“He came to know Swift and Dryden, and after a while Hobbes, and Butler’s ‘Hudibras.’ Then, if his father was in Edinburgh, they walked together, especially on the Saturday half-holiday, and ‘viewed’ Leith Fort, or the preparations for the Granton railway, or the stratification of Salisbury Crags—always learning something new, and winning ideas for imagination to feed upon. One Saturday, February 12, 1842, he had a special treat, being taken ‘to see electro-magnetic machines.’”

And again, speaking of his school-life:—

“But at school also he gradually made his way. He soon discovered that Latin was worth learning, and the Greek Delectus interested him when we got so far. And there were two subjects in which he at once took the foremost place, when he had a fair chance of doing so; these were Scripture Biography and English. In arithmetic as well as in Latin his comparative want of readiness kept him down.

“On the whole he attained a measure of success which helped to secure for him a certain respect; and, however strange he sometimes seemed to his companions, he had three qualities which they could not fail to understand—agile strength of limb, imperturbable courage, and profound good-nature. Professor James Muirhead remembers him as ‘a friendly boy, though never quite amalgamating with the rest.’ And another old class-fellow, the Rev. W. Macfarlane of Lenzie, records the following as his impression:—‘Clerk Maxwell, when he entered the Academy, was somewhat rustic and somewhat eccentric. Boys called him “Dafty,” and used to try to make fun of him. On one occasion I remember he turned with tremendous vigour, with a kind of demonic force, on his tormentors. I think he was let alone after that, and gradually won the respect even of the most thoughtless of his schoolfellows.’”

The first reference to mathematical studies occurs, says Professor Campbell, in a letter to his father written soon after his thirteenth birthday.[6]

“After describing the Virginian Minstrels, and betwixt inquiries after various pets at Glenlair, he remarks, as if it were an ordinary piece of news, ‘I have made a tetrahedron, a dodecahedron, and two other hedrons, whose names I don’t know.’ We had not yet begun geometry, and he had certainly not at this time learnt the definitions in Euclid; yet he had not merely realised the nature of the five regular solids sufficiently to construct them out of pasteboard with approximate accuracy, but had further contrived other symmetrical polyhedra derived from them, specimens of which (as improved in 1848) may be still seen at the Cavendish Laboratory.

“Who first called his attention to the pyramid, cube, etc., I do not know. He may have seen an account of them by chance in a book. But the fact remains that at this early time his fancy, like that of the old Greek geometers, was arrested by these types of complete symmetry; and his imagination so thoroughly mastered them that he proceeded to make them with his own hand. That he himself attached more importance to this moment than the letter indicates is proved by the care with which he has preserved these perishable things, so that they (or those which replaced them in 1848) are still in existence after thirty-seven years.”

The summer holidays were spent at Glenlair. His cousin, Miss Jemima Wedderburn, was with him, and shared his play. Her skilled pencil has left us many amusing pictures of the time, some of which are reproduced by Professor Campbell. There were expeditions and picnics of all sorts, and a new toy known as “the devil on two sticks” afforded infinite amusement. The winter holidays usually found him at Penicuik, or occasionally at Glasgow, with Professor Blackburne or Professor W. Thomson (now Lord Kelvin). In October, 1844, Maxwell was promoted to the rector’s class-room. John Williams, afterwards Archdeacon of Cardigan, a distinguished Baliol man, was rector, and the change was in many ways an important one for Maxwell. He writes to his father: “I like P—— better than B——. We have lots of jokes, and he speaks a great deal, and we have not so much monotonous parsing. In the English Milton is better than the History of Greece....”

P—— was the boys’ nickname for the rector; B—— for Mr. Carmichael, the second master. This[7] is the account of Maxwell’s first interview with the rector:—

Rector: “What part of Galloway do you come from?”