His father was unwell in the Christmas vacation of that year, and he could not return to Cambridge at the beginning of the Lent term. “My steps,” he writes[20] to C. J. Munro from Edinburgh, February 19th, 1855, “will be no more by the reedy and crooked till Easter term.... I should like to know how many kept bacalaurean weeks go to each of these terms, and when they begin and end. Overhaul the Calendar, and when found make note of.”
He was back in Cambridge for the May term, working at the motion of fluids and at his colour-top. A paper on “Experiments on Colour as Perceived by the Eye” was communicated to the Royal Society of Edinburgh on March 19th, 1855. The experiments were shown to the Cambridge Philosophical Society in May following, and the results are thus described in two letters[21] to his father, Saturday, May 5th, 1855:
“The Royal Society have been very considerate in sending me my paper on ‘Colours’ just when I wanted it for the Philosophical here. I am to let them see the tricks on Monday evening, and I have been there preparing their experiments in the gaslight. There is to be a meeting in my rooms to-night to discuss Adam Smith’s ‘Theory of Moral Sentiments,’ so I must clear up my litter presently. I am working away at electricity again, and have been working my way into the views of heavy German writers. It takes a long time to reduce to order all the notions one gets from these men, but I hope to see my way through the subject and arrive at something intelligible in the way of a theory....
“The colour trick came off on Monday, 7th. I had the proof-sheets of my paper, and was going to read; but I changed my mind and talked instead, which was more to the purpose. There were sundry men who thought that blue and yellow make green, so I had to undeceive them. I have got Hay’s book of colours out of the Univ. Library, and am working through the specimens, matching them with the top. I have a new trick of stretching the string horizontally above the top, so as to touch the upper part of the axis. The motion of the axis sets the string a-vibrating in the same time with the revolutions of the top, and the colours are seen in the haze produced by the vibration. Thomson has been spinning the top, and he finds my diagram of colours agrees with his experiments, but he doubts about browns, what is their composition. I have got colcothar brown, and can make white with it, and blue and green; also, by mixing red with a little blue and green and a great deal of black, I can match colcothar exactly.
“I have been perfecting my instrument for looking into the eye. Ware has a little beast like old Ask, which sits quite steady and seems to like being looked at, and I have got several men who have large pupils and do not wish to let me look in. I have seen the image of the candle distinctly in all the eyes I have tried, and the veins of the retina were visible in some; but the dogs’ eyes showed all the ramifications of veins, with glorious blue and green network, so that you might copy down everything. I have shown lots of men the image in my own eye by shutting off the light till the pupil dilated and then letting it on.
“I am reading Electricity and working at Fluid Motion, and have got out the condition of a fluid being able to flow the same way for a length of time and not wriggle about.”
The British Association met at Glasgow in September, 1855, and Maxwell was present, and showed his colour-top at Professor Ramsay’s house to some of those interested. Letters[22] to his father about this time describe some of the events of the meeting and his own plans for the term.
“We had a paper from Brewster on ‘The theory of three colours in the spectrum,’ in which he treated Whewell with philosophic pity, commending him to the care of Prof. Wartman of Geneva, who was considered the greatest authority in cases of his kind—cases, in fact, of colour-blindness. Whewell was in the room, but went out and avoided the quarrel; and Stokes made a few remarks, stating the case not only clearly but courteously. However, Brewster did not seem to see that Stokes admitted his experiments to be correct, and the newspapers represented Stokes as calling in question the accuracy of the experiments.
“I am getting my electrical mathematics into shape, and I see through some parts which were rather hazy before; but I do not find very much time for it at present, because I am reading about heat and fluids, so as not to tell lies in my lectures. I got a note from the Society of Arts about the platometer, awarding thanks and offering to defray the expenses to the extent of £10, on the machine being produced in working order. When I have arranged it in my head, I intend to write to James Bryson about it.
“I got a long letter from Thomson about colours and electricity. He is beginning to believe in my theory about all colours being capable of reference to three standard ones, and he is very glad that I should poach on his electrical preserves.