82] ON THE TRIADIC ARRANGEMENTS OE SEVEN AND FIFTEEN THINGS. 483
triads having a letter in common, there shall be triads such as £/38, £ye, and rj/3e,
7]jS) may easily be found; the system to be presently given of the triads of fifteen
things would answer the purpose. And so would many other systems.
Dropping the consideration of the order of the letters which form a triad, I pass
to the case of a system • of fifteen letters, a, b, c, d, e, f g, h, i, j, k, l, m, n, o.
It is possible in this case, not only to form systems of thirty-five triads containing
every possible duad, but this can be done in such manner that the system of thirty-
five triads can be arranged in seven systems of five triads, each of these systems
containing the fifteen letters 1 2 . My solution is obtained by a process of derivation
from the arrangements ab. ,cf. dg. eh and ab.cd.ef.gh as follows; viz. the triads are
iab jac kaf lad mag nae oali
icf jfb kbc Ice mch ncd ocg
idg jde kdh Igb mbd ngf ofd
ieh jlig kge Ihf mfe nhb obe
and a system formed with i, j, k, l, m, n o, which are then arranged in the form
klo
ino
jmo
ilm
jin
ijk
kmn
iab
jac
lad
nae
kaf
mag
oah
ncd
mdb
kbc
ocg
mch
Ice
icf
mef
keg
ieh
jf h
obe
ofd
jde
J9 h
Ihf
n fd
khd
idg
nhb
Ibg
an arrangement, which, it may be remarked, contains eight different systems (such as
have been considered in the former part of this paper) of seven letters such as i, j,
k, l, m, n, o; and seven of other seven letters, such as i, j, k, a, b, c, f(f). The
theory of the arrangement seems to be worth further investigation.
Assuming that the four hundred and fifty-five triads of fifteen things can be
arranged in thirteen systems of thirty-five triads, each system of thirty-five triads
containing every possible duad, it seems natural to inquire whether the thirteen
systems can be obtained from any one of them by cyclical permutations of thirteen
letters. This is, I think, impossible. For let the cyclical permutation be of the letters
a, b, c, d, e, f g, h, i, j, k, l, m. Consider separately the triads which contain the
letter n and the letter o; neither of these systems of triads contains the letter,
whatever it is, which forms a triad with n and o. Hence, omitting the letters n, o,
we have two different sets, each of them of six duads, and composed of the same
twelve letters. And each of these systems of duads ought, by the cyclical permutation
1 The problem was proposed by Mr Kirkman, and has, to my knowledge, excited some attention in the
form “To make a school of fifteen young ladies walk together in threes every day for a week so that each
two may walk together.” It will be seen from the text that I am uncertain as to the existence of a
solution to the further problem suggested by Mr Sylvester, “ to make the school walk every week in the
quarter so that each three may walk together.”
2 [I have somewhat altered this sentence so as to express more clearly what appeared to be the meaning of it.]
61—2