BIOGRAPHICAL NOTICE OF ARTHUR CAYLEY.
xiii
3 Masaccio, Giovanni
hey proved a delight
bile he remained in
d no formal lecturing
>ils. The leisure that
pleasant, of uses, in
'graduate that Cayley
more than fifty years
pure mathematics as
ical activity. By the
d been set free from
had proved effective
)f analytical methods
l was the foundation
'ory and Leslie Ellis,
bion open to mathe-
I; and young writers,
it well have hesitated
rrd. The new journal
pportunity, previously
oved a great stimulus
Only four volumes of
ne of the Cambridge
! present time, under
Though the oppor-
both in England and
y ago, the undoubted
e of the two young
earliest paper, written
late—it was the year
the results are not
p estigations are worthy
1 care the Mécanique
il memoirs in the two
These achievements of
plished now and were
.es, il faut étudier les
It was as certainly one of the characteristics of Cayley to find a stimulus to new
developments in the main ideas of other writers as it was one of his characteristics
to be able to follow out his own ideas with the insistent unwearying patience of an
investigator creating a new work complete. And it is interesting to see how this
faculty of receiving inspiration reveals itself from the beginning of his career.
Once free from the necessity of preparing for his Tripos and his Fellowship
examination, he was able to throw himself into the work of production. His activity
may be estimated from the fact that he produced three papers in 1842, eight in
1843, four in 1844, and thirteen in 1845. Moreover, these papers deal with a great
variety of subjects. Thus he makes his first investigations in the numerative calculus
of plane curves : he initiates his discussions about geometry of n dimensions : he
founds the theory of invariants and covariants : and he elucidates the connexion between
doubly-infinite products and elliptic functions. Some of these early papers are now
classical ; and the briefest inspection of them is sufficient to reveal the suggestiveness
and the easy strength of the young mathematician who was not yet in his twenty-fifth
year.
Even by this date the opportunities of publication in England had become
inadequate to his needs. Curiously enough, he does not appear to have sent any paper
to the Royal Society until the year 1852, when Sylvester communicated the “Analytical
Researches connected with Steiner’s Extension of Malfatti’s Problem* ” to that Society.
Later in the same year, Cayley was elected a Fellow of the Society, and thereafter many
of his papers appear in its Philosophical Transactions. Before 1852, there were few
journals either at home or abroad which did not receive communications from him : and
even in the quite early years of his researches, several of his papers, written in French,
appeared in Liouville’s journal and in Crelle’s journal. As societies and journals grew
in number, so the area over which his papers spread became ever wider.
At first, after winning his Trinity Fellowship, he remained at Cambridge, and his
time must then have been largely at his own disposal. This freedom, in his circum
stances, could last for only a limited time because, unless he either entered holy
orders or devoted himself to teaching in some permanent post (if obtainable) in the
College, the Fellowship could be held for not more than seven years after his M.A.
degree—a period that would expire in 1852. He was unwilling to take holy orders—
not that there was any religious obstacle in his way, for he was not harassed either
by philosophical doubts or critical difficulties. His simple reason for remaining a
layman was that, though devout in spirit and an active Churchman, he felt no
vocation for the sacred office.
In consequence, it became necessary to choose some profession. Cayley selected
the law, left Cambridge in 1846, entered at Lincoln’s Inn, and became a pupil of
the famous conveyancer, Mr. Christie. A story of their first interview, that Mr. Christie
used to tell in after years, is an illustration of the modesty and the lack of self-
* Cayley’s Collected Mathematical Papers, vol. ii. No. 114. Subsequent references to this series will be
made in the form C. M. P.