THE YOUNG PROFESSOR 217 
accessible. Up to this time we had pleasant weather, but going out 
of Oswego the Lake was very rough, and most passengers were sea- 
sick. I however, was not among the number. Woke up on Tuesday 
morning off Lewiston, where we landed, and at 9, took the British 
boat to Toronto. My business in Toronto was to visit the Magnetic 
Observatory and to see the superintendent, Capt. Lefroy, on Smith- 
sonian matters. The observatory is very complete in its arrange- 
ments, as the motions of the magnets all daguerreotype themselves, 
and the direction and velocity of the wind, the amount of rain and 
other phenomena are self-registered in other ways. I met the Gov- 
ernor General, Lord Elgin, and his Lady at Capt. Lefroy’s. We left 
Toronto on Thursday morning and reached Niagara Falls that same 
evening. Staid at Niagara till Saturday morning when we went to 
Buffalo, and the same evening to Geneva. After spending Sunday 
at Geneva we left for New York via Erie R. R. and got into the city 
at 9 P M having left Geneva at 514 AM. Distance 350 miles. 
On Tuesday afternoon I left for New Haven being under orders 
from Prof. Henry for that place. Having walked extensively into 
Oysters, Peaches and Lobster while in N. York (the latter at Lawrence 
Gitz’ instigation) I had a very severe attack of Cholera Morbus 
while in the cars, Dana was at the Depot and took me home where 
I kept in bed for a day, but got up pretty well on Thursday. They 
treated me very judiciously, put hot bottles to my feet, clapped on 
mustard poultice to abdomen and gave me brandy, laudanum and 
camphor. I met many acquaintances and made others, and had a 
very pleasant time. In the course of the meeting I was made perma- 
nent secretary, this involving attendance at all the meetings, the 
publication of the proceedings, general correspondence &c. There 
is a nominal salary of 300 dollars which will probably not be paid 
as they have not funds enough to publish their proceedings, much 
less pay this. After remaining in New Haven till Monday, I went 
to New York and reached home on Thursday morning. 
I found it altogether impossible to bring Mary to Reading, 
owing to the slight difficulty of her having left Westport while I was 
on the Lake and reaching Carlisle two or three weeks before I did. 
The cause of her quick return was her fear that Lucy had the Whoop- 
ing cough. She coughed much like it, and was very violently possessed 
of all the symptoms, although over it rather sooner than usual, 
