Page:Lifelettersoffaradayjonesvol1.djvu/15

 PKEFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. To WHITE a life of Faraday seemed to me at first a hopeless work. Although I had listened to him as a lecturer for thirty years and had been with him frequently for upwards of twenty years, and although for more than fifteen years he had known me as one of his most intimate friends, yet my knowledge of him made me feel that he was too good a man for me to estimate rightly, and that he was too great a philo- sopher for me to understand thoroughly. I thought that his biographer should if possible be one who was his own mental counterpart. I afterwards hoped that the Journals, which he wrote at different periods whilst abroad, might have been published separately. If this had been done, then some portions of his biography would have been in his own writing : but it was thought undesirable to divide the records of the different parts of his life. As time went on, and those who were most interested in the work found no one with sufiicient leisure to whom they were inclined to give his manuscripts, I at last made the attempt to join together his own words.