Page:Memoir and correspondence of Caroline Herschel (1876).djvu/111

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
Chap. III.]
Letters from Astronomers.
89

REV. DR. MASKELYNE TO MISS HERSCHEL.

GREENWICH, April 22, 1790.

Dear Miss Herschel,—

***** ***** * * If I misunderstand anything I shall be obliged to you for an explanation. The weather has not permitted me to see anything of the comet yet, but it seems now mending, and I hope to be able to make something of it tomorrow morning. Your second communication, at the same time that it gives me fresh spirits as to the certainty of its being a comet, will certainly assist me in more readily finding it. I feared that your using your new telescope might make that a bright comet to you which might prove but a very faint one, if at all visible, in a common night-glass, which is what we first use to discover a comet with. As soon as I shall have seen it I will send you a line. I sent intelligence of your discovery to M. Mechain, at Paris, last Tuesday, and will send to him your farther communication next Friday. Mr. Maskelyne joins me in best compliments to yourself and Mrs. Herschel, and Dr. Herschel on his return. Dr. Shepherd sent advice of it from me last Tuesday to the Master of Trinity, at Cambridge, who perhaps may convey the agreeable intelligence to your brother.

I remain, dear Miss Herschel,

My worthy sister in astronomy,

Your faithful and obliged humble servant,

N. Maskelyne.

J. DE LA LANDE TO CAROLINE HERSCHEL.

Rue Collège Royal, le 12 Juillet, 1790.

Ma Chere et s'avante Commère,—
J'ai reçu avec la plus délicieuse satisfaction la première