Jump to content

Page:Memoir and correspondence of Caroline Herschel (1876).djvu/194

From Wikisource
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
170
Caroline Lucretia Herschel.
[1823.

P.P.S.—Babbage has had £1,500 granted him by Government to enable him to execute his engine, which is very curious. A report is strongly current of Captain Parry's successful arrival at Valparaiso; it comes in a very probable form.

FROM MISS HERSCHEL TO J. F. W. HERSCHEL.

HANOVER, August 11, 1823.

My dearest Nephew,—

I thank you most heartily for your kind care and punctuality in sending my remittance, and am only sorry to trouble you so often; I might have acknowledged the receipt thereof by the last post, but I wished first to enable myself to give the following information. Johann Wilhelm Pfaff, professor, in Erlangen, is the same who intends to translate your father's papers, but those only which he can get a copy of. The Philosophical Transactions, I am told, are not within his reach. You may depend on my sending you whatever may come out as soon as it makes its appearance.

I can easily imagine how little time you can have to spare for writing to me when once you have entered on that mass of your father's observations contained in his journals, &c. . . . . I think the temporary index (such as it is) will in many instances be of service to you, but I wish to point out here that about the year 1800 there was a change made in the titles of some of the books. The first volume of miscellaneous observations was then called Journal No. 10, &c., . . . . so if the index directs you to January 24th, 1797 M. (for M. read J.) I think a memorandum of this will be found in the cover or beginning of the index, but I am not certain.

You have truly gratified me by sending the inscription of the monument,[1] for such subjects only are capable of inte-
  1. To her brother, in Upton Church, near Slough.