Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- SECTION I FROM 1806 TO 1827
- SECTION II FROM 1827 TO 1831
- SECTION III FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION IV CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION V FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VI CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VII FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION VIII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION IX FROM 1856 TO 1865
- SECTION X CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1856 TO 1866
- SECTION XI FROM 1866 TO 1871
- SECTION XII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1867 TO 1870
- LIST OF WRITINGS
- INDEX
SECTION X - CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1856 TO 1866
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 29 August 2010
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- SECTION I FROM 1806 TO 1827
- SECTION II FROM 1827 TO 1831
- SECTION III FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION IV CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1831 TO 1836
- SECTION V FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VI CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1836 TO 1846
- SECTION VII FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION VIII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1846 TO 1855
- SECTION IX FROM 1856 TO 1865
- SECTION X CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1856 TO 1866
- SECTION XI FROM 1866 TO 1871
- SECTION XII CORRESPONDENCE FROM 1867 TO 1870
- LIST OF WRITINGS
- INDEX
Summary
To Sir John Herschel.
Camden Street, June 8, 1856.
1856
My dear Sir John,—I have long had the idea of a pianoforte in which each set of strings belonging to one note is to communicate with a pipe for resonance; and sometimes I have thought that a spring at the mouth of a pipe struck by a hammer would make a good instrument. In this case we might have various pedals opening and closing the upper end of the pipe. But I never imagined anything so grand as the introduction of a vast force by means of electro-magnetism. I should propose to call your instrument the electro-magnetic whack-row-de-dow.
What is the reason why thirds and sixths, major or minor, are more pleasant to the ear than fourths and fifths, which are consonances of simpler ratio of vibration? Fifths, by themselves, have a certain something which the ear does not like much of, and consecutive fifths we all know are forbidden. But thirds and sixths are very pleasant. If Dr. Smith's theory of beats be true, I almost suspect I spy a way to explain this. But I must get hold of an organ tuner, and learn whether they are actually effective.
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- Memoir of Augustus De MorganWith Selections from His Letters, pp. 287 - 335Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1882