that you are extremely well. That I may yet often hear the same, wishes your most affectionate aunt,
Car. Herschel.
P.S.—[To Lady Herschel] My knowing so well to what noble purposes an experimental philosopher may use his fortune, it would make me very un- happy if my dear nephew was cramped in his. And if I could do any good by relinquishing my annuity I would leave Hanover and live on my pension in the country most willingly, and am only sorry that 1 have no other means of showing the care and affection I have for my dear nephew. But I beg no other notice may be taken of all I have written than often—when my nephew or yourself cannot write—to inform me by the hand of Miss B——— of all your joys and sorrows, that I may, though at this distance, sympathise with the same.
If my nephew cannot be easily supplied with the Berliner Jahrbuch, I beg he will let me know, for I have got them by me, and can send them by the messenger in January. *****
FROM J. F. W. HERSCHEL TO MISS HERSCHEL.
LONDON, December 1824.