Normandy Farm. Surplus of cabbages, wants to sell them in Guilford, requires epsom salts
Concerning a Diaghilev project.
Enclosing letter from W. H. Thompson to E. T. Vaughan, [Jun 1885?], and copy of this by S. E. Smith.
Letter of introduction for his nephew who 'is going up to Trinity next month'.
University of Cape Town. Dated 12 June 1922 - Thanks Frazer for his letter of congratulation and apologises for the delay in responding; is sending 'The Andaman Islanders'; is writing articles for journals rather than the large book on Australia he had hoped to publish; worries that [Wilhelm?] Bleek's daughter [Dorothea?] will not publish his work; have 12 students taking the first course in Social Anthropology; has plans for more students and an Anthropological Institute; the news of the death of Dr Rivers came as a shock.
2 Raymond Buildings, Gray's Inn - CL would like WW to review his second volume ['Principles of Geology'] in the Quarterly. 'The part finished contains my whole theory of the continual changes now going in the animate world and the processes by which the state of the same at any given period is communicated, in other words the fossilizing of recent remains'. Reinnard is coming out with a work on the Indian Archipelago in which his facts regarding recent elevation confirm and 'go far beyond' CL's first volume. The medical, literary and law professors at King's College have been well chosen, but the same can not be said for Botany, Zoology and Experimental philosophy.
Royal Observatory Greenwich - The installation of a Photographic Magnetic Observatory at Cambridge 'would be a matter of serious expence and of great trouble'. The Magnetic Observatory at Greenwich 'cost about £500 without instruments. Its use is very good for its purpose'. GA gives a break-down of the personnel costs at Greenwich. He does not think that a magnetic observatory at Cambridge 'would very probably give a single leading idea on this mysterious subject...As regards the results obtained at one isolated place, it is not likely that any could be obtained differing generally in character from those obtained at Greenwich, and there, as you correctly remark, have led to nothing yet. And I cannot conceive that there would be any advantage in adding to the accumulation of existing unproductive observations'. Besides which Cambridge is too near to Greenwich to compare observations, if the proposed observatory was somewhere like Rio Janeiro, GA would look upon the project favourably. Further if there was a Cambridge mathematician deeply engaged in theories of terrestrial magnetism, with the physico-mathematical power of Professor Stokes, 'it might be a sufficient justification of the expence of an observatory that he would have its results ready to his hand'.
Lewisham - Sterling Club, Blakesley's anxiety to leave Trinity, he must go at the same time as Thompson
Trinity College - WW would like RJ 'to look over my recent lucubrations, if you have time to do it carefully' ['Astronomy and General Physics Considered with Reference to Natural Theology', 1833]. WW wants it criticised.
The fine clear weather has improved RJ's health. Provides a testimonial for Mr Pickering who wants to apply for the post of auditor of the Uppingham and Oakham school estates. RJ has 'no news except I am sorry to say that real famine is pressing on parts of Ireland and the West Highlands'.
Trieste. - Condolences on the death of Lady Houghton; they were both very shocked to read the news in the paper. Richard 'has no courage to write' so she has undertaken to do so. Looks back over their long friendship: the help offered to them by the Houghtons when they were 'in trouble', especially to Isobel herself early in their marriage when Richard was in Africa and she was 'lonely and miserable'.
A friend would like to know if the boiled beef immortalised by Hayward in the Quarterly Review can still be obtained from that corner eating-house; general disgust at the doings of Dr Dionysius [Lardner, i.e., elopement with the wife of Richard Heaviside]; 'the moral Blues have turned Private Jackson out of the Reg[imen]t and intend to pay Serg[ean]t [Brunskill's?] fine'
Concerns theory of relativity. Includes copy of a letter from H. Dingle.
Held 17 October 1962; Synge gave an 'Introductory review of electrophoresis in stabilised media'.
Brief correspondence re arrangements; programme; list of participants; manuscript notes.
Part 1: Jamaica. Medical Research Council Tropical Medicine Research Board Subcommittee visit, 13–16 February 1988, Kingston, Jamaica
Part 2: Jamaica. Thirty-Third Commonwealth Caribbean Medical Research Council Meeting, 13–16 April 1988, Kingston, Jamaica. Includes a metal badge
Newhailes, Musselburgh, Midlothian - Thanks him for 'Creation and Evolution in Primitive Cosmogonies'; will go to London after the debate hosted by the Indian Circle of the Over Seas League [between the?] Duchess of Atholl and Sir Ernest Hotson; is attending a meeting of the Central Council tomorrow and lunching with Sir Evelyn Wrench before; is sorry to hear of the death of Sir Alfred Ewing; the Scottish Anthropological Society is publishing the manuscript collection of J. F. Campbell, expected to be 10 vols.; Lord Bute has contributed £150.