Philosophy consists not
In airy schemes or idle speculations;
The rule and conduct of all social life
Is her great province. Not in lonely cells
Obscure she lurks, but holds her heavenly light
To senators and to kings, to guide their councils,
And teach them to reform and bless mankind.
Thomson.
Full many a storm on this grey head has beat;
And now, on my high station do I stand,
Like the tired watchman in his air-rock’d tower,
Who looketh for the hour of his release.
I’m sick of worldly broils, and fain would rest
With those who war no more.
Joanna Baillie.
In 1864 Sir David Brewster
was appointed President of the Royal Society of Edinburgh, and on taking the
chair he delivered an address, in which he gave some details of the earlier
history of the Society, which were probably unknown to some of the members,
who belonged to a more recent generation than their venerable President; and
which included recollections of early friends and scientific correspondents,
whose letters still remain for future use. I give a few extracts:—
“In the closing years of the last and in the first decade of the present
century, the Society was in a very languid condition. In each of the years
1799, 1802, 1803, 1808, and 1809, only one of the papers read at its
meetings was published in the Transactions; while our Transactions were thus
scantily supplied with papers, those actually read were few in number, and
often too abstruse to excite a general interest.”
It was the storm of geological controversy which was raised between the
followers of Dr. Hutton and his Theory of the Earth, and the Wernerian
school of Geology, which brought new life and animation into the declining
Society. “The rival theories of fire and water were discussed with all the
warmth, I may even say the bitterness, of political or theological
controversy. Vanquished by the superior science of their opponents, the
Wernerians quitted the field, and the Huttonian theory, illustrated by the
eloquence of Professor Playfair, attracted to its study the most
distinguished geologists of other lands, and took a high place among the
natural sciences. ... If geology, as a science, drew its first breath within
our walls, by the active labours of our colleagues, the kindred science of
mineralogy was, at the same time, earnestly studied and greatly advanced.
Mr. Thomas Allan, who possessed one of the finest collections in Scotland,
spared no expense in enriching it with new and rare minerals. In 1808, a
Danish vessel, brought into Leith as a prize, was found to contain a small
collection of minerals, which was purchased by Mr. Allan, and Colonel Imrie,
a Fellow of this Society, and a contributor to its Transactions. Among these
minerals they found a large quantity of cryolite, a substance so .Tare that
at the market price it would have brought £5000. They found also crystals of
gadolinite, sodalite, and a new mineral, to which Dr. Thomson, who analysed
it, gave the name of Allanite.
“These interesting minerals had been collected in Greenland by Mr.
(afterwards Sir Charles) Giesecke, during the mineralogical survey which he
had made of that country between 1805 and 1813, and were shipped by him for
Copenhagen in 1808. Upon his arrival at Hull in 1813, with another and more
valuable collection, he learned the fate of his former specimens, and
immediately proceeded to Edinburgh, where he was hospitably received by Mr.
Allan, Sir George Mackenzie, and other members of this Society. During his
residence here he contributed papers to our Transactions, and acquired so
high a reputation as a mineralogist, that, through the interest of his
friends here, he was appointed to the Chair of Mineralogy in the Royal
Dublin Society.
“While the study of mineralogy was thus greatly promoted by the labours and
liberaiity of Mr. Allan, he had the good fortune, at a later period, to
bring to Edinburgh, and receive under his roof for nearly four years, a
young German, mineralogist of very uncommon acquirements. William Haidinger,
a native of Vienna, who had studied mineralogy at Gratz, under the
celebrated Frederick Mohs, came to Edinburgh in 1823; and resided with Mr.
Allan till 1826, when he returned to Austria, where he prosecuted with
ardour his geological and mineralogical studies, and where he now occupies a
high place in the scientific institutions of Vienna. During his residence in
Edinburgh he published several valuable papers in our Transactions, and
delivered a course of lectures on Crystallography, at which Dr. Edward
Turner and other two friends were the audience. In claiming to have been one
of his pupils at these lectures, I cannot resist the gratification of
claiming him as a pupil in that branch of optics, connected with mineralogy,
which was then ardently studied in every part of Europe. When Mr. Haidinger
returned to Vienna, he prosecuted the study of physical optics with great
zeal and success, and had the good fortune to discover one of the most
beautiful facts in that branch of science. He was the first who observed
that curious property of the eye by which it discovers polarised light, and
even the plane of its polarisation, without any instrument whatever. The
cause of this, remarkable phenomenon, called ‘Haidinger’s brushes,’ has not
been discovered ; but there is reason to believe that it is produced by a
structure in the retina, immediately behind the foramen centrale.”
Sir David either delivered or had read for him an address each of. the few
years that he held his post, and the latter part of each contained very
interesting biographical notices of the members of the. Society deceased
during the past year. He frequently communicated papers, many of them on
subjects connected with the labours and discoveries of long past years. A
few of these which are before me embrace such topics as "the Action of
Uncrystallized Films upon Common and Polarised Light;”—“On the Radiant
Spectrum,” the phenomena of which he discovered and described to the Society
in 1814;—“Observations on the Polarisation of the Atmosphere,” and
“Additional Observations,” which were made at St. Andrews between 1841-45,
where, from some of the experiments in which he so delighted, made in “a
long dark passage running north and south,” he discovered a new “point or
spot in which there is no polarisation,” and to which the French gave the
name of “Brewster’s neutral point“ Report of hourly Meteorological Register,
kept at Leith Fort, in the years 1826-27 —“On the Pressure Cavities in
Topaz, Beryl, and Diamond, and their bearing on Geological Theories —"On the
Structure and Optical Phenomena of Ancient Decomposed Glass”— one of the
beautiful and popular subjects of investigation which many will recollect
enjoying with him; this paper is beautifully illustrated by the late Mrs.
Ward, whose name has been already mentioned as a kind assistant with her
most ready and intelligent pencil. Her charming drawings, correct and
beautiful as they are, cannot do full justice to the strange filmy beauty
which clothes this substance only in decay and death. Afterwards there is a
paper upon the “Motion and Colours of Films of Alcohol, Volatile Oils, and
other Fluids,”— two papers on his favourite study, the “Liquid Films of
Soap-bubbles,” and many others.
During my father’s visit to Parkhill in 1866, an epidemic of whooping-cough
was in the neighbourhood, and two cases occurred in the house; his distress
and anxiety lest his little girl should take the infection were very great,
and a strict quarantine was established. It never struck any one that, while
she was to escape, he himself was to be smitten down,—but so it was; a few
days after his arrival at Belleville, so severe and prostrating a cough
began to tear his delicate frame, that it was quite clear that he must
either have caught real or sympathetic whooping-cough, a complaint which it
turned out he had never had in earlier years. He was very ill, and Lady
Brewster and I were both sent for from different directions. With the
knowledge of the presence of long-standing organic heart-disease, it seemed
as if every paroxysm of coughing must be his last, and slender were our
hopes of his rallying, while he himself was sure that the end was near. The
occasional extreme lowness of pulse, exhaustion, and abhorrence of the
necessary food and stimulants, were most alarming, but his submissive
efforts to take the nourishment on which his life depended were very
touching, and were, under God, the means of his ultimate recovery. During
one day, when he was at the worst, and occupation was impossible, from the
almost unceasing violence of the cough, it was curious to see how his active
mind employed itself in “examining” the laws of the malady, which was so
severe upon him that he would rather, as he said, with his quaint force of
expression, “have been sentenced to ten years of penal servitude he counted
the seconds of intermission, calculated the approach and duration of the
fits of coughing, described clearly his symptoms, and anxiously inquired
into the sensations of one or two other friends who in other parts of the
country had been prostrated in ripe years by apparently the same juvenile
complaint. Just before, he had received the sad intelligence of the death of
his beloved daughter-in-law, Mrs. James Brewster, who sank under protracted
sufferings, borne with the beautiful patience of those who know and love the
skilful Hand which smites and heals.
Notwithstanding these depressing circumstances, my father’s mind was never
brighter, clearer, or more active. A favourite young scientific friend, Mr.
Francis Deas, was staying in the house at the time, and after hours of
fatigue and suffering, it was positive enjoyment to the invalid to make the
little preparations for his visit, which was quite the event of the day.
Believing himself a fast dying man, he left many instructions with Mr. Deas
as to the arrangement of his scientific instruments, etc., and two years
afterwards, when the call really came, it was to this gentleman that he
confided the finishing and reading of a paper for the Royal Society which
weakness prevented him from completing. It was “ On the Motion, Equilibrium,
and Forms of Liquid Films.”
Mr. Deas writes thus to Mrs. Macpherson:—
“Edinburgh, 22d June 1869.
“My dear Friend,—I most gladly comply with your request to send you what
reminiscences I have of Sir David during the three weeks that I spent with
him at Belleville in September 1866.
“He had been ailing for some days, and, as I well remember, he sent for me
to see him in his bedroom the very night I arrived. I found him dressed,
sitting at the table, busy experimenting on a subject which had recently
attracted his attention, and which formed one of the principal matters of
scientific interest with him from that time till his death, viz., the
phenomena displayed by liquid films without sensible gravity. The subject
had been shortly before brought under his notice by an account published in
the Transactions of the Belgian Royal Academy of some experiments of
Professor Plateau. Sir David, while repeating these experiments, had been
led to question the commonly received theory of the cause of the colours of
the soap-bubble. Sir Isaac Newton’s calculations for the various orders of
the colour bands proceeded upon the supposition that the colours were due to
the interference of the rays reflected from the surfaces of the film itself.
Sir David made the discovery (which, although I believe it has been
questioned, has certainly not been refuted), that the colours originated in
minute particles of oily matter floating freely upon the surface of the
film. These experiments engrossed almost his whole time while he was at
Belleville, and formed the substance of three papers which were afterwards
read before the Royal Society of Edinburgh (vide Transactions, vol. xxiv.
part 3, and vol. xxv. part 1). His illness, you know, took the form of a
harassing cough, which at his great age of course severely taxed his
strength'; but his spirit seemed to defy any such restraint, and I think
there was scarcely a day that he was not at his work. I saw him, you will
remember, almost daily, and had a great deal of talk with him, both on
various scientific subjects and those of everyday interest, and I remember I
was struck, more than I ever had been before, by what I think was so
remarkable a part of his character, and doubtless one cause of his eminent
success as a discoverer of truth,—I mean the marvellously keen interest he
showed in every possible thing. I daresay you remember remarking the same to
me long ago, that in driving or walking with him every few yards of the road
presented either something he wished to look at or had something to tell
about.
“I was probably more struck with this peculiarity of his during that visit
than I had been before, because I saw more of him, and tried to amuse him
during his confinement with any subject for talk I could think of. Anyway, I
well remember thinking what a sight it was to see the grand old philosopher,
who had in the truest sense lived through wellnigh a century, during which
he had so diligently and so lovingly gathered in and employed, to the glory
of God and the weal of man, the truth and the beauty which, though lying all
around, it needs the seer’s eye to see, sitting there still at his work,
with all his faculties as perfect as ever, his memory as clear, and his
interest as keen. And touching too, was it not, that at the close of his
long life he should be admiring with the eye of the philosopher those very
beauties of the fleeting soap-bubble which doubtless he had so long before
delighted in with a different but not less intense interest as a child—as
grieved as ever when the bubble broke and scattered its glories jpst as they
reached perfection.
“Another matter of a somewhat different kind which greatly interested him at
that time was the Newton and Pascal correspondence. You may remember that I
remarked to you at the time that I was amazed at the ability with which he
sifted the evidence on that subject, and struck home at the weak points in
his opponent’s armour. It was more like the way an accomplished lawyer might
have been expected to deal with it than one who had never devoted himself to
the art of debating.
“Two little incidents also' occur to my recollection which I may mention, as
I think they were both very characteristic of Sir David. One was his
wakening Lady Brewster, as he afterwards told me, to look at the changes on
a gorgeous film he had been watching for hours. His whole heart was so in
the pursuit of the knowledge of God’s works that he seemed never for a
moment to doubt that any one could but go into raptures like himself over a
thing of beauty, even at untimely seasons.
“The other incident was no less like his own kind beautiful self. I had let
a box of microscopic objects, which had taken me months to prepare, fall
down-stairs, to their utter ruin. He spoke to me so kindly and
sympathisingly, saying it was like the story of Newton’s papers being burnt
by the upsetting of the candle, and so encouraged me that I set to work that
very day to repair the loss.
“If you think this letter can be of any service to Mrs. Gordon, please send
it to her; and if I can contribute anything more that may be thought of
interest about one who always showed such a kindly and considerate interest
in me, it will afford me the greatest pleasure to do so. I owe him at least
this debt of gratitude, that I believe, but for the kindly encouragement and
assistance that—prince of philosophers as he was—he always condescended to
give me in scientific subjects, much of the interest I have in those things
to which he so ardently and lovingly devoted his life might have lain
dormant. —Believe me, ever most truly yours, Francis Deas.”
The complaint gradually subsided, and when he was able to return home it was
with little apparent mischief, except an increased delicacy of the bronchial
tubes.
There was one subject which loomed through half a century of Brewster’s
life, and which to its last months caused him so much-overwhelming anxiety
and distress, that it would be impossible to. write any sort of faithful
memoir of him without at least alluding to it. I refer to what is called
“the Lighthouse Controversy.” For obvious-reasons my sketch of it shall be
as uncontroversial as possible.
There has seldom if ever lived an inventor who stood quite alone in his
invention. One man has generally laid the unseen foundation, another builded
thereupon, while perchance a third has put on the pyramidal headstone which
crowned it with use and glory. Nay, as the builder builds, it is not always
with his own materials. The blessing upon the inventor is still due to him
who in building the edifice of his invention, has the adaptive genius to
utilise the stone, the lime, the lintel, and the beam of some former edifice
scattered unused and uselessly around.
In 1811 Dr. Brewster had busied himself in experimenting upon a form of lens
which was not at that time known in England. This was called Buffon’s lens,
invented by that philosopher while making experiments with the burning
mirror of Archimedes. It consisted "of one piece, in which all the glass was
ground away which was not necessary either for converging rays to a focus,
or throwing them from a focus into a parallel beam.” In 1788, Condorcet, in
his “Hoge de Buffon,” suggested the important improvement upon his lens of
making it of several zones or circles of glass instead of one, or to use his
own words:—“On pourrait meme composer de plusieurs pieces ces loupes a
Echelons; on y gagnerait plus de facility dans la construction, une grande
diminution de depense, l’avantage de pouvoir leur donner plus d’^tendue, et
celui d’employer, suivant le besoin, un nombre de cercles plus ou moins
grand, et d’obtenir ainsi d’un meme instrument differents degrks de force.”
Buffon’s lens was intended for the purposes of heat. It was useless for the
practical purposes of illumination, because “the thickness of the glass at
its central part was so great as either to absorb the light by its colour,
or refract it irregularly by its want of homogeneity and if bad for light,
it was still worse for heat. Condorcet’s “circles” possessed the same
disadvantage, though to a lesser degree, and neither form of lens was ever
executed on a large scale. In 1789 there was, however, an attempt made to
apply lenses combined with mirrors for illuminating the Lower Lighthouse in
the Isle of Portland, which completely failed; and why. Simply because
the invention of a lens fit for practical purposes had not then been made.
In 1811, Dr. Brewster, during the course of experiments to which I have
alluded, invented a lens which he called the “built-up lens.” It was
constructed in zones or “circles,” which, it is true, was suggested by
Condorcet;—although, being unknown to Brewster, even this step was an
independent discovery. But it did not stop there,— each zone of Brewster’s
lens was formed or “built up” of separate segments, and hence it received
the name of the polyzonal lens,—a most important improvement for obviating
the great practical difficulty in the use of lenses for illumination, which
was that of obtaining pure and homogeneous glass in masses sufficiently
lafge. In order to give increased power to his new form of lens, Dr.
Brewster connected it with “ an entirely new lenticular apparatus,
consisting of small lenses and concave and plane reflectors, for
concentrating in one point or focus the light of the sun, or for throwing
into one parallel beam all the rays of light that diverged from that focus
as represented by a lamp.”
Both of these inventions were intended at the time solely for the purposes
of combustion. They were described and published, with clear and correct
engravings, in 1812, in the article “Burning Instruments” in the
Encyclopedia, copies of which were sent to the library of the French
Institute and to M. Biot in 1815. The laws of heat and light being
identical, it would have been passing strange if the easy application of the
new lens and its companion apparatus to illumination, had not soon occurred
to the fertile and practical mind of Brewster. That it did so, and as early
as 1816, when, by his own recollections, he made the proposal of so using it
to Mr. Robert Stevenson, the Engineer of the Scotch Lighthouse Board, is
therefore extremely probable, but as there are no documents directly
establishing this earlier period, it is best to waive it and the following
periods of 1818-19, when, as many believe, he also pressed it upon the
engineer’s attention. There is no doubt, however, that in 1820 he actually
proposed this application of it to Mr. Stevenson. Mr. Alan Stevenson, the
son of the engineer, himself gives this decided date in a pamphlet published
in 1833, in which he says, in reference to lighthouses, “that on the subject
of polyzonal lenses, Doctor, now Sir David, Brewster, the inventor, was
consulted in 1820,” while a statement in a letter from Sir David Brewster to
the chairman of the Board, that he had had frequent communication on this
subject with their engineer in 1820, is recorded in their minutes
uncontradicted.
We are told that at this time “every lighthouse in Europe was fitted up with
hammered parabolic reflectors of plated copper, or with little squares of
silvered glass, combined so as to form the segment of a sphere or a
paraboloid. When a lamp was placed in the focus of these reflectors, its
light was thrown into a widely diverging beam— so attenuated by its
divergence, and by the imperfection of the surfaces which reflected it, that
it ceased to be visible at great distances, and was incapable of penetrating
the fogs so prevalent at sea.” Very different from the “full swelling beam
of light” that might be cast upon the waters by the polyzonal lens and its “
whole light” apparatus. Mr. Stevenson, however, did not feel convinced by
the inventor’s arguments, and again and again his proposals fell to the
ground.
In the meantime an important life of science was springing up in France. On
the 10th of May 1796, Augustin Jean Fresnel was born at Broglie in Normandy.
He was the son of an architect, and he was educated as a civil engineer. In
1814, at the age of eighteen, he is recorded to have asked his uncle the
meaning of the words “Polarisation of Light,”—the explanation struck his
vivid mind, and from thenceforward he made the rapid progress in scientific
attainments which often marks the men of short career. In 1817 he was much
engaged in experiments upon Light; in 1819 he was put upon the French
Lighthouse Committee, and turned his attention to improvements in
illumination; experiments on these were made in 1821, and in 1822 he read
before the Academy of Sciences a memoir on “A New Method of Illuminating
Lighthouses,” describing as inventions of his own not only a polyzonal lens,
but, as it was afterwards called, a holophote or “whole light” apparatus of
lenses and mirrors, to be connected with it, so identically the same as
those described and engraved in the Mncyclopcedia, that it is difficult to
believe that he had not seen the article on Burning Glasses, which had been
in the library of the Institute for six years. That he was an independent
inventor, however, is universally believed, and my father wrote as follows
of him :—
“I have always considered that distinguished philosopher as an independent
inventor of the built-up lens and its relative apparatus, as described by
himself, though I preceded him by many years; and if his friends shall think
it just to assign him a higher place than mine, it will be done with the
delicacy and tenderness which honourable men feel to a rival, and with that
love of truth which his colleagues and mine in the Imperial Institute of
France will not fail to cherish and observe.”
M. Fresnel sent copies of his memoir to Sir David Brewster and Mr.
Stevenson. His invention possessed one great advantage,—it was made in a
country where the clairvoyance necessary for a foresight of success is not
only possessed in a peculiar degree, but is always promptly acted upon. In
1822, therefore, M. Fresnel was made secretary of the French Lighthouse
Board, and in the same year the Tour de Corduan, at the mouth of the
Garonne, was lighted by the polyzonal lens and its attendant
apparatus,—while before his death in 1827, M. Fresnel was a man whom his
nation delighted to honour as the inventor of the life-saving instruments
which guard the rocks and the reefs of the whole French coast. It was
otherwise in England. In 1820 at the latest, the Dioptric apparatus, as the
process of illumination by lenses is called, in distinction to the Catoptric
or reflector system, was proposed for lighthouses by Sir David Brewster,
being exactly the reverse arrangement of the same invention for heat. From
that time, on to 1822, when the success of the same system was shown in
France,—on through fifteen years, while precious lives were being saved in
France, Germany, Russia, and Holland, precious lives were being lost in
Great Britain by the unaccountable dilatoriness of officials, and the
dislike of the nation to “any new thing.” Month after month, year after
year, Sir David Brewster threw himself into the cause with the ardour and
singular persistency of his nature, only to be baffled and buffeted. The
history of these singular and unwearied efforts will still, it is hoped, be
presented to the public, so that it is unnecessary to say more than that
they were not crowned by success until 1835, when the new lighthouse of
Inchkeith was illuminated by the Dioptric lights ; and their triumphant
superiority so completely manifested, that since then all the new
lighthouses of Scotland, England, and Ireland have been fitted up with the
lenticular apparatus, although lighthouses erected previous to 1835 still
send out their old feeble lights, ships struggling beyond their limited
gleams still break upon the rocks, and lives still go down into the great
deep. Sir David Brewster wrote :—
“If the security of life and property at sea is a subject of national
concern, the expense of substituting a combination of lenses and mirrors in
place of reflectors does not merit a moment’s consideration. The saving of
oil and other materials would go a certain length in defraying it, and the
reflectors themselves might find an appropriate application to various
purposes on our coasts, or on ships at sea. Who can look at the Bell-Rock
Lighthouse, erected at the expense of £61,231, without lamenting that so
noble a watch-tower should be still lighted by hammered reflectors, and with
a distinguishing light which science and common sense have equally
condemned? An expenditure of little more than £1000 would make the
lighthouse a rival of the Great Corduan on the coast of France, and carry
its distinctive character over a much wider range of the German Ocean. What
would be said of a great railway company, if, when safer locomotives,
stronger carriages, superior brakes, and surer signals have been invented
and in use, they should introduce them only into their new lines of railway,
and allow the passengers on the old lines to run all the risks of imperfect
and antiquated machinery ?”
Still it was much to accomplish, and the proved superiority of the new to
the old system caused bursts of enthusiastic appreciation even from those
whose prescience had been at fault for so many years. A word of gratitude
from his country might therefore have been expected to the man who invented,
proposed, and almost forced the adoption of the system ; but the new mode of
illumination was and is called the “French system,” the lens impressed with
the name of “Fresnel,” and the Holophote with that of Stevenson. That during
the years before and after the tardy adoption of the Dioptric lights, there
was much of acrimonious and personal spirit cannot be denied, and Brewster’s
undoubted share of- the blame is deeply to be regretted, while those who
loved him best would fain have to remember that he had calmly submitted to
want of justice rather than that he failed in the application for it. But
the desire for a recognition of his services in this noble cause by his
country appeared almost as if it were engraven on his heart, like the name
of Calais on the queenly heart of old. His own intense dread of some day
perishing in the wild waters probably made him still more tenacious of his
glory in being the undoubted means, in some ways at least, of a saving of
life, the amount of which, though it might well be greater, will not be
fully known till the seas of the past and the present give up their dead.
I cannot forbear quoting the following gratifying sentence from the eloquent
Opening Address of Sir Alexander Grant, Bart., my father’s successor as
Principal and Vice-Chancellor of the University of Edinburgh, delivered Nov.
2, 1869:—“Every lighthouse that burns round the shores of the British Empire
is a shining witness to the usefulness of Brewster’s life.”
Government of Great Britain finally refused all recognition of his claims.
Two circumstances are pleasing to recall,—one is, that in his obituary
notice in 1866, before the Royal Society of Edinburgh, of Mr. Alan
Stevenson, all painful recollections were cast to the winds. His eminent
qualifications as civil engineer, author, and classical scholar, are given
their due place, and his death mentioned as that “which a Christian should
die.” The other is that on the 17th of February 1868, the representative of
the Stevenson family made before the Royal Society a few remarks prompted by
good taste and feeling, in which he expressed his cordial sympathy with the
recognition made of their late President’s “numerous and valuable
contributions to science and literature,” and seconded the motion to this
effect. When after his death the tardy recognition of his Lighthouse
services was made in many of the newspapers, it was touching to hear the
weeping remark made from sure knowledge of the hold it had upon his
heart:—“0 that he could have read that ! How pleased he would have been!”
The names of many eminent men, and their opinions upon this subject, all
favourable to my father’s claims, are in print before me; such as Sir
William Snow Harris, Sir John Herschel, Sir William Thomson, Lord de Mauley,
Professor Fuller, and others ; and I may be forgiven for inserting the
following valuable opinions, as well as an unpublished letter from Lord
Brougham to Lord Palmerston :—
“Opinion of Dr. Lyon Playfair, C.B., F.R.S., Professor of Chemistry in the
University of Edinburgh; and P. G. Tait, M.A., F.R.S.E., etc., Professor of
Natural Philosophy in the University of Edinburgh.
“We have examined the written and printed documents (connected with
Lighthouse Illumination) which you submitted to us, and we are of opinion
that they completely justify the following statements :—
“1. That in 1812 you suggested an important improvement on the lens of
Buffon and Condorcet, such as, in fact, rendered it (for the first time)
capable of being constructed. Neither Buffon’s original device, nor the
further improvement of Condorcet, could possibly have been executed on a
large scale.
“2. That in the same year, you described the Dioptric Apparatus, by which
the whole of a beam of light, parallel or diverging, can be thrown into a
beam converging or parallel, constituting what has been called the
Holophote.
“3. There is complete documentary evidence, that certainly in 1820, and
probably even as early as 1816, you pressed on the Engineer of the Scottish
Board the adoption of a Dioptric system, based on your new form of Polyzonal
Lens. Fresnel’s suggestion of the same improved form of lens, and of the
same Holophote apparatus, did not appear till 1822.
“4. The more perfect form of Holophote is also your invention, and was not
known to Fresnel.
“5. Apart altogether from the question of priority, there is no doubt
whatever that it was by your persistent and unaided efforts (especially in
obtaining, through Mr. Hume, a Committee of the House of Commons, after all
other means had failed) that the Dioptric system was at last, in spite of
long-continued opposition, tardily introduced in Britain.
“We have kept to the main facts, about which the evidence is so clear that
we consider it scarcely possible for any candid mind, upon being made
acquainted with it, to hesitate to give you, not only the full credit of
long priority, but also the merit of having, as it were, forced this
inestimable boon upon the" country.
“Lyon Playfair.
“ To Sir David Brewster, K.H.” P* Guthrie Tait-
“At a Meeting of the Council of the Inventors’ Institute, held on the 30th
day of June 1864, Peter William Barlow, Esq., F.R.S., in the chair : After
hearing a Report from a Committee appointed to investigate the evidence upon
the subject, it was agreed—
“1. That in the year 1811 Sir David Brewster, adopting, as he admits, from
Buffon a suggestion of a new form of lens, invented a mode of building up
this lens in segments, which for the first time made it capable of
construction.
“2. That in the years 1811 and 1812 Sir D. Brewster invented and described
an apparatus for burning purposes, consisting of a combination of this
built-up lens with a spherical reflector behind, and small lenses and plane
mirrors distributed around the focus, by which the whole of a beam of light,
parallel or diverging, can be thrown into a beam converging or parallel.
“3. That all men of science must have been fully aware, even at that time,
of the identity of its effects when applied to rays of light instead of rays
of heat.
“4. That this combination, afterwards called a Holophote, embodied the
fundamental features and principles of the most perfect optical apparatus
for lighthouses now in use.
“5. That the application of this combination, as peculiarly adapted for
lighthouse purposes, was suggested by Sir D. Brewster to the Engineer of the
Scottish Lighthouse Board'as early as the year 1820, and probably much
before that time.
“6. That in the year 1822 M. Fresnel applied the built-up lens of Sir D.
Brewster in combination with plane mirrors to the construction of an
apparatus for the illumination of one of the French lighthouses.
“7. That this apparatus of M. Fresnel did not involve the principle of the
Holophote, nor was its application to it suggested by him.
“8. That from the year 1820, till its final adoption and completion in a
Scottish lighthouse in 1836, Sir D. Brewster, by his personal exertions and
by his writings, laboured strenuously to obtain the introduction of the
Holophotal system into British lighthouses, and that it was owing to his
persevering efforts in the face of much opposition that its introduction was
finally effected.
Peter W. Barlow, F.R.S., H. B. Farington.
Chairman. R. Marsden Latham.
James Glaisher, F.R.S. Gerard B. Finch, M.A.,
J. H. Selwyn, Captn. R.N. Hon. Secretary.
Hume Williams. Robt. Richardson, C.E.
J. S. Lillie, Kt. C.B. (Lord) Richard Grosvenor,
Benj. Burleigh, C.E. M.P.”
Cornelius Varley.
“I have not the books in which your invention was published, but I remember
distinctly reading the article in the Edinburgh Encyclopaedia when it
appeared (1812), and appreciating at once its importance for lighthouses. I
felt this the more strongly, because at that time there stood in Howth a
lighthouse (now demolished) provided with solid lenses, which were so thick
at the centre that they did not transmit one half of the incident light.
This was a case that seemed to challenge the trial of your invention, for it
would at once have removed that defect. That such trial was not made will
surprise none who are familiar with the history of invention.—Believe me,
etc.,
“T. R. Robinson.
“Observatory, Armagh, Feby. 2, 1865.”
“2 August 1859.
“My dear Palmerston,—As I expect to leave London to-morrow early, I have no
prospect of seeing you before I go. But there is a subject on which we had
so little time on Saturday, that I omitted to mention it, though it is
really one of importance and of interest to scientific men and to the public
at large.
“I mean Sir David Brewster’s great services, and the value to the country of
his useful invention of Dioptric Lights, by which an incalculable number of
lives have been saved in the prevention of shipwrecks. My opinion, very
decidedly, is that the country which most properly showed its gratitude, and
its sense of valuable services in the case of Sir William Snow Harris’s
conducting rods, would be most unjust were it to pass over Sir D.
Brewster’s.
“I need not remind you of the great scientific eminence of Sir D. B. He is,
in fact, at the [head] of our men of science for the originality of his
researches, and the importance of his discoveries. But the matter now under
consideration refers to a happy and most successful invention in practice,
though founded on scientific principles. —Believe me ever most truly yours,
H. Brougham.”
In the meantime the strength of life was waning, though with a merciful and
gentle decrease. In the spring of 1867, my father for the first time lost
his consciousness in a fainting fit which came upon him when in a class-room
of the University in Edinburgh; assistance was at hand, and he soon rallied,
so much so that, when he came to see me half-an-hour after, he walked
up-stairs as firmly and conversed as cheerfully as if nothing had happened.
When with him at Belleville in September there seemed little change ; and
when he left it to go to the British Association at Dundee, it was with all
the want of precaution of a young and strong man. No entreaty would make him
attend to the taking of food or rest, which might have helped him to undergo
the journey more easily, and to have been more fit for the fatigues which
awaited him. The heated and crowded assembly of 2000 persons, held in the
Kinnaird Hall, was too much for him, almost immediately after the hurried
journey. He fainted away again, and was longer in recovering than on the
preceding occasion. Again he rallied, however, and was soon able to reassure
Lady Brewster by writing a playful account of his horror when he became
conscious of cold water, and hands kindly divesting him of his neckcloth.
After a day or two of rest, under the kind care of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Baxter of Hazel Hall, whose guest he was, he recovered sufficiently to be
present as usual at his own Section A (Mathematics and Physical Sciences),
where he read papers on the Colours of Soap-bubbles, on the Eadiant
Spectrum, on Enamel Photography, and on the Alleged Correspondence between
Pascal and Newton.
Professor Balfour, the eminent botanist, one of the Secretaries of the Eoyal
Society of Edinburgh, and the son of an early friend of my father, gives me
the following notes:—“ We were glad to have Sir David Brewster at the Dundee
meeting of the British Association, as a noble advocate of Bible truth in
opposition to the scepticism of the men of science of the present day. To
see a philosopher like him, of worldwide reputation, vindicating the
inspiration of God’s Word, and humbly receiving the truth in the love of it,
was most encouraging, though we did not know that it was to be his last
appearance amongst us,—the meeting at Dundee having laid the foundation of
his last illness. I was on the platform when Sir David came into the crowded
hall, after a most fatiguing journey, and sat down beside me. We shook hands
and spoke as usual, but on looking at him shortly after I saw a change on
his countenance and a shaking of the frame, which indicated faintness. He
fell into my arms, and was gently laid down on the platform, means being
used to revive him ; he was then carried to a back room, where many of his
Edinburgh friends (medical and others) rallied round him. He recovered
gradually, and was glad to see so many known faces. When he had sufficiently
recruited, he wished to go back to the room to hear the Duke of Buccleuch’s
address (as President), but his medical friends prevented him. After a time
I got him conveyed in a cab to my friend Dr. Gibson’s house, where I
remained till I got him comfortably settled for the night.
When sitting by him he pressed my hand, and expressed his thankfulness for
the mercies he had experienced, and for the kind attentions paid to him. I
committed him to Br. Gibson, and, when departing for the night, I could not
but remark the tender and affectionate manner in which he took leave of me.
He thoughtfully sent me money to pay for the cab, which he refers to in the
following brief but characteristic note :—
“Allerly, Sept. 14, 1867.
“Dear Professor Balfour,—I enclose some stamps in return for a small part of
my debt to you ; but I know of no stamp or coin by which I can repay the
great attention and kindness I received from you at Bundee.—I am, ever most
truly yours,
“D. Brewster.
“After the Dundee meeting, I spent a day at Rossie Priory (Lord Kinnaird’s)
with some of the scientific men. Sir Charles Wheatstone was there, and told
me that Sir David Brewster had gone up to him frankly at Dundee, saying, ‘We
have had much disagreeable discussion together, but I hope it is all
forgotten now;' upon which they shook hands cordially. In repeating the
anecdote to me, Sir Charles said, ‘Bo you really think he was sincere?5 and
I could not resist the prompt answer, ‘You may trust Sir David for that.'
“Sir David afterwards proposed to the Council of the Royal Society of
Edinburgh that Sir Charles should be elected an Honorary Fellow. His conduct
in this instance contrasted well with his reluctance some years before with
regard to another honour which was proposed (though not pressed) for
Wheatstone, and showed a softening of the heart which was very marked, and
which could only be traced to the power of the Spirit.—Believe me, yours
most sincerely,
“J. H. Balfour.
“Inverleith Row, October 27.”
Although apparently well again, he was glad to give up other intended visits
after the Association, and to hasten to his own home, which he never again
left. It was not, however, to entire rest and quiet that he at first
returned. One other public conflict begun before the Dundee meeting yet
awaited him. I refer to the part he took about the forged correspondence
between Pascal and Newton, which, if true, would have tarnished the fame of
his noble and beloved master, and broken the shrine of seventy years5
fervent admiration.
The discovery and establishment of the great law of universal gravitation,
which was the foundation of the celebrated Principia, were partly, it is
true, suggested by other minds, especially by Hooke and Cassini, which
Newton always frankly acknowledged; but these letters, if true, would have
branded the noble-minded philosopher with having fraudulently concealed that
these suggestions and others had been made to him long before by Pascal.
“Newton(g) depossed" was the heading of the first announcement of this
curious “fact,” which, if a “stubborn” one, would have been highly
gratifying to the French nation, one of whose scientific representatives I
had frankly confessed “that no Frenchman can reflect without an aching heart
on the small participation of his own country in the remarkable achievement
of the discovery of universal gravitation.”
The most noteworthy parts of these documents consisted in a French
correspondence between Pascal and Newton, when the latter was a boy of
twelve years old, in which the discovery of gravitation by Pascal, is
clearly announced. These were read before the Institute, and published in
Les Comptes Rendus by M. Chasles, a French geometer and scientific historian
of such undoubted character for rectitude, that even those who felt most
sure of the forgery never attributed it to him. As the biographer of Newton,
and the only living person who had examined his literary remains, it was
natural and appropriate that Sir David Brewster should again come forward as
the champion of the illustrious dead. That he did so with the zeal and
entireness of his character, and with the energy so seldom possessed at
eighty-six, was only to be expected, and these qualities contrasted strongly
but pleasantly with the flippancies which were opposed from unexpected
quarters to his intense earnestness. His acute discrimination seized at once
on many points, which may be said to have proved the forgeries. Some of them
may be stated thus:—
1. That there was no mention of Pascal in any correspondence of Newton.
2. So far from being a precocious boy, Newton was a juvenile idler, and when
his mind did begin to work it was entirely on mechanical objects ; he
himself having recorded that his first and rather clumsy scientific
experiment was made when he was sixteen, namely, jumping first in one
direction and then in the other in a storm, and by the measurement of both
leaps, which he compared with the same leap in a calm day, he computed the
force of the gale.
3. That Newton never wrote in French—a not uncommon circumstance in the
history of John Bull,—but wrote in Latin to foreign savans, while it also
came out that he was unable to read French without a dictionary at the age
of thirty-one.
4. That Newton’s mother, whose maiden name was Hannah Ays-cough, and who
married Mr. Smith when her son was four years old, is represented, as
signing her name when he was twelve years of age as “Miss Anne Ascough
Newton”.
5. That it would not have been like Newton’s English mind and English pen to
have professed himself “ eternally grateful” even to Pascal for scientific
favours, while another correspondent pointed out the amusing idea of an
English boy writing of Sir Kenelm Digby as “le Chevalier D’lgby ”!
6. That the handwriting of the ms., of which M. Chasles sent a photograph to
Sir David, bore not the least resemblance to the well-known autograph and
mode of signature—specimens of which were sent by Lord Portsmouth and Lady
Macclesfield for the purpose of comparison.
7. That Dr. Robertson, the Scottish Historian, who flourishes in the
correspondence as having been in Paris, writing in excellent French and
addressing his correspondent as “mon tres Honorable,” has not left a single
document from which it could be gathered that he was ever out of Great
Britain, could write a line of French, or was in the least interested in
Newton.
One name that occurred frequently in connection with these documents was
that of M. Desmaizeaux, a contemporary of Newton, and a man of whose
character for probity there seem certainly to have been two opinions; upon
this man, in his eagerness to demonstrate the forgery, Sir David Brewster
rather immaturely fixed as the forger, overlooking the obvious inference
that a man who like Desmaizeaux was “half an Englishman,” and who had lived
fifty-three years in England, would never have committed or allowed to pass
such obvious and ludicrous Gallicisms in letters professing to be written by
English letter-writers in a difficult and foreign tongue.
As these and other arguments and attacks appeared in the public papers,
other and more astonishing statements were successively produced. Galileo
complains of “weak eyes” in a letter, purporting to be written by his own
hand, three years after his total loss of sight. A correspondence, also in
French, was brought forward, said to have passed between James n. and
Newton, the object of the Royal letters being entirely to extol Pascal,
whose scientific discoveries made him oblivious of his various heretical
peccadilloes. One of these letters is written to Newton a few days after he
left his throne, a fact announced in the meekest terms, adding that he
forgets and forgives the behaviour of Newton and the rest of his rebellious
subjects! Louis xviii. and an English Queen or two also dash into the
subject, but all unite in the scientific glorification of Pascal.
It will never be forgotten, in connection with this singular episode, how
many distinguished Frenchmen came forward to rebut these accusations against
Newton, especially M. Leverrier and M. Prosper Faugere, the latter of whom
had in 1844 published in full the Pensees of Pascal; he demonstrated the
want of scientific probability, inasmuch as Pascal had barely been convinced
of the motion of the earth, and as one well qualified to judge of Pascal’s
handwriting, he pointed out the entire dissimilarity. Although this subject
has been entirely dropped in England, it has been again and again mooted in
France, and in its Institute, where M. Chasles still continued his singular
refusal to give up the source of these documents, his belief in which was
the only hold they had over the French mind. The conclusion of this story is
now a matter of history. M. Chasles at last consented to disclose the name
of the man from whom he had received the Pascal-Newton papers; and, as it
now appears, of a large number of other mss. of ancient personages of
note,—amongst them Columbus, Joan of Arc, Petrarch, Charlemagne, Julius
Caesar, etc. etc., for which he had paid the enormous sum of ,£6000. The
police watched this unfortunate individual, whose chief haunt turned out to
be the Imperial Libraries, his chief occupation copying old mss., and the
chief furniture in his room chemical compounds and brown and yellow dyes !
He made confession of his guilt, and is in prison awaiting his trial. And so
ends this singular episode, which caused much pain to Brewster, who to the
very last was peculiarly one whose life was instinct with:
“ . . . the conscious nerve
Within the human breast,
That from the rash and careless hand
Shrinks and retires distrest.
The pressure rude, the touch severe,
Will raise within the mind
A nameless thrill, a secret tear,
A torture undefined.”
But it is pleasant to remember that he went straight from this controversy
into the gathering Silences, from whose cool calm shades came the whisper,
“I die at peace with all the world.” |