Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PART I BIOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE
- CHAPTER I BIRTH AND PARENTAGE
- Note.—The Clerks of Penicuik and Maxwells of Middlebie
- CHAPTER II GLENLAIR—CHILDHOOD—1831-1841
- CHAPTER III BOYHOOD—1841-1844
- CHAPTER IV ADOLESCENCE—1844-1847
- Note.—Oval and Meloid
- CHAPTER V OPENING MANHOOD—1847-1850
- CHAPTER VI UNDERGRADUATE LIFE AT CAMBRIDGE—1850-1854
- CHAPTER VII BACHELOR-SCHOLAR AND FELLOW OF TRINITY—1854-1856
- CHAPTER VIII ESSAYS AT CAMBRIDGE—1853-1856
- CHAPTER IX DEATH OF HIS FATHER—PROFESSORSHIP AT ABERDEEN—1856-1857
- CHAPTER X ABERDEEN—MARRIAGE—1857-1860
- CHAPTER XI KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON—GLENLAIR—1860-1870
- CHAPTER XII CAMBRIDGE—1871-1879
- CHAPTER XIII ILLNESS AND DEATH—1879
- CHAPTER XIV LAST ESSAYS AT CAMBRIDGE
- PART II CONTRIBUTIONS TO SCIENCE
- PART III POEMS
- INDEX
- Plate section
CHAPTER II - GLENLAIR—CHILDHOOD—1831-1841
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 July 2011
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- Contents
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
- PART I BIOGRAPHICAL OUTLINE
- CHAPTER I BIRTH AND PARENTAGE
- Note.—The Clerks of Penicuik and Maxwells of Middlebie
- CHAPTER II GLENLAIR—CHILDHOOD—1831-1841
- CHAPTER III BOYHOOD—1841-1844
- CHAPTER IV ADOLESCENCE—1844-1847
- Note.—Oval and Meloid
- CHAPTER V OPENING MANHOOD—1847-1850
- CHAPTER VI UNDERGRADUATE LIFE AT CAMBRIDGE—1850-1854
- CHAPTER VII BACHELOR-SCHOLAR AND FELLOW OF TRINITY—1854-1856
- CHAPTER VIII ESSAYS AT CAMBRIDGE—1853-1856
- CHAPTER IX DEATH OF HIS FATHER—PROFESSORSHIP AT ABERDEEN—1856-1857
- CHAPTER X ABERDEEN—MARRIAGE—1857-1860
- CHAPTER XI KING'S COLLEGE, LONDON—GLENLAIR—1860-1870
- CHAPTER XII CAMBRIDGE—1871-1879
- CHAPTER XIII ILLNESS AND DEATH—1879
- CHAPTER XIV LAST ESSAYS AT CAMBRIDGE
- PART II CONTRIBUTIONS TO SCIENCE
- PART III POEMS
- INDEX
- Plate section
Summary
That part of the old estate of Middlebie which remained to the heirs of Maxwell was situate on the right or westward bank of the Water of Orr, or Urr, in Kirkcudbrightshire, about seven miles from Castle-Douglas, the market-town, ten from Dalbeattie, with its granite quarries, and sixteen from Dumfries. It consisted chiefly of the farm of Nether Corsock, and the moorland of Little Mochrum. But, before building, Mr. Clerk Maxwell by exchange and purchases had added other lands to these, including the farm of Upper Glenlair. The site chosen for the house was near to the march of the original estate, where a little moor-burn from the westward falls into the Urr. The two streams contain an angle pointing south-east, opposite the heathery brae which hides the village of Kirkpatrick Durham. There, on a rising ground above the last descent towards the river and the burn, a mansion-house of solid masonry, but of modest dimensions, had been erected. It was built of dark-gray stone, with a pavement and a “louping-on-stane” of granite before the front door. On the southward slope, towards the burn, was a spacious garden-ground and a plantation beyond it, occupying the den or dingle on either side the burn, and coming round to westward of the house and garden, where it ended in a shrubbery, by which the house was approached from the north. On the eastward slope, towards the Water of Urr, was a large undivided meadow for the “kye” and the ponies.
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- The Life of James Clerk MaxwellWith a Selection from his Correspondence and Occasional Writings and a Sketch of his Contributions to Science, pp. 24 - 44Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1882