Nor ought the obliging agency of the Count de Knuth, the Minister of Foreign Affairs, to be pa.s.sed without notice. The slightest indifference on his part, even the usual delays of office, would have prevented the application from reaching the king before the expiration of the twelvemonth within which all claims must, by the regulations, be presented. No one can reflect upon the pressure of business which must have existed in the foreign office at Copenhagen during the past year, without feeling that the Count de Knuth must largely share his sovereign"s zeal for science, as well as his love of justice. Nothing else will account for the attention bestowed at such a political crisis on an affair of this kind. The same attention appears to have been given to the subject by his successor, Count Moltka.
It was quite fortunate for the success of the application that the office of charge d"affaires of the United States at Copenhagen happened to be filled by a gentleman disposed to give it his prompt and persevering support. A matter of this kind, of course, lay without the province of his official duties. But no subject officially committed to him by the instructions of his government could have been more zealously pursued. On the very day on which my communication of the 8th of August reached him, Mr. Fleniken addressed his letters to the minister of foreign affairs and to the king, and he continued to give his attention to the subject till the object was happily effected, and the medal placed in his hands.
The event itself, however insignificant in the great world of politics and business, is one of pleasing interest to the friends of American science, and it has been thought proper that the following record of it should be preserved in a permanent form. I have regretted the frequent recurrence of my own name in the correspondence, and have suppressed several letters of my own which could be spared, without rendering less intelligible the communications of the other parties, to whom the interest and merit of the transaction belong.
EDWARD EVERETT.
CAMBRIDGE, 1st February, 1849.
CORRESPONDENCE
HON. WILLIAM MITCh.e.l.l TO WILLIAM C. BOND, ESQ., CAMBRIDGE.
"Nantucket, 10 mo. 3d, 1847.
"MY DEAR FRIEND: I write now merely to say that Maria discovered a telescopic comet at half-past ten on the evening of the first instant, at that hour nearly vertical above Polaris five degrees. Last evening it had advanced westwardly; this evening still further, and nearing the pole. It does not bear illumination, but Maria has obtained its right ascension and declination, and will not suffer me to announce it. Pray tell me whether it is one of George"s; if not, whether it has been seen by anybody. Maria supposes it may be an old story. If quite convenient, just drop a line to her; it will oblige me much. I expect to leave home in a day or two, and shall be in Boston next week, and I would like to have her hear from you before I can meet you. I hope it will not give thee much trouble amidst thy close engagements.
"Our regards are to all of you, most truly,
"WILLIAM MITCh.e.l.l."
HON. EDWARD EVERETT TO HON. WILLIAM MITCh.e.l.l.
"Cambridge, 10th January, 1848.
"DEAR SIR: I take the liberty to inquire of you whether any steps have been taken by you, on behalf of your daughter, by way of claiming the medal of the king of Denmark for the first discovery of a telescopic comet. The regulations require that information of the discovery should be transmitted by the next mail to Mr. Airy, the Astronomer Royal, if the discovery is made elsewhere than on the continent of Europe. If made in the United States, I understand from Mr. Schumacher that information may be sent to the Danish minister at Washington, who will forward it to Mr. Airy,--but it must be sent by next mail.
"In consequence of non-compliance with these regulations, Mr. George Bond has on one occasion lost the medal. I trust this may not be the case with Miss Mitch.e.l.l.
"I am, dear sir, with much respect, faithfully yours,
"EDWARD EVERETT."
EXTRACT FROM A LETTER OF THE HON. WILLIAM MITCh.e.l.l TO HON. EDWARD EVERETT.
"Nantucket, 1st mo. 15th, 1848.
"ESTEEMED FRIEND: Thy kind letter of the 10th instant reached me duly.
No steps were taken by my daughter in claim of the medal of the Danish king. On the night of the discovery, I was fully satisfied that it was a comet from its location, though its real motion at this time was so nearly opposite to that of the earth (the two bodies approaching each other) that its apparent motion was scarcely appreciable. I urged very strongly that it should be published immediately, but she resisted it as strongly, though she could but acknowledge her conviction that it was a comet. She remarked to me, "If it is a new comet, our friends, the Bonds, have seen it. It may be an old one, so far as relates to the discovery, and one which we have not followed." She consented, however, that I should write to William C. Bond, which I did by the first mail that left the island after the discovery. This letter did not reach my friend till the 6th or 7th, having been somewhat delayed here and also in the post-office at Cambridge.
"Referring to my journal I find these words: "Maria will not consent to have me announce it as an original discovery."
"The stipulations of His Majesty have, therefore, not been complied with, and the peculiar circ.u.mstances of the case, her s.e.x, and isolated position, may not be sufficient to justify a suspension of the rules.
Nevertheless, it would gratify me that the generous monarch should know that there is a love of science even in this to him remote corner of the earth. "I am thine, my dear friend, most truly,
"WILLIAM MITCh.e.l.l."
HON. EDWARD EVERETT TO PROFESSOR SCHUMACHER, AT ALTONA.
"Cambridge, 15th January, 1848.
"DEAR SIR: Your letter of the 27th October, accompanying the "Planeten-Circular," reached me but a few days since. If you would be so good as to forward to the care of John Miller, Esq., 26 Henrietta street, Covent Garden, London, any letter you may do me the favor to write to me, it would reach me promptly.
"The regulations relative to the king of Denmark"s medal have not hitherto been understood in this country. I shall take care to give publicity to them. Not only has Mr. Bond lost the medal to which you think he would have been ent.i.tled, [Footnote: Mr. Schumacher had remarked to me, in his letter of the 27th of October, that Mr. George P.
Bond would have received the medal for the comet first seen by him as a nebulous object on the 18th of February, 1846, if his observation made at that time had been communicated, according to the regulations, to the trustees of the medal.] but I fear the same has happened to Miss Mitch.e.l.l, of Nantucket, who discovered the comet of last October on the first day of that month. I think it was not seen in Europe till the third.
"I remain, dear sir, with great respect, faithfully yours,
"EDWARD EVERETT."
HON. EDWARD EVERETT TO HON. WILLIAM MITCh.e.l.l.
"Cambridge, 18th January, 1848.
"DEAR SIR: I have your esteemed favor of the 15th, which reached me this day. I am fearful that the rigor deemed necessary in enforcing the regulations relative to the king of Denmark"s prize may prevent your daughter from receiving it. I learn from Mr. Schumacher"s letter, that, besides Mr. George Bond, Dr. Bremeker lost the medal because he allowed a single post-day to pa.s.s before he announced his discovery. There could, in his case, be no difficulty in establishing the fact of his priority, nor any doubt of the good faith with which it was a.s.serted.
But inasmuch as Miss Mitch.e.l.l"s discovery was actually made known to Mr.
Bond by the next mail which left your island, it is possible--barely possible--that this may be considered as a substantial compliance with the regulation. At any rate, it is worth trying; and if we can do no more we can establish the lady"s claim to all the credit of the prior discovery. I shall therefore apply to Mr. Bond for the letter which you wrote, and if it contains nothing improper to be seen by others we will forward it to the Danish minister at Washington with a certified extract from your journal. I will have a certified copy of all these papers prepared and sent to Mr. Schumacher; and if any departure from the letter of the regulations is admissible, this would seem to be a case for it. I trust Miss Mitch.e.l.l"s retiring disposition will not lead her to oppose the taking of these steps.
"I am, dear sir, with great respect, faithfully yours,
[Signed] "EDWARD EVERETT."
POSTSCRIPT TO MR. EVERETT"S LETTER TO PROFESSOR SCHUMACHER OF THE 15TH JANUARY, 1848.
"P.S.--The foregoing was written to go by the steamer of the 15th, but was a few hours too late. I have since received some information in reference to the comet of October which leads me to hope that you may feel it in your power to award the medal to Miss Maria Mitch.e.l.l. Miss Mitch.e.l.l saw the comet at half-past ten o"clock on the evening of October 1st. Her father, a skilful astronomer, made an entry in his journal to that effect. On the third day of October he wrote a letter to Mr. Bond, the director of our observatory, announcing the discovery.
This letter was despatched the following day, being the first post-day after the discovery of the comet. This letter I transmit to you, together with letters from Mr. Mitch.e.l.l and Mr. Bond to myself.
Nantucket, as you are probably aware, is a small, secluded island, lying off the extreme point of the coast of Ma.s.sachusetts. Mr. Mitch.e.l.l is a member of the executive council of Ma.s.sachusetts and a most respectable person.
"As the claimant is a young lady of great diffidence, the place a retired island, remote from all the high-roads of communication; as the conditions have not been well understood in this country; and especially as there was a substantial compliance with them--I hope His Majesty may think Miss Maria Mitch.e.l.l ent.i.tled to the medal.
"Cambridge, 24th January, 1848.
EXTRACT FROM A LETTER FROM MR. EVERETT TO CAPTAIN W.H. SMYTH, R.N., LATE PRESIDENT OF THE ROYAL ASTRONOMICAL SOCIETY, LONDON, DATED CAMBRIDGE, 8TH FEBRUARY, 1848.