. 10 farthings or mils one coin unnamed ; 10 of these a florin ; 10 florins a Victoria. 3rd. 10 farthings or cash two- pence; 100 cash a cent; 10 cents a mil. 4th. 10 farthings a lion ; 10 lions a florin ; 10 florins a queen. To these four * plans ' we beg permission to add two of our own invention, as distinct from the above as the above are from one another. Our first plan is 10 farthings a what's-his-name ; 10 what's-his- names a how-d'ye-call-it ; 10 how-d'ye-call-its a thingembob. Our second plan is 10 farthings a George ; 10 Georges a Corne- wall ; 10 Cornewalls a Lewis. DECIMAL COINAGE. 245 All the old arguments were considered, and the 1856. answers to them repeated and enlarged. As to the Mr; ^owe r and the witticisms of Mr. Lowe, they had been answered by Mr. appie- De Morgan in a paper published by the Decimal Associa- argument. tion, Reply to the Facetice of the Member for Kidderminster. ' Mr. Lowe is of opinion/ the Westminster Review says, ' that if a poor man owed another a penny, for which four mils is too little, and five mils too much, this mil between them would lead to a mill between them; and some of the conscript fathers cheered him.' In the 'Reply,' a dialogue between an orange boy and the member for Kidderminster shows, in the method of the latter, how the supposed difficulties in a money transaction with an old apple woman might be overcome. The Review takes in the substance of the two Reports of Commissioners, 1841 and 1853 ; the Report of the Committee of the House of Commons, 1854; the debate of June 12, 1855 ; the publications of the Decimal Association, and the Journal of the Society of Arts, with a list of about one hundred publications on the subject in 1853, 1854, and 1855. At the end of this year 1855 he wrote for the Companion to the Almanac of 1856, Notes on the History of the English Coinage, giving many particulars of the history and origin of money in England and other countries, both as to coins and accounts. Speaking of the ruined and confused state which the coinage had reached at the time of the Restoration, he describes the reform projected by Montague, afterwards Lord Halifax, and carried into effect during his administration by Sir I. Newton, who only added to the pieces already in circula- tion the quarter-guinea, which was found too small for use. A note in the author's handwriting states, 'The next Scientific Master of the Mint coined a quarter- sovereign, which was never circulated.' Sir John Herschel gave my husband one of these pretty little gold coins, which he valued greatly. It was lost, in moving, after his death. 246 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. Many sanguine persons had been withheld from join- ing the Decimal Association, in the hope of establishing an International Currency ; ' a proposal which,' Mr. De Morgan said, 'unites the millennial and decimal systems.' They also contemplated the universal decimalisation of weights and measures. Mr. J. B. Smith's resolution for an Address to the Queen, praying her to invite a congress of all nations for this purpose, had not been carried, but shortly after, in the autumn, the Paris Exhibition took place, and the difficulty of harmonising the various weights, measures, quantities, and prices of the articles brought by contributors from twenty-two different states or countries, led to the consideration of the possibility of making a uniform system throughout the world. The advantages of such uniformity would be felt both morally and socially, in making free trade more easy, and war between nations more difficult. All these, as well as the benefits to commerce and merchandise, were fully acknow- ledged by all the advocates of decimal coinage. The only question was as to the first step. The mutual advances made by the French and Americans by interchange of specimens of weights and measures were followed by memorials and petitions to their respective governments in favour of a congress of delegates from the leading nations of the world. In Tract No. 12 of the Liverpool Financial Reform Association, all the evils of the present confused state of the means of effecting commercial ex- changes were shown, and all the arguments for a complete decimal system throughout brought forward. Shortly after the Paris Exhibition an ' International Association ' was formed, 'for obtaining a uniform decimal system of weights, measures, and coin throughout the world.' The proposals and arguments of this Association caused a great deal of extra work to the active members of tha Decimal Association. Among my husband's letters are several like this from the secretary — it enclosed some new tract or report of speech : — DECIMAL COINAGE. 247 Pray take charge of the * International,' &c., &c., &c., Asso- 1856. ciation, and blaze away from time to time, rifle-shot being better than 60-pounders in such a cause. The 60-pounders and small shot were cast and fired with- out thought of time and labour, by one who, besides his expenditure of both in daily lectures, &c., at University College, did more work than would have filled the time of an ordinary man. His next public effort was the delivery of a lecture in the large room of the Society of Arts, at a meeting, to of Arts. which the advocates of the various plans were invited, of the Decimal Association. The lecture was On the Ap- proaching Simplification of the Coinage. We move very slowly in good and useful directions. The ' approach ' of twenty-seven years ago remains in 1882 just where it was. The lecturer said : — The various systems1 which had been proposed had all sunk out of notice but two — the pound-and-mil system, and the ten- penny system. These terms were used sarcastically, which was no disadvantage, but then they must be correctly given. Some opponents on the tenpenny side had called themselves ' Little- endians/ and the pound-and-mil people ' Big-endians.' These had got hold of the poker by the wrong end. Samuel Gulliver, on whom all relied except the Irish bishop, who, when the voyage to Lilliput appeared, declared he did not believe half of it, stated that the Endian dispute arose out of the following dogma : — ' True believers break their eggs at the convenient end.' Now, the pound-and-mil people believe that the small end was that at which the coinage ought to be broken, and a small crack of 4 per cent, in the copper served their purpose. But the real Big-endians, the tenpenny people, smashed the sovereign into tenpenny bits, making such a hole as let out all the meat in getting rid of the pound and shilling. The lecturer showed how very small a change in the present coinage need be made to introduce the new system. He had been supposed to look at the matter from a scientific rather than a practical point of view, and many 1 Referring only to coinage. 248 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. writers had objected to his having a voice in the question. But these writers did not know or had forgotten that he was an actuary of twenty-five years' standing, besides being a teacher of monetary Arithmetic. He had also a position which made him better able to judge than he would have been either as a Mathematician or as an actuary. He had been for twelve years J a manager of a savings bank, and in that capacity had had, scores upon scores of times, to receive and pay out from two to three hundred pounds in a couple of hours, and in all kinds of coins, from a shilling and some halfpence up- wards. When he looked at the banker's clerk, with his luxurious table and his convenient scoop, and all his other paraphernalia, he at the pay- table of the savings bank looked upon that same clerk as an aristocrat, who knew little of the difficulties of humble life. The lecture was followed by a discussion, Mr. De Morgan in the chair, which lasted two evenings, and in which the members of the International Decimal Asso- ciation, who wished to adopt the French system entire, and the c tenpenny people ' defended their respective plans. The sense of the meeting was ultimately taken, when, with one exception only, the opinions were declared to be in favour of the pound-and-mil system. At this time some articles by Mr. De Morgan On the Approach- ing Simplification of the Coinage, intended to make the subject clear to all classes, were published in the Metro- politan. In the spring of 1857 Lord Overstone, one of the Commissioners for inquiring into the subject of decimal coinage, communicated sixty-five questions to the Decimal Association. These questions were answered by Mr. De Morgan, Sir J. F. W. Herschel, the Dean of Ely, the Astronomer Royal, Professor Miller, Mr. W. Miller, Mr. J. B. Franklin, and others. Those which were 1 During our residence in Camden Street. He thought this the best way in which he could be useful to his poorer neighbours. DECIMAL COINAGE. 249 given by the above members in October were printed by 1856. the Decimal Association in November 1857. Answer l No. 1 (Mr. De Morgan's) is preceded by some remarks by himself. He says, — These questions are the first attempts I have seen to bring the Lord^Over- advocates of the pound-and-mil system to a close hand-to-hand questions, controversy with the existing system. In such a trial of strength the weak points of both systems may appear, but the weak point of the assailant's system is sure to be discoverable from his mode of attack. After pointing out some of the weak points (those implying statements or opinions held by him to be essentially unsound), he says : — It must be conceded that the questions are wholly free from some absurdities very common among opponents of the pound, and-mil scheme. They do not bring forward the usual dirge upon the fraction of a farthing which the possessor of some copper pieces must lose, for once, on the day when the change takes place. The only question asked on this point is a sensible one, fully deserving of consideration and answer. They do not enable us to amuse ourselves with the supposition that we mean 2 apple women to transact business by help of '0041666666666 ad infinitum. The ( Answer ' runs through forty-one pages of small print, a portion being taken up by repetition of the questions. They are amusing and instructive even in subjects only indirectly related to coinage. The questions included references to authorities believed to be un- answerable. These were easily dealt with. Here is a specimen slightly abridged : — 9. In an old treatise 011 coin and coinage (Yaughan, 1675) this passage occurs: — Of all the numbers, twelve is the most proper for money, being the most clear from fractions and confusion of accompt, . . 1 I give them in the order in which they are printed. 8 Referring to Mr. Lowe's ideal apple woman. 250 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. by reason that of all the other numbers it is most divisible, being divisible into units, as all numbers are ; into two parts, as no odd number is ; into three parts, as no even number is but six, and the numbers that consist of sixes ; into fourths, into which six is not divisible ; and into sixths. In the memoir dictated by Napoleon at St. Helena is this paseage : — On avait prefere le diviseur 12 au diviseur 10 parceque 10 n'a que deux facteurs, 2 et 5, et que 12 en a quatre, savoir 2, 3, 4, et 6. II est vrai que la numeration decimale . . donne des facilites aux astronomes et aux calculateurs; mais ces avantages sont loin de compenser 1'inconveuient de rendre la pensee plus difficile. Le premier caractere de toute methode doit etre d'aider la conception et l'imagination, faciliter la memoire, efc donner plus de force a la pensee. To the quotations from Yaughan and the Emperor Napoleon this answer is given : — When an old writer is stript of his conceits, translated into correctness, and under those changes presented as a sage of antiquity, the only way to meet his authority is to restore his true form, and to allow his whole character to be judged. Whether the divisors of 12 gain anything by Mr. Vaughan's advocacy may be ascertained by reading the whole passage. . . The punctuation may be excused, since the work was printed after the author's death by his crotchety brother, Henry Vaughan, the Silurist, He is speaking of the proportion of gold to silver in value, which he would have 12 to 1, because 12 has many divisors. — (Pp. 73, 74.) ' But the most, and the most judicious propositions that I have seen, both at home and in other parts, do agree upon twelve for one as the most equal proportion ; and it agrees with the proportion of Spain, upon which in this subject we ought prin- cipally to have onr eye fixed ; and for my part I do the rather incline to this proportion, because 12 of all the numbers is the most proper for money, being most clear from all fractions and confusion of an accompt, by reason that [here the divisors enumerated as in the question]. And to the sixth this proportion seems like to square with the conceit of the alchemist, who called gold $0Z, and silver Luna, whose motions do come near upon the point of 12 for 1.' DECIMAL COINAGE. 251 Lord Overstone had wisely left Vaughan's Sun and 1856. Moon out of his question. The answer goes on : — Jtont'? questions Vaughan was a clever attorney, who had read more out of law than h"e was able to digest. Sir William Petty will be allowed to have a much better judgment by all who have read in both. In his Quantulum-cunque, reprinted in 1856 by the Political Economy Club, it has been pointed out to me that he speaks as follows : — ' The use of farthings is but to make up payments in silver * (N.B. Copper farthings and silver pence were then in circula- tion), 'and to adjust accompts, to which end of adjusting accompts let me add that if your old defective farthings were cryed down to five a penny you might keep all accompts in a way of decimal arithmetic which hath been long desired for the ease and certainty of accompts.' Decimals were not well understood in Petty's time. His system would give 1,200 farthings to the pound. But his main point evidently was that the multiplier 5, by its relation to 10, is an easier multiplier than 4. Mr. Vaughan lived at a time when decimal fractions were not familiar to the mass of arithmeticians. It would be easy to show that, up to the year 1700 at least, the mastery over decimal fractions which is common in our day was almost confined to high mathematicians. Mr. Yaughan's statement merely amounts to this, that 12 is better than 10, because it has more divisors. The answer is that 10 is better than 12 because it is the radix of our present system of counting. Mr. Vaughan's objections would be exceedingly valuable if a new system of numeration were to be under contemplation. Napoleon at St. Helena is no authority. He had never been a shopkeeper or a money calculator; and if he had been, his position at St. Helena was not favourable to sense or candour. He was grumbling at all creation ; nobody knew his own business, not even the General who commanded against him at Waterloo. He is very unfortunate in his expression. He adopts the erroneous supposition that the decimal system is only useful to scientific calculators, and styles them astronomes et cal- cidateurs. Now the Astronomer is the only scientific calculator to whom, as such, decimalisation is impracticable. He is in such continued connection with the records of his science that lie cannot afford to decimalise angular measure. He is a 252 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. merchant who wants all his ledger for 2,000 years past. The French tried it and failed ; it is the only part of the metrical system which is not in nse at this day, except indeed the tenth day of rest, which, being an attack on religion, disappeared with the return of Christianity. Scientific calculators in general use decimals, and they want the world at large to have the advan- tage which they feel every day of their lives. — (P. 7.) These appeals to the authority of Yaughan and the French Emperor were answered by some of the other members of the Association. The Astronomer KoyaPs reply is much to the point:1— Napoleon's infantry, cavalry, guns, rations for troops, re- quisitions in francs for their support, were all expressed on a decimal scale ; and he never failed in * distinctness of conception,' 'facility of recollection,' 'readiness and ease in mental calculations,' or in ' making fractional parts,' in dividing an army, from these circumstances. So far as I see, the same applies to smaller numbers. Sir J. HerschePs answer to Lord Overstone's questions filled thirty-seven pages. Those of the Astronomer Royal, the Dean of Ely, Professor Miller, Mr. Miller (Cashier of the Bank of England), and Mr. J. B. Franklin, being much shorter than the other two, were collected in one pamphlet of fifty-five pages. The preliminary Report of the Commission of 1855 was published about the same time (1857). It contains, besides the answers given by advocates of various schemes to Lord Overstone's questions, a great deal of evidence obtained from well-informed witnesses, of the operation of the decimal system in other countries. It is a very large blue-book. The Govern- ment was now in full possession of all the information that could be gained upon the question. Much discussion was naturally excited at this time, 1 It will be apparent that the work of other friends to the decimal cause is not made so prominent in this memoir as that of Mr. De Morgan. Space would not allow of my mentioning it at any length, even if my husband's share were not that with which I am concerned. But I believe that his share was the largest. DECIMAL COINAGE. 253 and the clear-headed advocates of the measure, and those 1857. who ' darkened counsel/ all contributed their share. In a long article in the Literarium of October 7, 1857, Mr. De Morgan sums up the history. He says, e the Decimal Coinage discussion is now in its third phase.' After nar- rating what had been done up to the year 1855, he adverts to the penny scheme, the plan of counting by tens and hundreds of pence, leaving the shillings and sovereigns in which the pence were to be paid, to take care of them- selves. After the debate of 1855 had been followed by the Royal Commission, the penny scheme came fairly into discussion, ' for such, in a manner, is evidence with cross- examination. The preliminary Eeport of the Eoyal Com- missioners shows the result. One of the chief advocates for the penny fairly bolted out of the course, and declared himself for remaining as we are ; another did nearly the same thing. This was the end of the second phase. Lord Overstone completed the downfall of the penny scheme by proposing sixty-five questions, mostly in advocacy of the plan of remaining as we are, and led the way to the third phase of the discussion, thereby doing the best possible service to the cause.' At this time the dispute turned upon the question whether it would be best to adopt the pound-and-mil system, or to remain as we are. Mr. De Morgan again set forth the nature of the change in the currency which would be necessary on the adoption of the pound-and-mil system. It would be embarrassing to have two sets of coins not fairly interchangeable. No such thing is proposed. The penny, even if still called a penny, would be lowered four per cent., and would become 4 mils ; the halfpenny would become two mils. The cent, 2-^ of old and extinct money, would be five halfpence, and ten farthings, if the mils were called farthings. The poor would know it as 2^d. from the outset, for they would never know the difference between a penny and 4 mils. The paper concludes, speaking of those who had 254 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. believed our present system to be better than a decimal one: — If this school be a logical one, it ought to be prepared to maintain that a country with a decimal system already established ought to abandon its coinage, and to introduce the succession of 4, 12, 20. This is a conclusion at which all parties would have laughed three years ago, and at which those who are to come after us will well laugh when the objections to this salutary reform are written down in histories after the happy, and we hope speedy completion of the change. It is now 1882, and our reckonings and payments are still made in pounds, shillings, pence, and farthings. Let me add one argument, which I have never seen used, in favour of decimals. It touches the morality of the question. Small shopkeepers, especially haber- dashers, find the full benefit of the present system by the use they make of farthings, and the difficulty of bringing them fairly into the calculation. At this time articles in small retail shops are often priced %d. less than an even sum of pence. The result is that to persons unaccus- tomed to reckoning they appear cheap, while in reality the impossibility of halving and quartering farthings in accounts where farthings are of frequent occurrence gives a gain over the professed prices of some halfpence on every bill. The shopman cannot be expected to do a difficult sum in small fractions for every customer, and each cus- tomer loses very little, but where these customers in each day count by hundreds, as in many of the large retail ready-money shops, the gains in this way must be con- siderable, as those who understand business well know. The Commission sat through the years 1857, 1858, and 1859. From resolutions passed on March 1, 1859, it appears that nothing had been ascertained which ren- dered the change desirable ; that while the weights and measures remain as at present the coin could not be touched ; and as the weights and measures could not be interfered with, the coin must be left alone. These, in DECIMAL COINAGE. 255 few words, were the substance of the decisions of Par- 1856. liament. The energetic promoters of what would have been both morally and socially a most useful measure were naturally disappointed. Their efforts did not entirely cease at the time, and Mr. William Brown, Mr. De Morgan, and others, still did their utmost to keep the public interest alive on the whole question. Mr. Brown, whose philanthropy showed itself in many ways, died in 1864. Of him my husband says, — ' The agitation for a decimal coinage was put to rest by the illness and retirement of Sir Wm. Brown, whose recent death has revived the memory of his splendid benefaction (a fine library) to the town of Liverpool. A parliamentary leader of weight and energy is absolutely necessary to the success of any public measure ; and as soon as the man shall be found who combines with William Brown's great energy his interest in the subject, the agitation will be revived. All the work that has been done is good material for a new attempt, and a new beginning will be made under great advantages. All the discussion about the metrical system works to the same end. We may be well assured that our system of calcula- tion will not always be cramped by counting in one way and measuring in another. And our firm belief is that the way to work the change will be by beginning with the coinage, in which decimals are most wanted and most easily obtained.' * We have now to help us in this work the aid of the Board schools. There is no reason why the strong efforts of the Decimal Association should be lost ; and in the hope that the revival to which my husband looked forward may not be far off, I have given this history. All his writings on the subject are instructive, and the series of articles in the Penny Cyclopaedia on Weights, Measures, 1 Athenasum, review of ' Battle of the Standards,' April 9, 1864. 256 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. and Coins, would form a large volume, containing infor- mation on every part of the question in all its relations.1 mem°ir °f Newton by Mr. De Morgan, which appeared in 1846 (Knight's British Worthies), was, after Baily's Life of Flamsteed, the first English work in which the weak side of Newton's character was made known. Justice to Leibnitz, to Flamsteed, even to Whiston, called for this exposure ; and the belief that it was necessary did not lower the biographer's estimate of Newton's scientific greatness, and of the simplicity and purity of his moral character. Francis Baily's discovery of the correspond- ence between the Rev. John Flamsteed, the first Astro- nomer Eoyal, and Abraham Sharp, as well as between Newton, Halley, and Flamsteed, on the publication of Flamsteed's catalogue of stars, had thrown a new light on the character of Newton. It appeared that the practical astronomer had been treated ungenerously by Newton, who failed to observe the conditions of publication agreed to by all parties; and afterwards when remonstrated with omitted the name of Flamsteed in places where it had formerly stood in the earlier editions of the Principia. My husband entered into the inquiry with keen in- terest, and with a power of research possible only to one who was fully master of the history of Mathematical disco- very.2 With reference to Newton's character he says : — 'We 1 I am told that a movement in this direction is now thought of. Whatever documents on this subject were left by my husband are still in existence. 2 Several of the works in which the questions relating to Newton's Mathematical discoveries were treated are as follows : — 1. ' Memoir on Newton/ by J. B. Biot. Biographe Universelle, 1794. 2. * Life of Newton/ by Sir D. Brewster. Family Library, No. 24, 1831. 3. Life of Flamsteed, by F. Baily, 1835. Article in Quarterly Keview by Barrow, No. 109. Remarks on the same by Dr. Whewell. Article in Edinburgh Review by Mr. Galloway. 4. 'Life of Newton/ by Lord Brougham. Library of Useful Knowledge. SIR ISAAC NEWTON. 257 must differ in some degree from our guide,1 as well as from 1857. all those (no small number) whose well-founded veneration ^orai011 S for the greatest of philosophical inquirers has led them peculiarity, to regard him as an exhibition of goodness all but perfect, and judgment unimpeachable. That we can follow them a long way will sufficiently appear in the course of this sketch.' Later on he says, ' The great fault, or rather mis- fortune, of Newton's life was one of temperament ; 2 a morbid fear of opposition from others ruled his whole life. When, as a young man, proposing new views in opposition to the justly honoured authority of Descartes and lesser names, he had reasons to look for opposition, we find him disgusted by the want of an immediate and universal assent, and representing, as he afterwards said, that Philosophy was so litigious a lady, that a man might as well be engaged in lawsuits as have to do with her. 5. (Art.) 'Newton,' by A. De Morgan. Penny Cyclopaedia, 1840. 6. ' Life of Newton,' by A. De Morgan. Knight's Cabinet Portrait Gallery (British Worthies), 1846. 7. Tract upon Keil and Leibnitz, by A. De Morgan. Cambv. Phil. Trans., 1846. 8. ' A Short Account of Recent Discoveries in England and Ger- many relating to the Controversy on the Invention of Fluxions,' by A. De Morgan. Comp. to the Almanac, 1852. 9. 'On the Authorship of the "Account of the Commercium Epistolicum,'" by A. De Morgan. Phil. Magazine, June 1852. 10. ' On the Early History of Infinitesimals in England,' by A. De 1. organ. Phil. Magazine, November 1852. 11. Life of Newton, by Sir D. Brewster, 1855. 12. Review of Brewster's Life of Newton, by A. De Morgan. North British Review, 1855. 13. Articles in Notes and Queries by A. De Morgan, 1853 and 1856. 14. Correspondence of Sir Isaac Newton and Prof. Cotes, by J. Edleston, Fellow of Trin. Coll., Camb. 8vo., London, 1850. 15. Historical Essay on the First Publication of 8ir Isaac Newton's ' Principia,' by Prof. S. P. Rigaud. 8vo., Oxford, 1838. 16. Gentleman's Magazine, Ixxxiv., p. 3. 17. Weld's History of the Royal Society. 2 vols. 8vo. , London. 1 Sir D. Brewster, from whose ' Life of Newton ' in the Family Library the facts are taken. 2 My husband always used this word for what I should call ori- ginal character or inborn disposition. 8 258 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1857. How could it be otherwise? What is scientific investiga- tion except filing a bill of discovery against nature, with liberty to any one to be made a party to the suit ? Newton did not feel this, and, not content with the ready accept- ance of his views by the Royal Society, a little opposition made him declare his intention of retiring from the field. He had the choice of leaving his opponents unanswered, and pursuing his researches, committing it to time to show the soundness of his views. That this plan did not suit his temper shows that it was not the necessity of answering, but the fact of being opposed, which destroyed his peace. And he steadily adhered, after his first attempt, to his resolution of never again willingly appear- ing before the world. His several works were extorted from him ; and, as far as we can judge, his great views on universal gravitation would have remained his own secret if Halley and the Eoyal Society had not used the utmost force they could command. A discovery of Newton was of a twofold character — he made it, and then others had to find out that he had made it. To say that he had a right to do this is allowable ; that is, in the same sense in which we and our readers have a right to refuse him any portion of that praise which his biographers claim for him. In the higher and better sense of the word he had no right to claim the option of keeping from the world what it was essential to its progress that the world should know, any more than we should have a right to declare ourselves under no obligation to his memory for the ser- vices he rendered. To excuse him, and at the same time to blame those who will not excuse him, is to try the first question in one court and the second in another. A man who could write the Principia, and who owed his bread to a foundation instituted for the promotion of knowledge, was as much bound to write it as we are to thank him for it when written.' The principle here expressed governed the writer's own life. What he knew belonged to the world, if by the SIR ISAAC NEWTON. 259 knowledge the world could benefit; and no sooner had it 1857. become his own than he felt as much bound to give it to whomsoever could receive it, as he did to repay to the uttermost farthing, and with interest, a debt that he believed himself to have incurred. Newton went to Cambridge as a sizar — ( a student Newton a whose poverty compels him to seek to maintain himself in graduate" whole or in part by the performance of some duties which were originally of a menial character. By this means a youth could live by the work of his hands while he pursued his studies. In our days there is little distinction between the sizars and those above them ; except in college charges, none at all. Those who look upon Universities as institutions for gentlemen only — that is, for persons who can pay their way according to a certain conventional standard — praise the liberality with which poorer gentle- men than others have gradually been emancipated from what seems to them a mere badge of poverty. But those who know the old constitution of the Universities see nothing in it except the loss to the labouring man and the destitute man of his inheritance in those splendid founda- tions. If sizarships with paid personal services had not existed, Newton could not have gone to Cambridge, and the Principia might never have been written. Let it be remembered, then, that so far as we owe this immortal work and its immortal work to the University of Cam- bridge, we owe it to the institution which no longer exists, by which education and advancement were as much open to honest poverty seeking a maintenance by labour as to wealth and rank. Let the juries, who find on their oaths that scores of pounds9 worth of cigars are reasonable neces- saries for young students, think of this, if they can think.9 ! Proofs of all the writer's assertions on the jealousy and even vanity of the man whose intellectual work he 1 Note to Memoir of Newton. The italics are mine. s 2 260 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. ]857. prized so highly had been brought forward in the memoir with a distinctness that left no room for doubt, though the question was not entirely set at rest at that time. Another question, that of Newton's religious belief, is discussed in the Life ; ' not,' the writer says, ' from any particular interest in it, for there are too many great minds on both sides of the controversy to make one more or less a matter of any consequence to either ; but because we have a curious matter of evidence, and an instructive view of party methods of discussion.' Notwithstanding this disclaimer I believe my husband felt more interest in the question, from its own nature, than he was himself aware of. Whether I am mistaken in this may be sur- mised by those who have read his own letter to his mother in this volume. He says, ' Whatever Newton's opinions were, they were the result of a love of truth, and of a cautious and deliberate search after it.' That Newton was a firm believer in Christianity as a revelation from God is very certain, but whether he held the opinions of the majority of Christians on the points which distinguish Trinitarians from Arians, Socinians, and Humanitarians, is the question of controversy. The generic name Unitarian, with the specific names Arian, Socinian, and Humanitarian, are c bandied about in interpretative discussion until they are so misused that the chances are many readers will need explana- tion of them. An Arian believes in the finite pre-exist- ence of Jesus Christ before His appearance on earth; a Socinian believes him to be a man who did not exist before His appearance on earth, but who was a proper object of prayer ; a Humanitarian, with all others who come under the general name Unitarian (the personal unity of the Deity being a common tenet of all), believes him to be a man, and not an object of prayer.' Having given the arguments on all sides, and taken into consideration Newton's great fear of discussion and of opposition, the biographer shows that the weight of evidence goes to SIR ISAAC NEWTON. 261 prove that Newton, the devout Christian believer, was an 1857. Arian at the least. Besides this evidence, he was the friend of Locke, Clarke, and Whiston, all distinctly Antitrinitarians. It is to be remembered that during the whole of New- Newton's ton's life the denial of the doctrine of the Trinity was belief™3 illegal, the statute of King William III. (which relaxed the existing law) making the offender ineligible for any position of trust for the first offence, and liable to three years' imprisonment with other penalties for the second. In these days, when few men of science do more than tolerate the idea of the existence of God, we may dwell with satisfaction on the fact that the world, if not wiser, is better. For whereas in 1696 a man was hanged for denying the Trinity, in 1881 men deny their Father in Heaven, and their fellow-men, instead of hanging them, are content to leave the opinion of each to find its own place in philosophy. If our intellectual con- clusions are chaotic, our moral sense, in this respect at least, is clearer than it was 200 years ago. The c Life of Newton ' concludes with these words in reference to the failings which truth compelled the writer to disclose : — ' Surely it is enough that Newton is the greatest of philosophers and one of the best of men; that all his errors are to be traced to a disposition which seems to have been born with him ; that, admitting them in their fullest extent, he remains an object of unqualified wonder, and all but unqualified respect.' In the year 1855, three years after the appearance of Brewster's Mr. De Morgan's tracts on the Fluxional Controversy, Sir David Brewster's Life of Newton was published. Some of the statements of the biographer in the British Worthies were controverted, though not strongly; some were softened, and some ignored. Sir David, in his great veneration for his subject, had fallen into hero-worship, and my husband's critique of his Life of Newton in the North British Review, No. 46, 1855, shows this very clearly. 262 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1857. In this review ] Brewster's objections and omissions were refuted and supplied. The faults of Newton in the matter of Flamsteed and Leibnitz are proved, and in relation to the order of the discovery of Fluxions the character of Leibnitz received its due testimony: — f We shall not stop to investigate the various forms in which Sir D. Brewster tries to make him out tricking and paltry. We have gone through all the stages which a reader of English works can go through. We were taught, even in boyhood, that the Royal Society had made it clear that Leibnitz stole his method from Newton. By our own unassisted research into original documents we have arrived at the conclusion that he was honest, candid, unsuspecting, and benevolent. His life was passed in law, diplomacy, and public business ; his leisure was occupied mostly by psychology, and in a less degree by mathe- matics. Into this last science he made some incursions, produced one of the greatest of its inventions almost simultaneously with one of its greatest names, and made himself what Sir D. Brewster calls the " great rival " of Newton in Newton's most remarkable mathematical achievement.' The reviewer speaks of the pleasure he derived as a boy from Brewster's invention, the kaleidoscope :— ' The two deans of optical science in Britain and in France, Sir David Brewster and M. Biot, are both bio- graphers of Newton, and take rather different sides on disputed points. Sir D. Brewster was the first writer on optics in whose works we took an interest ; but we do not mean printed works. We, plural as we are, remember well the afternoon, we should say the half-holiday, when 1 Speaking of the titles of all the parties concerned, Mr. Be Morgan says, ' Sir David never neglects the knighthood of Newton. . . . Should we survive Sir David, we shall Brewster him. We hold that those who are gone, when of a certain note, are entitled to the compliment .of the simplest nomenclature.' In the tracts on the Commercium Epis- tolicum he reverses the usual phrase, saying, " Inasmuch as knighthood was not honoured with Newton until," &c.' SIR ISAAC NEWTON. 263 the kaleidoscope, which our ludi-magister (most aptly named for that turn) had just received from London, was North confided to our care. We remember the committee of conservation, and the regulation that each boy should, at the first round, have the uninterrupted enjoyment of the treasure for three minutes ; and we remember, further, that we never could have believed it took so very short a time to boil an egg. A fig for Jupiter and his satellites, and their inhabitants too, if any ! What should we have thought of Galileo when placed by the side of the in- ventor of this wonder of wonders, who had not only made his own telescope, but his own starry firmament ?'.... 6 Since his own scientific sensibilities are keen, . . . we hope they will make him fully feel that he has linked his own name to that of his first object of human rever- ence for as long as our century shall retain a place in literary history. This will be conceded by all, how much soever they may differ from the author in opinions or conclusions; and though we shall proceed to attack several of Sir D. Brewster's positions, and though we have no hesitation in affirming that he is too much of a biographer and too little of an historian, we admire his earnest enthusiasm, and feel as strongly as any one of his assentients the service he has rendered to our literature.' The two biographers had differed in their estimate of Newton's religious belief, Sir David Brewster, in the first instance, maintaining his orthodoxy, c by which,' Mr. De Morgan says in his Review, ' we mean a belief of as much as the Churches of England and Scotland hold in common.' He himself believed Newton to be an Arian, and the MS. creed of Newton found in the Portsmouth papers showed that he was right. M. Biot, who had been a worshipper of Newton early in the century, wrote to Mr. De Morgan at the time, expressing his satisfaction and concurrence in the statements of the North British Review. He received from my husband a copy of the memoir, with which he was greatly pleased. The author and M. Biot had met 264 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1857. in Paris twenty-five years before, but this M. Biot, now in his eighty-second year, had forgotten. In the course of the inquiry a question had arisen, which my husband felt to be an important one, nearly concerning Newton's moral rectitude. Catherine Barton, the niece of the philosopher, was known to have kept the house of his friend Lord Halifax. It was, however, never publicly known whether they were or were not privately married. From all that Mr. De Morgan could gather on this subject, which amounted to a great deal of presump- tive if not quite conclusive evidence, he was convinced that, except as a wife, Newton would not have counte- nanced his niece's connection with the Prime Minister. This conviction was strengthened by the production of a MS. letter of Newton's bought by our friend M. Libri at a sale, in October 1856. But the opinions of scientific and literary men were not unanimous. All the facts and arguments connected with this ques- tion were carefully embodied in an article for the Com- panion to the Almanac for 1858. This article was objected to by the publisher, Mr. C. Knight, on the ground of its not dealing with a subject of general interest. It was suggested to Mr. De Morgan to alter or curtail his writing, or to furnish another article, and he refused to do either. This was the cause of his discontinuing his con- tributions to the Companion to the Almanac. His reasons will be found in the correspondence. 1858. My husband's time was too thoroughly filled to allow of his taking an active part in many public movements, but he was always glad to give what help he could to benevolent schemes. He has mentioned, a propos of de- cimal coinage, his work at the Savings Bank. Another design which he much wished to see carried into execution was the opening of playgrounds for poor children. Our friend the Rev. David Laing, well remembered in his parish of Trinity, St. Pancras, N.W., for incessant efforts REV. DAVID LAING. 265 to improve and assist his parishioners ' in mind, body, 1858. and estate,' devised a plan for opening playgrounds ground^" wherever land could be obtained in London, in which poor movement children might play harmlessly and happily, uncontami- nated by street influences. Mr. Laing asked me to join his committee, and my husband fully shared the interest felt in the scheme. We had a dinner at the Freemasons' Tavern, at which Mr. Charles Dickens presided, and spoke as warmly as he was known to feel for the little vagrants, who, like the dweller in Tom All-alone' s, were always being ( chivied ' away. A meeting, too, was held for the same object, when Lord Shaftesbury was in the chair, supported by Lord Ebury and Mr. De Morgan, who both spoke warmly in our favour.1 Our object was not attained, partly from the difficulty of exciting general interest, partly from the want of workers on the committee, for Mr. Laing's health gave way, and the society ceased to exist. The want is now in some measure but not entirely supplied by the playgrounds of the Board schools. It was a few years before this time that Mr. Dickens and Mr. De Morgan had met at the house of Mr. Charles Knight at Broadstairs. I heard that the meeting gave pleasure to both, but I was not myself of the party. It was in the autumn, on one day of which the forty drowned bodies of cattle were heaped on the little pier, as described in the volume of letters recently published.2 I well re- 1 I wrote in Household Words l A Plea for Playgrounds/ and a longer article in Good Words some time after for Miss Octavia Hill's playground. 2 Some little time ago I came upon a letter from Mr. Dickens to us both, dated 1840. A difference of opinion had arisen between my hus- band and myself on the meaning of one of the illustrations in Nicholas Nickleby, that in which Mrs. Kenwigs, her four daughters, with Miss Petowker the fireman's daughter, and the reciter of the Blood- drinker's Burial, appear. Mr. De Morgan believed that the stout lady was the fireman's daughter, and the thin lady the mother of the little girls who were ' too beautiful to live.' The dispute ran so high that it could only be settled by an appeal to head-quarters. Accord- ingly Mr. De Morgan sent a letter to the author from * a lady and 266 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1858. member Mr. Dickens's active interest in the scene, and I heard the proposal to make the dead cattle into sausage meat, which probably was carried into effect ( unbeknown,' for several of the carcasses were bought by butchers. I was strictly enjoined not to let f sassingers ' come into the house. 1859. Our three youngest daughters had been born in Camden Street, and there were many associations with the house which were, with the sad exception of our eldest child's death, pleasant to my husband and myself. But we wanted a more roomy house, and it was thought that my severe illnesses might be averted by a better air. After we were settled at No. 41 Chalcot Villas, Adelaide Road (at that time nearly surrounded by fields, and fully two miles from the College), he left the house always before eight o'clock in the morning, and met the omnibus in the Hampstead Road, which took him to Grafton Street a short time before the lecture began. He returned to dinner at five o'clock ; and as he only gave himself about half an hour's rest after dinner before going to his library, where he wrote or read for four or five hours, gentleman who, being husband and wife, seldom agreed about anything, though they were in one mind in admiration of the novel,' entreating the author to adjudicate the question. We received the following reply :— ' 1 Devonshire Terrace, York Gate, April 12, 1840. ' Mr. Charles Dickens sends his compliments both to the gentle- man and the lady who do him the honour to differ upon an illustrated point in Nicholas Nickleby, and begs to inform them that the lady sitting down is intended for Mrs. Kenwigs, and the lady standing up for the designing Miss Petowker. But Mr. Dickens begs the gentleman and lady unknown to take especial notice that neither of their portraitures is quite correct, Mrs. Kenwigs being constitutionally slim and delicate and of a slight figure (quite unimpaired by her frequent confinements), and Miss Petowker a young female of some personal attractions, set off by various stage effects and professional captiva- tions.' This was according to my husband's impression, so he was trium- phant and I crestfallen. DRINKWATER BETHUNE. 267 he seldom gave up an evening to friends without feeling 1859. that his work for the next day had accumulated. When he had nowhere to go to between the lectures he spent an hour or two in the Professors' room with some of his colleagues in the middle of the day, and this was his chief rest and recreation. I cannot record any of the conver- sation held there, but I know that for many years it was very pleasant and sociable, and many a good anecdote and riddle (generally traceable to Dr. Sharpey) have come to me from that little conclave. One day my husband told me that he had only been in the Professors' room for a few minutes for two days, for that a poor man driving a cab had been thrown from his seat just as he was himself crossing the road. ' They picked him up,' he said, ' quite insensible, but he recovered when we got him home. I saw him comfortably in bed, and that he did not want anything. Yesterday he was much better.' I found that the injured man's home was more than a mile from the College. Mr. De Morgan's friend Mr. Drinkwater Bethune held Essay on a high Government appointment in India. Besides being ty. a statesman and a distinguished scholar, he was a philan- thropist, and was active in promoting the education of Hindoos and Mahomedans. The lives of Galileo and Kepler in the Library of Useful Knowledge were by him, as was also an essay On Probability, which he wrote in conjunction with Sir J. Lubbock. On the back of this little book the binder had by mistake printed Mr. De Morgan's name, and the attribution to himself of a work to which he had no claim troubled the reputed writer, who, of course, was uneasy till he had thoroughly disowned it. On the cover of his own copy he substituted for his name those of the real authors, adding after the printed words ' by Augustus De Morgan ' the comment, < the last named is homo trium literarum.9 1 1 F. U. ft. 268 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1859. In 1850, shortly before Mr. Drinkwater Bethune's dra™0 death, he had sent to England some copies of a work by Kamchundra, a native teacher, and head master of Science in the school at Delhi. A copy was presented to Mr. De Morgan, who saw in this treatise on problems of Maxima and Minima f not only merit worthy of encouragement, but merit of a very peculiar kind, the encouragement of which . . . was likely to promote native effort towards the restora- tion of the native mind in India.5 With his lively interest in all that belonged to India, the land of his birth, and with his still wider interest in every effort of original thought, especially where, as bearing the impress of national charac- ter, it had place in the history of mental progress, he called the attention of the Court of Directors to the work of the Hindoo teacher, suggesting that Eamchundra should receive a reward for his work, and that the work itself should be brought under the notice of Mathematicians in Europe. After some correspondence with the authorities and with Ramchundra himself, the Court expressing entire concurrence in his views, his offer to superintend the reprint of Ramchundra's work was accepted. It was a work of some labour, because it was done so thoroughly. His preface, consisting of twenty-three closely printed pages, gives a short but scientific history of the rise and progress of Mathematical science in Greece and India, and an analysis of the mental character of the two nations in their respective leanings to geo- metrical and algebraic thought, with the causes of the entire extinction of Mathematical speculation in India, while it remained to some extent active in Greece as long as that country existed as a nation. The extinction of active speculation, and its replacement by a taste for routine, c to which,' he says, c inaccurate thinkers give the name of practical,9 he shows to be coeval with the death of Science in a nation. This was the fate of Hindoo philosophy, and how to revive active thought in the land of his birth was to him a question of deep interest. His HINDOO ALGEBRA. 269 counsel may still be valuable. ( Some friends of education/ he says, * have advised that the Hindoos should be fully Ramchun- instructed in English ideas and methods, and made the media through which the mass of their countrymen should receive ideas in their own language.' This plan has not succeeded, and a deeper knowledge of the psycho- logical aspects of national character might have predicted the result. c My conviction,' my husband says, ' is that the Hindoo mind must work out its own problem, and that all we can do is to set it to work — that is, to pro- mote independent speculation on all subjects by previous encouragement and subsequent reward.' Ramchundra had a stronger leaning to geometry than could have been expected by a person whose sole knowledge of the native mind was derived from the Vija Ganita, but he had not the power in geometry which he had in algebra. ( Should this preface,' the writer says, ' fall into the hands of some young Hindoos who are systematic students of Mathe- matics, I beg of them to consider well my assertion that their weak point must be strengthened by the cultivation of pure geometry. Euclid must be to them what Bhascara or some other algebraist has been to Europe.' It may be that the prevalence of algebraic thought among the Hindoos naturally accompanies their power of compu- tation, and their love of symbolism (without beauty of external form) shown in the mythology and astro- nomy; while the mathematical reasoning of the Greeks fell, as might naturally be expected from their love of symmetry and proportion in form, into a geometrical method. At this time, Lord Brougham being Lord Rector of Offer of the University of Edinburgh, the degree of LL.D. was Edinburgh offered to my husband. He appreciated the honour, but declined it with thanks, saying to me that it did not suit him : he e did not feel like an LL.D.' The International Statistical Congress was held in London in 1860, and he joined a Committee for the 270 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1859. Inspection, I think, of Scientific Instruments, but he did not give much work to this. 1861. An uncompromising character like my husband's must, i- while the world is what it is, sometimes make its owner cai Society. appear combative. And indeed it always needs some kindness and geniality in a dissentient to produce the conviction that he is not actuated by love of opposition in the part he takes. Mr. De Morgan's fellow-workers in any cause soon knew him well enough to feel sure what part he would take in any occasion of difficulty involving self-sacrifice for principle. An occasion of this sort occurred in 1861, when he left the Council of the Eoyal Astronomical Society. The following list will show the offices he had held since he joined it in 1828 :— Feb. 1830. He was elected a member of the Council. 1831. Secretary with Hon. Mr. Wrottesley. 1832-38. Secretary with change of colleague. 1839-40. One of the Vice-Presidents. 1841-42. Member of Council. 1843-44. One of the Yice-Presidents. 1845-47. Member of Council. 1848-54. Secretary with Admiral Manners. 1855-56. One of the Vice-Presidents. 1857. Member of Council. 1858. Vice-President. 1859. Member of Council. 1860. Vice-President. 1861. Elected a Vice-President; declined to act. From this list, taken from the Monthly Notices, it appears that he held the place of Secretary for fifteen years. By his own statement in the letter given farther on, he filled it for eighteen years. In 1860 he retired from the Club.1 After our removal 1 This consisted of the most influential members of the Society, KOYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. 271 in 1859, from Camden Street to Adelaide Road, the 1861. distance made it difficult for him to be in London late at night, on account of the necessity before mentioned of his leaving home early in the morning. His resigna- tion was received with regret. The meetings of this friendly Club had been a great pleasure to him, but he had latterly been unable to join them. His friend Mr. De la Rue, then treasurer and secretary, wrote : — ' Regret was universally expressed at the announcement of your retiring, and also because it recalled to mind how little you had been with us of late. The members could not reconcile themselves to the withdrawal of a name so intimately connected with the Club for the last thirty years, and you were immediately proposed as an honorary life member. I have to announce to you that you were elected by acclamation, and that the Club hope that you will dine with them whenever your leisure and inclination permit of your doing so ; and this wish I endorse on my own account most heartily.' I do not think he ever found leisure, however much he might have had inclination, to dine with his old friends again. During this and the following year occurrences took Election of place which affected his happy relations with the Society, president! though not with the friends who continued to belong to it. In the year 1861, six members of the Council determined to place Dr. Lee, of Hartwell House, in the President's chair. Dr. Lee was a respectable and esti- mable man, who, by the maintenance of a private observa- tory, had shown great interest in Astronomy ; but he was himself more of an antiquarian than a scientific man, and, but for his wealth, would not have been eligible as President. It was the manner of proposing the candidate at a packed meeting, and the canvass for his election by his supporters, in place of the open election by which, who assembled after the meeting. Their entertainment consisted of cofiee, cigars, sometimes a bowl of punch, and always much friendly talk. 272 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1861. in compliance with the recommendation of the Council, a President had hitherto been chosen, that constituted a departure from the course hitherto followed. It was no longer ' our little honest Society,' as my husband had called it in writing to Admiral Smyth ; and all its oldest friends — those who had made it what it was — declared against the innovation. The other party prevailed, and on the election of Vice-Presidents after the President's election, Mr. De Morgan was informed that his name was on the list. His friends, when his intention to leave the Council was made known, entreated him to remain, seve- ral of them urging that his was the name which could be least spared. But he believed that his resignation would cause the smallest possible shock to the Society, while it would be a protest against the unconstitutional tendencies which he wished to arrest. In answer to the official an- nouncement of his election as one of the Vice-Presidents, he sent the following letter :— 41 Chalcot Villas, Adelaide Road, March 1, 1861. Letter on GENTLEMEN, — I have received from Mr. Williams a notifica- Council. tion that I was elected a Vice-President of the Society at the General Meeting of the 8th nit. This election, legally valid, is morally defective in one essential particular. The appointment of a voluntary officer must be a result of concert between the choosers and the chosen. It is a matter of prudence, when a new system is established by a contested election, that the first should inquire of the second whether he will be willing to take the office on the terms which the altered circumstances of the case expressly or implicitly lay down. Failing such inquiry, any election, however good in law, is but an offer ; and to the offer I reply, in all good humour, first by thanks, secondly by non-acceptance. Here I might close this communication ; but the regard^! feel for the Society, in whose affairs I have taken part from early manhood up to a time when old age is within signal distance, impels me to explain myself farther. In placing before you the ground of my retirement, I am fully satisfied that the retirement itself, accompanied by reasons, will do the cause more good than any services of mine have ever done yet, and vastly ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. 273 more than my continuance on the Council could do. Were I 1861. not so well assured of this, that the course I take becomes im- Letter on perative, I should content myself with silent acquiescence, and should defer my secession until the actual arrival of the state of things which I fear is on its way. Before I enter on the subject I will premise — first, that there is nothing in my refusal to serve which has reference to the new President, for whom I entertain, as always, high esteem and regard. Had Mr. Airy been preferred to Dr. Lee in the manner in which Dr. Lee has been preferred to Mr. Airy, my course and my reasons would still have been what they are. Secondly, I fully admit, should any one suppose I question it, that the Society has not exceeded its rights a bit more than I shall have exceeded my own rights in sending this letter. Thirdly, I have not acted in concert with any former colleague, and have not even given a hint of my resolution to any Fellow of the Society. The Astronomical Society has gained a high position by sheer hard work. It is the plainest of all the scientific associa- tions, and the one which least glitters by the show of rank and wealth. Its sole thought has been the promotion of Astronomy. And undivided attention to its real business has been rendered easy by such harmony as is very rarely found in public bodies. Nevertheless, during the last two or three years there has not been that entire unity between the Council and the Fellows which had always existed in time past. I believe that such interruption of the usual concord as has taken place was the consequence of adverse feeling in a very small number of the Fellows ; how generated I do not know. Perhaps that bias towards initiation of political action by which Englishmen spoil so many of their extra-political associations may have taken hold of some minds. I thought I saw symptoms of the Council being a corrupt aristocracy, who made pocket boroughs of the planets, and deprived the moon of her due share of the franchise. I will make no further allusions to the manifestations, which satis- fied me, independently of all I knew besides, that the side they came from was the wrong side. The feelings I have mentioned soon took the form of a desire to facilitate combined opposition to the list of officers which each retiring Council had always recommended to be their successors. The existing Council met the expression of this [desire by the proposal of those by-laws on the subject which now govern the T 274 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1861. Society. That I was not against the change may be inferred from my being the acting Secretary of the Committee of Council which drew up the new by-laws, and the mover of their adop- tion at the general meeting which passed them. My assigned reason was that nothing could be too democratic for a scientific society. I think so still. But I saw in silence, though with great satisfaction, that the changes would speedily bring to issue and to settlement questions, on the right and speedy settlement of which the prosperity of the Society depends. And this is a much better way than could be opened by the results of a period of smouldering discontent. I saw that the good sense of the whole body would soon be turned to reflection upon the question whether the Society could exist in honour and in usefulness upon any other basis than that of peaceful government by a Council : not this Council, nor that Council, but a Council. That is to say, government by one Council, under the statutory changes of its details, until that Council ceases to be in harmony with its con- stituents, and then government by another Council, composed, in strong part at least, of different men. I did not suspect that the Society would be so fortunate as that reflection on this point should first be promoted by so slight a pair of matters as the substitution of one President for another, and the retirement of so dispensable a member of the Council as myself. It is just as I could have wished. My own secession will not — whatever it might have done twenty years ago — im- pede the action of the Society, while the retirement of a person who has known it so thoroughly as I have done for thirty years, during eighteen of which he has officiated as Secretary, will certainly lead to that reflection which I desire to promote. The circumstances under which I retire are, in my view, as follows. Half-a-dozen of the Fellows, desiring to pay a compliment to a highly respected member of the Council, proposed him as President, in opposition to another Fellow proposed by the Council. That this, and no more than this, was their first intention, I feel well assured. But, as they grew warm in the business, they availed themselves of the usual resources of opposition — the personal canvass, the newspaper article, and the invention of a principle to justify a course which, in the first instance, had no reason except the innocent one which I have stated. They lay it down that A B having been President three times, and C D not at all, it is now, as it were, C D's turn. That is to say, they propound a law of rotation, independently of any reason which the Council ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. 275 might have had for their recommendation. Should I have mis- 1861. represented, or rather under-represented, the Fellows to whom I Letter on allude, the misrepresentation comes of their own fault. They nUltJilr-f had the power of stating the principles on which they acted to the general meeting ; it pleased them to prefer the partial and private canvass for their only mode of action, the paragraph and its reason for their only statement of view. They succeeded, and I am convinced that one element of their success was that modicum of adverse feeling towards the Council, of the existence of which I had seen proofs. Their suc- cess transfers the responsibility of their course of action to the Society as a whole ; and thus, and thus only, does that course of action become a legitimate object of my criticism. I maintain and uphold the i-ndividual Fellow in his claim to propose a Presi- dent on any criterion of superior fitness which he pleases. I will support him, acting for himself, in the assertion of his right to use the canvass, the newspaper, or anything which a civilised man can have recourse to, in preference to placing his views before the assembled Society. But when the Society adopts a proposal, the result then becomes my affair, with its reasons, if any be assigned ; or, failing such assignment, with the reasons deduced by myself from circumstances. The power of organising opposition, recently and most properly conceded by the Society to individuals, is one, the corporate assent to any use of which should both be governed and defended by reason. It was intended, as the Society itself was intended, for the encouragement and promotion of Astronomy. When employed and privately argued against a deliberate re- commendation of the Council, it should not be sanctioned by the collective Society except upon avowed grounds. I speak of concerted plans, not of votes of individual Fellows, each acting on his own judgment. If the existing system of ad- ministration be not in harmony with the corporate feeling to an extent which requires united action, it is expedient that the Council should know the how and the why. This is reasonable, because it will discourage and retard Astronomy, so far as the Society can do it — and it can do something — if the Council and the Society should take to working against each other in the dark. Should the system continue, it is my fixed opinion that the harmonious and useful body to which I have so long been attached will go through a series of faction fights, compared to which the recent matter is hardly worthy to be called a contest; T 2 276 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1861. and will emerge, if indeed it emerge at all, with crippled utility, diminished honour, and wasted resources. This is my opinion. I desire no one else to assent unless his own experience of col- lective action should make him see the danger as I do, after that reflection which I know my proceeding will excite. I do not affirm that the substitution of one President for another is in itself a dangerous act. I look at the whole history of the Society for some years past, and on that whole I am irresistibly impelled to form a very strong opinion. I will add something which may tend to prevent a greater calamity than my own refusal to act. It ought to have been evident to the promoters of the recent division that the new by- laws have the effect of making what is called the balloting list into two or more, whenever two sets of nominators are therein exhibited. Usually when parties contest such a question each gives the whole of its own list, and any two lists are not the less two because there may happen to be many names common to both. It is most expedient that those who originate a second list should take care to ascertain that those whose names they take from the other list are willing to serve in either event. For two lists which differ by one name only, especially when the name is that of the proposed President, may symbolise two very different principles. It might easily happen that many of the common names might decline to give such assent to the principle of one of the lists, as would be inferred from their accepting office at the hands of a majority. It cannot reasonably be expected that any nominee should rise at the meeting, and declare his intention of not serving except on one contingency. I duly considered the propriety of such course, and rejected it for three reasons. First, it would have had such an appearance of disrespect to an old friend as it would have been impossible to neutralise, save by such explanations as would have brought on a discussion wrhich it was not for me to originate. Secondly, because such a declaration — a dictation, as it would have been called — would have been a firebrand thrown into the meeting by way of commencing the discussion. Thirdly, because the course announced would have caused difference of opinion among those who thought as I did concerning the policy of the oppo- sition to the Council. The true way of secur'^g a working Council would be for those who differ to take care, each side for itself, to present a list of those whom they have reason to know to be willing to ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY. 277 serve upon the views which the nominating party has put for- 1861. ward. In the present case it has been proposed to me, by the Letter on mere fact of election, and in no other way, to act as Vice- President on the principle of filling offices only to pay compli- ments, or else upon a principle of rotation, the compliment and the system of rotation being settled by private canvass. Or if not one of these, then upon the principle that the deliberate recom- mendation of the Council may be set aside on no reason, either assigned or discoverable. I disapprove equally of the compliment reason, the rotation reason, and the nullity reason. I consider them all as fraught with danger when applied without delibera- tion. I am not prepared to say that, on due consideration of all circumstances, the case might not arise in which any one of these reasons might be sufficient. But I feel compelled to decline action on either reason on no better support than the pro ratione voluntas of the balloting-box. If, indeed, the promoters of the change had come forward and had justified their course in public meeting, I might possibly, though not concurring in their reasons, have been able to accept the deliberate conclusion of the Society, in lieu of the deliberate conclusion of the Council. I have much respect for the result of argument, even when I do not feel convinced by the argument itself. But I will not act in the affairs of a Society which rejects the recommendation of its best advisers on grounds which those who promote the rejection do not submit to discussion ; and, were I not satisfied that the successful majority do not comprehend the character of their own proceeding, I should look upon them as almost wanting in courtesy for not taking the pains to ascertain whether I could meet their views, or whether they would have to substitute for my name that of one of the gentlemen whose advice they were disposed to prefer to mine. As it is, however, I can thank them without reservation for the honour which I decline. I cannot help saying that it will give me much satisfaction to hear that no one but myself, however much he may be con- vinced that a new and perilous period in the history of the Society has commenced, judges it necessary to carry matters so far as I have done. And with this, coupled with the expression of the deep regret with which I separate myself from those with whom I have so long acted in the most friendly concert, I remain, gentlemen, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 278 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1861. P.S. — It will be seen that I write as if I were addressing the Fellows at large. This means that I expect that my letter will be entered on the minutes of the Council, which are by express by-laws accessible to the Fellows at their meetings. These suggestions on government might apply to larger bodies than the one addressed. They give an idea of his political principles, which demanded the utmost possible freedom for the individual, subject to a conserva- tive respect for law. I have been told that the Astro- nomical Society suffered at this time from the causes which led him to leave it. But these things occurred twenty years ago, and their effects have, no doubt, long passed away. 1862, His correspondence with M. Biot had been chiefly on the Life of Newton. In this year M. Biot died, and Mr. De Morgan received from his son-in-law, M. Lefort, some particulars of his early life as material for a biographical notice. introduc- An introductory lecture, the last he ever gave at at Univesr- University College, on the opening of this session, was lege. ° never printed. How greatly this was regretted by many of his hearers I am unable to say. Seldom was an address listened to within those walls with a more lively interest, or received with such mirth and hearty acclama- tions. The subject was a branch of his favourite one— * Education,' and that branch was the method of exa- mining at Cambridge. The attacks on the system were made with so much humour, and so much good humour, that the attacked could hardly have resented what they must feel was so well deserved. Great amusement was caused by the description of the self-satisfaction of an examiner after he had set a question well fitted to show off his own ingenuity and cleverness, but unfitted to elicit the thought or power of the student. The illustrations which half filled the lecture were taken from common sayings, old ballads, and nursery rhymes ; and if the grave body in the centre of the theatre, a few of whom could appreciate LIFE ASSURANCE. 279 the force and humour of the quotations, felt their dignity 1862. at stake, the indisputable truth of every sentence justified the utterance. Many of the students who felt the im- portance of all that had been brought forward in this playful guise signed a request that he would print the lecture. A similar request was also sent privately from Cambridge. He meant to rearrange and add to it before publication, but he never had time for this, and the slightest notes only are left. I ought not to leave out his work in Life Assurance, but of this I can say very little. I have heard it said that his attention was drawn to this subject by iny father, who, from his own pursuits, was supposed to be interested in it. This was not so, however. The two had always mutual subjects of more interest to discuss, and, as far as I recollect, it was scarcely mentioned between them till Mr. De Morgan, who had been consulted on some Com- pany's business, referred to my father for information as to their way of doing it, a subject on which he had been consulted before. My husband frequently gave opinions on insurance questions. He was a contributor to the Insurance Record, and gave many valuable papers to it and to the magazine of the Institute of Actuaries. One of the longest articles in this was a severe criticism and exposure of Mr. T. E. Edmonds, who had given to the world as his own a discovery which was made by Mr. Benjamin Gompertz. The latter was distantly related by marriage to Mr. De Morgan's family. The last paper in the Insurance Record to which his ^ilui;eT°£ Albert Life name is appended relates to the Albert Life Assurance Office. Company. In 1861 he had made the valuation according to the data furnished to him, and in 1862 gave his opinion that the Society was in a condition to give a bonus. When, eight years after, the Society was declared bank- rupt, under circumstances which were far from creditable to the management, his name and opinion were brought forward as a justification of their proceedings. This was 280 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1862. first known to him by paragraphs extracted in our news- Failure of papers from the Bengal Hurkaru and other Indian papers, Office. and afterwards by the Overland Summary, by which it appeared that severe censure had been passed upon him for the part he had taken in the monetary affairs of the Albert. The question was not unimportant, because much ruin had been caused by the failure of the office ; and though this could not be traceable to his advice, his name had been used as a screen by those whose mismanage- ment, if nothing worse, had caused the calamity. As was said, he had but to fight shadows, but this might be worth while when the shadows rest upon a good name. When all this came to his knowledge in 1870, he was too weak and ill to care much about erroneous statements respecting himself, but his friends prevailed on him to write an explanation of the case, which was simple enough. He had, he said, given an opinion upon the data laid before him. He had not been required to investigate the affairs of the office. Had this been asked, he would have perceived that the managers were counting as realised capital large sums which they believed would be paid to them from various quarters, an error against which he had strongly cautioned them, and into which he after- wards suspected they had fallen. His letter, the last he wrote upon public business, contains a little touch of his old humour. When a scientific opinion is given, it is intended that ' it '- the whole opinion, remember — may be used in any way the receiver pleases. Let him give ' it ' as it was given, without alteration or suppression, and he may speak of it as he pleases, may call it what he pleases, and may infer from it what he pleases. He may call my life office valuation a receipt for mince pies — which I certainly never intended it to be — but he must not mix up with it anything out of Mrs. Rundell or Mrs. Glasse. Let him give it but fairly, and I am content, if he will do the same, to take all the consequences of his change of description. Mathemati- The last occurrence connected with Science which gave " ' him pleasure was the formation of the Mathematical MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY. 281 Society. Our second son, George Campbell, had gained 1863. the highest prizes for Mathematics and [Natural Philosophy in University College, though his father's scruples were strong as to adjudging the first prize in his own class to his own son. My husband told me that the papers, which he knew to be George's, were much ahead of the other competitors. ( But,' he said, ' I don't see how I can give him my prize.' I reminded him that the sons of other Professors had frequently taken their fathers' prizes, and that justice to George required it. He said that was true, and he would show the papers to another Professor, who was enough of a Mathematician to judge. The arbitrator, who did not know the writing, adjudged the prize to our son, as his father had done, without the slightest hesitation. George afterwards took his degree in the University of London, and obtained the gold medal for Mathematics and Natural Philosophy. He likewise took the Andrews Scholarship in Uni- versity College, but the work required, especially that for his degree, was too much for a delicate frame, and a severe cold caught about this time was the forerunner of his last illness. The last three years of his life were alternations of illness and partial recovery, though a winter at the sea-side and a subsequent voyage to the West Indies with his brother Edward gave him strength for a time, and we hoped he might have outgrown his delicacy of constitution ; but this was not to be. It was in the year 1864 that Mr. Arthur Cowper Origin of Ranyard and George were discussing mathematical pro- blems during a walk in the streets, when it struck them that ] ' it would be very nice to have a Society to which all discoveries in Mathematics could be brought, and where things could be discussed, like the Astronomical.' It was agreed between the young men that this should be proposed, and that George should ask his father to take the chair at the first meeting. I have a list in his 1 The words in which he told me of the occurrence. 282 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. 1864. handwriting of those Mathematicians who were invited to join, with the names marked of the gentlemen who accepted the invitations. Among these were many of the first Mathematicians in England, and their number rapidly increased. One of the first documents relating to this Society- it may have a value in its future history — is the following, lithographed from George's writing :— University College, Gower Street, Oct. 10, 1864. SIR, — We beg leave to request the honour of your attendance at the first meeting of the * University College Mathematical Society,' which will be held at the College in the Botanical Theatre on the evening of the 7th of November, at eight o'clock precisely. Professor De Morgan has promised to take the chair, and will give an introductory address, and the general objects and plans of the Society may then be discussed. It is proposed that the ordinary meetings of the Society should take place once a month, and that the papers then read should be lithographed and circulated among the members. The annual subscription will not exceed half a guinea. We have the honour, &c., G. C. DE MORGAN, ARTHUR C. RANYARD, Hon. Sees, pro tern. 1865. The first meeting was held January 16, 1865. My husband was the first President, and his inaugural speech contains so many of his own leading thoughts, that I may give a few sentences. The first conveys his old opinion, formed early in life, upon the constitution of public bodies, and the inexpediency of crippling their future action by legislation at the outset. There is much discussion about what our Society should be. But this cannot be settled and marked out ; it must be deter- mined by the disposition of its members. All scientific societies are in danger of getting into a groove, and settling into a routine which possesses small interest to the great body of their members. . . . On the other side, there is always the danger of MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY. 283 guiding the Society off the rail, as it were, and getting it out 1865. of the way in which the momentum of its members can be Inaugural applied to move it. ... address- Our great aim is the cultivation of pure Mathematics, and their most immediate applications. If we look at what takes place around us, we stall find that we have no Mathematical Society to look to as our guide. The Royal Society, it is true, receives mathematical papers, but it cannot be called a Mathe- matical Society. The Cambridge Philosophical Society seems to fulfil more nearly the functions of a Mathematical Society, but it is in an exceptional position. It is the Society of the place which may be regarded as the centre of the Mathematical world ; it is a Society in which almost all the members are able to relish its highest discussions. But in London we have no Mathema- tical Society at all. He had a few words for his old object of attack — the Cambridge examinations : — The Cambridge examination is nothing but a hard trial of what we must call problems — since they call them so — of the Senior Wrangler that is to be of this present January, and the Senior Wranglers of some three or four years ago. The whole object seems to be to produce problems, or, as I should prefer to call them, hard ten-minute conundrums. These problems, as they are called, are necessarily obliged to be things of ten minutes or a quarter of an hour. It is impossible in such an examination to propose a matter that would take a competent Mathematician two or three hours to solve, and for the con- sideration of which it would be necessary for him to draw his materials from different quarters, and see how he can put together his previous knowledge so as to bring it to bear most effectually on this particular subject. It is, I say, impossible that such a problem as this should be set in these examinations. It must be one of our objects to introduce into our dis- cussions something more like problems properly so called, and, if possible, to keep ourselves from entertaining an undue n am- ber of the questions just described. In some quarters the Mathe- matics are looked at, I may say, almost entirely with reference to their applications. These applications are not only physical applications or commercial applications, which may be termed external, but there are also what may be termed internal appli- cations. Those very questions to which I have alluded already, 284 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOL'GAN. 1865. respecting curves of the second order, are applications of the principles of pure Mathematics. They form, in fact, a particular Jnaugiir.il branch of the application of first principles. . . . We nmst not mistake and misapprehend these internal appli- cations ; we must not regard them as constituting entirely what we are to turn our attention to. We have several things before us besides these, which are very little attended to. One of these is what may be called Logical Mathematics. We want a great deal of study of the connection of Logic and Mathematics. Where is any consideration of this question to be found ? If I may be allowed to say more on a subject to which I have devoted a good deal of time and thought, I would make a few observations on this very important and yet very much neglected one. There is exact Science in two branches : the Analysis of the necessary Laws of Thought, and the Analysis of the necessary Matter of Thought. The necessary Matter of Thought, that without which we cannot think, consists of Space and Time. These exist everywhere, and we can imagine no thought without them. Space and Time are the only necessary Matter of Thought. These form the subject-matter of the Mathematics. The con- sideration of the necessary Laws of Thought, on the other hand, constitutes Logic. These latter have been little studied hitherto, even apart from the study of the necessary matter of thought. We mathematicians may very easily improve our reasoning from the very beginning. For, though the Logic that Euclid used is very accurate, there has been no inquiry made with regard to it ; and the consequence is that for two thousand years we have been proving, as we go through the Elements of Geometry, that a thing is itself. That is to say, we have been proving, in the Elements of Geometry, by help of a syllogism, a thing which must be admitted before syllogism itself can be allowed to be valid. Thus, does Euclid not prove that, when there is but one A and but one B, if the A be the B, then the B is the A ? He would not take such a thing as that without appearance of proof. 'A thing is itself;' that is the assertion, that is what Euclid would not take without proof ! To take an example. Let us suppose that there is a village which contains but one grocer and but one Post-Office. Then, if the grocer's be the Post-Office, the Post-Omce is the grocer's. For, if it be possible, let the Post-Office be somewhere else, say at the chandler's. Then, because the Post-Office is the chandler's MATHEMATICAL SOCIETY. 285 and the grocer's is the Post-Office, it follows that the grocer's is 1865. the chandler's, another place, by hypothesis ; which is absurd ; Inaugural and so with every other place except the grocer's. Therefore the Post-Office is at the grocer's. Is not this mode of proof in the third book of Euclid, being the way in which proposition 19 is deduced from proposition 18 ? Yet any body who should use it out of geometry would be laughed at, though Euclid used it, and all those who have studied his Elements have been proving things in this manner for two thou- sand years. There is no doubt about the matter, I say — and it will appear more distinctly on further thought — that you are proving by help of a syllogism what must be admitted before syllogism itself is valid. As to the chances of the Society finding for itself lines of original work, he says :— The higher Mathematics may be carried on with much greater effect by elementary students if they will but study points of Logic, History, Language, and perception of propositions by simple common sense. Mathematics is becoming too much of a machinery, and this is especially the case with reference to the elementary students. They put the data of the problems into a mill, and expect them to come out ground at the other end — an operation which bears a close resemblance to putting in hemp- seed at one end of a machine, and taking out ruffled shirts ready for use at the other end. This mode is, no doubt, exceedingly effective in producing results, but it is certainly not so in teach- ing the mind and in exercising thought. If it should chance that we find a disposition among the members of this Society to leave the beaten track and cut out fresh paths, or mend the old ones, we make this Society exceedingly useful. But if not, if it be our fate only to become problem makers and problem solvers, there is no harm done ; we shall but add one more association to the list of journals, colleges, &c., devoted to this object. The only objection is that this branch of the subject is sufficiently well appreciated and more than sufficiently well practised already. Original papers by both its first President and Secre- taries appear in the first pages of its earliest reports, and 286 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1865. some brilliant mathematical discoveries by Professor Sylvester were communicated to it soon after its founda- tion. In 1866 George was teacher of Mathematics in Uni- versity College School, and in January 1867, the last year of his life, the Tract On the Proof of any Function, and on Neutral Series, read before the Cambridge Philosophical Society the year before, has this note appended to it : ' My son Mr. G. C. De Morgan recently showed me this case of failure of development.' The algebraic operation is given. His father had a high opinion of the power of George's mind, which in some ways resembled his own. Our friend M. Libri called him Daniel Bernouilli, in reference to the two Bernouilli s, father and son. It gave his father plea- sure to think that although he died so young, his son's name should have been associated with his own. 287 SECTION IX. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. To Sir John Herschel. Camden Street, June 8, 1856. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I have long had the idea of a piano- 1856. forte in which each set of strings belonging to one note is to communicate with a pipe for resonance ; and sometimes I have thought that a spring at the mouth of a pipe struck by a hammer would make a good instrument. In this case we might have various pedals opening and closing the upper end of the pipe. But I never imagined anything so grand as the intro- duction of a vast force by means of electro-magnetism. I should propose to call your instrument the electro-magnetic whack-row- de-dow. What is the reason why thirds and sixths, major or minor, are more pleasant to the ear than fourths and fifths, which are consonances of simpler ratio of vibration ? Fifths, by them- selves, have a certain something which the ear does not like much of, and consecutive fifths we all know are forbidden. But thirds and sixths are very pleasant. If Dr. Smith's theory of beats be true, I almost suspect I spy a way to explain this. But I must get hold of an organ tuner, and learn whether they are actually effective. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, August 15, 1856. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — What can you say for yourself? Your last note was written in a good strong hand. This is hot weather. When I was a boy I read how Cato the Censor used to allow himself a little vinegar in his water when the heat was 288 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. great, and when a young man I used to imitate him. A few drops of vinegar, half or a whole teaspoonful to the tumbler, I found the most refreshing addition possible to a tumbler of water, and I have revived the habit. Try it. Raspberry vine- gar is a great deterioration of the principle. Cato would have censored it prodigiously. I hf,ve got a clincher about Cath. Barton and Lord Halifax. Last Sunday Libri showed me a letter of Newton which he had bought. The handwriting is indisputable. It came out of some Newton papers which Rodd picked up in 1847. It is written four days after the death of Halifax to a Sir John of Lincoln- shire (probably Sir J. Newton of Westby, Newton's distant cousin). It excuses him (J. N.) from paying a visit for these reasons : — 'The concern I am in for the loss of my Lord Halifax, and the circumstances in which I stand related to his family, will not suffer me to go abroad till his funeral is over.' Not a scrap of evidence exists that Newton was ever ac- quainted with the other Montagues, though of course it is very likely he knew them ; but relation of any kind, whether rapport or parente, is utterly unknown, much as Newton has been poked into. Newton was not an executor of Halifax. Qucere whether Halifax's family means family in the usual primary sense of wife and children ? Did Halifax leave a widow ? Was that widow Newton's niece ? If so, a very natural reason for keeping the house occurs. Macaulay, who used to battle the point, and fought for the Platonics, now says he does not entirely reject my hypothesis. Brewster has never written to me since I reviewed his book, so I cannot send it to him. Lord Brougham is brought up by it ; says it is very curious, and he must think about it. I believe this letter will be Cath. Barton's marriage certificate. Here is another letter which I picked up in sorting my letters to-day : — 'SiR, — Please give me information on the following points: — '1. A course of mathematical study by which an accurate and comprehensive knowledge of the abstract principles of the science shall be gained, and at the same time such a course as will prove an efficient instrument in the study of physical science. ' 2. The best works — Continental, classical, and English — on the several branches of mathematics, and where I can get com- plete lists of books. 'Yours CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 289 I never heard of the man in my life. I made the following note 185(5. on the letter, and did not send it : — ' Est modus in rebus, stint certi demque fines. How could I answer this letter in less than five sheets full of lines ? ' Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John HerscheL 7 Camden Street, Sept. 10, 1856. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — This letter is not written to be framed and glazed, but because, quoad the form, I must have a line no longer than the sway of the wrist, because the arm is in a sling; because on Friday last I put out the shoulder, because I and my book. ladder slid down together, because the angle at which said ladder may be trusted on a beaten and tightly nailed carpet is very different from the same when the carpet is dusty and what seamen call loose in stays, because the coefficient of friction is vastly altered. However, I am thriving apace, and my wife, who would not believe my report of exceeding good health written with a pencil an hour after the replacement of the shoulder, but ran up to see how things were, went back to the children satisfied that I was a convalescent. . . . Now mark, dislocations are among the minor evils which step in to shut the door in the face of greater ones. If the bone had been invincible, and all the wrench withstood by the muscles, I should have had a long fainting fit or fever, a sprain of six months, and it would have been a question whether I should have used the arm again ; whereas, after a flash of fire and a bump, cogito ergo sum began to act, and I got up as much as ever alive to all things, and especially to the necessity of sending for a doctor. However, all this is merely as to the form of the writing. Do you remember Sir H. Davy's habits ? "Was he in the habit of rubbing his hands together in any peculiar way and frequently ? I want to know, because verification of a story too long to write now depends on it. I shall hope to hear a good account of yourself. With kind regards to all around you, believe me, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 290 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. To Rev. Dr. Whewell. Sept. 16, 1856. 1856. MY DEAR SIR, — I have been prevented from answering your note by an effect of gravity which brought me and my book- ladder to the ground together, and dislocated my right shoulder. However, it is getting right now, and the whole thing is not so bad as it is called. As to Galileo, I have inquired of Libri, who is up to that case above all men, and he says that though various statements have been made, he never could find the least ground for supposing that any Pope had done anything in the matter. And this was my impression also. I feel confident that all the rumour is a mere sham. The following (not to be used) may confirm you. The nar- rator is Biot, to Libri, long ago. A little before 1830 Biot was at Rome, conversing with the chief Inquisitor, who said, ' You men of science think that the Inquisition is opposed to scientific statements, which is quite untrue.' 'Then,' said Biot, 'I suppose the Professor at the Sapienza College may teach the motion of the earth ? ' The Inquisitor shook his head and said, 'No, that could not be allowed.' Depend on it, if anything had been done, it would have been widely promulgated. Yours very truly, however illegibly, A. DE MOEGAN. To Rev. Dr. Whewell. 7 Camden Street, Nov. 7, 1856. MY DEAR SIR, — For your thin volume of additions just received many thanks. These little supplements are like giblet pie — a collection of all that is most racy : only, mind, I don't mean to say they are goose giblets ; on the contrary, they shall be owl giblets if the owl is still to be the bird of Minerva. Now for notes and remarks. Who can unlatinise in our day ? Who answers for Nicholas Gusa or Adam Marshman ? ] He might be Adam Marsh, or Fen, for aught we know. Have not the French made Viete of M. de Viette, who would have been horrified at his prefix of gentility being abolished ? We happen to have plenty of evidence to De Viette. 1 Adam de Marisco de-latinised. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-06. 291 Smyth is rather slapdash sometimes. He killed Mezzofanti 1856. in the R.A.S. Annual Report long before that polyglot Mpes implumis set off to leave his card on all the builders of Babel to see if he could manage to pick up a stray dialect or two more than he carried with him. I feel sure that if there had been any revocation of the decree — above all in 1818 — Libri must have known it. But I will get something yet. The Catholics are evasive on the point. Smyth heard it, no doubt, so have I ; and there is a disposition to have it believed among the R. C. Page 51. In p. 19 of my notes on the Antegalileans I have given a better account of Digges, and especially of the edition of 1594, which you seem not to mention. I have it. It has an actual defence of Copernicanism (physical). P. 33. I have never seen the perspective of Bacon separately, and so say nothing. But I am not without a silent suspicion that the work published separately is by John Peccam, after- wards Archbishop of Canterbury, a pupil probably of R. Bacon. P. 47. The acceptance of the motion of light is not pro re natd ; the motion of light is first proved by Jupiter's satellites, which establish geometrically a motion of the effect called light ; and then, with the velocity inferred of the effect, the aberration is explained in quantity and quality both. There is not even the assumption that light is material. Measured motion is geometry, not physics. . . . Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John HerscheL 7 Camden Street, Nov. 13, 1856. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I am glad to hear you are getting on. I think you should not do too much in the way of being a free body in the morning. The evening phenomena are fatigue. I doubt your prognostic about the coinage. I think you may be eatable by the time it comes. It is getting into country schools and colleges, and I think people are learning it. The House of Commons will probably be tried again next session. As to how you might cook next century, you remind me of an experiment I have often thought of — mummy soup. The muscular fibre which remains must be partially soluble in water, I should think. I should like to catch some of the Fee-Jee Islanders — if that be the way to spell it — and feed them on the u 2 292 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1856. strongest mummy soup made in a Papin's digester. They are cannibals, and would enjoy the idea. Fancy the souls of the poor Egyptians, who preserved their bodies with such care for a future resuscitation, seeing their remains devoured by ferocious savages, and incorporated literally into the bodies of the same ! I have been looking at a 10-inch bar of aluminium which Graham hp,s lent me. Queer stun0. Costs at present its bulk of silver, being £ of the weight. Smells a little, and rings like Scyllaand Charybdis — I mean the Sirens. It makes a very pretty noise. They are making it at Paris in earnest. They pat 40 Ibs. of sodium into some preparation at one go, I am told, during the manufacture of a lot. Our kind regards to all the ladies. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, Nov. 8, 1856. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Are you doing well and getting on ? I am going on with my shoulder famously, chalking on the board ; ! but I can't do everything yet. I have learnt that whoso putteth out his shoulder, him shall his shoulder put out. I think that if you were to give me an answer before Friday, I might talk of you at the Astronomical, where people ask after you. Next, how are all your party ? — no small one. I saw Warburton a week ago at his own house, working away at An Om, in utter falsification of the maxim that out of nothing can come nothing. I have nothing in the world to say about mathematics except, musing idly, I found that Euclid has not demonstrated the way to bisect angles. I send you a lecture on decimal coinage. It is a slow-moving subject, but it must be carried sooner or later, in spite of ministers. They might have mentioned it at Paris, while they were talking about everything. I mean the Plenipotentiaries. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 1 In his lecture-room. — ED. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 293 To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, Oct. 9, 1857. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — . . . I am very glad to hear your son is 1857. safe. You say nothing about yourself, so I hope there is nothing to say. Subdivide yourself into any number of egos or ichs, but take care you don't get the double identity, which sometimes happens, in which a person is one person for a time ajid then another. Did you ever read a novel called The Devil's Elixir ? If not, try for it ab the circulating library. This Elixir has the effect that if two persons drink thereof their identities get mixed up in a very odd way. Each one becomes the other to a consider- able extent. By the way, you and I may be cousins all this time without knowing it. One of my mother's ancestors — her mother's mother, I think — was a Pitt, belonging to a family which con- sidered itself an elder branch of the Chatham family ; and I think I remember some expressions of hers being quoted which seemed to savour of thinking it very presumptuous in the younger line to come out as prime ministers, &c. Multa renascenhir quce jam accidere. Among them is a fact which I discovered a few days ago — that T, A. De M.,have sailed under our friend Beaufort's orders. He commanded the convoy in which my father and mother brought me home to England in 1806, he being in the Woolwich frigate. I was then four months old. So you see I was at the Cape long before you. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, Feb. 7, 1858. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — King Cole (2nd edition) is nearly per- 1858. feet. Carmina cumfumo is not idiomatic, and that is all.1 When did 1858 begin ? on what meridian ? An insidious question, demanded in the interests of equinoctial time. Why, 1858 had as many beginnings as there are meridians. When did Wednesday begin ? 1 Speaking of a Latin translation of King Cole, which Sir John had sent him. — ED. 294 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1858. If a year begin with a day there must be as many beginnings of years as there are beginnings of days. Now I ask another question. From 0° to 360° of terrestrial longitude, how many meridians are there ? The political world will be content with defining the year by the place. The astronomer, when he names time, always names a place. If you like to begin the year with the centre of the mean sun, in the mean equinox, it can be done, but the poor almanac makers must not be puzzled, and I protest against any more 185f , or the like. I returned to the Royal Society the other day a book which was given to them in 1728, and had probably wandered the world for more than a century. That book and others satisfy me that about the years 1734-40 the R. S. library was expurgated — purged of all anti-Newtonian and infinitesimal books. This is curious, but they were curious people in curious days. There is a very marked absence of all materials for studying the Newton and Leibnitz controversy in the R. S. library. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, Feb. 11, 1858. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I see your drift. But that year question set me off on equinoctial time. Why, the question is an ethno- logical, not an astronomical one. When the Portuguese and Spaniards met in the Philippines — via India the Portuguese, via S. America the Spaniards — they differed a day in their reckoning, kept their Sundays on different days, and cursed each other as only real Christians can curse. I never could learn how the Pope settled it. Taking Christendom as a point of departure from whence all have gone whom we are concerned with, we shall find the Americans beginning their Sunday after us, and the Anglo- Indians before us ; the New Zealanders after us, the Australians before us, owing to the way they go. But when New Zealand goes to Australia there is a change of day for them, and vice versa. Rule. — Do at Rome as they do at Rome. And what they do at Rome depends on the direction of travel by which they got to Rome. If there were a constant meeting at the meridians oppo- site Christendom by people of different modes of coming there, CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-60. 295 there must be an arrangement made somehow. By a wise 1853. arrangement of things it will be long before the opposite part of the world is fighting the question. I don't see how there could be three days current at once, unless some chaps had gone twice round the world and never made a correction. Did I ever explain to you how it is that the opposite hemi- sphere to the one which has London for pole is nearly all water ? You might go ahead in science many a day before you would find the true reason. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, May 25, 1858. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — When your excessively rare animalcules had been duly studied, it struck me that all creation is full of life ; and though I have neither pond, tank, nor aquarium, yet I have access to divers atramentaria which in common life are called inkstands. Out of these I soon fished some specimens,1 which I send you greatly magnified. I begin to have a suspicion that the style of writing depends somewhat upon the monsters which live in the ink, and that people would do well to examine the fluid before committing articles. Most of the specimens are difficult to make head or tail of — which is very frequently the character of other products of the inkstands. Care, however, must be taken how such things are published, for the world is very incredulous. And Fabricius, in his Philosophical Entomo- logy, says, ' Damnanda vero memoria Johannes Hill et Ludovici Renard qui insecta ficta proposuere.' As to the algebra, you are proving that you won't look at symbols. What ! ! ! When nk is the number of vibrations in one second, and ma the time of each vibration, you pretend to tell me that you don't see — ma x 72^=1 ; or do you dispute — ma X nlt,=mnka ? You will not easily make me believe that you were doing anything but laying a trap for me to make a pun that you 1 Figures made by scribbling, and then folding the paper in half, by which both sides are made alike and resemble strange insects. 296 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1858. might be down upon me if I missed it. But I see through you — you were pretending to labour under a marik d* intelligence. As to the little dees — De Mogorgon — it is not the first time. My old friend Farish (the professor's son) could not call me any- thing else ; it went against his conscience up to the day of his death. ' But why is the gentleman not called De Mogorgon ? ' I am constantly tempted to make a mistake in one Greek name, because in the second-hand book lists it always comes after mine. Look into any book list of a miscellaneous character, and you will see the succession following : — De Moivre De Morgan De Mosthenes. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Whewell. Oct. 10, 1858. MY DEAR SIR, — Many thanks for the Bacon which you found in the Barrow. It all amounts to wondrous little, if, as you say, Bacon was known to the Cambridge men generally. How could Bacon be so little quoted ? The conceits of which that age was fond were taken out of puerility by him, and made into wit and covered with taste. And yet they knew nothing of him to speak of. Newton's silence is emphatic. When I have time and opportunity I intend to work out the thesis, * That Newton was more indebted to the Schoolmen than to Bacon, and probably better acquainted with them.' The question whether I wrote the two articles in the Athe- nceum is entirely the question whether personal identity lasts through time. Cowley I had forgotten. I have looked him up again, and see that he merits Harvey's satire. Gassendi I knew of. He is a Baconian prononce. I dare say you have received Mansel's vol. of Bampton Lectures. I tell him by this post that it is the best argument I have seen against subscription at matriculation. Can you detect that the printer has punctuated Bampton's will into full Priestleian heterodoxy ? . . . Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 297 To Sir John Herschel. Oct. 15, 1858. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — It's all very well for people to be clever, and go to the British Association, and talk philosophy and chemistry and — confound the hard words ! — transcendity, which transcends all entity whatever, and is next ot kin to the two German equations — Everything=God. God =0. This, I say, is all well as far as it goes. But can your philosophy answer me this ? — Suppose the Northern Hemisphere to be all land, the Southern Hemisphere all water : is the Northern Hemi- sphere an island, or the Southern Hemisphere a lake ? Crack that.1 Yours very truly, A. DB MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. Camden Street, Nov. 15, 1858. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I have as nmch chance of meaning to try for the Lowndean as I should have of getting it if I tried (=0). Knew yon not that I am a heretic who is B.A. of thirty- one years' standing by reason of subscriptions being unsub- scribable ? Moreover, I have other fish to fry. Cayley is a capital man for it. I hope you have been asked to do a memoir of Peacock for the R.S. anniversary. He is lost at the time when he is most wanted. I heard of your frisking about the country like a young 1 The geographical question was answered with another by Sir John Herschel. * Suppose all was water except a patch of land of an insular form round the North Pole, N° in radius (N = 3), would that be an island ? I should say yes, because it is land. Next, let N=-4, same question. Next, N = 5, N = 6, 20, 30, 90°. ' At what value of N does it cease to be an island ? 'Then N = 95, 100 ... 179° 59' 59". At what value does the sea cease to be an ocean, a lake, a pool, a pond, or a puddle ? I pause for a reply/ — Collingwood, Oct. 18. 298 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1858. gentleman, and was very glad to hear of it. You are now ' discharged cured,' and are, I hope, meditating some proof of violent health. A new edition of the Differences would be a very pretty step in the proof. Did I send you this riddle ? — the answer is in itself a riddle. If a comet were to take a much more elongated orbit, and the King of Naples were to prohibit the importation of malt liquor into his capital, in what particulars would two empty heads differ ? Answer overleaf. Kind regards to all your circle. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. Answer : The comet would have double eccentricity, and the King of Naples would not. What can it mean ? To Sir John Herschel. 7 Camden Street, N.W., Jan. 1, 1859. 1859. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Many thanks for your dates. I want one more thing — Who was Peacock's father? I have before me a book by a clergyman of the name, whom I suspect to be the one — Rev. Thos. Peacock, author of The Practical Measurer and of Walkingame's Arithmetic Modernised. I am very completely set up by your dates. The Prolocutor of Convocation is, in fact, the speaker of the Lower House ; for the clergy have their higher House, made of bishops, and their lower House, made of dignitaries and proctors, so called, elected by the lower clergy ; and they all have a hankering to be what they once were, when they persecuted books as heretical, and excommunicated the writers, and kept the pot boiling to the wonderment and amusement of men and angels. And this was called synodical action, but at last the State voted it torn-nodical, and put it down. In our own day it has been revived to the extent of allowing a day or two of talk, and appointment of com- mittees to organise talk for next time ; but no measures have been allowed to pass. And Peacock, as prolocutor, was, I understand, very useful as a king of order and a stifler of pranks, he being himself favourable to the revival of synodical action on the principle of all the clergy being as discreet as himself, a theory which beats out of the field Homoeopathy, Mesmerism, Table-turning, Parliamentary Reform, and Perpetual Motion. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 299 What they want is that Parliament shall not legislate for the 1859. Church without consent of Convocation, and this Parliament will never agree to. In the meanwhile they are allowed to use logarithms, not Napier's, but of the sort which Sophocles men- tions, A,dy Induction. Whether you have gone as far with logic I have not yet found out. And I see, with great satisfaction, that the name of Friar Bacon begins to appear. Brother Roger has always been a great favourite of mine since as long ago as B in the Penny Cyclopaedia, and he ought to be allowed his share of the name- of Bacon. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 303 Bacon is a queer name ; but there seems to be a providence 1860. which watches over names, and makes the great men have bear- able sounds. None of the hypotheses that, be the names what they may, the exploits will sanctify them in time ! If Bacon and Newton had been Wiggins and Figgins, would any time have taken off the ridicule of the rhyme ? Could anybody with a grave face have argued the question whether the immortal Figgins was or was not indebted to the great Wiggins ? I see a little theological philosophy. A rationalist Non- conformist a few weeks ago opened one of his paragraphs thus : — 'Now, my brethren, let us proceed to make a logical incision into the psychology of Grod.' This was making a subject of the Deity. Subject is the sense in which the word was used in reply to an argument of mine. I maintained that a good teacher must have his heart in his subject, and his subject in his head. Not if he teach anatomy, says Dr. Sharpey, for he could neither have his heart in his subject, nor his subject in his head. To Professor Kelland.1 41 Chalcot Villas, Adelaide Road, April 2, 1860. MY DEAR SIR, — I have received your note announcing that the Senate of the University of Edinburgh intend me the honour of a degree of Doctor of Laws on the occasion of Lord Brougham's installation as Chancellor. I hope I shall give no offence by very respectfully declining the honour. I mean the diploma. The honour lies in the good opinion of the Senate, and that your communication gives me a right to say I have already earned. My reason for declining the degree is my own peculiar dis- like of conventional titles, which are not what they seem to be. If I had studied civil law I should be very glad to be styled fit to teach it by any competent body ; but as I never have studied, I object to call myself a teacher, and should object to others calling me so, and I would not consent to accept a degree in law from any University in the world. This is for myself, without im- peachment of the conduct of others for adopting any conven- 1 In reply to an offer to confer on Mr. De Morgan the honorary degree of LL.D. of the University of Edinburgh. 304 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1860. tional misnomer in which they may see good, or for which they may find reason. I am, dear sir, Tonrs very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To a Friend. 41 Chalcot Villas, Jan. 19, 1861. 1861. MY DEAR , — Two days ago I heard from Miss Sheep- shanks of the heavy blow which has fallen upon you and , a dreadful shock, and, I must suppose, wholly unlooked for. With my strong and increasing disposition to congratulate those who leave this world, I feel an increasing amount of sympathy for those who are left behind ; and you and your wife's share of this mournful event will command the sympathies of thousands you know nothing of in addition to those of your friends. I trust you both bear up, and try to balance what is left against what is gone. That this is not easy I know. A few days more than seven years have elapsed since it was my turn, and I could not then feel that six left made any set-off against one gone. I could only understand it. But time will do for you what it has done for me. My wife unites her sympathy and kind regards with mine. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Rev. Dr. Whewell.1 41 Chalcot Villas, Jan. 20, 1861. MY DEAR SIR, — This very (Sun)day— how I do not know, but 1 suppose the Parcels Company holds it a work of necessity and mercy to distribute the parcels which have accumulated during the frost ; most likely they have been obliged to suspend some work by the state of the streets — I have received the volume of Barrow, for which I have to return thanks either to you or the College ; c'est egal, Vetat c'est moi ! I say nothing as yet, except that it is exceedingly handy and time-saving to have these books 1 Wafered into a volume of tracts left by Dr. Whewell to Trin. Coll. The succeeding letter refers to the memoir entitled ' On the Syllogism, No. IV., and on the Logic of Relations,' in the Trans- actions of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, vol. x., part ii., 1860. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 305 in one volume. For B. is the man of all others, according to my 1861 experience, who is referred to by citation of one work for what is in another. How could aught else happen to a cove who called one of his writings Lectiones Mathematicce, and another Lectiones Geometricce, and then treated what is considered as exclusively Geometrical (as Euclid V. wrongly is) in his Mathe- matical lectures, pp. 8, 9 (i.e. one word shared between them) ? For metaphysical read psychological. I don't object to the word a few lines higher up. Do you know the use of the word metaphysical, which is growing up among the writers of the examination books which have taken the place of all others ? — I mean at Cambridge. It means requiring thought, and proceeding without symbolic calcu- lation. When a proof of two pages of symbol drumming is avoided by an act of reasoning, it is said to be ' too metaphysical.' This is one of the consequences of the death and burial of psychological thought in Cambridge. There seems to be a com- plete acquiescence in the maxim that Oxford shall settle what the world shall think, and Cambridge shall settle who is to be Senior Wrangler. It is getting worse and worse from day to day. Are any of the younger men alive to the facts ? With best remembrances to Lady Affleck, I am yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Rev. Dr. Wliewell. 41 Chalcot Villas, Adelaide Road, Jan. 20, 1861. MY DEAR SIR, — There are some mistakes which are too small to be of any consequence, and some which are too large. Ex- tremes meet; — oo is curiously a comrade of +00. . . .* The reason I call $3 — 2*— 5=0 a celebrated equation is because it was the one on which Wallis chanced to exhibit Newton's method when he first published it; in consequence of which every numerical solver has felt bound in duty to make it one of his examples. Invent a numerical method, neglect to show how it works on this equation, and you are a pilgrim who does not come in at the little wicket (vide J. Bunyan). Newton was anything but illiterate. He knew Bacon. His silence is most marked. How could he avoid every possible 1 Referring, I think, to some error in a figure in a former letter. — S. E. DE M. X 306 • MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1861. amount of mention of Bacon on every possible subject ? I never said he did not know Bacon ; I only said he could not be proved to have known of his existence. Nor can he. I think he has taken such pains not to be known to know him as cannot be attributed to accident. I am glad to hear there are logicians at St. John's. It is a college at which more pains are taken to make the men write © for ' circle ' in their writing out than to prevent their reasoning in a circle. There is no attention given to writing in. Neverthe- less, St. John's has preserved the shadow of a teacher of logic. When I published my syllabus last year, I sent a copy to every college in Cambridge, directed 'to the Tutor in Logic,' just to make them stare. I got an answer from St. John's from Mr. Mayor, who acknowledged the title. It is not examination that is wanted, but good teaching and example. A paper of logic conundrums would be just as useful - as one of those fearful mathematical papers, to prepare for which private tutors drill men in passing examinations. Thank Heaven that I was at Cambridge in the interval between two systems, when thought about both was the order of the day even among undergraduates. There are pairs of men alive who did each other more good by discussing x versus dx, and Newton versus Laplace, than all the private tutors ever do. With kind re- membrances to Lady Affleck, I am yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. From Professor Alexander Bain.1 University, Aberdeen, Feb. 7, 1861. DEAE ME. DE MOEGAN, — As two copies of your paper on the ' Logic of Relations ' have reached me, I beg to return you one of them, and to thank you for the other. I am very much inte- rested with this new subject which you have entered upon, being convinced that the greatest omission both in logic and psychology is the not seeing how far the principle of relativity goes. So far 1 This letter was given to me by Professor Alexander Bain. I have departed from the general rule of not giving letters to my husband in the correspondence, because in this instance the value of his own to general readers is greatly enhanced by being accompanied by that to which it is a reply. I wish it had always been possible to give both sides of the correspondence, but this would have rendered it too volu- minous. — S. E. DE M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 307 as I am able to judge, relation goes into everything ; no quality 1861, existing except as related to some other, which we sometimes call its negative, at other times its contrast, and again its cor- relative. The straight line has no meaning without its contrast, the bent line ; the occurrence of the two kinds is necessary to our recognising either property. Every quality, every cognition of the mind, implies an antithesis or couple. Hot — cold, up — down, &c. If I say red, I mean to exclude all other members of my ' universe ' (to use your own well-chosen designation) ; and if that be'* colour,' I exclude all other colours. The important inferences deducible from the essential doubleness of all cognition are, I am sure, very numerous, and I have no doubt you will con- vince us of this if you continue the subject. Yours faithfully, ALEX. BAIN. To Professor Alexander Bain. 41 Chalcot Villas, Adelaide Road, N.W., Feb. 9, 1861. MY DEAR SIR, — I am sorry to have given you the trouble of returning my second copy. I see I must have entered you as of two Universities. I quite coincide in your view as to a quality being unthink- able except in company with its non. I forget where I said, long ago, every name designates every object of thought as either in the class or out ; but I did say it, and the equipollence of X and non-X is the foundation of completeness even in common syllogism. I hardly like to claim the word universe as mine, though I have brought it down from its modern sense (the TO irav) to the old sense. Those who have derived the word from a mixture of unum and diver sum (strange etymologists !) certainly very much favour my plan of making it any aggregate of X and non- X which is in hand. But the old universal was any name which had plurality of things signified : of two only, the name turned the two into one, in unum versa. I have made some people stare by telling them that universality begins at two. The combinations of relation are the ambiguities of language. Looking on a little into compound relation, I come to such a sentence as the following : — * He is the father of a friend of every one of my children.' Do I mean that one of his children is the friend of every one x 2 308 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1861. of mine, or that every child of mine has a friend among his children ? Here is L(MN)' as distinguished from (LM)N'. This door is a very little way open as yet. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Admiral Smyth? 41 Chalcot Villas, Adelaide Road, Feb. 19, 1862. 1862. MY DEAR SMYTH, — I am not very especially busy just now. The obscure men are, as we know, precisely the men that future necrologists will look out for. I find that the Biographies Obscurorum Virorum are very useful. I have an old Italian Glorie degli Incogniti, which I find very useful for information about men who are merely there to be shown up for non-notoriety. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. April 19, 1862. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, No news here ; not even a riddle. Here is a poem which was given me : — "Ae'iSc etSvAAtov Sea, Felis adest cum cithara, Vacca lunam transivit, Hoc jocoso motus visu Rumpitur canellus risu Cum cochleari lanx abit. Which do you believe in, metal plates or guns ? I have just received a pamphlet on the subject from Michael Scott. If this be the great wizard, then we know how it was that — When in Salamanca's cave Him listed his magic wand to wave, The bells would ring in Notre Dame. The wand was a long match, and his range was so good CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 309 that he would hit the belfry at Notre Dame from as far off as 186? Salamanca. The end of it I have long foretold to be that the different capitals of Europe will shell one another without the trouble of sending out soldiers. With kind regards to Lady Herschel and the juniors all, I am, yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 91 l Adelaide Road, April 29, 1862. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Many thanks for the hexameters. They are as good as they can be, but all the logic in the world does not make me feel them to be English metre, and they give satisfaction only by reminding me of the Greek. Just as, mark you, a flute-player — which I have been these forty-five years — only plays Haydn and Mozart because he has the association of the orchestral accompaniment, which arises in his head with the melody. The idea of the Scott ballad metre is not recent. When I was at school, forty-two years ago, our ludi-magister read out about 100 lines of Homer, which he said were versified by Scott himself as a specimen. They were decidedly Scott, and I thought not a little Homer. The hexameter, it is clear, does not fix itself in the popular mind. If it has done so proofs can be given, but I have not met with them ; the popular mind knows neither quantity nor accent, but that which is to last bites its own way in, without any effort. Is the hexameter making any way ? Do people quote any hexameters ? It seems to me that the problem of a metre for translation of the hexameter is not yet solved. The English hexameter is not a better reminder of Homer than the usual metres of our language. I have discharged my conscience, llichard's visual organ.2 Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 1 The number of the house had been changed. 2 Dixi?— S. E. DE M. 310 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, May 3, 1862. 1862. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — A great many years ago yon stood np after dinner at our club, and gave strong hints that your time was nearly up. But you brisked up, took the Mint, overworked yourself, got an illness worth prophesying about, got over it, and committed mathematical papers. Now here you are again, talking about softening of the brain, and a knacker's yard, and all kinds of incom mensurable s. If this mean that you are going to be Chancellor of the Exchequer, why, take off the income tax. If it be really melancholy foreboding, take on a little quinine or brandy and water, and give up the hexameter for six months. It is a mournful metre. As to your catalogue of Greek ships and of nebulae, take care you do not mix them accidentally, ' A catalogue of ships which sailed against Troy, reduced to the year 1862,' by Sir J. H., &c. People will stare to see how 2,500 years of precession turn a trireme into a steamship. AH our progress may be only pre- cession of the equinoxes, motion backwards of the zero of reckoning. As to the hexameters, it is only now and then remembered that verses among Greeks and Romans were not for recitation, but recitative. An hexameter is a natural measure for a chant. I dare say the rhapsodist in the streets of Athens gave it out something like as a Pnseyite parson gives out the Litany, only with more taste. A famous hexameter might be made out of the opening line of the hymn to the Virgin in * Masaniello,' but our most natural measure is a foot too long, and the last spondee is doubled. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 311 To Sir J. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, N.W., May 30, 1862. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I should not wonder if Sylvester and 1862. you were at one without any intercommunication of your par- ticles. I have had the same idea a long time. I have even hinted at it through a glass darkly. In my third logic paper there is the following passage : 'It is easy to frame hypotheses which no one can of knowledge deny, under which attributes in the brain should be as real as the sun in the heavens, or the rocks on the earth, and this without a denying either the existence of matter or the separate existence of mind.' If the things of the universe be affections of the immovable primary particles of space, the impresses on the brain may be veritable copies, as real as the things themselves. A very pretty system of pre-established harmony might be established. If all the matter-universe be in motion of translation through the space- nniverse or in transference, and if an individual in a certain part of a certain nebula be to have a headache at a certain date, he may at that date find the space particles, which are to keep up his head, ready supplied with the adjunct affections — confound them, whatever they are ! — which are essential to an ache of predestined intensity. * How charming is divine philosophy ! ' Of course all this means that I have received your letter and book. I will look at the latter, and let you have it back soon. I never heard of the dialogue between Hermogenes and Her- mione. The puzzle about oo arises much, I think, from a want of distinction between the subjective and objective infinity. But before I fairly tackle the subject I have to superintend and, en Uoc, to calculate a valuation of about 30,000 life policies ; but not 30,000 calculations — Heaven in its mercy forbid ! But I must leave off. With kind regards, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, Aug. 9, 1862. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I return you with thanks your MSS. on algebra. There are little bits here and there that I wish had been published. Did it chance to you that the first thing you 312 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 3862. wrote never was published? It did so to me. The first thing ever proposed to me was a treatise on mechanics for the U. K. S. I wrote a few chapters, and, chancing to become a candidate for what I now hold, I sent my MS8. in as a testimonial, and I believe it greatly helped me. At any rate, I was picked out of fifty candidates, being known to be only twenty-one last birth- day. I think Brougham and Warburton were the people who dared a thing so bold, considering the danger of making any ventures in an institution beginning under so many evil eyes as the University of London. Olinthiis Gregory was against it ; S , who always had a wonderful faculty of getting something against somebody, though he did not know me, and had never seen me, either concocted or retailed to Stratford a story which I never heard from elsewhere, namely, that my appointment was the doing of Mr. Frend, then an acquaintance of mine of a few months' standing, not on the Council, and at Cheltenham for health all the time, and who learnt my candidateship and appoint- ment from the newspapers at one and the same moment. Who shall escape ? Mark the following. In some journal in 1851, M. Bertrand, in a paper on the convergence of series, is charged with suppressing what I had done on the same sub- ject. It is hinted that he had used what I had done. The facts are — 1. M. Bertrand invented a set of rules before he had seen mine, so he says, and I believe ; his method has all the marks of independent thought. After he had observed the identity of his rules and mine, in effect and each to each, it struck him to try a hint of a M. Raube, and he thereupon constructed a third system. 2. He announced my rules in half a quarter-page of translation from me, with inverted commas to every Hue, and mentioned my name eleven times in his descriptions and com- parisons. 3. He gave my book the date 1839 instead of 1842, 1839 being the date of the number in which the rules of con- vergence appeared. 4. He sent me a copy of his paper as soon as it appeared. What could he have done more ? Nevertheless, he is un- blushingly charged with unfair suppression by a man who knew nothing of my book but what he himself had told him, for he (the critic) gives the wrong date of 1839. As to infinity, I hold i to be the infinite of infinites. For 0 marks the change from + to — , which oo does not. As we generally use DO, we admit oo1, which is not negative, CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-00. 313 and oo3, &c. But quantity which changes sign through infinity 1862. passes though ^. This will become a very important distinction. The ^ of common algebra is high up above the — of the differ- ential calculus. I am rid of all fear about oo2. I believe in oo, oo2, oo3, &c., &c.; and I intend to write a paper against the skim-milky, fast-and- loosish mealy-mouthedness of the English mathematical world on this point. My assertion is that the infinitely great and small have subjective reality. They have objective impossibility if you please ; or not, just as you please. I have first to remove an ambiguity, which has played a large part in causing confusion. To imagine is originally to form an image in the mind. But it has been transformed into a synonym of to conceive, to form a concept. The distance from here to the sun is a concept. I have no image of it. But of six feet I have both image and concept when I shut my eyes. Now many per- sons, when they cannot image, speak as if they could not conceive, and use the ambiguous word imagine. We cannot, they say, imagine infinite space. I grant they can't image it, but I am sure by their modes of denial that they have a conception of it. Locke and others affirm that we arrive at the notion of infinity by finding out that when, say, we add number to number, we find the succession incapable of termination, and so fashion interminability in our minds. I say the process is precisely the reverse. If it were not for our conception of infinity we should not know the interminability. Who ever tried up to 10,000,000,000,000,000 ? It is certainly not experience. If any one were to affirm that 1016 is only a symbol, and that any one who should try would find himself brought up by the nature of things, Locke has no answer, unless, as would probably be the case, he should ask permission to bring on the conception of infinity. I therefore affirm the concept infinite as a subjective reality of my consciousness of space and time, as real as my conscious- ness of either, because inseparable from my consciousness of either. When, therefore, I think of a finite space — say a cubic foot — if I compare it with the totality of space, I say infinitely small ; if I compare the totum with it I say infinitely great. Now comes a postulate on which there may be a fight. Let A and B be two magnitudes, any whatsoever, arid 0 a third, also any whatsoever. Let these magnitudes be concepts, imagin- 314 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1862. able or unimaginable. I take a right to affirm the conception of D such that A : B::C : D The notion of ratio is a fundamental thing, not dependent on, though only definitely expressible by number. A person who cannot count, and who does not even know that language can turn multitude into number, has the idea of ratio, relative mag- nitude. He sees, feels, and knows that if A be the house, B is too small for the chimney, and C too large.1 I claim the exist- ence of D, so that A : B as C : D is a concept. This being premised, then I have the infinitely small part of any magnitude, and of that again, &c. For instance, if dx : x :: a pint pot : all space, dx is an infinitely small part of x. All this I mean to develop and fight for. So with kind regards to Lady Herschel and the next generation, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, Aug. 15, 1862. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Many thanks for the dialogue.2 From the parties to the dialogue I deduce the equation — mogenes + mione_ , , What a quantity of arguable propositions ! I cannot see how you deduce your account of Descartes. As to at'ems — I spell the name thus, considering it as a challenge to attack them, and make your boast of it — I suspect that if you look back into the world a thousand years hence you will find the remote posterity, as we call it, fiddling away at the creatures, and knowing about what we do. I have often thought of the minimum of extension en- dowed with attraction, &c., and adjusting his accounts with f(10)i,ooo,ooo,ooo]. (10) 1,000,000,000 brethren instantaneously. It is a wonderfully fine hypothesis for expressing what we see and 1 A rough sketch of a house, with a too small chimney on one side and a too large one on the other. 2 Dialogue on Atoms, by Hennogenes and Hermione. Private circulation. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 315 know ; but for an actual objective truth, oh my ! And we 1862. call them blind atoms ! Why, the fellows see faster and farther than we do, by the above to 1, at least. If a malevolent being could create one single atom more than is in the plan, he would of course bring the whole thing to smash at last. Query, in what time ? I hope we shall know more about it next world. We can't know much less than we do now, that's one comfort. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. WhewelL 91 Adelaide Road, April 1, 1863. MY DEAR SIR, — I am not going to take the privilege of the 1863. day, but it reminds me, though it is not the occasion of my writing, that this very day ten years I made a sort of specula- tion which I thought many would attribute to the influence of the day. While I was chuckling at the idea of having quite suc- ceeded in a new metaphysical insanity, and before the pen was out of my hand, there actually came in from a bookseller Heywood's Analysis of Kant, 1844, and there I found the very same notion. It occurred in a description of the * paralogisms of reason,' as they occurred in the first edition. You can tell me whether there is any allusion to the subject in the later editions, and this is my question. I was considering a syllogism in which a term is a class of which the individuals are the subject at different moments of its existence. For instance, — No black ball is ever a billiard ball; this ball has always been black ; this ball has never been a billiard ball. The individuals of the class are the balls which we call one ball at different times. Thereupon it struck me to think, how is it that we call this ball the same ball all the time ? Whereas, if we had a number of fac-simile balls in different places, we should not say it is the same ball all the space. I suppose w e borrow a notion from our personal identity, in which we feel sameness. Consequently, if our presence had m ultipresence, if the ego knew himself for himself in all the different parts of a space without being able to say, I am one person here aud another there — any more than he can say, I am one person now 316 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1863, and was another then — he would be very much inclined to doubt the difference of balls, when the only difference is that of place. This supposes a faculty altogether beyond our comprehen- sion— if, indeed, anything be within our comprehension on the question of what is what — which ties spaces together, just as memcry ties times together. All this I found in Kant (Hey wood, ut supra, p. 109). He uses it to prove, as he thinks, that ego ' I think ' might be iden- tical, though the thinking subject is variable. He will not admit the space-string to constitute the nos of different places one ego. I cannot find any of this in Hey wood's or Tissot's translations, and I think it possible that he may have learnt better in the interval of the editions. But you may be able to refer me to some notice of it. With this metaphysical reduction of omnipresence to depend upon an incomprehensible something which has at least an analogue in our own consciousness, I have looked for ten years at various ontological writings about ' the unconditioned,' and various religious works about ' the Almighty,' and I think I see a very great tendency to confuse omnipresent personality with infinite extent. At least there is a want of power to put the distinction into language. Are you aware of any Roman Catholic speculation on the subject ? They must give mnltipresence to the saints whom they invoke, and by whom they expect to be heard. And I should suppose that some of their writers have touched on this gift. I am now writing on the subject of Infinity, trying to burn the candle at both ends. I have found out for some years that I am a full believer in the infinitely great and small, both . I mean in the subjective reality of both notions. I cleared off much obscurity by a distinction which I find very faintly shadowed by the psychologists — that of a concept which has image, and a concept which has none. I can image a horse : I can't image the right to a horse, but I can conceive it. I cannot image infinity, but I can conceive it — that is, 1 recog- nise a notion ivith predicates. So that when a metaphysical writer says, as some have said, that we cannot conceive space to be finite, and are equally unable to conceive it as infinite, I say they ought to have said that we cannot conceive space to be finite, nor image it as infinite. But neither can we image a CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-G6. 317 million of cubic miles, though we can conceive it, as proved by 1863. our knowing truth and falsehood about it. I am, yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Eev. Dr. Whewell. April 3, 1863. MY DEAE SIE, — Did I provoke you to an ontological discus- sion ? Did I chalk my hat and say, ' Now I'd like to see the man who says that this is not silver lace' ? That's what I call provoking a discussion. I asked you, who are Kantescient, whether you knew of a certain speculation in the later editions of Kant ; and you say No. I am pretty sure you would have remembered it at once if it had been there. I am quite sure we shall never solve the problem which my analogy went to suggest. But for all that, if we only envisage a quality acting through space as memory acts through time, we put multipresence upon a definite basis of • unintelligibility — there, I have managed to spell the word, and that is something gained. I value the analogies of space and time — the two indis- missible extensions ; and I have before now made much profit of the very remark you quote. For aught I know, a body may act where it is not ; it may leave consequences behind it. An annihilated star, which is seen by light emitted during its existence, may be said, for aught we can tell, to act where it is not, in as true a sense as matter, in attracting distant matter, can be said to act where it is not. But presence is a very ill-used notion. If a particle really do attract all others, it is present throughout the universe. It is present in one quality — in others, for aught we know. The presence of matter is the presence of all its qualities — the only things we know. Now who is to say that the spheres of the qualities have the same diameters or even the same centres ? Grant one centre to qualities of a particle, and there may be millions of centres, all effective in spheres of different radii. The sphere of attraction may be the biggest, or it may not. Mansel, I detect partly by private, partly by public evidence, is in the state of the old logicians about infinity. He cannot separate the mathematical notion from the old mixture of infinite in quality and in everything. Leibnitz had it to a considerable extent, in spite of his power over the mathematical notion. 318 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1863. 1 bring the chief difficulties of quantitative infinity to some- thing like this : — When of A and B one and one only must be, when A is visibly self -contradictory and B only incomprehensible, I vote forB. I shall be very glad to see anything of Ellis's. The thoughts of his long illness would be valuable. He gained an enormous power of thinking about mathematics without pen and paper. I repeat my wish that his preface to Bacon could be separately published. With kind regards to Lady Affleck, I am, yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Rev. Dr. Wh&well. April 7, 1863. MY DEAR SIR, — Now I will provoke an opinion, not an answer to a matter of fact ; and if anybody in College has ever thought about the subject, I wish he would think about it again. Aristotle has a chapter in the * Metaphysics ' about the aircipov, translated ' the infinite.' The chapter opens with a description of the meaning of the word, which has come down without any strong objection that I can find. I give the sen- tence itself, with a literal translation from MacMahon. I hardly ever had to look closely at a sentence of Aristotle without finding what reason might take either for a gross corruption or an obvious interpolation. This chapter I suppose to have had much sway in determining the logician's obstinate confusion between the infinite, unlimited in qualities, powers, &c., and the simple infinite of magnitude. Now from 'Metaphysics,' lib. x. or xi., cap. 10 : — To 8' aTTCLpOV TJ TO O&VVO.TOV $L€\6eiV T(2 fJLrj 7T€VK€Va.L 8u€VOLL, KaOd- iT€p rj <£(ov>) doparos, rj TO 6W£oSov *xov ttTeXevnyrov, fj o yu.oA.is, ^ o rj ' But the infinite is either that which it is impossible to pass through in respect of its not being adapted by nature to be per- meated, in the same way as the voice is invisible ; or it is that which possesses a passage without an end, or that which is scarcely so, or that which by nature is adapted to have, but has not, a passage or termination. Further, a thing is infinite from subsisting by addition or subtraction, or both.' CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 319 Here is a nice kettle of fish ! Now I try to put a sense npon it. 1863. 1. I take aTTcipov to mean rather without boundary than without end ; indefinite. But the quantitative notion of having no end does intrude and confuse that of having no determinate.1 To Rev. Dr. Whewell. April 11, 1863. MY DEAR SIR, — Many thanks for your letter. I feel helped by the word SueVai, because it is a very thoroughfaresome word. As the lexicon says, it is used for going through a country, or for running a man through the body, which is a process very definitely suggestive of in at one side and out at the other. It points very distinctly to the idea of bounded on all sides, being that which aTrapov denies. And this, combined with an oL7T€t/oov gained by subtraction, confirm me in the notion that Aristotle is treating of the indefinite — not necessarily, though possibly, infinite in magnitude. I agree with you that the adjective infinite without a sub- stantive is like all other adjectives similarly situated. On infinity — i.e., infinite quantity — a concept necessarily connected in our minds as an attribute or predicate, with space and time, I have come to the conclusion that we must treat it as a concept without image. Throwing away the word imagine, as spoiled by becoming a synonym of conceive, I distinguish the concepts which we can image from those which we cannot. We can put before the mind's eye, or the mind's mode of remembering sensible things, an image or likeness ; a man, for example, as he appears when alarmed. But alarm is a concept without image ; it has predicates, it is the subject of true and false propositions, but not as a thing having an image. Now of quantity of space, and even of time — for succession of things is among our sensible relations — we have images ; but not when too small or too great. The infinitely small and the infinitely great are below and above our imagining power, but they are concepts with attributes. Those who reject both or either because they cannot form an idea — by which they mean an image — ought equally to reject those entia rationis, the fTnTm 1 I much regret that I have lost the rest of this letter. But I insert it as it stands, as the same subject is spoken of in the next. S. E. DE M. 320 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1863. of an inch and the length of 10100 miles. But these are subjects of which we can predicate ; and so, I hold, is infinity. I have made all manner of efforts to repudiate infinity of quantity for forty years, in obedience to the dicta of people who assured me I did not possess any idea of it, and I have failed. And I have observed that no people seem so clearly to have the idea as those who argue against it, while engaged in their task. And I begin to lean towards the notion that the difficulties of infinity of quantity arise from our having more knowledge of it than of things, for which we depend on attributes — as mind or matter. The absolute, as you say, really has no predicates ; arid it is a very circular idea. Is not the being unconditioned, if per se and necessarily, a condition ? Cannot is a word of limitation and condition. Can the Creator commit suicide ? if not, he is, to our thoughts, conditioned. I should like to know what Hamilton would have said to this. Seeing that the Germans shine as smokers and also as metaphysicians, and also that in the former capacity they blow a cloud — which was the word for taking a cigar in my day — it is worth while to think about transferring the phrase, in a transcendental sense, to their other pursuit. Yours truly, A. DE MOKGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, May 10, 1863. MY DEAK BARONET, — There's change for your 'Professor.' Everybody attaches some ideas to a word derived from early associations. The first * learned Professor ' I read of under that name was Olearius Schinderhausen, of Leyden, who disparted with his cast-off suit biennially. I did not think I should live to match him ; but as I never go out, and always work at home in a dressing-gown, I also have but one coat in two years. Seventy- one, eh ? Go on to eighty, and then apply to me for further directions, if I should be in a condition to give them. Addition of the same to a ratio of greater inequality diminishes it. So says Jemmy Wood ; and the life of man confirms it. When you were preparing sin ~lx, I was learning numeration from my father on a zalilenbreitstein — a pebble, of diameter and flatness, picked up in the road. And I remember that when it was lost I refused all arithmetic till another was found ; which, CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 321 considering that no one had told me the etymology of calculation, 1863. showed a kind of natural philological acumen. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Master of Trinity. 91 Adelaide Road, October 21, 1863. MY DEAR SIR, — .... If you read Notes and Queries, look out for a few notes I have given on Robert Robinson. I shall send down a cutting to paste into his * History of Baptism,' or any work the library of Trinity may chance to have. I have been in communication with Mr. Wright about a book he used out of that library. He was the most remarkable Cam- bridge (town) man of the last century, I suppose ; at least he comes next after Maps and Jemmy Gordon. I do not know whether you know Crabb Robinson (no rela- tion), to whom I am indebted for anecdotes. He is eighty-six, and pours out anecdotes about everything and everybody, espe- cially his especial friends Goethe, Wordsworth, Southey, Cole- ridge, Charles Lamb, et id genus omne. He tells me that Wordsworth agreed with Samuel Parr that Dyer's ' Life of Robert Robinson ' is one of the best biographies in the language. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel 91 Adelaide Road, November 19, 1863. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Thanks for the paper on the standard. Hurrah for anything which preserves our great units ! On that condition I will accept the earth's axis or anything else. But I stipulate for the foot, as for common usage. A yard is too long to start from ; a foot I hold too long ; I should like better -fa of 2 yards. Many years ago I demanded of my bootmakers the lengths of foot of 100 adult men, taken as they came in his books. The result was 10-26 inches as the average foot of man, English, measured in Bedford Street, Bedford Place. This is rather surprising, seeing that a bootmaker gives a little additional rather than otherwise. I hope the metrical people will continue to agitate. I do not T 322 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1863. fear their metre, which will never go down; but they will do good to the decimal principle. I think we shall get the decimal coinage up again by their help. I am dry of information of every kind. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Husenbeth. 91 Adelaide Road, December 31, 1863. MY DEAR SIR, — I am very much obliged for the excerpt. But how do you manage with rubric letters on a dark morning or by candlelight ? The first opening I made of the creed showed me, by candlelight, ' eeque confondentes personas,' which, said I, must be a misprint. I am glad to be set right about the flioque. I was once — but it dropt — puzzled to know how the Greeks could reject two words of the Athanasian when they rejected the whole creed. But like most (Western) others, I had but a cloudy notion of the Greek Church. My Latin Prayer-book is certainly the old Latin. A new Latin translation, the veritable original being Latin, strikes me as would a Greek Homer translated from Pope. . . . I shall certainly attack reliable. One of the tale-writers in All the Year Round has introduced it into a document purporting to be of the early reign of George III. This is adding insult to injury. When I say a journal cannot refuse advertisements, I mean that it cannot do so without danger to its prosperity. It is found that any check to influx of business is bad policy. If the Athenceum of thirty years ago be examined, it will be found that the reader's portion is increased relatively more than the advertisement portion. It is astonishing how many persons delight in running over columns of advertisements. . . . Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. Dr. Husenbeth. January 12, 1864. 1864. MJ DEAR SIR,— Many thanks for the drama, which, not knowing the original, I cannot divide between you and the CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 323 author of the second. I read it through, which is a point on 1864. which most reviewers of books are apt to be evasive, and, as I did so at one sitting, I need not say I liked it. A 3 there are only two Christians in it, or at most three if we count Agellius, there is no scope for a fault which I noticed in a book of the Cardinal's, of which I forget the name, all about St. Pancras (saint, not parish). That fault is that though the author can draw characters, yet the moment he puts on the religion, it is a domino of the same form and colour for all, which makes them look just alike. I thought all the while of the great magician who could make the Calvinism of David Deans and Jeanie as distinct as their characters, sexes, and ages, without anything that would bring either under the censure of the Presbytery. Either Dr. Newman or yourself, or both, have managed three tolerably different phases of religious character. You may easily get far enough into my syllabus to see the meaning of the symbols -)) )•( &c., which is all the book was intended for — I mean the copy sent to you. In )) (•), for instance, I see — 1. Premises. 2. Proof of validity. 3. Conclusion. 4. Quantities of all the terms. Dr. Watts's book, which I call the English Port-Royal logic, deals little in purely logical exercise. As to your reading it in spite of what it says against the Pope, &c., I should have read it all the more, for I enjoy being assaulted and batteried. But the book is a good one. Had he been of the Parliamentary form of religion, it would have been a great work, as great as any of Paley, in the two Universities. ... I am, dear sir, Tours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. F. W. Herschel 91 Adelaide Road, August 18, 1864. MY DEAE SIR JOHN, — If you happen to recollect you were Master of the Mint — I am sure you had reason enough to recol- lect it — you cannot have forgotten that Newton was there before you. His concessis, I find that N. and H. added each one coin to the list ; N. the gold quarter-guinea, which was in circulation until towards the end of the century ; H. the gold quarter- Y2 324 MEMOIK OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1864. sovereign, which was never circulated. Tell me, I pray, when you quarter-sovereigned did you know that Newton had quarter- guinead, or was it an accidental coincidence ? Here I am, as usual in August, with one son in the house and all the rest at Aldborough. My wife is mending, but has been seriously ill. I hope I shall have a good account of your section of the human race. You know Tristram Shandy — who does not ? But you may not know his views of proportion. He says his father was some- times a gainer by a misfortune ; for if the pleasure of haranguing about it was as ten, and the misfortune itself only as five, he gained ' half in half,' and was as well off again as if the mis- fortune had never happened. Cipher this out. I call it a splendid bevue ; as good as the two last lines of the song about the young man who poisoned his sweetheart in sheep's-head broth, and was frightened to death with — Where's that young maid What you did poison with my head ? at his bedside. Now all young men, both high and low, Take warning by this dismal go ! For if he'd never done nobody no wrong, He might have been here to have heard this song. Babbage's Act has passed, and he is a public benefactor. A grinder went away from before my house at the first word. The New Zealander shall sit on the remains of his doorstep to sketch the fragments of a broken barrel-organ. ' 0 si sic omnia ! ' Yours very truly, A. DE MOEGAN. To Mrs. Smyth. 91 Adelaide Road, September 1, 1864. MY DEAR MRS. SMYTH, — I see by the title-page that work is on hand — when was it not ? It is thirty-seven years since I became personally aware of the fact — that is, I have known the Admiral nearly half his life, and yet there was a lot of it when I first knew him ; he had retired from a life's work. I wanted to see how you swallowed the Pyramid.1 I do not 1 Prof. Piazzi Smyth's work on the Pyramids, published just be- fore this time. S. E. De M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 325 see any occasion to feel depressed about it. The world is not 1864. what it was when the Admiral and I were young. There are strange break-downs of opinion and build-ups of system. I do not know that it is more extraordinary than that I, of all persons, should declare and publish my actual experience of phenomena which so many will have to be actually the work of disembodied spirits, which I can neither deny nor affirm. The Christian world is actually tending towards the belief that a great many mythologies and idolatries are really diseased revelations. Wait a few years until it begins to be generally apprehended that Juggernaut and Cham Chi Thaungee — if you happen to know him — were originally divine, though a little altered by time and priest, and it will then seem a very natural thing that the measures in the Pyramid should have come from the same quarter. I wish the reasoning had been a little more sound and the mind less influenced by bias of system, but this is not peculiar to primeval inspiration advocates. It is the beauty of these extreme vagaries that they show off and illustrate the methods which are most in vogue among savans who are quite in the groove. But the moral courage which ventures upon a trip off the line is not so common/ The work itself is part of an impulse which is doing strange marvels, which will make Bishop Colenso die a heretic, and which has made Robert Owen die a Christian; nay, which has made a Christian of Dr. John Elliotson, the strongest materialist almost that I ever heard of. If we go on in this way twenty years longer, the name of God will be heard at a meeting of the Royal Society, from which Dr. Gumming will take occasion to declare that the millennium has commenced. There are educated persons by thousands not in the little knot, who will look on Piazzi's book without much surprise as to his mere conclusions. It is astonishing how little the world of science knows about opinion outside. Kind regards to the Admiral, who, I suppose, has his work well-nigh done. What a beautiful feeling the proof of the title- page gives ! Yours very sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 326 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. To Sir J. F. W. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, September 20, 1864. 1864. MY DEAE SIR JOHN, — So honey-bees have stings as well as wapres. So much the better. I do confess to a baker's dozen of readings of your letter.1 Saving your presence, your usual mild- ness and diffidence, and all those things of which I know no more than my grandmother's torn cat knew of the differential calculus, bring out the points with such strength that there is no leaving off. It will do an abundant deal of good, and will make the declaration a blessing. It is in good contrast with Bowring, whose letter is capital in its way. Truly you did express yourself with tolerable precision and to much purpose in the old discourse. I have been pasting a copy into that discourse, and it notes time well to find that the copy wherein I paste it is one which poor Stratford gave my wife long before she was even my sweetheart, and my eldest son is twenty-five years old. The inpasted copy is cut out of a reprint in the Bath Chronicle, done for the special benefit of the Br. Ass. What is the collection of names they have got ? I suppose they have handed out their best fifteen. ... I think I had as good a right to be asked as . . . . ; 2 but possibly they took me for too great a heretic. I dare not think they respect me more than they do you ; but the temptation is great. How I should strut ! They are now pledged to publish this declaration and the names they have got. They might have dropt the thing after Daubeny's letter. I hope your bronchial state is better. To my last letter I add that the little dust does not confine itself to your books ; it gets into your throat. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 1 Many scientific men had been requested to sign a declaration of their belief that science did not contradict revelation, &c. By the ' honey-bee's sting ' is meant Sir J. Herschel's answer, which con- tained a trenchant reply to the arguments contained therein. " I think he was asked to sign perhaps rather later. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 327 To the Rev. Wm. Heald. September 27, 1864. MY DEAR HEALD, — I suppose you and family are pretty well, 1864. as you say so little about it. In re Colenso, you can easily demolish him by assuming the points. He has never told us what residue of the Xtian religion he still believes ; why, whether the historical truth of the 0. T. is any part of the N. T. is just the point. If I remem- ber right, he at one time could not use the ordination service ; but he can now, I believe, after Lushington's decision in Williams' s The case about C. D. and A. B. stands thus. All the reviews, &c., declare that A. B. is self, and C. D. wife. Neither of us has contradicted it, which leads me to suspect that we cannot. The style of A. B. is, I am assured by good judges, unmistak- ably my own, and I certainly do see a strong likeness. All these things put together cannot be got over. Were I you I should assume the report to be true. I have not heard anything about a second edition. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To J. S. Mill, Esq. 91 Adelaide Road, October 10, 1864. MY DEAR SIR, — Ten years ago I asked you whether certain abridged dialogues of Plato were yours, to which you answered in the affirmative. Have they been reprinted ? I very much wish they were, if they are not. The presentation of Plato is now frequent ; but there is nothing I know of in which a picture of Plato is given, and remarks kept distinct. I am reminded of this by a translation of the Gorgias which has just appeared, by Mr. Cope, Fellow of Trinity College, Cam- bridge. A good translation, I dare say; but, to tell the truth, I and many others like to have the pith of Plato extracted, and find both Greek and full translations rather wearisome. Nostra culpa, no doubt, but you must have thought such sinners not quite below a missionary, or you would not have published your abridgments. I suppose it is not given to man to relish both Aristotle and Plato. 328 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1864. I often cut from a review and paste haphazard on to the fly- leaf of a book. In your Plato articles I find, in this way, a curious accidental paraphrase of the Trinity that may amuse you. The Druse system is described as historically identified with the Caliph Hakem, the Persian Hamze, and the Turk Davagi — Hakem the ' political founder J Hamze the * intellectual (Xoyos) framer,' and Davagi the ' expositor and propagator.'— (Athenceum, August 27, 1853.) I am, dear sir, Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To J. S. Mill, Esq. 91 Adelaide Road, February 5, 1865. 1865. MY DEAR SIR,— The Algebra, which I am much pleased to find you approve of, is to be divided between several. I have no doubt I may claim to have first presented it complete, and the connection, of A°° * with the rest is my own. But Warren, Peacock, and others of those mentioned in my list at the beginning of the work are real predecessors. You are perhaps aware that Peacock published two works on algebra. The first, in one volume, is that which treats the subject most generally. He is in full possession of all except what relates to the ex- ponent, and here he is obliged to have recourse to interpretation, that is, discovery of meaning from results. With regard to the acceptance of the system, the time is not yet come. The algebraists almost all make algebra obey their preconceived notions. They have laws which algebra must obey. Peacock had very nearly attained the idea of algebra as a, formal science, in which every result of the form is to have meaning. His permanence of equivalent forms would have developed itself into formal algebra capable of any number of material applica- tions, if he had been a logician — I mean a student of logic. So long as an algebraist has preconceptions which his science must obey, so long is he incapable of true generalisation. Macaulay said of Southey that what he called his opinions were his tastes, and this is true of many persons, and of a great many algebraists. Algebra must, a priori, be subject to this or that limitation, upon what is really an acquired taste of the legislator. Pure logic is in the same predicament. 1 I am not sure about this exponent. — ED. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 329 For myself, it is my tasfce, if you please, that I will have a 1865, formal algebra, in which, every form, every law of transformation is universal. I admit that we have not yet arrived at it, bnt I have entire faith in the future. I was in the spirit on the day of Wellington's funeral, when, wife, children, and servants being away to see the remains of the glorious old man carried upon what was so justly called a cross between a locomotive and a fire-engine, I was sole master of my house and myself. So I sat down to eviscerate the following difficulty, and I believe I did it. If the forms of algebra be universal, then %x=x gives — =- or 2=1. I should not have been ashamed of myself if x x resolved on a formal algebra, I had invented a generalisation of = to meet this case. But I had no occasion for any such thing. I found that, by only taking permission to lay down as a canon what mathematicians never scruple to do when they want it, I was master of the field. I have a paper now at Cambridge which explains my views, so you see I have taken twelve years to think about it. In brief as follows. Admitting in theory as full and free a use of infinites, finites, and infinitesimals, as is made in practice, I say that — 1. The sign = is that of undistinguisJiability, say indistinction. A=B means that A and B are not distinct. Equality is but a case, though the most common one. 2. Distinction implies the use of a standard or metre. Quantities infinitely great with respect to the standard, or infinitely small, or unmeasurable by it, are undistinguishable. And this is the origin of Leibnitz's equation dx=dx + dx~~*, the metre having finite ratio to dx . 3. Whenever we divide or multiply both sides of an equation by anything above or below the standard, the new equation takes a different standard. When we multiply by an infinite we must take a standard which was infinite, &c. Now 2a? and x can only be undistinguishable when x is infinitely small or infinitely great. Let x be infinitely small. In passing from 2#=& to 2=1 we change our standard into an infinitely small quantity, and 2=1 is true, that is 2 and 1 cannot be distinguished. The same when x is infinitely great. The difficulties which will suggest themselves are many and obvious ; but I think that they are superable, and also that, looking at actual algebra, they are not so great as the difficulties which actually occur. For all these things I refer to the paper 330 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1865. when printed, to which so brief an account is more like a pre- liminary objection than anything else. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To J. S. Mill, Esq. March 26, 1865. MY DEAR SIR, — I thank you for the article on Comte received a few days ago. It gives me a much more definite idea of Comte than I ever had patience to get from himself. His writing always had to me a smack of that unequalled prolixity which he showed in his algebraic geometry, where he discourses in page after page on the equation of a straight line, without a symbol. I settled that he was not a psychologist. I make out from you that he would not &e, prepensely. I thought he was impatient of the subject, but did not fathom all his guilt. I am confirmed in my view that his philosophy is, so far as it is distinctively his, negativism. For his positivism I find in all thinkers, or nine out of ten ; his rejections, hardly anywhere. Positive, because no more than positive. When understood thus, he is a bearable companion, for one has a right to be as anti- positive with his philosophy as he is positive with mind and matter ; i.e., as he has taken part for the whole, I take his whole for part. I shall soon send you a paper in which I find I am a sort of Positivist. There are those who reject all but phenomena ; there are those who reject phenomena because they cannot have more. Comte is the assailant of those who accept more because they think they can get more. In the mathematical treatment of infinity, small and great, most mathematicians reject the abso- lute treatment because they cannot image, or treat as phe- nomena, all the attributes of the notion. My notion is that oo7 and -^7 have a subjective reality, of which various phenomena are proper subjects of direct reasoning. The mathematicians have virtually denied that A is B is a component of reasoning when we know it to be true even though A and B should be porcu- pines with difficulties for quills. In my paper in two parts, oo is a porcupine, and = is a hedgehog. I see you are in England again by your complimentary letter to the Westminster electors. You pay them a higher compli- ment than they pay you. I am always in doubt about the origin CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. 331 of the word compliment. It looks like a formation from comply, 1865. but I doubt it. I suspect that complement is the original, though the present spelling and usage is as old as the Academy's Dictionary. I suspect that old forms of civility were at last described as complements, fillings up ; and that complimts, at the end of a letter, meant that all usual forms are to be understood. My theory receives a little support from comply not being a French verb. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. I have as yet read your article for Comte only, for I really wanted to know what he had been at. I must read it again for criticism. To J. 8. Mill, Esq. 91 Adelaide Road, April 27, 1865. MY DEAR SIR, — I received the Examination to-day, and write my thanks that I may not forget it, as I shall have no consecu- tive reading for a week or two. I hold, from observation, that a question is never fairly put before a public meeting until it has been moved, seconded, and opposed. A great many persons are really only half informed by the mover and seconder what it is all about ; but the first person who rises on the other side puts some light into it. It is just the old law knowledge : the points at issue come out of the pleadings on both sides. In like manner with controversies. Hamilton has moved, Mansel has seconded, and now you rise to take objections. And I also observe that the first opponent very often puts his view of things into a much more attainable-in-a- given-time form than if he had been the mover of a counter measure. A dip into several unconnected pages makes me think that may be the case here. One of my dips is into ' All oxen ruminate.' I have shown in my fifth paper on logic that Aristotle and all his real followers never collected all the oxen. Their phrase was, * Every ox rumi- nates,' or, any ox ruminates. That the predicate is what I have called in my third paper metaphysical I am satisfied. And I have maintained that the common predicate of the world at large is so. I say, * man is born and educated a mathematician as to the subject of his proposition, and a metaphysician as to the predi- cate.'— Ex. gr. * Every man is biped,' i.e., is of biped quality or 332 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1865. attribute. I contend in that paper that the logician's form of extensive reading stands or falls with the immerical syllogism, which is the true genus. Yours truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Chief Baron Pollock. MY DEAR 0. BARON, — First as to subjective and objective. Th. e thinking mind is the subject, id quod subjicitur. The external thing, relation, &c., is the object, id quod objicitur. Or the acts of the minds may themselves be objects ; i.e., one mind may b e the object of another mind. I see an apparition : is it subjective or objective ? If it be a thing of my mind its existence is subjective. This use and others are not very sound. But, generally, objective has that relation to the thinking mind which subjective has to the exciter of its thoughts. When Kant makes space and time pure concepts of mind to put things into, the things themselves being in some unin- telligible sense external, he is said to make space and time purely subjective^ As to your being old, you are the youngest I have lately heard of. On Saturday, at University College distribution of prizes was Lord Brougham, eighty-seven, much broken, but still himself, and able to deliver himself as fluently as ever, and with that powerful delivery of the one word which makes his sentences so effective. And there was Crabb Robinson, ninety in May, and quite alive to everything. And he will last for ever if he will only take advice I heard given to him, i.e. not to talk more than two hours at a time. With your note came an acknowledgment from General Perronet Thompson, B. A. of 1802, and Fellow of Queen 's before he was an ensign. And he works at acoustics as hard as ever he did at the Corn Laws. I say nothing of boys of seventy who are scattered about. Our kind regards to Lady Pollock and the family. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66, 333 To Sir J. F. W. Herschel. September 13, 1865. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — The world is changing round us very 1865. fast. I have lost two very old friends on two successive Satur- days— W. Rowan Hamilton and Smyth. Smyth went off very quietly from mere exhaustion, without any long illness. He had lost a great deal of strength in the preceding fortnight, but had rallied a little, and was driven out on Friday, and went calmly off on Saturday morning with effusion on the lungs. Poor Mrs. Smyth is very calm ; it is the break of a tie of fifty years. W. R. Hamilton was an intimate friend whom I spoke to once in my life — at Babbage's, about 1830 ; but for thirty years we have corresponded. I saw him a second time at the dinner you got at the Freemason's when you came from the Cape, but I could not get near enough to speak. They will take care that a fall life shall be published. Of forty members of the Nautical Almanac Committee of 1830, there remain now, besides our two selves, Airy, Lord Shaftes- bury, Babbage, Lee, Maclear, Robinson, South, Wrottesley — ten in all ; this is fair vitality for thirty-five years. I am, yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. F. W. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, September 21, 1865. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — You must have been much in the way of hearing all the rumours about George III. and his malady. Do you remember hearing a story which I have heard from boyhood, which I find numbers have heard, and which I believe has been in print, but I do not know where ? It is stated that one of the earliest indications of his complaint was a formal announcement to those about him that he intended to begin his speech from the throne with * My lords and peacocks.' To all remonstrance he did nothing but persist, and they say that acci- dental noises — as tumbling down books, &c. — were prepared to drown the words. If the story be really true, I have no doubt I have arrived at the meaning of his phrase — that is, at its origin. But first, query, did it happen ? If it did, there was method in his madness. With kind regards all round, Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. 334 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, To Sir J. F. W. Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, September 27, 1865. 1865. MY -JEAR SIR JOHN, — Then the story is a story, and has a place in history. ISTow for its explanation. Old George III. knew Shakespeare pretty well — much better than any other literature. In ' Hamlet ' there are several places in which Hamlet seems on the very point either of disclosing his step- father's villany or giving him some reproach, but breaks off and substitutes something. In one case where ass is clearly coming, he makes it peacock. For thou dost know, O Damon dear, This realm dismantled was Of Jove himself ; and now reigns here A very, very (ass) peacock. Now George III. had old score recollections of the House of Commons. I suspect that when his mind was in his wanderings he determined to be revenged and to say, * My Lords and Asses/ and he remembered and imitated Hamlet's substitute. I am, yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Lord Chief Baron Pollock. 91 Adelaide Road, December 22, 1865. MY DEAR L. CHIEF BARON, — I don't believe in December 21 as the shortest day. Put on the twilight at both ends, and calculate the shortest day. What care I for geometry ? It is day as long as I can see to read, and even then the type must be stated. There is Large Pica day, Small Pica day, Bour- geois (pron. Burgice) day, etc. Diamond day is considerably shorter than the geometrical day, in winter. But now to your questions.1 'A/zos is an obsolete word = TIS. HODS, the common word. 'A/xcocrycTrws is a word of Plato and Aristophanes (two people as opposite as L. C. B. Pollock and L. C. B. Nicholson), meaning somehow or another, So it is, as you say, ' some unknown cause capable of producing.' We can- not coin in English, I suppose, because it is the Queen's 1 As to the meaning of amosgepotically in the preface to From Matter to Spirit. CORRESPONDENCE, 1856-66. ,335 English, and 'uttering ' one's own coin is a felony. We cannot 1865. say ' somehow or otherically.' Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. F. W. Herschel 91 Adelaide Road, September 27, 1866. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — I write without much purpose, unless a 1866. funny fact be one. Ulugh Bey is the end of the chain. An Arabic dictionary maker came to talk to me about getting his names of the stars in Arabic ; thence came various Turks, thence Turkish pupils he had had — whom I had had also ; thence Ameen Bey, whose father was Hassein Effendi, who trisected the angle, and who was taught by Ingliz Selim Effendi, who translated ' Bonnycastle.' This Englishman who translated B. must have been Richard Baily, Francis B.'s brother. He certainly ran away and turned Turk, and both F. B. and Miss B. told me that he translated Bonnycastle. Do you happen to remember anything about him ? I remember that Miss B. had his picture. I hope you have fought the weather with needle-gun success. By the way, where is it set forth that a leech is a famous barometer, by indications to be seen in his behaviour in the water ? I have been looking at the writing of South about Babbage and Davy. There is an exceeding patness of recollection about him on this occasion as on former ones. Are we really to believe that when he called on Sir H. Davy, and wrote a note which he left in Davy's study, he took a copy of that note, so as to be able to give it in complete form ? Or has he done what Thucydides must be held to have done about the speeches of his generals — made them as they might have been and ought to have been ? What is the real origin of the severance between South and Babbage ? In all Babbage's ' Autobiography ' I cannot find a hint of South' s existence ! Do you possess Hyde's edition of Ulugh Bey's ' Catalogue ' (in Arabic and Latin) ? If so, I wish you would lend it to me. I should not wonder if it were in your patrimony, though I should hardly think you would have wanted it yourself. With kind regards to Lady Herschel and all around you, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. 336 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. SECTION X. 1866-1871. 1866. I COME now to the last important event of my hus- band's life — the cessation of his connection with University College. In recording this I wish to dwell as little as possible on the fact, undoubted by all who were near him at the time, that his last illness resulted from mental trouble consequent upon it, in at least as great a degree as from the losses which befell us later. But however painful it is to write it, and however painful it may be to read for the survivors among those who were indirectly responsible for it, I have no choice but to state what was the belief of all who had the means of forming a true judgment. He had joined University College in his early youth, in opposition to the advice of some of his nearest friends, who believed that his interests would not thereby be pro- moted, and to the satisfaction only of those in whose minds the upholding of a high principle was a more weighty consideration than worldly success or affluence. He was fully aware how much less lucrative a Professor- ship in a new institution was likely to be than many appointments which he might have obtained elsewhere. The associations, too, inseparable from a perfectly new institution were less congenial than those in which he would have found himself at either of the two Universities, where he would have worked under and with men whose habits of thought (in some ways) would have been more in harmony with his own. He had worked in the new institution with untiring energy for six-and-thirty years, because he trusted the UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 337 assertion of its founders and subsequent Governors that 1866. the essence of its being was absolute and complete religious equality in every portion of its organisation. His anticipation that the pledge, so often and so emphatic- ally given, would be fulfilled, was destined to a complete and final disappointment. The occasion arose on the appointment of a new Pro- Candi- fessor of Mental Philosophy and Logic, in June 1866, in of Rev.Jas. place of Dr. Hoppus, an Independent minister, who had held the chair from the beginning. In accordance with the laws of the College the testimonials of all candidates were submitted to the Senate of Professors, who examined and reported on them to the Council, in whose hands rested the final appointment. Prom the first foundation the Unitarians had been among the most powerful sup- porters of the College, which could never have risen to its then condition without their assistance in money and effort. When it was first known that the Rev. James Martineau, a Unitarian minister and a distinguished scholar, was a candidate for the chair of Mental Philosophy and Logic, a gossiping rumour came to the ears of my husband and myself that the Unitarians on the Council were working to bring in their own candidate. This was merely foolish talk among a few persons, but I mention it to show what my husband's feelings were on the subject of the appointment. When he heard the report he declared his disbelief in it, but said he would make inquiries, as there must be no suspicion of the preponderance of any one party in religion in that place. He inquired about the rumour, and, as he expected, found it false. No member of the Council at that time knew anything of the relative merits of the candidates. It was evident, even if any one who knew him well could have supposed it possible, that friendship for Mr. Martineau, for whom he had a sincere respect, did not influence his subsequent conduct.1 1 I note this, as one of the newspapers spoke of my husband's z 338 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. The report of the Senate, after enumerating Mr. Martineau's qualifications for the appointment, as shown by his writings, by his examination papers, and by the testimony of his pupils, concludes with the words, 'All these considerations evidently lead to the conclusion that Mr. Martineau is the most eligible candidate. He appears to be at least equal to the other candidates in ability and learning, while he is superior to them both in reputation, and in experience and success as a teache'r.9 The question was, however, raised at this early stage, whether Mr. Martin eau's position as a Unitarian minister would be injurious to the class ; and of this doubt the Council, some of the influential members of which were bent on appointing a Professor far lower in the scale of orthodox belief than Mr. Martineau, availed themselves. They postponed the appointment for a time, and the Senate was called upon to make a second report in consequence of new candidates having come into the field, and some of the old candidates having sent in additional testimonials. Their report of the second of the candidates was given in these words : — * Upon the strength of this singularly strong testimony we have no hesitation in concluding that Mr. Groom Robertson is exceedingly well qualified to fill the vacant chair ; and that of the candidates whose claims we have examined up to this point, he is the ablest, and, as far as we can judge, the most learned, and the most likely to rise to eminence, and to raise the repu- tation of the College. But there yet remains upon the list the name of Mr. James Martineau. As the Senate has already recommended the appointment of Mr. Martineau, and the Council has declined to appoint him, the Senate does not think it necessary to present a second report con- cerning him.' In the hope and belief that the position of affairs was not yet past remedy, fourteen Fellows of the College, including some of its most distinguished alumni, sent a ' chivalrous advocacy of his friend's cause.' This conveyed an inexact idea of the facts. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 339 requisition to the Council asking that a special Court of 1866. Proprietors might be summoned to consider the course taken by the Council in deferring the appointment of the best Mr. Croom qualified candidate for special reasons to the vacant chair. An objection to this on legal grounds was raised by the Council ; they referred the question to the law officers of the Crown, and before the opinion of these gentlemen (which was in favour of the requisitionists) was announced, settled it their own way by the appointment of Mr. Croom Robertson, who was a pupil of Prof. Alexander Bain, and an adherent of the school of thought upheld by that gentleman, and approved by the leading members of the Council. When Mr. De Morgan heard that the Council intended Roagj^ to reject Mr. Martineau for reasons connected with fessorshi]>. religious belief, he openly declared that should the Col- lege make such a departure from the principle on which it was founded, he should feel that his connection with it was at an end. He waited with anxiety for their decision, and when the news came that the acknowledged best candidate was set aside on the ground of his Unitarianism, and one below him appointed, he said that the College had committed a suicidal act, and would never hold its old place again. He did not hesitate as to his own course, but at once sent in his resignation. His letter to the Council, which follows, I know to have been written without any intention of publication at the time, or rather with a distinct intention of non-publi- cation during his lifetime. To the Chairman of the Council of University College. 91 Adelaide Road, November 10, 1866. SIR, — I feel much sorrow in notifying to the Council that my connection with the College must close at the end of the current session. For some years the returns of my chair have been so z 2 340 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. small that, taking into account the time I give, my stay Letter of has been an imprudence. I had nevertheless calculated resigna- tion. that I might, without too great an injustice to my family, draw upon my capital, if I may use so grand a word, for the means of retaining my post during this and the next session, in the hope of the dawn of better days.1 The recent vote of the Council in the case of Mr. Martineau renders it unnecessary for me to settle when I shall leave the College ; it proves that the College has left me. I am, as heretofore, strong in the determination not to be overlooked, and not to be controlled in any matter of religious thought, speech, or teaching. The Council has decided that a certain amount of notoriety for advocacy of an unpopular theology is a disqualification. Whether a distinction was intended between the case of a candidate and of an installed Professor I neither know nor care. I assume that such a body as the Council would never enter- tain this distinction. I concede that A is not B, but I maintain that those who surrender to expediency point A of principle are the men who will surrender point B when the time comes, and who, until that time does come, will be honestly shocked at the prophecy of their future con- duct. Adherence to come is discounted to meet the con- sequence of present departure. The principle of the College has been partially surrendered to expediency ; no man can say how much more will be given up, nor when. This I said when the Peene legacy was accepted, and I was laughed at. The acceptance of the conditions of that legacy did not drive me from the College, because, after much deliberation, and not a little help from what I now see to be sophism, my love for the College and the life I led in it barred the way with De minimis non curat lex. 1 During the last years of his stay from various causes the proceeds of his chair had fallen off. They had never been great, only one year amounting to nearly 500L His continuing to hold it at a later period, when the returns seldom exceeded 300L, and were becoming less, was entirely due to his belief that the institution would fall still lower by his withdrawal.-— S. E. DE M. UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 341 But I ought to have seen that minimum is the first step 1866. from nihil to totum ; and when St. Denys, with his head under his arm, had made that first step, I ought to have foreseen the second.1 My self-complacency is comforted by observing that there are even now men of experience and thought who not only cannot foresee the third step, but who affirm it will never be made. Before proceeding to the most delicate part of the subject I make two remarks. First, in all that I say I am stating the decision of my own court, by which my own course is determined. It is for me alone to weigh evidence, and for me alone to de- cide. This distinction is often forgotten ; such a letter as the present is treated as appeal to those to whom it is addressed, instead of recorded argument in a decided case. Be it remembered that the first sentence of this letter contains the needful ; all the rest is partly respect to the body I am addressing, partly evidence of what is thought by a person who has stood by the College for thirty years, and who is likely to represent the opinions of many. Secondly, I earnestly protest against being supposed to impute to any one, in or out of the Council, the least wilful or conscious impropriety of reasoning or conduct. T mean to give the offence which, in our thin-skinned day, is always taken at plain and uncompromising attack upon alleged wrong proceedings ; but I am free of all intention to be personally disrespectful to any of the promoters. I can never forget the cordial co-operation of thirty years. In the matter of Mr. Martineau, I am aware of the existence of two cross currents. Since the first vote of the Council I have weighed all that I heard, and have for months been satisfied that there has been an objection to 1 St. Denys carried his head to Montmartre after his execution. I take the allusion to mean that just as the miracle was complete as soon as the Saint made the first step, so the alienation of the College from its principle was effected at the very earliest departure therefrom. — S. E. DE M. 342 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. his psychology as well as to his religion : the first is too far £igna-f rem°ved from atheism to please the philosopher, the ioii. second too far removed from orthodoxy to please the priest No longer neutral between the disputes of Christians, the College is to apply the abandoned principle in another field. The frontier is to be rectified by putting Theism in the place of Unitarianism, and making God an open question, not to be the basis of any teaching on the human mind. And so it is contrived that one and the same victim, offered on the altar of the Janus Bifrons of expediency, shall appease both the priest and the philo- sopher, while each votary selects the particular head of the deity to which his offering is made. I proceed to show that (supposing me willing to re- main) I am as worthy to be extruded as Mr. Martineau to be excluded. I have for thirty years, and in my class-room, acted on the principle that positive theism may be made the basis of psychological explanation without violation of any law of the College. When in elucidating mathematical prin- ciples it is necessary to speak of our mental organisation as effect of a cause, I have always referred it to an intelligent and disposing Creator. The nature of things, the eternal laws of thought, and all the ways by which that Creator is put in the dark corner, have been treated by my silence as philosophical absurdities not worthy to have their silly names intruded upon those who are to be trained to think. Were I to remain under the new system, I should hold it a sacred duty and — ah, poor human nature ! — a malicious pleasure to extend and intensify all I have hitherto said on this subject. Again, for more than thirty years I have been as strong a Unitarian as Mr. Martineau. If I have not raised my voice in this matter, and as strongly as Mr. Martineau 1 has done, it is because I have been deeply 1 In writing the above (as will be evident to the reader) Mr. De Morgan believed Mr. Martineau to be of the older Unitarian school, UNIVERSITY COLLEGE, 343 engaged in other things, because I do not care what un- reflecting people think they think, and because I have found that the great bulk of reflecting men of all sects keep their Trinitarianism caged in a creed, and are, in every practical application of religion except pelting Unitarians, as truly Unitarian as Mr. Martineau himself. Were I to continue in this College, under even the ghost of a gag, I should soon be heard (without the walls) on a subject to which I have paid long and close attention.1 I should soon bring the question to issue whether the installed Professor is or is not a subject for such discus- sion as has arisen about the candidate for admission. I hope it will be clear that my absence is as desirable as that of Mr. Martineau. But, for reasons given, I deprecate the supposition of having sacrificed to principle. I have only ceased to sacrifice because the temple has been desecrated. My determination would not be altered by a return to the old principle on the part of the Council. I shall, therefore, not be suspected of any personal motive when I urge the Council to reconsider their suicidal vote, and to re-nail the old flag to the mast. One point has perhaps been almost overlooked. A teacher of psychology, if he do his duty, expounds all systems of sufficient note, and puts forward the grounds of each. Every one must have his own system, and if one may therefore be suspected of bias, so must another. Mr. Martineau has special reputation as an eclectic teacher. He is noted for ability to prepare students for examina- tions in which the examiners have no bias towards his views. I have heard it remarked, before this discussion, that he crams his pupils with different systems. Such a man does not cram. It means that those of his students which receives the New Testament records as literally true. I should not be justified in referring to this mistaken impression if Mr. Martineau's late writings, and his preference of the name of Theist, were not well known. 1 These words, which may seem obscure, must be understood to refer to his Unitarian belief.— S. E. DE M. 344 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1 866. who desire no better can cram different systems from his res?6* - lectures. There is more proof of his competency in this tion. respect than in the case of any of the untried candidates. Keturn to the old principle. If the College fall, it will fall wren honour. No concession of narrow minds, philo- sophical or theological, will save it. The enemy will give one sneer more, the Mend nine cheers less. Thing'embigot, who says that his son shall not enter the College if Mr. Martineau teach there, never meant to send his son in any case. The late vicar of St. Pancras, then a lessee in Gower Street, found the noise of the playground disagreeable, and sent word that if the nuisance were not abated he should withdraw his patronage ; he had been an inveterate opponent. He was left to subtract his negative quantity if he pleased. Let Thing'embigot learn the same rule of algebra. On the other hand, the enemy of religious disqualifica- tion, if the present course be persisted in, must decide whether his son shall be educated under selection carried up to its logical extent in the professed fear of God, or exclusion nibbled at up to compulsion of circumstances in the concealed fear of man as to religion, and another fear of God as to philosophy. I should myself be puzzled to make a choice, for if there be a tincture of atheism in the second fear of God, there is a tincture of blasphemy in the first. Of the two different ways of putting man in the place of God, I think the world at large would prefer the first. My best wishes remain with the College which I leave, but I wish to make myself clearly understood on the question which has been opened. I trust that by return to and future maintenance of the sound principle on which it was founded, in which there is more religion than in all exclusive systems put together, the College will rise into prosperity under the protection, not of the Infinite, not of the Absolute, not of the Unconditioned, not of the Nature of things, not of the chapter of accidents, but of God, the UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 345 Creator and Father of all mankind.— I am, sir, with much 1866. respect, Your obedient, humble servant, A. DE MOBGAN. The reading of this letter at the Council was (I was Reply of told) followed by silence for a minute or two. The minority who could understand its meaning and its motive had already been outvoted. The majority could give no answer, because they were determined not to give the only one it called for, a return to principle. The secretary was directed to inform the writer 'that your letter of November 10, addressed to the Chairman of the Council, was read at a session of the Council on Saturday last, and that your resignation of the Professorship of Mathematics from the close of the current session was accepted.' The decision and its results gave great dissatisfaction to the friends of religious liberty outside the College. The newspapers, which represented different phases of thought, expressed the variety of opinions held on the subject. By those of the earnest and Liberal school the movement was strongly condemned ; among other things it was said that all real Liberals must ask whether it is wise to support a College which, unsectarian in name, can yet be guilty of such religious and philosophical bigotry. Here I may remark upon the expression c real Liberals.' Every one who has watched the progress of thought, especially during the last half-century, must have seen that its tendency, both in philosophy and in religion, is to the denial, or what amounts to a denial, of God. I am not now attempt- ing to condemn this tendency, but its prevalence has had the effect of confusing formerly well-defined distinctions. The ' Liberal ' has frequently gone from liberality to un- belief ; and in the case of University College many pro- fessed Liberals took the part of intolerance because they preferred atheism to theism. The self-styled religious party said that it was now clear that the profession of 346 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. desire to preserve the unsectarian character of the College CoTiIge!lty was so much dust thrown in the eyes of the public, ' and that the College had declared itself truly a ( godless Col- lege,' as it had long been called by the orthodox. Scoffers laughed, and opined that ' the College ' could do without its principles, but the principles could not do without their College. Meeting of The next meeting of Proprietors was appointe d for >roprietors. Febmarj 2? 1867. But before the end of the current year, and with reference to the requisition already referred to, the Senate met again and supported the decision of the Council, and in anticipation of the meeting addressed a statement to the Proprietors. Though the real question, which lies in a very few words, has been distinctly stated in Mr. T)e Morgan's letter of resignation, I should be thought to give an ex-parte account of the whole affair if I were to omit the arguments on the other side. The strongest of these may fairly be presumed to be embodied in this statement of fifteen Professors, of whom more than one had belonged to the institution from its found a- tion. I feel it only right to give the document at length . Statement addressed to the Proprietors of University College. A certain number of Fellows and Proprietors of University College, London, have required the Council of the College to convene a Special General Meeting of the Proprietors, 'to con- sider a recent resolution of the Council declining to appoint the Rev. James Martineau to the Professorship of Mental Philo- sophy and Logic, after a Report of the Senate that he was the best qualified candidate for the chair ; ' and a Special General Meeting will be held, in consequence of this requisition, on Saturday, February 2. The subject which the meeting is convened to consider h as attracted much attention, and has been the occasion of many articles in various daily and weekly papers ; and as is usually, and indeed inevitably, the case when writers press forward to instruct the public under the influence of a strong preconceived opinion, and with an imperfect knowledge of the constitution STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF COUNCIL, 347 and history of the body which they criticise, and an imperfect 1866. knowledge of the facts which they discuss, many circumstances have been misrepresented. It is likely that these misrepresenta- tions have influenced some even of the requisitionists ; and we may assume without doubt that they have produced some effect, more or less, on other proprietors who will attend the meeting. We wish, therefore, to correct the more important of them, and those especially which relate to the action of the Senate, or body of Professors. The gentlemen who have signed the requisition, and who are indignant that Mr. Martineau was not appointed to the vacant chair, have not thought it necessary to make themselves acquainted with the evidence respecting the qualifications of the other candidates. Most of them, in all probability, had no means of knowing it. But as it would not have been seemly to impugn the judgment of such a body as the Council of the College, which had a full knowledge of the case in all its bearings, and considered it very carefully, and which in fact made its final decision after three months' deliberation, merely upon the plea, that knowing only the reputation of one candidate, and not having examined the claims of any other, they had a strong opinion another way, they shelter themselves under the authority of the Senate, and justify their very unusual attempt to pass a censure upon the Council on the ground that the Senate reported that Mr. Martineau was the best qualified candidate for the chair. The greater number of the requisitionists are Fellows of the College, and were formerly distinguished students ; and probably these gentlemen understand the constitutional relation of the Senate to the Council. But in the articles on the subject which have appeared in the public papers there have been expressions as if the privileges of the Senate were invaded by the action of the Council, or at least as if the two bodies were necessarily placed in a position of antagonism by such a difference of opinion. This is not the case. By the charter the power of appointing Professors is given absolutely to the Council. Neither the Senate nor a General Meeting can limit their discretion. But it is wisely provided in our by-laws that, when a Professor- ship is to be filled up, all the applications of candidates, and all testimonials and other documents which they may present as evidence of their qualifications, shall be submitted to the Senate, and that the Senate shall report thereupon to the Council. But 348 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. a report so made is only an expression of opinion. The Council retains perfect liberty of action. The choice of the Council is usually in accordance with the opinion of the Senate. But cases have occurred before in which the Council has exercised an independent judgment, and departed from the recommendation of the Senate, and the Senate has never felt itself aggrieved by the exercise of such an indisputable right. In this particular case there is especial reason why the Senate should receive with respect the decision of the Council. On subjects of professional learning, and in several departments of science and literature, it is likely that there will be men amongst the Professors better able to form a sound judgment than any members of the Council. But on the question of Mental Philo- sophy we believe honestly that the members of the Council generally are as fully competent to form an opinion as the members of the Senate. Moreover, the relative strength of the recommendation of the Senate has been misrepresented. It has been asserted that the Senate ' reported to the Council that Mr. Martineau was incom- parably the ablest candidate.' The first report of the Senate, in which alone the qualifications of Mr. Martineau were discussed, was not so unjust. The report examined the claims of Mr. Martineau, as attested by his published writings, by the evidence of his pupils, and by his Examination Papers, which he frankly laid before the Council; and the conclusion was in these words: — ' All these considerations evidently lead to the conclusion that Mr. Martineau is the most eligible candidate. He appears to be at least equal to the other candidates in ability and learning , while he is superior to them both in reputation, and in experience and success as a teacher.' A still more flagrant injustice has been done to the other candidates by the language of another writer, who chooses to describe the Council as rejecting a first-rate man in order to look about for 'a safe man with indifferent qualifications as a teacher,' one 'obscure enough to be inoffensive.' It is not necessary to insist upon the qualifications of the candidates whose names are not public, except to protest against the injustice of a writer who knows nothing about the matter using such disparaging language : but in the case of Mr. Robartson, whom the Council have appointed to the Professorship, it is right to state the conclusions of the two reports of the Senate. The first report upon his qualifications ended thus :— ' Mr. Robertson is only twenty-four STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF COUNCIL, 349 years of age. To judge from his testimonials, his philosophical 1866. acquirements are already very uncommon ; nor ought we to forget the great public service our College may render by giving a man whose natural vocation, we are assured, is philosophy, an opportunity of following his vocation.' The report then spoke of the objection on the score of youth, and after alluding to drawbacks in the case of certain other of the candidates, con- cluded, * But we are inclined to think that, of the disadvantages under which they labour, Mr. Robertson's youth is the least serious, as it is certainly the most remediable.' But the Senate was called upon to make a second report in consequence of new candidates having come into the field, and some of the old candidates having sent in additional testimonials, after the Council had extended the time for filling up the vacant chair. When they drew up the second report, they had before them additional evidence with respect to Mr. Robertson, which gave assurance of the extent of his learning, and of the breadth and impartiality of his views, and of his scrupulous fairness in exhibiting fully contending theories. They expressed their con- clusion in these words : — ' Upon the strength of this singularly strong testimony we have no hesitation in concluding that Mr. Robertson is exceedingly well qualified to fill the vacant chair; and that, of the candidates whose claims we have ex- amined up to this point, he is the ablest, and, as far as we can judge, the most learned, and the most likely to rise to eminence, and to raise the reputation of the College.' The report then continued, ' But there yet remains upon the list of candidates the name of the Rev. James Martineau. As the Senate has already recommended the appointment of Mr. Martineau, and the Council has declined to appoint him, the Senate does not think it necessary to present a second report concerning him.' It would be almost ludicrous, if it were not rather lamentable that parties in a controversy should be unable to conceive that those who differ from them may differ honestly, to see how little able the partisans of Mr. Martineau have been to take in the notion that he may have been rejected upon his merits. Various unworthy motives have been attributed to the Council ; but it does not seem to have occurred to their assailants that possibly they did not think Mr. Martineau the best Professor of Philosophy that they could appoint. And yet a zealous advocate of Mr. Martineau, in expatiating upon the soundness of his philo- 350 MEMOIB OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN, 1866. sophical views which ought to have recommended his appoint- ment, points out triumphantly that they are opposed on various points to the opinions of Hobbes, and Locke, and Hume, and Paley, and Bentham, and Mill, and Austin, to say nothing of Aristotle. Now it might have occurred to this writer upon his own showing, that some thinkers might, whether rightly or wrongly, at least honestly, think Mr. Martineau's philosophy unsound ; and when it is considered from what class of thinkers many of the original founders and many of the late supporters of University College have proceeded, it becomes exceedingly pro- bable that members of the present Council did sincerely and honestly believe that his teaching would be at variance with philosophical truth. "When this explanation of the strange phenomenon was suggested, another argument was set up. We were told that ' the principle ' of considering the truth or falsehood of the philosophical opinions of a teacher of philosophy ' is monstrous,' and is a kind of ' philosophical intolerance ' almost as bad as religious intolerance. ' The truth of a philosophical doctrine cannot be settled with the same certainty as the truth of a pro- position in Euclid Mental philosophy is at least as valuable for the intellectual exercise it affords as for the conclu- sions to which it leads ; and the duty of the Council is to choose a particular teacher of the subject, not because he belongs to one or other of the two great metaphysical schools, but because he is the ablest candidate that can be got.' If it were acknow- ledged on all hands that Mental Philosophy is a subject on which no truth or certainty has yet been arrived at, it would be the duty of the Council to appoint no teacher at all. It would be a subject most worthy of the exertions of the trained student, who still hoped against hope to arrive at truth ; but it would be no study for a place of education. It continues to be a branch of education because it is believed that truth and genuine know- ledge are involved in it. The directors of a place of education may be mistaken in their estimate of philosophical truth ; but surely they are not to be blamed for acting conscientiously on their convictions. But although it cannot reasonably be doubted that the decision of the Council was determined, in the case at least of some of its members, perhaps of many, by their estimate of Mr. Martineau's philosophical merits, there is ground also for believing that it was affected by a consideration of his position as a leading STATEMENT IN SUPPOKT OF COUNCIL. 351 minister of a religious sect : not, be it carefully observed, by any 1866. consideration whether he belonged to this sect or to that, but by the fact that he was a minister of religion, and a minister who was placed in a prominent position. When it became known that he was not appointed to the vacant Professorship, the first outcry raised was that he was rejected because he was a Uni- tarian, with the additional imputation that he was rejected, not because the Council of University College objected to Unitarians as such, but because they sacrificed their own professed principles in timid and interested subservience to the prejudices and ' bigotry of the outer world. This calumny was too gross to be long maintained in face of the known characters of the gentlemen who constitute the Council. But it did its work. It was the origin of the agitation which was raised ; and probably it is still believed by many persons. And not only was it the origin of the agitation, but the agitators continue to agitate as if their first assertions were true, although they know that the question to be considered is a very different one. On August 4 a motion was submitted to the Council in the following terms : — * That the Council consider it inconsistent with the complete religious neutrality proclaimed and adopted by University College to appoint to the Chair of Philosophy of the Mind and Logic a candidate as minister and preacher of any one among the various sects dividing the religious world.' This motion was negatived ; so that no one has a right to assign the principle here laid down as the ground of the subse- quent action of the Council as a body ; although, no doubt, as there was a minority who voted for the motion, it may be assumed that those individual members acted upon this principle in their subsequent votes ; and it is possible that other members, who were not present in August, but were present in November, did the same. It is seldom expedient in any deliberative body to propound a resolution in general terms, when the object is practical action in a particular case ; and the Council probably judged wisely in not affirming the general proposition in their minutes : but the argument suggested is one which might be entertained and applied in the particular case, without any departure from the true principles of the College. It is important that the friends of the College should know that such, at least, is the deliberate opinion of the Senate. In the conclusion of their second report, 352 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. after stating that they did not think it necessary to report a second time concerning Mr. Martineau, they added these words : — ' We wish, however, to express our opinion upon a question of principle which is supposed to be involved in the matter. If it be thought by the Council that the characteristic principle of the College, impartiality between religious sects,1 would be violated or endangered by placing in the Chair of Mental Philo- sophy a prominent theologian and a leader of one school of theo- logical thought, even though the upright and honourable character of the individual gave an assurance that he would not consciously allow his theological opinions to affect his teaching of philosophy, the Senate fully recognises the right of the Council to entertain the objection ; and it is not disposed to impugn the discretion of the Council, in whatever way the ques- tion may be ultimately determined. In fact, the difficulty has been felt in the Senate as well as in the Council.' The report including this paragraph was carried, after an adjourned debate, by a majority of 14 to 2 ; so that it may be fairly taken as expressing the deliberate opinion of the main body of the Professors. It will be observed that the Senate pronounced no opinion upon the case of Mr. Martineau. They desired only to recognise and uphold the perfect right of the Council to consider his ecclesiastical position before they appointed him to the Chair of Mental Philosophy. The reproach to which the Council is now subjected is of a novel nature. It is something strange that gentlemen pro- fessing liberal opinions should make it a reproach to other 1 This may be accepted as the semi-official declaration of the prin- ciple of the College in 1866. It is evident that if it be the right one, my husband's was wrong (see pp. 369-373). It is also evident that if it were the full statement of that principle, divines of all denominations alike might have been, by the Charter, precluded from holding chairs in the College. Had this been announced in the first instance, Mr. De Morgan might possibly have still held a Professorship there, as in any other institution of moderate liberality ; but he certainly would have made no sacrifices to retain it, in the idea that he was supporting the sound principle of religious equality defined by himself. As a matter of fact, the reiteration of the statement that no reli- gious qualification or disqualification could be tolerated in the College had become almost tedious. — S. E. DE M. STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF COUNCIL. 353 liberals, that they are jealous of clerical influence in education.1 1866. Such a jealousy is the usual concomitant of religious equality. When the University of Sydney was founded, the authors of it entrusted the selection of a Principal and Professors to a com- mittee of gentlemen in England, informing them that, in conse- quence of the equality of religious sects in the colony, they would prefer that none of the Professors should be a minister of any religious denomination. Their committee found it impossible to discharge their trust to their satisfaction within this limita- tion ; and as the instruction to them was not imperative, they selected as Classical Professor and Principal the late Rev. Dr. Woolley, who was a clergyman of the Church of England. The appointment of Dr. Woolley was received at first with some suspicion and dissatisfaction ; and it was not till the people of Sydney became convinced by personal knowledge of the Tin- sectarian character of his mind that they were thoroughly reconciled to it. We by no means wish, nor would any judicious friend of our College wish, to exclude all ministers of religion from all Professorships ; but we mention this instance to show that the advocacy of religious equality does not compel its advocates in all cases simply to shut their eyes and ask no questions as to the religious position of persons with whom they have to do. In the last number of the Athenceum there is an article upon the approaching Special Meeting of the Proprietors of University College, in which the principles of the College are thus described : — ' There was a universal belief created by every kind of declaration on the part of the promoters, and fostered by an unflinching adherence, that no disqualification on religious grounds was to be tolerated, whether as to teacher or pupil. The best Professors were to be chosen, independently of their faith, and of their notoriety as followers of their faith.' This is quite true as a general description, and we trust that it always will be true. But the writer does not perceive that the two clauses of his last sentence may be inconsistent ; and if he insists upon the literal application of this rule in all conceivable cases, he is a slave to the letter, and blind to the spirit of the principle which he advocates. The College will appoint a Professor of Anatomy, or a Professor of Latin, or a Professor of Natural 1 According to my recollection the reproach against the Council was that they were sensitive only on the score of an unpopular clerical in- fluence. It was not implied that they would as a body have shrunk from the appointment of a liberal Churchman. — S. E. DE M. A A 354 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. 186f>. Philosophy, without any reference to their theological opinions or their ecclesiastical denomination, because their theology or their denomination will in no way affect their teaching of anatomy, or Latin, or Natural Philosophy. But the College may reasonably and consistently think twice before appointing a professional theologian Professor of Mental Philosophy ; because it is not only possible, but not unlikely, that his professional theology will make him a worse teacher of mental philosophy. We will borrow the language of one of the assailants of the Council. * Such is the nature of speculative inquiry, that of necessity it brings into view the truths of Revelation, and forces up the question whether they agree with the principles which the thinker has reached. If his mind have the logical grasp requisite for the profoundest of all studies, he will not be content with laying down certain doctrines regarding cognition, but will follow their issues through the windings of thought, till they come into contact with theology itself.' True : and if his theology be really his own, good ; but if his theology be a fore- gone conclusion — something which he has accepted independently of philosophical investigation, — if he is trammelled by connexion with a party or a denomination, if he has an ecclesiastical position to maintain, or a theological reputation to lose, there is no small chance that his philosophy will be, or has been, modified by con- tact with his theology. We put the case generally ; but there is a strong a priori probability that a layman will be a more unpre- judiced, and therefore a better teacher of mental philosophy than a minister of religion ; and, if so, it is no part of the duty of the Council to ignore the distinction. If the general principle be sound, there is no force in the objection that our late Professor, Dr. Hoppus, was a minister of religion. If the general rule be a safe one, the fact that no harm followed from one departure from it l is no argument for lightly departing from it a second time ; and still less is it an 1 The suggestion that the election of Dr. Hoppus was at the time regarded as a departure from a general rule, shows that the writer of this passage had not been connected with the College from its founda- tion. The elections of two clergymen of the Church of England, among the first appointed, were looked on rather as affirmations of a distinct principle than as departures from an unexpressed ' general rule.' When Dr. Hoppus's name first appeared in the list of Professors, a remark was made in my hearing on his being a minister of religion. The reply, given by an influential member of the institution, was, ' We do not consider these things.' — S. E. DE M, STATEMENT IN SUPPORT OF COUNCIL. 355 argument to debar the Council from their right to consider all I860. circumstances likely to affect a Professor's teaching. We are assured on very good authority, that when the first appointment to the Professorship of Mental Philosophy was to be made in the College, there were two instances of eminent ministers who thought of offering themselves as candidates for the office, but were withheld by the conviction at which they themselves arrived, after further consideration, that it would not be consistent with the duty of the Council to appoint them.1 The preceding argument is perfectly general ; but in the particular case of Mr. Martineau there is one point of another kind which deserves consideration. No one will question that the authorities of our College are bound by the strongest obliga- tions to avoid carefully any act by which they wo aid induce our students, or even put facilities in their way, to submit themselves to one form of religious teaching rather than another. Mr. Martineau is described as ' Professor of Mental, Moral, and Reli- gious Philosophy ' in Manchester New College ; and we have every reason to believe that he discharges faithfully, zealously, and ably the duties of his office. In his letter of application for the Professorship he stated that, if he were appointed, he should transfer his lectures on logic and mental philosophy entirely to University College. Moral philosophy is not included in the duties of our Professorship. We may fairly conclude, therefore, that, if Mr. Martineau had been appointed, he would have lectured on logic and mental philosophy in University College, and would have continued to lecture on moral and religious philosophy in the institution called Manchester New College, all the business of which is done in the building of University Hall, which is immediately contiguous to the College. A very natural consequence would have been, that students who were attracted by his lectures in the College would have been led to attend the further part of his course in the Hall. At present, if any students seek the instruction of Mr. Martineau, they are at perfect liberty to do so, but the College is in no way responsible. The Council has been attacked for having proceeded to elect Mr. Croom Robertson to the vacant chair at the same meeting at which they received the requisition for a Special General Meeting, without waiting for the answer to their consultation of 1 This statement would have had more force if substantiated by particulars. According to my recollection these gentlemen had other reasons for not coming forward. — S. E. DE M. A A 2 356 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1866. the high law officers whether a meeting could legally be convened for the purpose named in the requisition, and, if it could, without waiting for the result of it. In the first place, the Council had a perfect right to do this. By the very charter of the College the power of appointing Professors is committed to the Council, and not to a General Meeting : manifestly because the Council is a body capable of judicial action, and a General Meeting is a popular body, and not a fit instrument for such a purpose. The Council is elected by the proprietors to discharge this and other duties ; but they are not mere delegates of the proprietors, and it has never been considered that they were bound to receive instructions from them. No doubt the General Meeting may express an opinion upon the acts of the Council ; but the duty of the Council was to do what they thought best for the College, and then to await the judgment of their constituents. If the Council had delayed to act, for the purpose of deferring to a vote of the meeting, they would have abdicated their proper function. Our sole purpose is to uphold the legitimate authority of the Council, and to vindicate their right (and, indeed, we might insist upon it as their duty) to consider all circumstances which make a candidate more or less fit to discharge the duties of the office which he seeks. When the first report of the Senate was drawn up, the Senate named Mr. Martineau as the best candidate ; and although the objection presented by his ministerial position was discussed, it was not insisted upon, and therefore it was not mentioned in the report. When the second report was framed, which was rendered necessary by the reception of additional evidence, the relative position of Mr. Martineau and Mr. Robert- son was certainly not left what it was before ; and, moreover, the attacks upon the College made it incumbent upon us dis- tinctly to recognise in the Council, and members of the Council, the right to consider all points in the position of Mr. Martineau, or any other candidate, which seemed to them likely to affect his fitness for the Professorship. We learn now, on what we must consider good authority (the Spectator of January 26), that the issue to be submitted to the meeting is substantially the same as the proposition of the writer in the Athenceum, which we have discussed above. The resolution announced runs thus : — * That in the opinion of this meeting any candidate, who is other- wise the most eligible for any chair or other office in this College or the School, ought not to be regarded as in any manner dis- qualified for such office because he is also eminent as a minister or preacher of any religious church or sect.' The writer in the MEETING OF PROPRIETORS. 357 Atfienceum, and the framer of the resolution, under cover of a 1866, specious general proposition, thrust out of sight the certain fact that there are some departments of human knowledge, and mental philosophy is eminently one of them, in which the pre- possessions of a theologian and the habits of a theological teacher may make him a worse qualified candidate than another man ; and in such a case those who have to appoint the teacher are bound to take cognisance of the fact, and it is very unwise to fetter their discretion. We pass no judgment on the particular case of Mr. Martineau. We are quite ready to assent to the general proposition, that no candidate ought to be regarded as ipso facto disqualified because he is a minister or preacher. But we desire to maintain the right of the Council to examine all the circumstances of every case that comes before them ; and we earnestly entreat every true friend of the College not to concur in any vote which would seem to inflict a censure upon the Council for the legitimate exercise of their discretion ; and, above all, not to- concur in any vote which would impose a restraint upon their freedom ot judgment in future. This was signed by fifteen Professors, of both Faculties. On reading this document, my husband said the principal part of the question was left out altogether ; for had he ever understood that the profession of religious impartiality made by the founders of the College was only to be understood ( as a general description/ his name would never have been connected with it. He drew a distinction between the part taken by the older Professors, who, from their long connection with University College, could not fail to know that its very life consisted in the entire rejection of all religious distinctions, and that of those more recently appointed, who, he thought, might and probably did believe that the Council was not bound by any condition except that of making the appointment which might seem to them best for the worldly prosperity of the institution. From this latter point of view, it is not difficult to understand why a candidate believed to be prominent in an unpopular sect should have met with dis- favour in the eyes of the Council. The special meeting of Proprietors was held early in 358 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1867. February 1867, and a few weeks later the annual meeting took place. On both these occasions those who contended for the old principle were beaten, and the College pro- ceeded to work in its new character. Whether it is held in higher estimation since then I have no means of knowing. I only know that it is changed since I heard the conversations of Lord Brougham, Thomas Campbell, and my father at the time of its foundation. My husband told me that during the session in which he worked after his resignation was sent in he met his colleagues as before in the Professors' room. Not one of them ever spoke on the subject of his retirement, and he left the place without one word of acknowledgment for all he had done for it. Only once, after the end of the session, he paid a visit to his old lecture-room. He went to bring away the note-books and manuscripts which he had used in his lectures. The visit was a painful one, but was so cheerfully borne that I should hardly have known all he felt if I had not said something to the effect that I hoped he would not suffer for the trial. He said, c Oh, I shall do very well. I felt all the time to-day that the College had left me, not I it. It was no longer the old place. But then,' he added sorrowfully, ' all my thirty l years' work has been thrown away.' The answer to this was of course easy. I said that no such efforts as his could ever be without result ; that his teaching had trained many strong and honest minds ; and that if the College had done nothing more, its establishment might have helped in the opening of the two Universities. He acquiesced, but the blow was struck. In the spring of 1867, after the efforts of many of the best of his old pupils and friends to retrace the false step had failed, some of these gentlemen, desirous that he should not leave the scene of his work without taking 1 It will be observed that sometimes more than thirty years are mentioned. He was Professor from 1828 to 1833, and again from 1836 to 1866— in all more than thirty-five years. RETIREMENT FROM UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 859 with him some memorial of their respect and friendship, 1867. asked me whether I thought he would refuse a testimonial in money.1 I answered without consulting him. He had strongly objected to the system of testimonials, which of late years had grown to such a height, and I was quite certain that his answer would be in the negative. He soon after received the following, enclosed in a letter from our friend Mr. Jacob Waley : — 'May 7, 1867. c DEAR SIR, — Many of your old pupils, at whose request Proposed , , n , . n -i memorial we address you, desire, upon your resignation of a chair bust. which for upwards of thirty years you have filled with so much distinction, to give some appropriate expression to the high estimation in which they hold you. ' Our admiration for your philosophical views of edu- cation, your skill in the art of instruction, and your scientific attainments, as well as our cordial regard and esteem for you as our old teacher and friend, render us desirous of recording these feelings in some substantial shape. * We understand, however, that you feel you cannot consistently accept any testimonial of intrinsic value. But we hope that you may be persuaded to gratify your pupils by sitting for a picture or bust to be placed in the library of our old College. We remain, sir, 'Yours faithfully, ' JACOB WALEY. H. M. BOMPAS. W. A. CASE. E. B. CLIFTON. J. G. GREENWOOD. J. M. SOLOMON. G. JESSEL. H. COZENS HARDY. RICHARD HOLT HUTTON. THEODORE WATERHOUSE.' WALTER BAGEHOT. 1 The year before his death several old pupils and friends kindly obtained for him a pension of 100L from Government. On hearing of this his iirst impulse was to decline it with thanks. I entreated him to receive the kindness as it was meant. 360 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1867. It gave a pain to my husband to refuse a request so kindly and cordially made. His reply was as follows : — ' MY DEAE WALEY, — I acknowledge your kind letter of the 7th with the cordial and gratifying inclosure, signed by eleven old pupils, whose dates represent the time which has elapsed since I rejoined the College in 1836. ' The inclosure is in itself a testimonial. It has all the meaning and all the value. And to those who hold that the mind of the teacher counts for something in the making of the pupil, the string of names appended to it will be no mean presumption that I have in some degree a claim to the terms in which I am described. ' I am asked to sit for a bust or picture, to be placed in what is described as " our old College." This location is impossible; our old College no longer exists. It was annihilated in November last. ' The old College to which I was so many years attached "by office, by principle, and by liking, had its being, lived, and moved in the refusal of all religious disqualifications. Life and soul are now extinct. '* I will avoid detail. I may be writing to some who think that the recent transaction is a reparable dilapida- tion, or even to some who approve of it. To me the College is like a Rupert's drop with a little bit pinched off the small end ; that is, a heap of dust. ' I can never forget that I have been usefully employed, though I now wish my life had been passed in any other institution. I have worked under the conviction that I was advancing a noble cause, until every letter in the sentence " Augustus De Morgan, Professor of Mathematics in University College, London," stands for 234 hours of actual lecturing, independent of all study and preparation; and all this under a banner which is now shown to have been either shamfully raised or shamefully deserted. 6 So much is necessary that my old pupils may under- stand my mind, and the repugnance I feel towards any proceeding which must record my connection with Uni- RETIREMENT FROM UNIVERSITY COLLEGE. 361 versity College. I am happy to say that the circumstances 1867. have not created any personal bitterness of feeling ; indi- viduals are to me what they were before. But if force of will can succeed, the institution is to pass away from before my mind, and to become as if it had never existed. 6 You will see that I am altogether averse to lending aid or countenance to any scheme which will tend to remind others that I was a teacher in the College which did homage to the evil it was created to oppose. ' But I am even more sensible to my old pupils' remem- brance than I should have been if I could have accepted the result of their most acceptable good opinion. Such remembrance would have been, in any case, a treasure. It has now the additional value of a treasure saved out of the fire. 'You will, of course, communicate my answer, and with my warmest thanks and most heartfelt regards, ' I am, my dear Waley, ' Yours sincerely, 6 A. DE MORGAN.'1 He often spoke with satisfaction of the uninterrupted friendly relations which had for thirty years subsisted between himself and his colleagues. From his declining health and other circumstances he saw but little of them latterly, but this was in no case due (on his part at least) to personal feeling created by the question which had caused his withdrawal. One of his social pleasures during the last few years had Crabb been in the acquaintance and friendship of Mr. H. Crabb Robinson, one of the first active promoters of the establish- ment of University College. Through a life of nearly ninety-one years Mr. Robinson had been the steady friend of 1 This letter was printed after Mr. De Morgan's death for circula- tion among friends who had been asked to join in an injudicious at- tempt to found a scholarship under his name in University College. 362 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1867. freedom and progress, but his influence, which was con- Mr.Crabb siderable, had been felt chiefly in his conversation and Robinson. m * social intercourse with other minds, for his writings were few and comparatively unimportant. In December 1866 he had voted in the minority in the Council on the ques- tion of Mr. Martineau's appointment, and on the next meeting, when the cause was lost by a majority of one, the chairman giving the casting vote, Mr. Robinson was absent from illness. This, and the adaptation of principle which afterwards ensued, was a cause of great concern to him. During the winter of 1865-66 Mr. De Morgan helped him in the task of arranging and sorting his books, a miscellaneous but very valuable collection. My hus- band, who was interested in the work, said that it was a very slow process, because every book or pamphlet looked at gave occasion for some literary or historical anecdote, and this sort of gossip was pleasant to his hearer, who knew much of books and of men ; for Mr. Robinson had been the contemporary of all — the friend of many — of the eminent, political, and literary characters whose life and work made the history of the end of the eighteenth and much of the nineteenth centuries. He had been the friend of Goethe, Wordsworth, and Coleridge. He remembered and knew the political trials of Home Tooke and his friends, and told me incidents connected with my father's trial at Cambridge of which I had never heard.1 His Sunday morning breakfasts were, I suppose, occasions of much pleasant intercourse among many intellectual men of various opinions. At these my husband used to meet the Rev. F. D. Maurice, the Rev. J. J. Tayler, the Rev. J. Martineau, and many others ; and it was at these parties of friends that his acquaintance with Mr. Mar- tineau was chiefly formed. Early in 1867, shortly after the trouble at the College, the kind-hearted, consistent old man left this world. Mr. 1 I first saw Mr. C. Robinson at Mrs. Barbauld's. I wa3 then twelve years old. FAILURE OF HEALTH. 363 De Morgan visited him daily, and saw the day before he died 1867. that his end would be without pain. In the Diary and Memoirs, published by Dr. Sadleir, a little sketch by Mr. De Morgan gives a portrait of the subject, which shows how actively his mind was still at work, and his interests alive to the last. The last work of any importance undertaken by my husband was a large calculation, I think, for the Alliance Assurance Company. But his health had begun to fail. Every one who saw him observed the change which had passed over him, and before the great sorrow which came to us at the end of 1867 he was no longer the strong, vigorous man, full of hope and activity, which he had been before his alienation from the institution to which so much of the work of his life had been devoted. In October our dear son George was taken from us. George's He had worked hard during the winter, and even late into the spring, both in giving lessons and in examining the papers for the degrees of the University of London. He was at that time Vice- Principal of University Hall, Gordon Square, but was almost every day with us in Adelaide Road. His father, who only saw his cheerfulness and the seeming improvement in his health when, after a short time at Herne Bay, he parted from him to join us at Bognor, did not realise his state, and hoped against hope to the last. George went on with one of his sisters and myself to Ventnor. He was still warmly interested in the success of the Mathematical Society. As his name be- longed to it as one of the secretaries, his father was anxious that, if possible, the first diploma given should have his signature. For this purpose parchment was placed before him, and he evidently recognised its import, passing his finger over the words Mathematical Society. But he was too weak to hold the pen, and died two days after. His father, already enfeebled in health, had been at home with two of our daughters, and could not com e in time to see him while he would have been recognised . 364 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1868. He bore the blow as bravely and firmly as he had borne other trials, expressing his full confidence in the wisdom which had removed from among us one who seemed in- tended to tread in his own steps on earth. But another trial awaited us in the illness of our third daughter. I had to leave home with her for several weeks, and she recovered so far as to remove much anxiety. In the year 1868 my husband's own health, which had continued steadily to decline, broke down entirely. A sharp attack of conges- tion of the brain, the result of so much intense mental suffering, left him so prostrated that it was evident he never again would be equal to sustained effort. We moved in the summer to 6 Merton Road, near Primrose Hill, a house which he said was the most comfortable he had been in since our marriage. We dreaded this moving on account of his weak state, but all was ready to receive him, and he did not suffer. In his enfeebled condition the task of placing his books was a heavy one. The room destined for them was much smaller than the one he had had in Adelaide Eoad, which he said was a palace. It was a work of time for him to measure the walls, and to direct the placing of the new shelves, but it was done, with intervals of rest. Alarge num- ber of the books had been sold, but about 3,000 remained, and I feared he could not get them all in, and of course begged him to have help. He said, with his old spirit, 6 They shall all go in, and I will put them all in myself; ' and so he did. The work was done gradually, and I do not think it hurt him. He always liked looking through his treasures, and showing to any friend any special rarity. During the last few years of his life my husband occu- pied himself a good deal in reading the Greek Testament, and comparing the different versions and translations. I regret much that many comments which he made on this subject were not preserved, as he did not write them. He also compiled a sort of history of his family and biography LATEST INTERESTS. 365 of himself — not in a connected form — to be left as materials 1869. for his Life, and from this book I have taken much of the earlier part of this Memoir. He also rearranged and added to his Budget of Paradoxes, which, however, was not published till after his death. One of the last subjects which afforded him interest Free Chris- tian Union. was the proposed formation of a society to be called the Free Christian Union. The idea, a beautiful and attractive one, was the formation of a union for the promotion of good in various directions of men of all religious beliefs and opinions, on the common ground of the Fatherhood of God and the brotherhood of man. But there was some inaccuracy in the designation, for under the simple, universal principle, professed Jews, Hindoos, and other Easterns were eligible as members ; indeed, my husband said Christ himself and the Apostles might belong to the society, which they could not perhaps have done to many associations taking the name of Christian. Either the designation or the conditions of membership must be abandoned ; and on the former pro- posal, several persons of well-defined orthodox opinions left it. Mr. De Morgan hesitated before giving his name, feeling that in the present uncertain and unsettled state of opinion among the best meaning persons a union based upon anything but absolute and simple theism was im- possible. This would exclude the use of the word Christian, leaving a common basis of belief so broad as not to satisfy men of deep religious thought, while it would not admit Comtists and others whose philanthropic views and de- sires to benefit mankind were as wide and earnest as those of the founders themselves. He also desired to learn to what the designation ' Christian ' applied — what were the opinions of the founders with reference to the work and mission of Christ. The writings of some of these, friends whom he valued and respected, had led him to suspect that in their view what is called the supernatural element in the Gospels, the account of the miracles and resurrection of Christ, were 366 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS BE MORGAN. 1869. due either to the exaggerations of Eastern fancy and expression, or to the interpolations of superstitious times. My husband, who believed fully in the account of the resurrection of Christ as given in the Gospels, wished to ascertain the views of those who held what are called ' advanced ' opinions on this head. He wrote and inquired, but told me he could not make out what their ideas were. I once said to him that I thought one element in the question had been generally overlooked, the ' opening of the (spiritual) eyes ' of the witnesses, as mentioned in the Gospels on other occasions. This would give some apparent subjectivity to the fact, but it is nowhere stated that all present saw the rising of Christ. He said, * Very possibly, but there was a rising; the history is clearly given and well attested, and the rejection of it would be to cut away the root from the tree. And the accounts given of this and the other miracles cannot be taken from the history without throwing a discredit 011 the narrators' character that would make all their statements worthless. They say,' he said of the Rationalistic school of interpreters, ' that it is the character of Christ that commands reverence, and proves his mission from God. You cannot separate the two. He himself claimed extra-natural powers, given by the Father. If this was false He was false, and His cha- racter would not have been what it was ; and the men who could invent fictions about His works could not have described the character as they did.' It was with reference to this society that we spoke of public prayer. In his letters on Christian union he speaks of a basis on which people might meet and pray together. He had always said to me that Jesus Christ had not enjoined public prayer; and though He had not forbidden it, the tenor of His teaching was strongly in favour of privacy and seclusion in this most internal and sacred communion. ' Enter into thy closet, and when thou hast shut thy door, pray to thy Father which is in secret,' &c. But though he felt this strongly himself, he knew that all did not feel with him. HIS DEATH. 367 He himself felt the happiness of prayer, but he said, 'I 1870. regard it rather as a luxury than a duty.' In reference to the vision of the apostles I may men- tion that he had always been interested in cases of the kind, especially those in which departing persons, while fully conscious, assert the presence of those who have gone before. Such instances, he said, were so common that one could not believe them to be all illusion ; but whatever they were, they should be recorded carefully. In August 1870, seven months before his own release, Death our daughter Christiana was taken. She had stayed at j£u"hter Bournemouth on her return from Madeira, and died there. Christiana. I came home the day after her death to find her father so weak that he had that day fallen on the floor, and was unable to rise without help. From this time the decline in his health was very apparent, but he did not seem to suffer, except from weak- ness and sleeplessness. The physical state was a com- plicated one, chiefly owing to nervous prostration, and traceable in the first instance to the shock of the College disappointment, and afterwards to anxiety and sorrow on our children's account. In March 1871 he became still weaker, and talked 1871. very little. The only word I remember relating to his own state was, after saying that any way all would be right, 'But I shall be glad when I have got it over.' When I expressed a hope that he would not be taken yet, he told me to ' leave it all in God's hands,' and he then waited quietly for the end. During the last two days of his life there were indica- tions of his passing through the experience which he had himself considered worthy of investigation and of record. He seemed to recognise all those of his family whom he had lost — his three children, his mother and sister, whom he greeted, naming them in the reverse order to that in which they left this world. No one seeing him at that moment could doubt that what he seemed to perceive. 368 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1871. was, to him at least, visible and real. After this he said very little, only on the last morning of his life asking me, as he had been used to do, ' if it was time to get up.' On being told that it would soon be, he seemed to be carefully dressing himself. Then he lay quite still till, just after midnight, he breathed his last. The state of mind in which he had lived, and in which he died, is shown by a sentence in his will : — I commend my future with hope and confidence to Almighty God ; to God the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, whom I believe in my heart to be the Son of God, but whom I have not confessed with my lips, because in my time such confession has always been the way up in the world. 369 SECTION XI. CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. To Sir John Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, March 25, 1867. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — ' How do you bear this trying weather ? ' 1 867. asked a friend during the late froid d'enfer, as a Frenchman might say. ' Trying weather ! ' said I ; ' convicting weather ! sen- tencing weather ! penal servitude weather ! ' The question between me and the College is simple. I entered that College on what all the world knows was its loudly vaunted principle, that the creed of neither teacher nor student was to be an element of his competence to teach or to learn. After forty years of existence the College, for worldly reasons, has decided that a teacher must not be too well known to be heterodox : he must not be conspicuous as a Unitarian. Breach of faith, surrender of principle, and D. I. O. But this is not all. Between ourselves, the candidate who has been refused the chair of Mental Philosophy because he is so very wicked a Christian in religion, is also excluded because he is too much of a theist in philosophy. He cannot help founding his psychology on a moral Governor of the universe. Now, I would not have objected to leaving the existence of God and His action on the minds of men an open question for the best qualified candidate to treat in his own way ; but the interference of the College as a college, and a settlement of that question officially, is a step in which it concerns me, with my way of thinking, to take a part. The public knows nothing about this view of the question, but the Council have been roundly charged with it by one of themselves in debate, and by me in my D. I. 0. I have told them totidem verlis that they had acted from fear of God in philosophy and fear of man in religion. I am only here till the end of the current session. . . . Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. B B 370 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. To J. S. Mill, Esq., M.P. July 3, 1867. 1867. MY DEAR SIR, — A person described by you as a remarkable working man, and your correspondent, is one whose case is more than usually worth looking into. He had better write to me direct, and state in some detail what he knows, and, as well as he can, what he wants. I dare say I shall be able to shorten his route. He must specify arithmetic, his knowledge and habits, geometry, algebra, physics, if any. You need not tell him that the glimpse I shall get of his mind is one of my data. I hope you are lifelike in spite of Reform debates. 1 Confound this rope ! ' said the Irishman who was hauling in the slack, ' sure somebody has cut off the other end of it ! ' Do you not begin to suspect that somebody has stolen the third reading ? Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To J. S. Mill, Esq., M.P. 91 Adelaide Road, August 2, 1867. MY DEAR SIR, — As touching your proposal to me to join the committee of the National Society for Women's Suffrage, I cannot accede. I never join political agitations, or associations for procuring changes in the political machine. I remember signing a petition which, as I understood it, was for franchise to be granted to single women having the property qualification. Your Society, as its title is worded, contemplates a full female suffrage — e.g. a vote for a man and another for his wife. Sup- posing me willing to join a political agitation, I should hardly be ready for such a one as this. I should think better of two votes given to the couple jointly — i.e. the two to agree upon the two. I almost thought this was the meaning of the phrase 'compound householder,' when I first heard people mention it.1 I got as far as joining the Decimal Coinage, but this was for the 1 I cannot help thinking my husband wrote this for the sake of play- ing on the expression ' compound householder,' as he can scarcely have missed seeing that the result of one vote to each of two people has the exact effect of two votes to both if they agree, except only in the case of one of the two not voting at all. — S. E. DE M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70, 371 sake of education, and the furtherance of arithmetic among the 1867. labouring classes. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, August 8, 1867. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Many thanks for the Latin original of Schiller's poem.1 I always take the older language as being the original. I see Spaziergang — in my dictionary it is Spatzier- gang in the German-English and Spaziergang in the English- German — means a walk. Now, I have not taken a walk for many a year. Had I done so, I might have started off something at this kind of pace : — Good morning, Mr. Mountain, with the light upon your top, Just the rubbing of Apollo's eyes before he opens shop ; And you, you ' daisy-spangled meads,' and you ' resounding grove,' Where the feathered songsters make a row ; I'd feather 'em, by Jove, &c. But seniores priores : Schiller has the start. I hope your hexes and pents show that you are in a good condition. I see you don't care for the dissyllabic ending. No more did I when I was at school ; and I was reprimanded, which I should not have cared for ; but I was then remanded to set it right, and this was a bore. Of all the verses I made at school, I only remember one couplet. The subject was poetic inspiration, and was very classically intended. It pleased me to take it that dinner was the thing, and I have always been inclined to support my thesis. The pair of lines I remember is — Gustat Virgilius — procul o procul este Camoenae Conclamat vates — hoc mihi numen erit — If you look into the AtJienceum of Saturday week, you may chance to see a little account of the last mare's-nest at Paris — the discovery that Pascal preceded Newton in the theory of gravita- tion. The letters, if genuine, prove nothing. -^-. was guessed P* to be the law before Newton or Pascal by Bouillaud. But the funny point is that Pascal is made to talk of a tasse de cafe, years 1 A Latin translation from Schiller by Sir John. B B 2 372 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1867. an(j years before coffee was known in Paris, so far as has been stated. The first coffee- shop was really started nine years after Blaise's death by a man named Pascal, and the first started in England was in 1652 by Pasqua, a Greek. In England in 1657, ' Coffa — see Cauphe,' is in Phillips's dictionary, and of ' Cauphe ' it is said, ' it is much used in these parts.' I have nothing to say abont myself or my people. The world wags as usual. I should like to hear of you . I have just found out that Dr. Pearson began life as a junior partner in Sketchley & Pearson, who kept a school at Fulham for boys from four to ten. Here he had been for some years in 1800. I picked up a sensibly written prospectus — they said plan then — of this esta- blishment. He founded his great school at Sheen in 1811. I make out that he was not a graduate of Oxford or Cambridge. He was the undoubted projector of the Astronomical Society, and his dinner there again set it going. Our kind regards to Lady H , &c. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, August 15, 1867. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — A country clergyman (I think : how is one to address where the party is a suspected clergyman ? May one put down the probabilities as Rev. [f ] John Smith, Esq. [£] ? ) has written to me to know why, in the Runic almanacs, or very many of them, the days of the week begin from Monday. I could only suspect that their almanac makers had the notion I had when a child. They told me the week had seven days, and that the seventh day was to be kept holy ; and they kept Sun- day holy, and called it Sabbath. So I thought Monday was the first day, and I well remember taking it as of coarse that the day the women went to the sepulchre was Monday. But this puzzled me more. They always made the ' Scrip- tures,' when mentioned in the New Testament, mean Old and New both. So when I saw (Acts) that the Bereans searched the Scriptures, I thought they would find Bereans who searched, CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 373 and who found Bereans who searched, &c., and ad wfinitum. 1867. Query : Is this a convergent or a divergent series ? Hard rain — great relief. Yours sincerely, A. DE MOEGAN. To Rev. Wm. Heald. August 20, 1867. MY DEAR HEALD, — My bit of news is my retirement from University College, after two terms of service, 1828-31 and 1836-67. The world knows, or takes note of, only one side of the cause. I was meditating retirement in a session or two on account of the general decadence of the College, which made the emoluments wholly out of reasonable proportion to the time the duties took. In November last came a course of conduct which made me glad to escape at the end of the current session. University College, as you know, was founded on the prin- ciple of giving secular education without reference to religion, which was left to the parents. The best men who could be found independently of creed, being of good fame and conduct, were to teach all who were willing to be taught equally without reference to creed. From this principle there was never a departure. At the very outset, indeed, there was a circumstance of this kind. Dr. Southwood Smith was proposed for a chair of mental philosophy, with some mixture of moral philosophy. Zachary Macaulay read extracts from a work of his, I think with the name * On the Divine Government,' so heterodox that he, Z. M., declared he would take no further part if S. S. were chaired. The Council gave way. But, for other reasons, I fancy, no one ever complained of infraction of principle, and the case made no noise. The principle was put to a very severe test when Francis New- man, then actually Professor of Latin, published his Phases of Faith — an attack, it was said, on Christianity. No one proposed that he should be called to account for a work the title of which did not state his connection with the College. So it seemed pretty certain that the College would always hold to its declared principle of perfect indifference to the creed of a teacher. The Professor of Logic and Mental Philosophy, Dr. Hoppus, resigned in the spring of 1866. The best candidate beyond a doubt to succeed him was Mr. James Martineau, a leading man among the Unitarians, but not thoroughly in accordance with 374 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1867. the bulk of them. And thereby hangs a tale. The Unitarians in general are highly intellectual, but have a practical dislike of the spiritual. Mr. Martineau is a strong spiritualist, not merely in religion, but in psychology. He neither can nor will teach psychology, the structure and action of the mind, without a distinct recognition not merely of a God, but of God and His action upon the minds of men. This he teaches in his lectures at University Hall — an unconnected appendage to University College, in which Manchester New College is located, the students of which attend lectures on secular subjects at University Col- lege, and learn Theology at the Hall. The Senate of University College (i.e. the Professors) re- ported that Mr. Martineau was the best candidate. The Council (which is composed of a small body of philosophical men, whose creed no one knows; a larger body, perhaps one-third of the whole, of Unitarians, and a full half of the miscellaneous Church- men, &c., whom one finds making up the mass of all public bodies) rejected him on the ground that a very distinguished Theologian, no matter of what sort, would injure the College, as giving an appearance of breach of its neutrality. This influenced many, but all the world knew that it was his sect being Unitarian that was objected to, and fear of the unpopularity of the Unitarian doctrine was of considerable effect. But it was very well known in the College that the philosophical party was only making a tool of the anti-Unitarian party. Their objection was to Mr. M.'s theism in psychology. There is a school of philo- sophers who cultivate what they call sensational philosophy. They are driving at the doctrine that thought is a secretion of matter, and they want to get rid of all but matter and its con- sequences. . . . The fact then was, as I told the Council in my letter of resignation, in these words, that Mr. M. was rejected because he was too far from orthodoxy to please the priests, and too far from atheism to please the philosophers ; that he was offered up to the Janus Bifrons of expediency, each member of the majority of the Council choosing the head of the idol to which his offering was to be made. To myself, who never will have anything to do either with religious exclusion or with atheism, the proceeding was a call to resign, which I immediately obeyed. I knew it to be an abandon- ment of the principle of the College done in the worst way ; a pretence of fearing heterodoxy, with the fear on the minds of the leaders of nothing but theism. Not a soul of the Council or CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 375 of the Professors has ventured to deny to me the truth of what 1867. I told them. I did not publish my letter of resignation because I did not wish to hurt my old friends in the College. If they can get a mess of pottage for their birthright I should be very glad they had it. I resigned in November, but remained until the end of the session, of course. All that time not one of the old hands among my colleagues made the slightest allusion to the fact of my resignation, and I am sure they felt that they had better let the subject alone. Two of the younger ones, indeed, undertook to instruct me that I was wrong about the principle of the College, which I had studied before they were born. I believe, from observation, that both in colleges which pro- fess exclusion, and in those which profess perfect neutrality, there is a concealed under-current of, let us say, philosophy, veiled under formalism in one case and toleration in another. Get your smelling-salts ready, for I am going to tell you that a certain section of your order are in earnest about nothing but the endowments. These men see danger in all but formal adherence to religion, and would rather have a world of con. cealed philosophers than one of earnest believers in actual Pro- vidence and guidance. This, I say, I glean from observation ; there are easy means of verifying what I say. Of course, the neutral places have their share of this. But a place like University College — and not alone — has its share of the philo- sophers who are really earnest about their system — religious atheists — this phrase comes nearer than anything else ; men who believe that the moral ends of the universe, so far as there are any, are better answered by their concoction of reasoned right and wrong than by any reliance on higher government. To one or two perhaps of these men University College is indebted for its rise or fall, whichever it shall turn out to be. I hope it will be a rise, for they may as well have the profits of duplicity as others. Perhaps I shall never write as much about University Col- lege in all my life to come. I am no way surprised at the money part of the business — I mean the fear of diminution of pupils from a distinguished Unitarian. Twelve years ago or more a Mr. Peene left about 1,5007. to be a fund for buying books, and to be selected by Professors of Latin and Mathematics, being members of the Estab- lishment. To my surprise they caught at the money. But they did not venture to acknowledge openly what they were doing . They did not, as they ought to have done, write to me to know 376 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1867. if I could take the office. The secretary said (without applica- tion to me) that he knew I would not take it. The other Pro- fessors declined on principle, though they could have held it, and some old students were appointed. But in time the other Pro- fessors came into it quietly, without my being told. I smiled and shut my eyes. I have got over all the disgust of the matter, and am fast losing the remembrance of the place. To my surprise I went to my publisher's to-day, opposite the College, and was there half an hour. When I had come away I remembered that I had quite forgotten the College, and had not any recollection of having seen it. I suppose you have your share of the ritualism in Leeds. I hear of it from my girls, who sometimes go to one of the show- places. I read a book of essays about it a month or two ago. There is the Roman system complete ; doctrine quite full on all points ; a strong aspiration for the time when men will be pre- vented from undermining the orthodoxy of their neighbours, which can mean nothing but penalties for expression of heterodox opinion in private life. We are getting on in every point, the matter is coming to a crisis, and the hierarchy has no courage ; one would suppose they back the winner. Neate is with his family at Baden, or some such place. I have hardly heard of Mason since he changed his living. I believe he finds the change has done him much good. I have lately renewed acquaintance with a man who was an infant when I last saw him — Samuel S. Greathead, of Trinity College. He is the nephew of S. Maitland, and is rector of Corringham, near Rom- ford. He tells me that a large quantity of Maitland' s papers were destroyed by an ignorant executor. Yours sincerely, A. DE MOKGAN. To Sir John Herschel. 91 Adelaide Road, KW., October 18, 1867. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Be no way prepared to start when you see 110 black border ; it is a thing which I never will use. Black is not my colour of death. I followed to Kensal Green yesterday the remains of my second son, George, who died of phthisis in the throat on Monday at Ventnor, after three years of alarm as to his lungs. A voyage to the West Indies two years ( + ) ago CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 377 appeared to restore the lungs, but the laryngeal affection came 1867. on slowly, and ended this world for him without any great suffering, he being perfectly satisfied until within forty-eight hours — in fact, until he began to wander — that he was as strong and well as need be — the phrase he used when he could not rise in his bed. I bear it well, and so does my wife. Many condoling friends have found out that the great and special force of the blow is that he was the son who was to follow in my footsteps, and had made some beginning. To which I assent ; but, truth to speak, I did not remember this until I was told, nor did it produce any effect. I am peculiar, I suppose. I remember with satisfaction that he and a young fellow-student were the projectors of the Mathematical Society, which seems to have taken firm root ; but this is only the general love of memorial which belongs to our nature. Any other instance would do as well. A strong and practical conviction of a better and higher existence does much better for every purpose, and reduces the whole thing to emigra- tion to a country from which there is no way back, and no mail packets, with a certainty of following at a time to be arranged in a better way than I could do it. Our kind regards to Lady Herschel and the family. You have been through the same Valley of the Shadow, and know all about it. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Miss Sheepshanks. 91 Adelaide Road, July 23, 1868. MY DEAR Miss SHEEPSHANKS, — All are at Esher, and I have 1868. sent your letter down there. .... The Bishops of Oxford and Cape Town are a pair of opposites : C. T. foolish, and believed to be sincere ; O. sharp, and suspected of a sort of slyness. Colenso won my good opinion before he became a heretic — when he would have got it of course — by showing that he understood one part of the New Testament which it is a rule to hide under the cushion. What did the Gentile and Jewish converts do who had several wives ? Did they break their contract with all but one ? There would have been a rule laid down if they had, and a controversy. They kept their wives, St. Paul ordaining that only the husband of one wife should be a 378 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1868. bishop or a deacon. This is the meaning of the regulation. Now Colenso saw this, and did not require his converts to reduce themselves to one wife. Not much noise was made about it, for the divines at home did not like to raise the question. Colenso is founding a church in Natal with success. He has both a clerical and a lay body of followers. There will be curious consequences, which will find their way home. One Pope at Rome and an opposition Pope at Avignon did something towards the sowing of Reformation seed. But which is Rome and which is Avignon in this case seems not quite clear. When Dr. Philpotts got up his diocesan synods against Gorham, he declared very strongly that every diocese is a separate church, with its own right to pronounce a doctrine. He was quite right ; according to ante-papal Christianity nothing but a general Council could override any one bishop and his synod. But he did not see he played into the hands of the Independents. So the synod was held, and it will not be the last. The wind is getting up, and the day is cloudy and compara- tively cool ; there is a synod of clouds. Tours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To J. S. Mill, Esq., M.P. 91 Adelaide Road, September 3, 1868. MY DEAR SIR, — You are, I suppose, in this interval, as likely as you will be to make a note about your Logic ; so I send a couple of corrections (edit. 6, pp. 9, 71, vol. i.). (P. 9.) You will be taken to mean — perhaps you meant — that the phrase ars artium is due to Bacon. It was an old technical definition of logic. Ludovicus Vives (in the only word of praise he gives to a Schoolman, or nearly) commends Petrus Hispanus (ob. 1277) for making it his definition, and corrects those who think it only an hyperbole of praise, explaining it as the art which treats of arts. (P. 71.) A wrong quotation may be defensible when it enhances a joke ; at any rate, Sterne's recording angel would erase the record with a grin, as he did Uncle Toby's oath with a tear. But a defect of quotation which converts humour into dry gravity is one over which the angel, if he shed a shower of tears, would take care none of them should fall. In p. 71 you say that a pedantic physician in Moliere accounts for the fact CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 379 that ' Popium endormit ' by the maxim ' parcequ'il a un vertu 1868. soporifique.' From whom do yon get your quotation marks ? Not from Moliere. Yon know the original at the end of the Malade Imaginaire : — Mihi a docto doctore. Domandatur causam et rationem quare Opium facit dormire. A quoi respondeo Quia est in eo Virtus dormitiva, Cujus est natura Sensus assoupire. I never read this exquisite satire without wishing for a Moliere to expose the school of thinkers of our day who invert the process ; and having settled that opium has not and cannot have a virtus dormitiva, will deny the sleep, or else declare that it is only a coincidence. Eighteen years' experience has told me that infinitesimal doses, so called, meet my symptoms as well as the finite doses of the eighteen years preceding ; bnt the docti doctores assure me that it cannot be, because there cannot be a virtus curativa in doses so small. I think the Schoolmen were the more rational of the two. I cannot understand how you liken the virtus dormitiva to a case of the * scholastic doctrine of occult causes.' In fact, I have never been able to arrive at such causes in the Schoolmen. I know that these offenders are charged in our day, and since the time of Bacon, with upholding certain things called occult causes, but I cannot find any. Virtutes occultce and occult qualities I find enough of. The following is my account of the matter. The class of inquirers who cultivated magic, a large part of which was mysterious physics, npheld the existence of many qualities which do not show on the surface of things, and cannot be inferred from the sensible qualities. Many of these were fictions and many were truths. The sources of these things were hidden in a sense in which they presumed more common qualities were not. Thus Cornelius Agrippa (De Occulta PTiilo- sophia) says that though heat in the stomach digests food, yet the external heat from fire, for instance, will not do it. Accord- ingly the stomach has a virtus qucedam occulta, quam ignoramus. As the dead stomach will not do, we say it is an effect of vital force, and laugh at the Schoolmen for their hidden cause. 380 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1868. The school of magicians has a great number of such occult qualities, as plants which will produce certain dreams, or will repel poison when worn next the skin, &c. They had also the remarkable stone which attracts iron, and we have it too. Put all these things together, make the school of magical writers include all the Schoolmen, and you may attribute to their philo- sophy the treatment of occult causes. Their budget of facts was hampered with an immense number of wonders handed down from the ancients. They were not enough of our spirit to deny all they could not understand, so they declared that the virtutes were of an occult character. Thus the story, not rejected, of the Ark being still in existence on Mount Ararat, made them pronounce that the glue which fastened the timbers had an occult virtue ; and if you and I believed the fact, we should say the same. The great error of the Schoolmen was too easy belief in antiquity ; the great crime they are charged with is declaring that what they did not know was hidden from them. When Leibnitz attacked gravitation he called it an occult quality, not cause. If you can put me on the scent of any doctrine of occult causes, I will follow it up. When Agrippa wrote De Vanitate Artium against all that he had explained in the De Occulta Pliilosopliia, and against every- thing else, his chapters against logic and sophism have not a word about the matter. Ludovicus Yives, who also satirised every- thing, is equally free. I do not recollect any satire on the sub- ject in any old writers, however fierce they may be against the scholastic writers. You say elsewhere that the following proposition is not intelligible : ' Abracadabra is a second intention.' Literally, ' animal is a second intention ' may be held false, not un- intelligible. For a second intention is a subjective use of a name. Probably you mean that the proposition ' Abracadabra is a (name of) second intention' is unintelligible. But why more than ' animal ' ? If you mean that Abracadabra is a mere sound, you do less than due honour to the name of a medical instrument of 1,200 years' life. I suspect you are not aware that no less an authority than Serenus Samonicus, in the Carmen de Medicina, (perhaps you don't care for his authority), lays it down that the word thus treated — CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 381 1868. b a b r a b r a a b r a c a b r a c a a b r a c a d abracada ibracadab abracadabr bracadabr will cause fever gradually to abate if it be hung round the neck of the patient. This was the Abracadabra, and it was a class of objects, and could be a name of second intention. This is a sextant (60°). Agrippa prefers the octant,— a a b a b r a b r a, &c. I wish every voter in the country would hang one round his neck until this election is over. Perhaps what would abate would prevent. I hope you are not thoroughly knocked up with heat and politics. Yours very truly, A. DE MOEGAN. (The following is from Mr. J. S. Mill's papers, with the above letter.) Virtus Dormitiva. In the article * Physique ' of the Diet, de Phil. Schol. of the Abbe Migne's collection, after noting the virtutes and essentice as scholastic faults, which is only true of their abuses, the author proceeds thus : — * Arnauld lui-meme, Arnauld le Cartesien, pratiquait les vieux erremens de la scholastique, lorsqu'il disait a Malebranche, " II est insense de se demander pourquoi Tame humaine pense a Tinfini et au necessaire. Elle y pense parce que c'est dans son essence d'y penser." ' Aujourd'hui encore Tecole ecossaise et 1'ecole eclectique ex- pliquent exclusivement les phenomenes psychologiques par des facultes qu'on multiplie et qu'on distingue parfois avec une ridicule subtilite ; et on s'imagine qu'en pla9ant ainsi sous les faits intimes des facultes que la conscience n'a jamais percues on a fait de la science, 382 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1868. l L'ecole rationaliste commet la meme erreur dans la question de 1'origine du langage. L'homme parle parce qu'il a la faculte, done il a pu in venter la parole.' The Schoolmen never generalised a quality until they had at least two instances. As long as there was only A which had a certain virtus, they said nothing about it ; it was occult, i.e. un- known. But when B was found to have the same they had such knowledge as comes of classification, being almost all they had. The moderns invented a name upon one instance, and made it a cause. They said that magnetism was the explanation of the magnet. The Schoolmen would have waited until the amber showed its quality, and then the distinction of magnetism and electricity would have been specific knowledge, the genus being virtus attractiva. It is something to know two phenomena with a generic agreement and a specific difference. If the medical candidate had known the mind of those who classed, he would have said, I do not know ivliy except in that I can refer the phenomenon to a class. We note agreements and differences and arrange them. Arnauld, &c., might have a similar answer made for them, but not for those who inferred power of invention of languages from possession. To J. 8. Mill, Esq., M.P. September 20, 1868. MY DEAE SIE, — Seeing you at Avignon again reminds me of a question I intended to ask long ago. If a mathematician were asked what Avignon reminds him of, I do not know what he would answer, except the Avignon edition of Gardiner's Logarithms. Gardiner published a very celebrated folio of logarithms in 1742, with a very solid subscription list of 120 persons, of whom two- thirds are now known in the history of science — that is, to a close inquirer. I greatly doubt that an old list could be found except this of which the same proportion could be recovered. Gardiner corrected all the errors with his own hand in all the copies. My great-grandfather, James Dodson, who also in 1742 published his Anti-logarithmic Canon, with 1,100,000 computed figures, did the same thing. I suspect there was some concert as to this excellent plan between the two. To proceed, in 1770 appeared at Avignon the reprint of Gardiner, in folio, ' Chez T. Aubert, Imprimeur, Libraire Hue de 1'Epicerie.' There is a printed Avis, signed T. Aubert, which CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 383 has a list of errata, and an announcement that the corrections 1868. are all made in their proper places. But in my copy the cor- rection is thus made. The correct figures are cut out and pasted over the incorrect ones, with a written announcement in English t signed G. Townsend, stating what has been done ; he says it was done in the edition, but perhaps he only means the copy. The editors have modestly concealed their names. They were three industrious priests, Pezenas, Dumas, and Blanchard, who would probably have remained unknown if Lalande, who had been a pupil of Dumas, and who was in com- munication with them, had not preserved their names in his gossip. If there should be any local science at Avignon I dare say you will know some one who will be able to tell whether any tradition of the three editors remains. Of course there will be a copy in some public library, and it will be seen whether G. Townsend's performance appears there. Pray do not trouble yourself further than to make any local antiquary acquainted with what is wanted. I suppose Avignon must now be what people would call an out-of-the-way place ; but such places very often have people who, like Captain Clutterbuck, spend their whole time in illustrating their locality. A nice job you will have made for the courts. Some ladies have actually passed the revising barrister because there was no opposition. The B. B. was right; he is not bound to know that Jane Smith is a woman, nor could he raise the question. I have a cousin whose wife is David. When the poll clerk sees a female claimant, I suppose he will be bound to say, ' Madam, you cannot be the Jane Smith on the list, for the law says that voters are all men. I must wait until some man comes forward and declares he is the person described.' Then the poll clerk may perhaps be subjected to an action. But if he should admit the claim, there may be a scrutiny demanded, and perhaps a petition against the return. The question will raise some logic. The world of concepts being divided into man and non-man, if man mean male person, and only man can vote, non-man equally excludes Jane and her pussy and her pianoforte. They all come under the contra-positive — All voters are men. All voters are men, i.e. all non-men are non- voters. There is but one answer to Jane, the cat, and the pianoforte, i.e. non-man. I hope you will push the point and get rid of the bother ; it infests the house. But, in justice, let no woman be placed on the register 384 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1868. except on her demand. To be a voter is sometimes dangerous. A man ought to face the danger, but you have no right to enforce it on women ; in principle you might as well enforce the militia on them. Many women think exemption from politics is one of their rights. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To the Rev. J. J. Tayler. 91 Adelaide Road, N.W., April 9, 1869. 1869. MY DEAE SIR, — I have at last found head to complete the read- ing of your two tracts, for which I am much obliged. I think I also have to thank you for a copy of Mr. Martineau's tract, of which we were speaking, and which I received within thirty-six hours of our conversation. Your propositions for a free "Christian Union are brought to a point at which no opinion can be given until more comes out. It seems clear that the freedom extends to a rejection of all direct interference of Deity in old time, that is by those who choose, with liberty to others to retain it, and to dealing in the same manner with the actual existence of Jesus. All that seems to be required is Mr. Martineau's triad (absit Trinitas) of (p. 19) belief in God, piety, and charity. It seems to be required that the morality of Jesus shall be acknowledged. But whether because it finds a response in the human heart, or because it is in some unexpressed way sanctioned by God, does not appear. In fact, there are as yet many points which are only seen through a glass darkly, but the one on which expectation must now wait, which is in the field but without illumination, is the question of worship. Is a joint worship contemplated ? I cannot make out. The moment the plan is sketched out a hundred points will arise. There are two classes of persons with whom I should hold that neither you nor Mr. Martineau should refuse communion : — 1. The old-fashioned Christian — the man who starts with Peter. 2. Those who know no more whether there be a personal and moral directing God than whether He have an Anointed. If these men stipulate for another o, and adopt the creed of love of go(o)d and love to man, they must either be admitted under general agreement as to what is good — or a reason of inclusion CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 385 must be found in the assumed necessity of appeal to God to know 1869. what is good. And if it come to that I wait for further infor- mation as to how the appeal is made. If man be to settle morals his own way, I would not bind myself to his law ; for though I do not go quite the length and all the strength of St. Paul, I am clearly of opinion that the heart of man is as deceitful as most things, and is very much, not a little, wicked. But further, supposing the intermediates could fraternise with the extremes, could the extremes fraternise with one another ? This is the old difficulty of compromise, under which many an attempt at political and religious concentration has failed. We know that if A and B coincide with C they coincide with one another ; but if A and B should happen to be within x feet of C, all we can positively affirm is that they are within 2x feet of one another. And x may do where 2x will not. These are the first things which strike an old thinker on the subject, who does not feel equal to more than two sheets. There may be comfort in the Scotch proverb that those who pluck at a gown of gold may get a sleeve of it. In the meanwhile the name is too bold. * Free ' ( Christian ' ' Union ' ! Until you tell us how free and how Christian you mean to be, no one can tell how united you will become. You have your sand, and you aspire to make rope. Michael Scott's devils failed, but they did not know that a very easy pro- cess would make their sand ropes into glass, which makes very good thread. What have you got to mix with your sand ? That is what I am curious to see. But the attempt is praiseworthy, and must be most useful in any case of result. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir Frederick Pollock. [Not in his own handwriting.] 91 Adelaide Road, June 13, 1869. MY DEAR SIR FREDERICK, — I should have said, till now, that it would have been your business to receive me when I got to the gate of the other world, but now I hold it not so sure. I had an attack of congestion of the brain on Wednesday, which kept me several hours in a condition of which I had after- wards no recollection. I think I may put this against your greater age, and consider myself as a candidate of equal preten- C C 386 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1869. sions with yourself. It was not what they call the real apoplexy, because it had no lasting effect on any organ ; but Mr. Weller, senior, would have admitted it for a genuine appleplexy. I am going on very well now, and if anything happens to the con- trary, my wife will write. Give our kind regards to Lady Pollock and all the family. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir F. Pollock. [Written in pencil.] 91 Adelaide Road, June 19, 1869. MY DEAR SIR FREDERICK, — I enterprise a letter of my own writing. I am glad to hear you have got hold of H. C. B.,1 whom I allow to be Herr Conversations Rath, though I cannot answer for the German correctness of the title. I suppose you will find a host of reminiscences — even I find a large lot. The only thing I have done for many weeks is to write — from the sheets — a little notice of his works for a theological Review ; so I have picked it all through, and made extracts. They say autobiography is always readable. Three thick volumes, intermixed with letters, is a severe test, but I think many will get through it. Certainly, it will be a repertory of facts tending to literary history, in which the smallest bit of personal biography is sometimes clinching. As to myself, I progress. The medical men are agreed that nothing is apoplexy except what leaves injury to some power or organ. The congestion, which they make out to be common, is voted no disorder at all. All which is very true, as to the great superiority of an attack which leaves no consequences over one which does leave them. But congestion is congestion, after all. Our kind regards to Lady Pollock and all the family. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir F. Pollock, Bart. 6 Merton Road, N.W., July 24, 1869. MY DEAR SIR FREDERICK, — As we neither of us are strong on the legs, and yet can use our fingers, I employ mine to beg you 1 Henry Crabb Robinson's Diary, &c. CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 387 will employ yours, at any leisure you like, in answering a 1869. question. I want a tolerably distinct account of the reading of a senior wrangler of your day. How much had he read, and in what books ? A very general view will do. Anything as to distinc- tion between algebra and geometry will be valuable. The people are all gone who could give any information". With me it will be perpetuated in some shape. I gain strength pretty fast, but am not without warning that head-time is not come back yet. There are all kinds of legends current about old reading. A trustworthy account would be of historical value. With kind regards all round, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. On looking at the list of seniors, I see that you are not only the last left, but that yon come at the turn. In 1810 comes Maule, who was in communication with Babbage about functional equations, and all kinds of novelties. Maule would have been conspicuous, among the moderns, with Herschel, Peacock, Bab- bage, if he had held on. Had I not known you, I should, on these circumstances, have applied to you, as the only chance left for information essential to historical knowledge of Cambridge. From Sir F. Pollock, Bart. Hatton, Hounslow, July 29, 1869. MY DEAE DE MORGAN, — I am glad to hear you ' gain strength pretty fast.' I lose it slowly ; but I lose it. I shall write in answer to your inquiry, all about my books, my studies, and my degree, and leave you to settle all about the proprieties which my letter may give rise to, as to egotism, modesty, &c. The only books I read the first year were Wood's Algebra (as far as quadratic equations), Bonnycastle's ditto, and Euclid (Simpson's). In the second year I read Wood (beyond quadratic equations), and Wood and Vince, for what they called the branches. In the third year I read the Jesuit's Newton and Vince's Fluxions ; these were all the books, but there were certain MSS. floating about which I copied — which belonged to Deal try, second wrangler in Kempthorne's year. I have no doubt that I had read less and seen fewer books than any senior wrangler of about my time, or any period since ; but what I knew I knew thoroughly, c c 2 388 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1869. and it was completely at my fingers' ends. I consider that I was the last geometrical and fluxional senior wrangler ; I was not up to the differential calculus, and never acquired it. I went np to college with a knowledge of Euclid and algebra to quadratic equations, nothing more ; and I never read any second year's lore during my first year, nor any third year's lore during my second ; my forte was, that what I did know I could produce at any moment with PERFECT accuracy. I could repeat the first book of Euclid word by word and letter by letter. During my first year I was not a ' reading J man (so called) ; I had no expectation of honours or a fellowship, and I attended all the lectures on all subjects — Harwood's anatomical, Woollaston's chemical, and Farish's mechanical lectures — but the examination at the end of the first year revealed to me my powers. I was not only in the first class, but it was generally understood I was first in the first class ; neither I nor any one for me expected I should get in at all. Now, as I had taken no pains to prepare (taking, however, marvellous pains while the examination was going on), I knew better than any one else the value of my examination qualities (great rapidity and perfect accuracy) ; and I said to myself, * If you're not an ass, you'll be senior wrangler ; ' and I took to 1 reading ' accordingly. A curious circumstance occurred when the Brackets came out in the Senate-house declaring the result of the examination : I saw at the top the name of Walter bracketed alone (as he was) ; in the bracket below were Fiott, Hustler, Jephson. I looked down and could not find my own name till I got to Bolland, when my pride took fire, and I said, ' I must have beaten that man, so I will look up again ; ' and on look- ing up carefully I found the nail had been passed through my name, and I was at the top bracketed alone, even above Walter. You may judge what my feelings were at this discovery ; it is the only instance of two such brackets, and it made my fortune — that is, made me independent, and gave me an immense college reputation. It was said I was more than half of the examination before any one else. The two moderators were Hornbuckle, of St. John's, and Brown (Saint Brown), of Trinity. The Johnian congratulated me. I said perhaps I might be challenged ; ho said, * Well, if you are you're quite safe — you may sit down and do nothing, and no one would get up to you in a whole day.' This is confirmed by what the Bishop of Gloucester told me Brown said at Lord Lonsdale's table at Lowther. The examina- tion in the Senate-house became the subject of conversation. CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 389 Brown said no one answered any question that I did not also 1869. answer, and better. I have no doubt Walter and Jepbson had read more books than I had, and knew (after a sort) more. Maule was a man of great ability and immense acquirements ; he reminded me of Person more than anybody else did. My experience has led me to doubt the value of competitive examination. I believe the most valuable qualities for practical life cannot be got at by any examination — such as steadiness and perseverance. It may be well to make an examination part of the mode of judging of a man's fitness ; but to put him into an office with public duties to perform merely on his passing a good examination is, I think, a bad mode of preventing mere patronage. My brother is one of the best generals that ever commanded an army, but the qualities that make him so are quite beyond the reach of any examination. Latterly the Cambridge examinations seem to turn -upon very different matters from what prevailed in my time. I think a Cambridge education has for its object to make good members of society — not to extend science and make profound mathematicians. The tripos questions in the Senate- house ought not to go beyond certain limits, and geometry ought to be cultivated and encouraged much more than it is. Euclid and conic sections studied geometrically improve, enlarge, and strengthen the mind ; studied analytically, I think not. But I must have exhausted your patience — a virtue which may be tried but not examined. My best regards to Mrs. De Morgan and your family. Ever sincerely yours, FRED. POLLOCK. P.S. — Looking over what I have written, I fear you will find little that you want ; but I am still ready to answer any specific questions. To Sir F. Pollock. 6 Merton Road, Adelaide Road, N.W., August 1, 18C9. MY LEAR SIR FREDERICK, — Tour letter has better Cambridge history than any 100 pages of the Esq. Bedell — I forget his name — who quoted Wm. Frend as saying that the market women complained of being scotched a quarter of their wages, and quoted the word three times in italics to call attention to it. Mr. Frend's 390 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1869. word was sconced — the old word for fined. If you can recall at this rate, you will rival H. C. B. Your letter suggests much, because it gives possibility of answer. The branches of algebra of course mainly refer to the second part of Wood, now called the theory of equations. Waring was his guide. Turner — whom you must remember as head of Pembroke, senior wrangler of 1767 — told a young man in the hearing of my informant to be sure and attend to quadratic equations. ' It was a quadratic,' said he, * made me senior wrangler.' It seems to me that the Cambridge revivers were Waring, Paley, Yince, Milner. You had Dealtry's MSS. He afterwards published a very good book on fluxions. He merged his mathematical fame in that of a Claphamite Christian. It is something to know that the tutor's MS. was in vogue in 1800-1806. Now — how did you get your conic sections ? How much of Newton did you read ? From Newton direct, or from tutor's manuscript ? Surely Fiott was our old friend Dr. Lee.1 I missed being a pupil of Hustler by a few weeks. He retired just before I went up in February 1823. The echo of Hornbuckle's answer to you about the challenge has lighted on Whewell, who, it is said, wanted to challenge Jacob, and was answered that he could not beat if he were to write the whole day and the other wrote nothing. I do not believe that Whewell would have listened to any such dissuasion. I doubt your being the last fluxional senior wrangler. So far as I know, Gipps, Langdale, Alderson, Dicey, Neale, may contest this point with you. I go on fairly. With kind regards all round, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. From Sir F. Pollock Hatton, Hounslow, August 7, 1869. MY DEAR DE MORGAN, — You seem not to know the story of Gunning's book (the Bedell you allude to). He really kept a sort 1 Much of this is not perfectly clear to me ; but I insert the letter as it stands, as it may have interest for old Cambridge men. For the same reason I have departed from my general rule, in inserting Sir F. Pollock's letter in reply.— S. E. DE M. CORRESPONDENCE, 18G7-70. 391 of diary, in which he put all the scandal of every sort he met with 1869. in Cambridge society — much about Porson ; Hansel's epigrams and verses ; his contest with Sir Busick Harwood ; much of the vulgar drollery of Jemmy Gordon, who did not survive till your day : in short, a collection of very low and ribald stuff, mixed with what was worth preserving (but Gunning could not distinguish between the two). Some one persuaded him to burn it, and the book he published was what he remembered when his memory was gone and the real book burnt. His son Frederick was my pupil, and did well as a barrister, from whom I had this. You have put together as revivers five very different men. Woodhouse was better than Waring, who could not prove Wilson's (Judge of C. P.) guess about the property of prime numbers ; but Wood- house (I think) did prove it, and a beautiful proof it is. Yince was a bungler, and I think utterly insensible of mathematical beauty. Milner was incomparable. The Claphamite Christians are a class to be found in every form of religion ; and when they are not too intolerant (which generally they are) they have much of my sympathy, though I don't agree with them. Now for your questions. I did not get my conic sections from Vince. I copied a MS. of Dealtry's. I fell in love with the cone and its sections, and everything about it. I have never forsaken my favourite pursuit ; I delighted in such problems as two spheres touching each other and also the inside of a hollow cone, &c. As to Newton, I read a good deal (men now read nothing), but I read much of the notes. I detected a blunder which nobody seemed to be aware of. Tavel, tutor of Trinity, was not ; and he augured very favourably of me in consequence. The applica- tion of the Principia I got from MSS. The blunder was this : in calculating the resistance of a globe at the end of a cylinder oscillating in a resisting medium they had forgotten to notice that there is a difference between the resistance to a globe and a circle of the same diameter. The story of Whewell and Jacob cannot be true. Whewell was a very, very considerable man, I think not a great man. I have no doubt Jacob beat him in accuracy, but the supposed answer cannot be true ; it is a mere echo of what actually passed between me and Hornbuckle on the day the Tripos came out — for the truth of which I vouch. I think the examiners are taking too practical a turn ; it is a waste of time to calculate actually a longitude by the help of logarithmic tables and lunar observations. It would be a fault not to know how, but a 392 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1869. greater to be handy at it. Oh dear ! I longed to get among the Fellows ; but when I did, I was utterly disgusted at the rubbish- ing conversation that prevailed, and I then longed to get away. ' You see I linger over Cambridge recollections ; but no par- ticular time has been the happiest of my life, certainly not school. Best regards to Mrs. De Morgan and your family. Sincerely yours, FREDERICK POLLOCK. To the Rev. W. Mason.1 Adelaide Road, August 13, 1869. DEAR MASON, — As touching myself I get stronger gradually. I am slowly getting my books into order, which is a long job. I have no more information of any very decided character than is to be found in my wife's book, From Matter to Spirit. I retain my suspense as to what the phenomena mean, but I am as fully persuaded as ever of their reality. The presence of the dead is a thing widely felt, but by cer- tain temperaments. Bishop Jebb is an instance of no very forcible kind, because the two worlds had been in constant con- nection in his mind. I will give you a more curious one. An actuary, a man of science and a keen searcher after old printing, married a second cousin of mine. He was a cheerful and kind-hearted man, but to all appearance as thoroughly un- spiritual as a man could be. I never heard a word drop from him which made it appear that another life was his familiar thought. He was, though moderate in drinking, rather fond of eating, and skilled in it. The ladies of his acquaintance who had dinners to give would consult him on all details. His wife, to whom he was devoted, died, and he himself fell into a weakly state. I used to sit with him by the hour. A few weeks before his death I found him debilitated by a long conference he had had with a lady about a dinner she had to give : this merely to show that his mind was not turned to the subject of death by anything 1 This was in answer to a letter in which Mr. Mason asks him, if able, to give him ' some information on the interesting subject to which you alluded in your last.' 'I have long thought/ Mr. Mason says, ' that departed spirits are often with those they left at death. When Bishop Jebb had been for some time under a paralytic seizure, he said, on his recovery, that in the prospect of death he had felt that he should be as truly with his friends after death as he was then when speaking to them.'— S. E. DE M. CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 393 external. He suddenly turned to me and said, ' De Morgan, my 1869. wife is often with me.' I was astonished, not at the phenomenon, but at his being the recipient. ' Often ? ' said I. ' Every even- ing,' said he, 'and oftener.' ' Do you see her? ' said I. * No,' said he, ' but I feel her presence.1 By these three words hangs a long tale. With kind regards to your family, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Rev. W. Heald. August 21, 1869. MY DEAR HEALD, — I think I shall be able to keep up the institution of a summer letter, though I may not be so long as usual. It is the forty-fourth observance. You think, one letter of yours says, that I am feeling the effects of hard work ; in fact, that I have been working too hard. Rid your mind of the idea. I have never been hard working, but I have been very continuously at work. I have never sought relaxation. And why? Because it would have killed me. Amuse- ment is real hard work to me. To relax is to forage about the books with no particular object, and not bound to go on with anything. You remember that my amusement used to be Berkeley and the like. Quite true. I did with Trinity College library what I afterwards did with my own — I foraged for relaxation. I used to shock you with my reading of Voltaire, who existed in that library in about eighty quarto volumes. So you called me an atheist vagabond, fancying that Yoltaire was an atheist : he was, in fact, theistic to bigotry, and anti-revolutionist to the same extent. I read an enormous deal of fiction — all I could get hold of — so my amusement was not all philosophical. I have never worked hard — never got so far as a headache. If I felt tired I left off. My illness is well enough explained by the following chain of events. 1866. Discovery that University College was going to betray its principles, and abandonment of the place in 1867. 1867. Long illness and death of my second son, with all the anxiety occurring during the turmoil of the College affair. In the meanwhile my third son had taken refuge from illness on board ship, and was away for eighteen months in very fluctuating 394 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1869. health. One of my daughters was also labouring under the same symptoms, and was four months with her mother at Hastings after the death of my son. All this I could have borne. It attacked the spirits, but I could have held on as I have always done ia sure reliance on the higher and wiser management which ' shapes our ends.' But the heats of 1868 broke down the phy- sical force, and gave a cough and weakness which was followed up by the consequences you know of. Does it, upon the pre- ceding showing, require the hypothesis of thirty years of over- work to explain an attack of diabetes which yielded to the first remedies, or rather to diet alone, in a week, and a stroke of con- gestion of the brain which left no result but weakness ? I have heard of overwork on all sides, and have seen people stare at their own omission of all the misfortunes — so called — which have come upon me in the last two years. I am now weak enough, but I gradually improve. I shall soon get all the way upstairs foot over foot, that is, sans both feet on one step at once, and without the banisters. At present it is, after half is done, either a tug at the banister, or bring up the second foot before you remove the first. Three weeks ago it was this alternative the whole way. The stairs are a beautiful dynamometer. I am very anxious about Arthur Neate. He has an ugly cancerous tumour on the lower side of the left cheek, which opinion decides variously cancer or no cancer ; but those who think it cancer think it a very serious case. He is not aware of the dangerous opinions. If they be correct the matter will be beyond doubt in a few months. As yet there is no serious internal symptoms, and such things have sometimes passed off. Neate is about sixty-four. I turned the grand climacteric (sixty- three) in June last (27th). August 30. — So much for delays and feelings of inability. I get on fairly, head and arms, but the legs do not thrive in proportion. I sawed a plank of wainscot (hard wood) ; and a man who can do that ought to walk three miles, but I do not do more than one. September 1. — My wife, who was at the sea with my second daughter and a bronchial cough to be got rid of, came home on Saturday, and my daughter's cough nearly gone. A man cannot have the sort of attack I had without some amount of evidence of it. I had two well-marked consequences for several days, an inability and a delusion. 1. I could not for a week master the word congestion as the name of my own attack. CORRESPONDENCE, 1667-70. 395 I had it at once for every other purpose. If I got hold of cow, 1869. it was confusion, conglomeration — anything but congestion. If I got hold of gestion, it was digestion, suggestion, &c. Several times, and days after I had recovered my senses, I used to amuse myself by trying, and was at last obliged to ask what had been the matter with me. 2. When I woke to recollection of the universe, and for days afterwards, I was possessed with the idea that before the seizure I had received a letter from Ireland, written on the sup- position that I was a clergyman, and offering me a great lot of Irish preferment. If there be one political subject on which I had never thought or cared, it is the Irish Church and its man- agement. My idea was that some poor patron, in a hurry to induct some one into the benefices, by way of securing some vested interest before the final disendowment, had taken it into his head to select me as the holder of the profits for the rest of their term. I was very anxious to set him right, not knowing how much consequence a day might be of. But as I got nearer to the letter- writing state, the vision became fainter, and when I at last looked, more to see what could have suggested it than with any idea of finding, I could not get a trace of any such letters. Besides these, I had not any consequences whatever of the loss of consciousness. I think this must go as it is. I hope your family are well, and yourself. Do you know, or can you find, anything about H. Parr Hamilton, the Dean of Salisbury ? Kind regards to Mrs. Heald. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 6 Merton Road, October 20, 1869. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — Surely I sent you my card, which you will find within the envelope.1 This envelope arrived on Monday with the pie of TTS which you see. But the Leverrier has not come yet: no doubt it is hunting me all over N.W., with a 1 A card on which he had printed a small map of Merton Road and the immediate neighbourhood as a guide to friends. Unless the ' pie of TTS ' means the number of circles stamped by the Post Office on the envelope, which appears to [have travelled half over London before reaching him, I cannot interpret it. — S. E. DE M. 396 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DK MORGAN. 1869. change of air by a jaunt to Merton Road, S.W. In a few days it will be time to look up the dead-letter office. I am afraid I am not strong enough for this yet. Have you anybody you could ask who goes near the P.O. often ? I tnrive — and the cold weather is bracing me up like a bundle of asparagus, having been no better than a rope of onions. A week's cold weather last winter would have kept me from striking my flag. Two or three days of half-cold told me so, and then took leave. I shall be glad to see the Leverrier account. If it should come, I will write at once. With kind regards all round your circle, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Sir J. Herschel. 6 Merton Road, November 8, 1869. MY DEAR SIR JOHN, — The Queen used up so much of the fine weather on Saturday, that the chief clerk of that office says he can issue no more until he gets a further supply. So I am rain- bound for to-day, and can clear off obligations. I, therefore, return your Leverrier with many thanks. What a miserable mess has been made by Chasles, Lucas, and Co. ! I am obliged to give up Chasles until he clears himself, which I have small hope of his doing. The different accounts he has given at different times are such as must be reconciled, or otherwise explained. If there be no explanation except sub-human credulity, then arises the question which is so important in lunacy inquiries, When did this defect begin ? For Chasles has a lifetime of memoirs full of references to MSS., many of them unseen as yet except by himself. It will be unsafe to quote him — at least to a better-not extent. I have lately lost my friend Libri, and of course, he being removed, the accusations which he put down begin to revive. I wrote a short article in the Athenceum of the mortuary character, and the Parisians, quite forgetting the beating they got, are pleased to be excessively astonished at the revival of a defence which silenced them fifteen years ago. There is a little knot of subscribers in England who try to act privately on editors and contributors. Ex. gr. : A person who described .... (Nov. 11. — Sunshine came out, and drew me out also, and I have not been able to resume until now. I walked 1J miles yesterday I1 !* !* I catch up the unfinished sentence — )t CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 397 .... himself as a known book-collector (N.B. — No less a person 1869, than wax-chandler to the Queen, &c., very rich, and collects no end of elegantly bound large paper ; all this I learnt afterwards) came to me in a neat carriage and a heavy shower, and as he was doing a wabbling preamble about nothing, I cut him short sternly with, ' Pray, sir, what is the upshot of all this ? ' He answered that, seeing my article in the Athenceum — which it was very impertinent to assume was mine — he could prove in two minutes that Libri was guilty of all that was imputed to him. ' What do you know of the matter ?' ' I have read all the pamphlets.' * So have I,' said I, ' and some of them before they were pamphlets.' ' Oh ! I thought perhaps you had not investigated.' He then produced 'Vapereau,' a French biographical dic- tionary of first-rate size and tenth-rate accuracy, and, opening at Libri, said, * Have you read that article ? ' 'I have,' said I, 1 in former days, before I found out what a worthless affair Vapereau was.' ' I assure you,' said he, ' the people at Paris are much astonished at your article.' ' No doubt,' said I : ' they are the parties whom Libri's defence incriminates.' ' I thought perhaps you were not aware of the facts, and that by coming to you we might avoid a, polemic.' ' Now,' said I, 'you must go to the editor of the Athenceum, and polemic with him. Do you really suppose you will prove to me that one of my dearest friends was a robber by an extract from " Vapereau " and Parisian opinion ? ' So he went away, and there has been no polemic yet. A matter of this kind brings out the hidden fun of the world. So with kind regards all round, Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. To Rev. J. Martineau. 6 Merton Road, Adelaide Road, N.W., December 19, 1869. DEAR SIR, — Many thanks — to you I suppose I am indebted — for the reprints of the journal memoir of J. J. Tayler. He is well recalled, which in his case is not very easy to do in writing. It appeared to me that his treatment of controversy in conversa- tion allowed the wave to pass over the reef without breakers. A congregation of such men could have realised his plan of a 398 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1869. scheme of joint worship in which the party were agreed npon everything except accurate definition of what they were agreed about. I have your two tracts — one of J. J. T., and the c anniversary ' of 1869. If there be any more I should like to know of them. For I am interested in the attempt, which, hopeless as it seems to me to the extent proposed, may yet originate a sect in which people may pray together without each man being fettered to his neighbours. But there must be some little definiteness of statement. I tried hard to get from J. J. T. whether his Christianity had a supernatural element. His final information ' was that he thought it most likely the apostles had a supernatural element which we do not understand. I intend to keep watch on the attempt to couple super- naturalists and anti-supernaturalists, for that is what is aimed at. When I get something definite about its indefiniteness, I intend to write about it. Dubius sed non improbus. This is what Sheffield said of his own religion, and the scholars (Dean Stanley included) make him ' sceptical, but not wicked/ Improbus means one who declares against the proof — one to whom there cannot be proof. As when Pliny says that Hipparchus counted the stars — rem Deo improbam — a thing unproved by the gods ; and Virgil, Labor omnia vincit, improbus — toil yet unproved, or untried, conquers all things. Yours very truly, A. DE MORGAN. To Sedley Taylor, Esq. 6 Merton Road, December 26, 1869. MY DEAR SEDLEY, — Many thanks for your pamphlet,1 which I shall join on to some of Martineau's, &c., in one notice. I think you will produce some effect on people who begin to have a cranny through which the light comes. I saw Jas. Martinean a day or two ago, and he tells me that his organisation is con- templating the circulation of your pamphlet in aid of their view. I wish their view were a little less of a dissolving view when 1 On Clerical Subscription. (Macmillan, 1869.) Mr. De Morgan believed that this pamphlet hastened the disruption of the Free Christian Union. CORRESPONDENCE, 1867-70. 399 you come to look closely at it. I cannot make out whether they 1869. have a super religion or not. I do not know how to fill up the word. Now I tolerate everything except passing off one thing under the name of another. There are people who can detect in the foundation of Christianity a third alternative, * Super- or Imposture.' I cannot. I am content they should, but I want them to be explicit. I am very much afraid they want a common worship with the above question left open. No ! there is no objection to leaving it open if people will, but they do not want it openly open, but secretly open, under a cloak of some indefinite pretension of divine origin. I hope you will follow up. Yours sincerely, A. DE MORGAN. (The only letters to friends after this time that have come into my possession are two to Sir John Herschel, in my husband's own handwriting, the first bearing date June 25, 1870. In this he says, ' I am creeping along, and 1870. shall get right about as soon as the blessed St. Alcuin's snail got to dinner. It is one of the pleasant problems in the works of that holy man that the sparrow asked the snail to dinner at a league distance. Now the snail moved half an inch a day. How long, the Saint asked, will it take him to get to dinner ? ' The second is in an extremely feeble hand, merely describing his own state. Sir John himself died within the year. In his letter to me on receipt of mine telling him of my husband's death, he wrote, 'I have been expecting as much. The last letter I received showed me too clearly that the lamp was flickering in the socket, and it is consoling to know that the end was so peaceful and so painless, and so full of hope. Looking back on onr long friendship, I do not find a single point on which we failed to sympathise ; and I recall many occa- sions on which his sound judgment and excellent feeling have sustained and encouraged me. Many and very distinct indications tell me that I shall not be long after him ; and I can only hope that my own end may be such 400 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1870. as you describe.' His last surviving correspondent was the Rev. W. Heald, who died three years after him. All his other old University friends had gone before. I iiave, with respect to domestic matters and details, done what I know iny husband himself would have wished, for he never liked making known what nearly concerned his family. Moreover, those to whom he wrote at length and on questions of general interest were friends with whom he did not get frequent opportunities of conversa- tion. Consequently, as we were almost always together, his correspondence with myself and our sons and daughters was fragmentary, and not suited for publication. I trust, however, that the foregoing selections will not be thought insufficient to show the character of one to whom letter- writing was a pleasure and a relaxation, and among whose leisure occupations it always held so prominent a place.— S. E. DE M.) LIST OF WETTINGS. 1828. Bourdon's Elements of Algebra, translation. Elements of Arithmetic, 1st edition, 1831. „ „ 2nd edition, 1832. 3rd edition, 1833. 16th 1,000, 1857. AimcLES IN QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF EDUCATION, PROM 1831 TO 1835. 1831. (1) Account of the Polytechnic School of Paris, vol. i. (2) Notice of Tables for facilitating Calculation, vol. i. (3) Rev. of Pinnock's Catechism of Geometry, vol. i. (4) On Mathematical Instruction, vol. i. (5) Walker's Theory of Mechanics (rev.), vol. i. (6) Barley's System of Popular Geometry (rev.), vol. ii. (7) Bayley's Elements of Algebra (rev.), vol. ii. 1832. (8) A Plan for Conducting the Royal Naval School, vol iii. (9) Study of Natural Philosophy, vol. iii. (10) A Preparation for Euclid, vol. iii. (11) Barlow's Mathematical Tables, vol. iii. (12) On some Methods Employed for the Instruction of the Deaf and Dumb, vol. iii. (13) James Wood's (D.D., of Ely) Algebra (rev.), vol. iii. ( 14) Quetelet on Probabilities (rev.), vol. iv. (15) Young's Elements of Mechanics (rev.), vol. iv. (16) State of Mathematical and Physical Sciences in the University of Oxford, vol. iv. (1 7) Von Turk's Phenomena of Nature (rev.), vol. iv. 1833. (18) On Teaching Arithmetic, vol. v. (19) Cunning-ham's Arithmetic (rev.), vol. v. D D 402 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. (20) On the Method of teaching Fractional Arithmetic, vol. v. (21) On the Method of teaching the Elements of Geometry, vol. vi. (22) The School and Family Manual (rev.), vol. vi. (23) Method of teaching Geometry, No. 2, vol. vi. (24) Busby's Catechism of Music (rev.), vol. vi. (25) Geometry without Axioms (rev.), vol. vii. (26) Ritchie's Principles of Geometry (rev.), vol. vii. (27) Elementary Works by M. Quetelet (rev.), vol. vii. (28) Cambridge Differential Notation, vol. viii. (29) Gravitation, Airy's article, Penny Cyclop, (rev.), vol. viii. (30) Peacock's Treatise on Algebra (rev.), vol. ix. (31) Peacock's Treatise on Algebra, No. 2, vol. ix. (32) Progress of Physical Science, vol. x. (33) Ecole Polytechnique, vol. x. MEMOIRS IN THE CAMBRIDGE PHILOSOPHICAL TRANSACTIONS. (1) On the General Equation of Curves of the Second Degree, read Nov. 15, 1830. (2) On the General Equation of Surfaces of the Second Degree, read Nov. 12, 1832. (3) Sketch of a Method of introducing Discontinuous Con- stants into the Arithmetical Expressions for Infinite Series, where they admit of several values, read May 16, 1836. (4) On a Question in the Theory of Probabilities, read Feb. 1837. (5) On the Foundations of Algebra, read Dec. 9, 1839. (6) On the Foundations of Algebra, No. 2, read Nov. 29, 1841. (7) On the Foundations of Algebra, No. 3, read Nov. 27, 1843. (8) On Divergent Series, and Points connected with them, read March 4, 1844. (9) On the Foundations of Algebra, No. 4, On Triple Algebra, read Oct. 24, 1844. (10) On Divergent Series, and on Various Points of Analysis connected with them, read 1844. (11) On a point connected with the Dispute between Keill and Leibnitz, read Jan. 1846. (12) On the Structure of the Syllogism, and on the application of the Theory of Probabilities to questions of Argument and Authority, read Nov. 9, 1846. LIST OF WRITINGS. 403 (13) Method of Integrating Partial Differential Equations, read June 1848. (14) On the Symbols of Logic, the Theory of the Syllogism, and in particular of the Copula, and the application of the Theory of Probability to some questions of Evidence, read Feb. 1850. (15) On some Points of the Integral Calculns, read Feb. 1851. (16) On some Points in the Theory of Differential Equations, read 1854. (17) On the Singular Points of Curves, and on Newton's Theory of Co-ordinated Exponents, read 1855. (18) On the Question : What is the Solution of a Differential Equation, Supplement to No. 3, read April 1856. (19) On the Beats of Imperfect Consonances, read Nov. 1857. (20) A Proof of the Existence of a Root in every Algebraic Equation, read Dec. 1857. (21) On the General Principles of which the Composition or Aggregation of Forces is a Consequence, read 1859. (22) On the Syllogism, No. 4, and on the Logic of Relations, read 1860. (23) On the Theory of Errors of Observation, read Nov. 1861. (24) On the Syllogism, No. 5, and on various points of the Onymatic System, read 1863. (25) On the Early History of the Signs + and — , read 1864. (26) A Theorem relating to Neutral Series, read 1864. (27) On Infinity and the Sign of Equality, read May 1864. (28) On the Root of any Function, and on Neutral Series, No. 2, read May 1866. (29) On a Theorem relating to Neutral Series, read Oct. 1868. IN THE PHILOSOPHICAL MAGAZINE. (1) On Taylor's Theorem, 1835. (2) On the Relative Signs of Co-ordinates, 1836. (3) On the Solid Polyhedron, 1838. (4) On the Rule for finding the value of an Annuity for three lives, 1839. (5) Suggestion on Barrett's Method, 1841. (6) On Ferncl's Measure of a Degree, Nos. 1 and 2, 1841. (7) On the reduction of a Continued Fraction to a Series, 1841. (8) On Fernel's Measure of a Degree, Nos. 3 and 4, 1842, (9) On Leonardo da Vinci's Use of + and -, 1842. (10) On Torpor-ley's Anticipation of part of Napier's Rule, 1843. n D 2 404 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. (11) On the almost total disappearance of the earliest Trigono- metrical Canon, 1845. (12) Derivation of the word Theodolite, 1846. (13) Derivation of Tangent and Secant, 1846. (14) Account of the Speculations of Thos. Wright, of Durham, 1848. (15) On the Additions made to the Second Edition of the Com- mercium Epistolicum, 1848. (16) On a Property of the Hyperbola, Jan. 1848. (17) On Anharmonic Ratio, 1849. (18) On the Early History of Infinitesimals in England, 1, 1852. (19) On Indirect Demonstration, 1852. (20) On the Authorship of the Account of the Commercium Epistolicum, 1852. CAMBRIDGE MATHEMATICAL JOURNAL. (1) On the Perspective of the Co-ordinate Plane, pp. 92, 93, 1841. (2) On a simple property of the Conic Section, pp. 201-3, 1841. (3) Remarks on the Binomial Theorem, pp. 61, 62, 1843. (4) On the Equation (D + a)n3 = a;, pp. 60-62, 1845. (5) On a Law existing in the successive approximations of a Continuous Fraction, pp. 97-99, 1845. CAMBRIDGE AND DUBLIN MATHEMATICAL JOURNAL. (1) On Arbogast's Formulae of Expansion, pp. 238-255, 1846. (2) Suggestion on the Integration of Rational Fractions, Nov. 1848. (3) On a Point in the Solution of Linear Differential Equa- tions, 1849. (4) Extension of the word Area, May 1850. (5) Application of Combinations to the explanation of Arbogast's Method, Feb. 1851. (6) On the Mode of using the signs + and — in Plane Trigo- nometry, May 1 851 . (7) On the Connection of Involute and Evolute in Space, Nov. 1851. (8) On Partial Differential Equations of the First Order, Feb. 1852. (9) On the Signs + and — in Geometry, and on the interpre- tation of the Equation of a Curve, Nov. 1852. (10) Mathematical Notes, pp. 93, 94, 1853. LIST OF WRITINGS. 405 QUARTERLY JOURNAL OF MATHEMATICS. (1) On the Dimensions of the roots of Equations, 1857. (2) On the Fractions of Vanishing or Infinite Terms, 1857. (3) Historical Notes on the Theorem respecting the Dimen- sions of Boots, 1857. (4) Notes on Euclid i. 47, 1857. (5) On the Integrating factors of Pd + 2dy + R,dz, 1858. (6) On the Classification of Polygons of a given number of sides, 1858. CENTRAL SOCIETY OF EDUCATION. On the Mathematics ; their value in Education. On Professional Mathematics, 1837-38-39. THE MATHEMATICIAN. (1) Remarks on General Equations of the Second Degree, pp. 242-246, 1850. (2) Organised Method of making the resolution required in the integration of Rational Fractions, pp. 242-246, 1850. (3) Remarks on Horner's Method of solving Equations, pp. 289-291, 1850. BRITISH ALMANAC AND COMPANION. 1831. On Life Assurance. 1832. On Eclipses. 1833. On Comets. 1834. On the Moon's Orbit. 1835. Halley's Comet. 1836. Old Arguments against the Motion of the Earth. 1837. Notices of English Mathematical and Astronomical Writers between the Norman Conquest and the year ] 600. 1838. On Cavendish's Experiment. 1839. Progress of the Problem of Evolution. 1840. On the Calculation of Single Life Contingencies. 1841. On the use of small tables of Logarithms in Commercial Calculations, and on the practicability of a Decimal Coinage. 1842. On Life Contingencies, No. 2. 1843. References for the History of the Mathematical Sciences. 1844. On Arithmetical Computation. 406 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. 1845. On the Ecclesiastical Calendar — Easter. 1846. On the earliest printed Almanacs. 1847. Recurrence of Eclipses and Full Moon. 1848. On Decimal Coinage. 1849. Short Supplementary on the First Six Books of Euclid's Elements. 1850. On Ancient and Modern Usage in Reckoning. 1851. On some points in the History of Arithmetic. 1852. A Short Account of some recent Discoveries in England and Germany, relative to the Controversy on the Inven- tion of Fluxions. (See Life of Newton in Knight's ' British Worthies/ Arts. Commercium 'Epistolicum and Fluxions, P. Cyc., Dispute between Keill and Leibnitz, Cambridge Memoirs.) 1853. On the difficulty of correct descriptions of Books. 1854. On a Decimal Coinage. 1855. The Progress of the Doctrine of the Earth's Motion between the times of Copernicus and Galileo, being notes on the Ante-Galilean Copernicans. 1856. Notes on the History of the English Coinage. 1857. Notes on the State of the Decimal Coinage Question. IN SMITH'S CLASSICAL DICTIONARY. Diophantus. Sosi genes. Eucleides. Theon. Heron. Ptolomseus. Hipparchus. TRACTS PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY FOR THE DIFFUSION OF USEFUL KNOWLEDGE. (1) Study and Difficulties of Mathematics, vol. i., 1836. (2) Arithmetic and Algebra, 1831, vol. i., 1836. (3) Examples of the Processes of Arithmetic and Algebra, vol. i., 1836. DUBLIN REVIEW. Laplace on Probabilities, No. 1, April 1837. Laplace on Probabilities, No. 2, July 1837. On Legislation for Life Assurance, Aug. 1840. Review of Jones on the value of Annuities (published by Diffusion Society), August 1841. LIST OF WRITINGS. 407 Pejrard's Elements of Eaclid, Nov. 1841. Weights, Measures, and Coinage, May 1841. Science and Bank, Nov. 1842. Baily's Repetition of the Cavendish Experiment, March 1845. Speculators and Speculations, Sept. 1845. Book-keeping, Dec. 1845. Mathematical Bibliography, Sept. 1846. Helps to Calculation, March 1847. ENCYCLOPEDIA METROPOLITAN. Calculus of Functions, 1835. Theory of Probabilities, 1837. LIST OF ARTICLES IN ' PENNY CYCLOPEDIA.' (This list of articles in the ' Penny Cyclopaedia ' is taken partly from a copy in the British Museum, in which all the articles have the names of their authors appended by the donor ; and partly from the marked copy in Mr. De Morgan's possession. The constellations and planets not included in this list are also by him, if the Museum copy is correct.) Abacus, 2 Advowsons, value of Abatis Aeolipyle Abauzit, Firmin Aero-dynamics Abbreviation, mathl. Aerostatics Abel, Niels Henri Agnese, Maria Aberration Air Aberration (in optics) Air-gun Abscissa Air-pump Absurdum, reductio Aliquot part ad D'Alembert Accelerated motion Algebra Accent (mathl.) Algebraic Achromatic Acoustics Acronychal Act (University) Actuary Almanac Addition Alonsine tables Addition of ratios Alternate Algebraic geometry Algorithm Almacanter Altitude Amphiscii Amplitude Analysis Anaxagoras Anaximander Anaximenes Anemoscope Angle Anker Annuity Annulus Anomalistic year Anomaly (astronl.) Antecedent Antecedentia Antilogarithm Antinomians Antipodes 408 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. Antiscii Antoeci Aphelion Appian, Peter Apogee Apollonius Pergseus Apparent (astron.) Apparent magnitude Apparent motion Approximation A posteriori, a priori Apsides Aratus, astronomer Arbogast, Louis Fred. Arc Arch Archimedes Architrave Archivolt Arctic circle Are Area Argument Aristarchus Aristoxenus Arithmetic Arithmetical com- plement Arithmetical mean Arithmetical pro- gression Arithmetical pro- portion Armillaiy sphere Arroba Ascension, ascen- sional difference Aspect (astronl.) Asterism Astrolabe Astrology Astronomy Asymptote Atmosphere Atmospheric air Attraction in physics Attwood, George Aurora borealis Autolycus Automaton Auzout, Adrien Average Avoirdupois Axiom Axis Azimuth Bacon, Roger Bailly, Jean Sylvain Bainbridge, John (astron.) Balance Ballistic pendulum Balloon Barlaam Barlowe, William Barometer Baroscope Barrel Barrow, Isaac Barter (arithmet.) Bartholinus Bassantin, James Bayer, John Bearing (nautical) Beccaria, Giovanni Battista Belidor Bellows Berkeley, Geo. (the latter half) Bernard, Edward Bernoulli Berosus (the latter half) Binomial Binomial theorem Biquadratic Bombelli, Raphael Bonnycastle, John Borda, Jean Charles Borel and Borelli, part Boscovich, R. J. Bossut, Charles Bouguer, Pierre Bouillaud, Ismael Boyle, Robert Bradley, James Brahe, Tycho Briggs, Henry Brouncker Burning-glass Bushel Cagnoli Calculating machine Calculus Calibre Calippus Callet Camera lucida Campani, M. and J. Campanus, J. Camus Cancer (sign) Canon (raathl.) Canton, John Capacity Capillary attraction Capricoruus (sign) Carat LIST OF WRITINGS. 409 Cardan Carnot Cassini Castelli Catalogue (astron.) Catenary Cause Caustic (optics) Cavalieri Cavendish, Henry Celsius Centigrade Centre Centrifugal forces Centripetal force Chain (surveyiDg) Chaldron Chance Chappe d'Auteroche Characteristic (of a logarithm) Chastellet Chiliad Chord Church rates Circinus Circle - of declination, &c. Circular parts Circulating decimals Cissoid Clairaut Clavms Cleomedes Clepsydra Cloud Cocker, Edward Coefficient Cohesion Collins, John Collision Colson, John Combinations and Permutations Comet Comet of Biela Commandine Commensurable Commercium Epis- tolicum Common measure Compass, azimuth Compass, mariners' Compasses Complement Composition Compound quantities Concave and convex Concentric Conchoid Condition (mathcs.) Condorcet Cone Conic sections Conical projection Conjugate Conjunction and opposition Conoid Conon of Alexandria Constant Constellation Construction Contact Content Contrary and con- tradictory Convergent Converse Co-ordinates Copernicus Cord Corollary Corvus Costard, George Cotes, Roger Coulomb Craig, John Cramer, Gabriel Crux Ctesibius Cube Culmination Cunitz, Maria Curtate Curvature Curve Cusp Cycle Cycloid Cylinder Data, Datum Day Decagon Declination Deferent Definition Deflection Degree of an equation Deism Demoivre's hypothe- sis Demonstration Deneb Denominator Density Departure Depression Derivation Determinate Development Diagonal Diagonal acale 410 MEMOIK OF AUGUSTUS DE MOEGAN. Diagram Diameter Differential calculus Differential co-effi- cient Digit Dimension Direct and retrograde Equimultiples Direction Equinoctial Directrix Disc Discontinuity Discount Dividend (arithl.) Division Dodecagon Dome Drachm, or Dram Duodecimals Duplicate ratio Duplication of the cube Equation of payments Geometer Equations, algebraical Geometrical Equations, differential Geometry Equations, functional Globe Equator and ecliptic Globular projection Equiangular, Equi- Globular sailing Gnomon Gnomonic projection Golden number Graduation Gravity, centre of Guldinus Gunter Gyration, centre of lateral Equinoxes Euclid Excentricity Factor, in algebra Fall of bodies False position Fellowship (in arithmetic) Ferrei and Ferrari Hachette Halley Halley's Comet Harmonic proportion Figure (in geometry) Harmonics Dynamics Dynamometer Firkin Flam steed Flexure, contrary Fluxions Force Forces, impressed and effective Forces, parallelo- gram of Fourier Fractions, common and decimal Height, measurement of Heliacal Herschel, William Heteroscii Hevelius, partly Hogshead Homogeneous and Heterogeneous Homologous Horary Horizon Earth (astronl.) Earth, density of East Easter, method of finding Eclipse Elimination (algebc.) Ellipse Fractions, continued Horologium Elliptic compasses Fractions, vanishing Horrocks, Jeremiah Ellipticity Functions,calculus of Hour, Hour-circle, Elongation (astronl.) Functions, theory of Hour-line Encke's Comet Huyghens Epoch (astronl.) Hyperbola Equal Gage Hyperbole Equation Gallon Hypothenuse Equation (astronl.) Generating functions Hypothesis LIST OF WRITINGS. 411 Impact Impenetrability Impulse Inclined plane Incommensurables, theory of Increment and de- crement Indefinite Indeterminate Induction (mathl.) Inequality Inertia Infinite, Infinity, - Infinitesimal calculus Integer Integration, Integral calculus Interest Interpolation Interpretation Invariable Inverse, Inversion Involute and Evolute Involution and Evolution Irrational quantity Irreducible case Isochronous Julian period Kalendar La Caille Laplace League Leap Year Least squares Legendre Lemma Lemniscata Lens Lever Libration Life, mean duration Light, barometrical Light-equation Lights, Northern ? Line Limits, theory of Litre Logarithms Logarithms, Gauss's hyperbolic Logarithmic curve and spiral, use of Longitude and latitude Lubienietske Maclaurin Magic square Magnitude Map Mariotte Maseres, Francis Maskelyne, Nevil Mass, in physics Mathematics Maurolico, or Marullo Maxima and Minima Menelaus Mensuration Mercator, Nicholas Mercator's projection Meridian Meton, Metonic cycle Metre Middle latitude Mile Milky Way Momentum, or Moment — — — or Moment of inertia Money Monge Moon Mortality, law of Motion • direction of of the earth Moving force Multiple, Submul- tiple Points Musa, Mohamed Ben Napier's bones, or rods Negative and impos- sible quantities Node Nothing differences of Nucleus of a comet Number Numbers, appellations of Numbers, theory of Numbers of Ber- noulli Numeral characters Numeration Numerator Numerical 412 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. Oblate Oblique Obliquity Oblong Observation and experiment Occultation Octans Offsets Operation Orb, Orbit Order Ordinate Precession and nuta- Reduction Regular figures, polygon, solids, polyhedrons Relation (mathl.) Residual phenomena tion Pressure Prime Primum mobile Principia Probability, theory of Resistance ? Problem Reversion Process ? Progression Projection Projection of mathe- matical diagrams Oscillation and centre Proportion of oscillation Proportional Pace Parabola Paradox Parallelepiped Parallelogram Parallels Parameter Penumbra loga- rithms Proportional parts Ptolemaic system Pyramid Quadrant Quadrature Quadrature of the circle Percussion, centre of Quantity Perimeter Quarter Periodic functions Quartile Periods of revolution Quintal Piccolomini, A. Quintile Piling of shot Pipe Planet Planisphere Point of contrary flexure Pole, Polar Polygon and poly- hedron Pond, John Power (mechanics) Practice Radix Ratio Ratios, composition of Ratios, prime and ultimate Reciprocal Rectangle Rectification Recurring scries Reversion of series Revolution Rhomb, Rhombus, Rhomboid Rhumb, or Rumb Right angle Root Rotation Round Rule, Ruler Sagittarius Salient Saros, Neros, Sosos Satellite Scale, musical mathematics Scholium Scruple Seasons, change of Segment Series Sexagesimal Sextans (constell.) Side Sidereal Sign, astronomy Sign, mathematics Similar, similar figures Sine and Cosine Sine and Cosine, curves of LIST OF WRITINGS. 413 Slide, or Sliding rale Solar system Solid, Solidity Solid angle Solid, surface, line, point Solid, superficial, and linear dimen- sions Solstices Solution Space and Time Species, mathematics Sphere, or globe Sphere, doctrine of the Spherical trigono- metry Spheroid Spiral Square Square root Stable and unstable Star, donble star, cluster of stars Statics Stationary, mecha- nics Stationary, astro- 'nomy Stereographic Sterling ? Straight, straight line, plane Sturm's Theorem Subcontrary Sublime (geometry) Subsidiary Substitution Subtraction Subtra- hend, Minuend Sufficient reason Sum and difference Sum, Summation Sun Sun-dial Sun, eclipse of Surd Surface, Surfaces, theory of Surfaces of the Second Degree Syllogism ? Symbols and Notations Symmetry, Sym- metrical Sympathetic sounds Synodic, Synodic Revolution Synthesis System, mathema- tics System, astronomy Table Tangent Taylor, Brook, theorem Term (algebra) Theodosius of Bithynia ? Theon, the elder Theorem Theory and practice Theory of couples Theory of equations Three, rule of Time Time of descent Toledo, tables of Transcendental Transformation Transformation of co-ordinates Transits of Mercury and Venus Transversal Trapezium, Trape- zoid Traverse tables Triangle Triangula and Tri- angulum Austral e Trigonometrical co- ordinates - curves — series — survey — tables Trigonometry Trisection of the angle Trochoidal curves Troy weight Tube Tuning Twilight Ullage Ulugh Beg Undetermined Universal and Parti- cular ? Universe Unlimited Uranus Vacuum, or Void Vanish (mathematics) Variable Variations, calculus of Varignon, Pierre Velocity 414 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. Vernal and Equi- Wager nox Vibration Vieta Viga Ganita Virtual velocities Vitello Volume Volute Vortex Wallis, John Wingate, Edward Wrangler Weight Wright, Edward of earth of observa- tions Weights and raea- Year sures Yourg, Thomas Whiston, W. SEPARATE WOEKS. Elements of Arithmetic, 8vo, 1835. Algebra, Prelim, to the Differential Calculns, 8vo, 1835. Connection of Number and Magnitude: an attempt to explain the Fifth Book of Euclid, 8vo, 1836. Essay on Probabilities, and on their Application to Life Con- tingencies and Insurance Offices, Cabinet Cyclopaedia, small 8vo, 1838. The Differential and Integral Calculus, one vol. 8vo, pp. 770, 1842. Arithmetical Books, from the invention of printing to the present time, being brief notices of a large number of works, drawn from actual inspection, 8vo, 1847. First Notions of Logic, preparatory to study of geometry, 8vo, 1839. Formal Logic, or the Calculus of Inference necessary and pro- bable, 8vo, 1847, pp. 336. The Globes, Celestial and Terrestrial, for Malby's Globes, 8vo, 1845. Syllabus of a Proposed System of Logic, 8vo, 1860. Trigonometry and Double Algebra, 1849. The Book of Almanacs, with an index of reference, by which the almanac may be found for any year up to A.D. 1000, with means of finding the day of any new or full moon from B.C. 2000 to A.D. 2000, compiled by A. De Morgan, 8vo, 1850. MISCELLANEOUS. Correspondence of Scientific Men of the Seventeenth Century, by S. P. Rigaud. Contents and Index by A. De Morgan, 1841. LIST OF WRITINGS. 415 Treatise on the Problems of Maxima and Minima, by Ram- chundra, Calcutta, edited, with Introduction, 1850. Decimal Association Proceedings, with Introduction, 1854 Debate on the Decimal Coinage Question, with remarks on the speech of the Member for Kidderminster, 1855. Reply to Facetiae of the Member for Kidderminster, 1855. Journal of a Tour in the Unsettled Parts of North America, by Francis Baily, edited with Preface, by A. De Morgan, 1856. Preface to From Matter to Spirit, by Sophia De Morgan, 1863. Notes on Colonel W. H. Oakes's Table of the Reciprocals of Numbers, 1865. Seven Figure Logarithms of Numbers 1 to 108,000, corrected, with a description of the Tables added by Prof. De Morgan, 8vo. (Trans, of Lndwig Schroen Siebenstellige. Gemeine Logarithmen der Zanten.) 1865. The Eleventh Chapter of the History of the Royal Society, with additions, by Prof. De Morgan, 1849. General Information on Subjects of Chronology, Geography, Statistics, &c., References for History of Mathematical Science, 1842. Statement in answer to an assertion made by Sir W. Hamilton in reference to a discovery of a new principle in the Theory of Syllogism, 1847. English Science, Report of the British Association, vols. i. and ii., written for a Review, edited by Mr. Beaumont (title for- gotten), 1835. Tables, C. Knight's English Cyclopaedia, a new edition of Useful Knowledge, London, 1861. In addition to the above there were numerous contributions to the ' Memoirs ' and ' Obituary Notices ' of the Astronomical Society, to the Journal of the Institute of Actuaries and Insurance Record. I do not find any contribution to the North British Review except the Review of ' Brewster's Life of Newton.' Among the smaller writings which I know to be omitted from the above list are some to Charles Knight's * Library of Anecdote,' biographies in the same publisher's * Portrait Gallery,' &c., &c. The voluminous contributions to the ' Athenaeum,' ' Notes and Queries,' &c., I have been obliged to omit on account of their number. INDEX OF NAMES, ETC. ABA ABACUS, 235 Abracadabra, 381 Adams, Professor John, 126, 129-136 Adelaide Koad, N.W., 271, 364 Affleck, Lady, 101, 305 Agathocles (eclipse of), 232 Airy, Sir G. B., 15, 19, 24,42, 48, 62, 77, 107, 118; 127-130, 134-138, 237, 241,248, 252, 273, 333 Albert Life Assurance, 279 Alderson, Baron, 390 Algebra Nova, 59 Alliance Assurance Company, 363 Alvescot, 215 Amicable Life Assurance, 60, 181 Appledore, 2 Arago, 126, 130, 176-178 Argelander, 136 Aristotle, 350 Arithmetic and Algebra, 29 Arnauld, 384 Ashburnham, Lord, 203 Astronomia Philolaica, 75 Astronomical Club, 250 Astronomical Society, Eoyal, 19, 41 - 63, 76, 81-83, 106-108, 118, 124, 181, 191, 194, 273, 277, 292, 301 -— Annual Report, 232 — Obituary Notices, 110 Athanasian Creed, 322 Athenaeum Newsp., 179, 192-194, 210 Aubert, J., 382 Austin, 350 BABBAGE, Charles, 48, 60, 89, 133, 235, 243, 324, 333, 335, 387, Bacon, Lord, 296, 303, 305 Bacon, Koger, 218, 302 Bagehot, Walter, 97, 359 Baily, Francis, 41-46, 49, 76, 78, 81, 104-109, 110, 117, 120, 140, 145, 148, 231, 256, 301-335 BOU Baily, Miss, 45, 301 Baily, Richard (Selim Effendi), 335 Bain, Prof. Alexander, 306, 339 Bampton Lectures, 296 Bardin's Globes, 120 Barnstaple, 23 Barrow, Isaac, 296 Barton, Catherine, 264, 288 Baynes, Professor Spencer, 212 Beaufort, Admiral, 2, 64, 77, 293 Bengal Hurkaru, 280 Bentham, George, 162 Bentham, Jeremy, 350 Bentinck, Lord W., 321 Berkeley, Bishop, 15, 115, 164 | Bernoullis (The), 286 ! Bertrand, M., 312 i Bessel, — , 82, 127 I Bethune, Drinkwater, 61, 268 Bhascara, 269 Bideford, 2 Biot, M., 32, 131, 231, 257, 262, 264, 278,290, 298 Biran, Maurice de, 300 Bird, William, 77 Birkbeck, Dr. George, 23 Bishop, George, 49, 137 Bishop, Mrs., 49 Blackburne, Archdeacon, 104, 109, 113 Blanchard (priest), 382 Blandford, — , 3 Bland' s Quadratic Equations, 7 Board of Longitude, 49 Bolland (Baron), 388 Bompas, Henry, 359 Bonnycastle's Algebra, 335 Boole, George, 165-168, 212 Boucly, M., 179-211 Bouillaud (or Bullialdi), 59, 75 Bourdon's Algebra, 29, 32 Bouvard, A., 127 Bouvard's Tables, 127 E E 418 MEMOIK OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. BOW Bowring, Sir John, 236, 238, 240 Bradley, 108 Brewster, Sir David, 199, 257, 261- 263 Briggs, Do., 31 Briggs, General, 21, 31-33 Bright, John, M.P., 241 British Association, 69 British Museum, 176 British Worthies (Knight's), 176 Brougham, Lord, 23, 51, 125, 269, 312, 332, 358 Brown, William, 238, 241,243, 255 Browne, J. Baldwin, 101 Budget of Paradoxes, 58, 70 Bunyan, John, 305 Burdett, Sir F., 109 Butler, Charles, 55 ' Butler's Analogy,' 194 Byron, Ladj Noel, 89 flABINET Cyclopaedia, 92 \J Cacciatore, M., 127 Calculus of Functions, 82 Cambridge Philosophical Society, 286 Transac- tions, 113 Camden Street, 96 Campbell, Thomas, 23, 358 Campden Hill Observatory, 61 Camus Musical Club, 16 Gary's globes, 120 Case William, 359 Cassini, Count, 153 Catalogue of stars. 42, 75, 83 Cavendish Experiment, 45, 106, 108, 111 Cayley, George, 297 Cenf-orinus, 204 Challis, Professor, 129, 132, 135, 138 Chasles, M., 396 Chevallier, Kev. Temple, 68 Chillingworth, 194 Chladni, 32 Church rates, 87 City of London School, 190 Clarke, Dr. E. D., 109 Clarke (anti-Trinitarian), 261 Cleasby, Sir K. (third wrangler), 18 Clifton, Professor K. B., 97, 359 Clough, A. H., 173 Coates, Thomas, 53 Cobbett, 220 Cobden, Richard, 241 Coddington, Professor, 15, 24 Colenso, Bishop, 325, 327, 378 ELL Coleridge, Samuel Taylor, 321, 363 Colin, Melanie, 181 Companion to the Almanac, 50, 53, 107, 123, 234, 264 Comptes Eendus, 68 Comtism, 116 Connection of Number andMagnitude, 65 Conolly, Dr., 53 Constellations (names of), 63 Convocation, 299 Cornelius Agrippa, 379 Cousin, Victor, 300 Crotchet Castle, 66 Crowe, Catherine, 173 dimming, Rev. Dr., 325 DAVY, Sir Humphry, 335 Day schools (his), 30 Deal try, Rev. —,387 Decimal Association, 235-240 Decimal coinage, 235-255 De Blainville, 163 Defoe, Daniel, 20 De Gasparis, 217 Delambre, 59, 108, 168 De la Rue, Warren, 2/1 De Moivre, 233 De Morgan, Mrs. (sen.), 2, 11-15 Campbell Greig, 234 Ed wardLindsey.il 6, 281 Elizabeth Alice, 189, 197 George Campbell, 34, 112, 281, 286, 363 George, 234, 281, 286 Helena Christiana, 367 William Frend, 108 Des Cartes, 108, 257 Dickens, Charles, 93, 265 Differential and Integral Calculus, 52, 65, 113 Digges, 291 Dodson, James, 233 John, 234 Dollond, 108 Drummond, Sir W., 21 Druse Trinity, 328 Dumas (priest), 382 Dunlops Nebulse, 120, 148 EASTER Question, 125 Ebury, Lord, 266 Edleston, J., 257 Edmonds, T. R., 279 Elements of Arithmetic, 54 Ellenborough, Lord, 87 INDEX OF NAMES, ETC. 419 ELL Elliotson, Dr. John, 323 Ellis, Leslie, 9, 103, 318 - Sir Henry, 201 Encyclopedia Metropolitana, 92 Essay on Probabilities, 92 Evening amusements, 109 Exeter, 108 T7ABRICIUS, 295 JL Falconer, Thomas, 16 Falloux, M., 179 Family Endowment Offices, 110 Fanshawe, Colonel, 1 Faraday, Michael, 82, 192 Farish, Professor, 388 Fenner, Eev. J., 3 Ferishta, 21, 31 Financial Reform Association (Liver- pool), 247 Finlaison, 87 Flaherty Scholarship, 144 Flamsteed, John, 120, 256 Follen, Mrs., 173 Formal Logic, 111, 157-168 Forman, Captain, 77, 78 Foster, Professor Michael, 190, 222 Fouchy, 151 Franklin,J. B., 248, 252 Fraser, Peter, 103 Free Christian Union, 365 Frend, William, 19, 21, 23, 28, 31, 39, 81, 89, 109, 235, 312 Fry, Elizabeth, 90 n ALILEO, 290 U Galle, M., 128 Galloway, Thomas, 45, 60, 150, 155, 171, 180 Gardiner's Logarithms, 381 George III., 82, 322, 333 Ghetaldi, 76 Ghuleim Hassein, 31 Gilbert, Davies, 217 Gladstone, William Ewart, 239, 241 Goethe, 321, 362 Goldsmid, Sir Isaac, 53 Gompertz, Benjamin, 279 Good Words, 265 Gordon (Senior Wrangler), 17 Gordon, Jemmy, 321, 391 Graham, Professor, 292 Greathead, Samuel, 376 Greenwood, J. G., 359 Gregory, D. F., 151 Olinthus, 64, 312 Guizot, M., 177 Gunning, Esquire-Bedell, 391 INT HACHETTE, M., 32, 58, 64, 75 Halifax, Lord, 245, 264, 288 Hallatn, Henry, 111, 201 Halley, 108, 256, 258 Halliwell, J. 0., 124 Hamilton, Rev. H. Parr, 15 Hamilton, Sir W., 104, 160-162, 204, 212, 331 _ Sir W. Rowan, 333 Hardy, Cozens, 359 Harrison, 108 Hartog, N. E., 102 Harwood, Sir Busick. 388 Haussen, Professor, 127, 136 Hayden, Mrs., 221 Heald, Rev. William, 16, 206, 214, 218-221, 293 Heneke, 136 Hensley, Lewis (sen.), 41 Mrs., 85, 143 Herschel, Sir J. W., 41-45, 67, 152, 170, 193, 209, 213, 216, 231, 237, 248, 287, 289, 291, 302 309, 320- 326, 333, 369, 371, 376, 395-400 Sir W., 85, 108, 148 Hervey, T. K, 176, 202, 210 Hey wood's Analysis of Kant, 315 Higgins, Godfrey, 21, 31 Higman, John, 12, 15 Hill, Sir John, 172 Octavia, 265 Rowland, 176, 201, 241 Hind, John, 137 - R., 49, 122, 136, 217 Historical Society of Science, 124 Hobbes, Thomas, 350 Hood, Thomas (A.D. 1500), 67 Hoppus, Rev. J., 327 Hornbuckle, 388 Homer, L., 31 Horrocks, 301 ' Household Words,' 265 Houtmann, F., 299 Howard, C., 120 Hume, David, 350 Jacobus, 153 Joseph, M.P., 51 Husenbeth, Rev. Dr., 322 Hussey, Dr., 127 Hustler, 388 Button, Dr., 106 R. H., 54 T NSTITUTE of Actuaries, 45 1 Insurance Record, 279 International Association for Weights and Measures, 240, 247 420 MEMOIR OF AUGUSTUS DE MORGAN. INT International Statistical Congress, 269 Introductory Lecture, 10, 29, 183, 278 TANE, Duchess of Gordon, 2 tl Jephson, 389 Jessel, George, 97, 359 Jevons, Prof, Stanley, 97 Johnson, Prof. Manuel, 138, 191 Julian Calendar, The, 205 TTALEIDOSCOPE, The, 262 J\. Kane, Sir Robert, 168 Kant, 315, 332 Kastner, 75 Kempthorne, 387 Keynes, Kev. T., 3 King, Lady, 89 King's College, 174 Knight, ^tACAOJLY, Rr OX Biographical Works. WILLIAM LAW, Nonjuror and Mystic, a Sketch of his Life, Character, and Opinions. By J. H. OVERTON, M.A. Vicar of Legbourne. 8vo. '5s. JAMES MILL ; a Biography. By A. BAIN, LL.D. Crown 8vo. 5s. JOHN STUAET MILL; a Criticism. With Personal Recollections. By A. BAIN, LL.D. Crown 8vo. 2s. 6d. A DICTIONAEY of GENEEAL BIOGEAPHY. By W. L. K. GATES. Third Edition, with nearly 400 additional Memoirs and Notices. 8vo. '28s. 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INDEX Abbey & Overtoils English Church History 14 Abney's Photography 10 Acton's Modern Cookery 20 Alpine Club Map of Switzerland 17 Guide (The) 17 Amos' 5 Jurisprudence 5 Primer of the Constitution 5 . 50 Years of English Constitution 5 Anderson s Strength of Materials 10 Armstrong's Organic Chemistry 10 Arnold's (Dr. ) Lectures on Modern History 2 Miscellaneous Works 6 Sermons 15 (T. ) English Literature 6 Poetry and Prose ... 6 Arnott's Elements of Physics 9 Atelier (The) du Lys 18 Atherstone Priory 18 Autumn Holidays of a Country Parson ... 7 Ayre's Treasury of Bible Knowledge 20 Bacon's Essays, by Whately 5 Life and Letters, by Spedding ... 5 Works 5 Bagehofs Biographical Studies 4 Economic Studies 21 Literary Studies 6 Bailey s Festus, a Poem 18 Bain's James Mill and J. S. Mill 4 Mental and Moral Science 5 on the Senses and Intellect 5 22 WORKS published by LONGMANS d- CO. Bain's Emotions and Will 5 Baker's Two Works on Ceylon 17 Baits Alpine Guides 17 Baits Elements of Astronomy 10 Barry on Railway Appliances 10 & BramivcllQV. Railways, &c 13 Bauerman's Mineralogy 10 Beaconsfield 's (Lord) Novels and Tales 17 & 18 Speeches i WitandWisdom 6 Becker s Charicles and Gallus 7 Beesly's Gracchi, Marius, and Sulla 3 Binghams Bonaparte Marriages 4 Black's Treatise-on Brewing '20 Blackleys German-English Dictionary 7 Bloxam's Metals 10 Bolland and Langs Aristotle's Politics 5 Boultbee on 39 Articles 15 's History of the English Church... 14 Bourne's Works on the Steam Engine 14 Bawdier' s Family Shakespeare 19 Brabourne's Fairy-Land 18 Higgledy-Piggledy 18 Bramley-Moore s Six Sisters of the Valleys . 1 8 Brande's Diet, of Science, Literature, & Art 1 1 Brasseys British Navy 13 Sunshine and Storm in the East . 17 Voyage in the ' Sunbeam' 17 Bray's Elements of Morality 16 Browne's Exposition of the 39 Articles 15 Browning's Modern England 3 Buckle's History of Civilisation 2 Buckton's Food and Home Cookery 21 Health in the House I2&2I Butts Hints to Mothers 21 Maternal Management of Children. 21 Burgomaster's Family (The) 18 Cabinet Lawyer Calvert's Wife's Manual Capes' s Age of the Antonines Early Roman Empire Carlyles Reminiscences Cates's Biographical Dictionary Cayley's Iliad of Homer Changed Aspects of Unchanged Truths ... Chesney's Waterloo Campaign Christ our Ideal Church's Beginning of the Middle Ages ... Colenso's Pentateuch and Book of Joshua . Commonplace Philosopher Comte's Positive Polity Conder's Handbook to the Bible Conington's Translation of Virgil's ^Eneid . Prose Translation of Virgil's Poems Contanseau's Two French Dictionaries ... Conyleare and Howson's St. Paul Cotta on Rocks, by Laurence Counsel and Comfort from a City Pulpit... Cox's (G. W.) Athenian Empire ^— — — — Crusades » Greeks and Persians Creightons Age of Elizabeth — England a Continental Power — Papacy during the Reformation Shilling History of England ... Tudors and the Reformation Cresy's Encyclopaedia of Civil Engineering Critical Essays of a Country Parson 7 Culley's Handbook of Telegraphy 13 Curteis's Macedonian Empire 3 Davidson's New Testament 14 Dead Shot (The) 19 De Caisne and Le Maoufs Botany u De Tocqueville's Democracy in America... 4 Dewess Life and Letters of St. Paul 15 Dixon's Rural Bird Life , n£i9 Dun's American Farming and Food 21 — Irish Land Tenure 21 Eastlake's Hints on Household Taste ...... 13 Edmonds's Elementary Botany ............... n Ellicott's Scripture Commentaries .......... 15 - Lectures on Life of Christ ...... 15 Elsa and her Vulture ........................... 18 Epochs of Ancient History ..................... 3 -- English History .......... . ....... 3 - Modern History .................. 3 Ewalds History of Israel ..................... 15 - Antiquities of Israel .................. 15 Fairlairris Applications of Iron ............ 13 —— — — — Information for Engineers ...... 13 Mills and Millwork ............... 13 Farrar's Language and Languages ......... 7 Fitzivvgram on Horses ........................ 19 Francis's Fishing Book ........................ 19 Freeman's Historical Geography ............ 2 Froude's Caesar .................................... 4 - English in Ireland .................. I History of England .................. I Short Studies ........................... 6 -- Thomas Carlyle ........................ 4 Gairdners Houses of Lancaster and York 3 Ganot's Elementary Physics .................. 9 Natural Philosophy .................. 9 Gardiner's Buckingham and Charles I. ... 2 — Personal Government of Charles I. 2 — Fall of ditto ........................ 2 — Outline of English History ... 2 - Puritan Resolution ............... 3 - Thirty Years' War ............... 3 -- (Mrs.) French Revolution ...... 3 --- Struggle against Absolute Monarchy ....................................... 3 Goethe's Faust, by Birds ........................ 18 . - bySelss ........................ 18 -- by Webb ..................... 18 Goodeve's Mechanics .............................. 10 - Mechanism ........................... 13 Gore's Electro-Metallurgy ..................... 10 Gospel (The) for the Nineteenth Century . 16 Grant's Ethics of Aristotle ..................... 5 Graver Thoughts of a Country Parson ...... 7 Griffin's Algebra and Trigonometry Grove on Correlation of Physical Forces. Gwilt's Encyclopaedia of Architecture 10 9 13 Hales Fall of the Stuarts ........................ 3 Halliwell-Phillipps s Outlines of Shake- speare's Life .................................... 4 WORKS published by LONGMANS 6- CO. 23 Hartwig 's Works on Natural History, &C IO&II HassaU's Climate of San Remo 17 Haughtori s Physical Geography 10 Hayward's Selected Essays 6 Heer's Primeval World of Switzerland 1 1 Helmholtz ' s Scientific Lectures 9 HerscheTs Outlines of Astronomy 8 Hopkins s Christ the Consoler 16 Horses and Roads 19 Howitfs Visits to Remarkable Places 19 HullaKs History of Modern Music n Transition Period n fiume'sTLssa.ys 6 Treatise on Human Nature..., 6 Ihne's Rome to its Capture by the Gauls... 3 History of Rome 2 Ingelow's Poems 18 Jago's Inorganic Chemistry 12 Jameson s Sacred and Legendary Art 12 Jenkins Electricity and Magnetism 10 Jerrold's Life of Napoleon i Johnson s Normans in Europe 3 Patentee's Manual 21 Johnston s Geographical Dictionary 8 Jukes s New Man 15 Second Death 16 Types of Genesis 15 Kalisch's Bible Studies 15 Commentary on the Bible 15 Path and Goal 5 Keary's Outlines of Primitive Belief 6 Kellers Lake Dwellings of Switzerland.... n KerTs Metallurgy, by Crookes and Rohrig. 14 Landscapes, Churches, &c 7 Latham's English Dictionaries 7 Handbook of English Language 7 Lecky's History of England I European Morals 2 Rationalism 2 Leaders of Public Opinion 4 Leisure Hours in Town 7 Leslies Political and Moral Philosophy ... 6 Lessons of Middle Age 7 Lewes's History of Philosophy 2 Lewis on Authority 6 Liddell and Scoffs Greek-English Lexicons 8 Lindley and Moore's Treasury of Botany ... 20 Lloyd' s Magnetism 9 Wave-Theory of Light 9 Longmans (F. W.) Chess Openings 20 Frederic the Great 3 German Dictionary ... 7 (W.) Edward the Third 2 Lectures on History of England 2 St. Paul's Cathedral 12 London's Encyclopaedia of Agriculture ... 14 ' Gardening... 1 1 & 1 4 . Plants it Luboock's Origin of Civilisation n Ludlow's American War of Independence 3 Lyra Germanica 16 Macalister's Vertebrate Animals ............ 10 Macaulay's (Lord) Essays ..................... I - • -- History of England ... I - Lays, Illus. Edits. ...12 £18 --- • Cheap Edition... 18 --- Life and Letters ........ 4 -- Miscellaneous Writings 6 - Speeches .................. 6 - Works ..................... i ---- Writings, Selections from 6 McCarthy's Epoch of Reform ............... 3 McCulloch's Dictionary of Commerce ...... 8 Macfarren on Musical Harmony ............ 12 Macleod's Economical Philosophy ............ 5 -- Economics for Beginners ......... 21 -- Elements of Banking ............... 21 — : -- Elements of Economics ............ 21 - Theory and Practice of Banking 21 Macnamara's Himalayan Districts ......... 17 Mademoiselle Mori ........................... ... 18 Mahaffy s Classical Greek Literature ...... 3 Marstimaris Life of Havelock ............... 4 Martineau's Christian Life ..................... 16 - Hours of Thought... ............ 16 - - Hymns ....... . ...................... 16 Maunder s Popular Treasuries ................ 20 Maxwell's Theory of Heat ..................... 10 May's History of Democracy .................. I - History of England ..................... i Melville's (Whyte) Novels and Tales ...... 18 Mendelssohn' s Letters ...................... ;.... 4 Merivale's Fall of the Roman Republic ... a - General History of Rome ...... 2 - Roman Triumvirates ............... 3 - Romans under the Empire ...... 2 Merrifield's Arithmetic and Mensuration... 10 Miles on Horse's Foot and Horse Shoeing 19 - on Horse's Teeth and Stables ......... 19 Mill (J.) on the Mind ........................... 4 Mitts (J. S.) Autobiography .................. 4 - Dissertations & Discussions 5 -- Essays on Religion ............ 15 - Hamilton's Philosophy ...... 5 -- Liberty ........................... 5 - Political Economy ............ 5 -- Representative Government 4 -- Subjection of Women ......... 5 -- System of Logic ............... 5 -- Unsettled Questions ......... 5 - Utilitarianism .................. 5 Millard's Grammar of Elocution ............ 7 Miller's Elements of Chemistry ............ 12 - Inorganic Chemistry ............ io&i2 -- Wintering in the Riviera ............ 17 M liner's Country Pleasures .................. ir Mitchells Manual of Assaying ............... 14 Modern Novelist's Library ..................... 18 Monck's Logic .................................... 5 Monsetts Spiritual Songs ........................ 16 Moore's Irish Melodies, Illustrated Edition 12 - Lalla Rookh, Illustrated Edition.. 12 Morris' s Age of Anne ........................... 3 Mozley's Reminiscences of Oriel College... 3 Muller's Chips from a German Workshop. 7 - Hibbert Lectures on Religion ... 16 - Science of Language ............... 7 - 1 — Science of Religion .................. 16 - Selected Essays ..... , ............... 6 WORKS published by LONGMANS d- CO. JVeisononihe Moon 8 Neviles Horses and Riding 19 New Testament (The) Illustrated 12 Newman 's Apologia pro Vita Sua 3 Nicolss Puzzle of Life n Northcott's Lathes & Turning : . . . 13 Oliphanf s In Trust 17 Orsi's Fifty Years' Recollections 4 Our Little Life, by A. K. H. B 7 Overtoils Life, £c. of Law 4 Owen's (R.) Comparative Anatomy and Physiology of Vertebrate Animals 10 ii Experimental Physiology ... 10 . (J.) Evenings with the Skeptics ... 6 Perry's Greek and Roman Sculpture 12 Payeris Industrial Chemistry 13 Pewtners Comprehensive Specifier 20 Piesse's Art of Perfumery 14 Pole's Game of Whist 20 Powells Early England 3 Preece & Sivewright's Telegraphy 10 Present-Day Thoughts 7 Proctor s Astronomical Works 8&9 . Scientific Essays n Public Schools Atlases 8 Rawlinsoris Ancient Egypt 2 Sassanians 2 Recreations of a Country Parson 7 Reeves Cookery and Housekeeping 20 Rey nolds' s Experimental Chemistry 12 Rich's Dictionary of Antiquities 7 Rivers' s Orchard House n Rose Amateur's Guide n Rogers' s Eclipse of Faith and its Defence 15 Rogef s English Thesaurus 7 Ronalds' Fly-Fisher's Entomology 19 Rowleys Rise of the People 3 Settlement of the Constitution ... 3 Rutleys Study of Rocks 10 Samuelson's Roumania 16 Sandars's Justinian's Institutes 5 Sankeys Sparta and Thebes 3 Seaside Musings 7 Scott's Farm Valuer 21 Rents and Purchases 21 Seebohm's Oxford Reformers of 1498 2 Protestant Revolution 3 Sennett's Marine Steam Engine 13 Sewetfs Passing Thoughts on Religion ... 16 Preparation for Communion 16 Private Devotions 16 Stories and Tales 18 Shelley's Workshop Appliances 10 Short's Church History 14 Smith's (Sydney] Wit and Wisdom 6 (Dr. R. A.) Air and Rain 8 — (R. B.)Carthage& the Carthaginians 2 Rome and Carthage 3 (J.) Shipwreck of St. Paul 15 Southey's Poetical Works 19 &= Bowles's Correspondence 4 Stanley s Familiar History of Birds n Steel on Diseases of the Ox 19 Stephen's Ecclesiastical Biography 4 Stonehenge, Dog and Greyhound -.... 19 Stubbs's Early Plantagenets 3 Sunday Afternoons, by A. K. H.B 7 Supernatural Religion 16 Swinburne's Picture Logic 5 TancocKs England during the Wars, 1765-1820 , 3 Tay lor's History of India 2 Ancient and Modern History ... 3 (Jeremy) Works, edited by Eden 16 Text-Books of Science 10 Thomd's Botany 10 Thomson's Laws of Thought 6 Thorpes Quantitative Analysis 10 Thorpe and Muirs Qualitative Analysis ... 10 Three in Norway 16 Thudichum's Annals of Chemical Medicine 12 7W£«YChemical Philosophy 10 ' — Practical Chemistry 12 Todd on Parliamentary Government 2 Trench's Realities of Irish Life 6 Trevelyan's Life of Fox i Trollope's Warden and Barchester Towers 18 Twiss's Law of Nations 5 Tyndall s (Professor) Scientific Works... 9&io Unawares 18 Unwin's Machine Design ic Ure's Arts, Manufactures, and Mines 14 Ville on Artificial Manures 14 Walker on Whist 20 VValpole's History of England i Warburton's Edward the Third 3 Watson's Geometery 10 Watts' s Dictionary of Chemistry 12 Webb's Celestial Objects 8 Weld's Sacred Palmlands 17 Wellington s Life, by Gleig 4 Whately's English i Synonymes 7 Logic and Rhetoric 5 White s Four Gospels in Greek 15 and Riddle's Latin Dictionaries ... 8 Wilcocks's Sea-Fisherman 19 Williams' s Aristotle's Ethics 5 WillicKs Popular Tables 21 Wilsons Studies of Modern Mind 6 Wood' s Works on Natural History 10 Woodward's Geology n Yonge's English-Greek Lexicons 8 Youatt on the Dog and Horse 19 Zeller's Greek Philosophy Sfiottisivoode &> Co. Printers, New-street Square, London. THE UNIVERSITY LIBRARY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SANTA CRUZ SCIENCE LIBRARY This book is due on the last DATE stamped below. AUG 8 REC'D JUL 3 1 1978 .. 50wi-4,'69(J7948s8)2477 3 2106 00229 6280 IB IB