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Authors: E.T. Bell

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In the midst of all this work Cauchy found time to do his courting. His fancy, Aloise de Bure, whom he married in 1818 and with whom he lived for nearly forty years, was the daughter of a cultured old family and, like himself, an ardent Catholic. They had two daughters, who were brought up as Cauchy had been.

*  *  *

One great work of this period may be noted. Encouraged by Laplace and others, Cauchy in 1821 wrote up for publication the course of lectures on analysis he had been giving at the Polytechnique. This is the work which for long set the standard in rigor. Even today Cauchy's definitions of limit and continuity, and much of what he wrote on the convergence of infinite series in this course of lectures, will be found in any carefully written book on the calculus. An extract from the preface will show what he had in mind and what he accomplished.

“I have sought to give to the methods [of analysis] all the rigor which is demanded in geometry, in such a way as never to refer to
reasons drawn from the generality of algebra.
[As
it would be put today, the
formalism
of algebra.] Reasons of this kind, although commonly enough admitted, above all in the passage from convergent to divergent series, and from real quantities to imaginary, cannot be considered, it seems to me, as anything more than inductions which occasionally suggest the truth, but which agree but little with the boasted exactitude of mathematics. We must also observe that they tend to cause an indefinite validity to be attributed to algebraical formulas,
II
while, in reality, the majority of these formulas subsist only under certain conditions, and for certain values of the quantities which they contain. By determining these conditions and values, and by fixing precisely the meaning of the notations I make use of, I shall dispel all uncertainty.”

Cauchy's productivity was so prodigious that he had to found a sort of journal of his own, the
Exercises de Mathématiques
(1826-30), continued in a second series as
Exercises d'Analyse Mathématique et de Physique,
for the publication of his expository and original work in pure and applied mathematics. These works were eagerly bought and studied, and did much to reform mathematical taste before 1860.

One aspect of Cauchy's terrific activity is rather amusing. In 1835 the Academy of Sciences began publishing its weekly bulletin (the
Comptes rendus).
Here was a virgin dumping ground for Cauchy, and he began swamping the new publication with notes and lengthy memoirs—sometimes more than one a week. Dismayed at the rapidly mounting bill for printing, the Academy passed a rule, in force today, prohibiting the publication of an article over four pages long. This cramped Cauchy's luxuriant style, and his longer memoirs, including a great one of 300 pages on the theory of numbers, were published elsewhere.

*  *  *

Happily married and as prolific in his research as a spawning salmon, Cauchy was ripe for the jester when the revolution of 1830 unseated his beloved Charles. Fate never enjoyed a heartier laugh than it did when it motioned Cauchy to rise from Monge's chair in the Academy and follow his anointed King into exile. Cauchy could
not refuse; he had sworn a solemn oath of allegiance to Charles, and to Cauchy an oath was an oath, even if sworn to a deaf donkey. To his credit, Cauchy, at the age of forty, gave up all his positions and went into voluntary exile.

He was not sorry to go. The bloodied streets of Paris had turned his sensitive stomach. He firmly believed that good King Charles was in no way responsible for the gory mess.

Leaving his family in Paris, but not resigning his seat in the Academy, Cauchy went first to Switzerland, where he sought distraction in scientific conferences and research. He never asked the slightest favor from Charles and did not even know that the exiled king was aware of his voluntary sacrifice for a matter of principle. Shortly a more enlightened Charles, Charles Albert, King of Sardinia, heard that the renowned Cauchy was out of a job and made one for him as Professor of Mathematical Physics at Turin. Cauchy was perfectly happy. He quickly learned Italian and delivered his lectures in that language.

Presently overwork and excitement made him ill, and to his regret (as he wrote to his wife) he was forced to abandon evening work for a time. A vacation in Italy, with a visit to the Pope for good measure, completely restored him, and he returned to Turin, eagerly anticipating a long life devoted to teaching and research. But presently the obtuse Charles × butted into the retiring mathematician's life like a brainless goat and, in seeking to reward his loyal follower, did him a singular disservice. In
1833
Cauchy was entrusted with the education of Charles' heir, the thirteen-year-old Duke of Bordeaux. The job of male nurse and elementary tutor was the last thing on earth that Cauchy desired. Nevertheless he dutifully reported to Charles at Prague and took up the cross of loyalty. The following year he was joined by his family.

The education of the heir to the Bourbons proved no sinecure. From early morning to late evening, with barely time out for meals, Cauchy was pestered by the royal brat. Not only the elementary lessons of an ordinary school course had to be hammered somehow or another into the pampered boy, but Cauchy was detailed to see that his charge did not fall down and skin his knees on his gambols in the park. Needless to say the major part of Cauchy's instruction consisted in intimate talks on the peculiar brand of moral philosophy to which he was addicted; so perhaps it is as well that France finally
decided not to take the Bourbons back to its heart, but to leave them and their innumerable descendants as prizes to be raffled off to the daughters of millionaires in the international marriage bureau.

In spite of almost constant attendance on his pupil Cauchy somehow managed to keep his mathematics going, dashing into his private quarters at odd moments to jot down a formula or scribble a hasty paragraph. The most impressive work of this period was the long memoir on the dispersion of light, in which Cauchy attempted to explain the phenomenon of dispersion (the separation of white light into colors owing to different refrangibilities of the colored lights composing the white) on the hypothesis that light is caused by the vibrations of an elastic solid. This work is of great interest in the history of physics, as it exemplified the tendency of the nineteenth century to try to account for physical phenomena in terms of mechanical models instead of merely constructing an abstract, mathematical theory to correlate observations. This was a departure from the prevailing practice of Newton and his successors—although there had been attempts to “explain” gravitation mechanically.

Today the tendency is in the opposite direction of a purely mathematical correlation and a complete abandonment of ethers, elastic solids, or other mechanical “explanations” more difficult to grasp than the thing explained. Physicists at present seem to have heeded Byron's query, “Who will then explain the explanation?” The elastic solid theory had a long and brilliant success, and even today some of the formulas Cauchy derived from his false hypothesis are in use. But the theory itself was abandoned when, as not infrequently happens, refined experimental technique and unsuspected phenomena (anomalous dispersion in this case) failed to accord with the predictions of the theory.

Cauchy escaped from his pupil in
1838
(he was then almost fifty). Friends in Paris had been urging him for some time to return, and Cauchy seized the excuse of his parents' golden wedding to bid adieu to Charles and all his entourage. By a special dispensation members of the Institut (of which the Academy of Sciences was, and is, a part) were not required to take an oath of allegiance to the Government, so Cauchy resumed his seat. His mathematical activity now became greater than ever. During the last nineteen years of his life he produced over
500
papers on all branches of mathematics, including mechanics,
physics, and astronomy. Many of these works were long treatises.

His troubles were not yet over. When a vacancy occurred at the Collège de France Cauchy was unanimously elected to fill the place. But here there was no dispensation and before he could step into the position Cauchy would have to take the oath of allegiance. Believing the Government to be usurping the divine rights of his master, Cauchy stiffened his neck and refused to take the oath. Once more he was out of a job. But the Bureau des Longitudes could use a mathematician of his calibre. Again he was unanimously elected.

Then began an amusing tug of war between Baron Cauchy and the Bureau at one end of the rope and the unsanctified Government at the other. Conscious for once that it was making a fool of itself the Government let go and Cauchy was shot backwards into the Bureau without an oath. Defiance of the Government was grossly illegal, not to say treasonable, but Cauchy stuck to his job. His colleagues at the Bureau embarrassed the Government by politely ignoring its request to elect someone legally. For four years Cauchy turned his obstinate back on the Government and went on with his work.

To this period belong some of Cauchy's most important contributions to mathematical astronomy. Leverrier had unwittingly started Cauchy off with his memoir of 1840 on Pallas. This was a lengthy work packed with numerical calculations which it would take any referee as long to check as it had taken the author to perform them in the first place. When the memoir was presented to the Academy the officers began looking about for someone willing to undertake the inhuman task of verifying the correctness of the conclusions. Cauchy volunteered. Instead of following Leverrier's footsteps he quickly found shortcuts and invented new methods which enabled him to verify and extend the work in a remarkably short time.

The tussle with the Government reached its crisis in 1843 when Cauchy was fifty four. The Minister declined to be made a public laughing stock any longer and demanded that the Bureau hold r.n election to fill the position Cauchy refused to vacate. On the advice of his friends Cauchy laid his case before the people in an open letter. This letter is one of the finest things Cauchy ever wrote.

Whatever we may think of his quixotic championship of a cause which all but flyblown reactionaries knew had been well lost forever, we cannot help respecting Cauchy's fearlessness in stating his own
case, with dignity and without passion, and in fighting for the freedom of his conscience. It was the old fight for free thought in a guise that was not very familiar then but is common enough now.

In the time of Galileo, Cauchy no doubt would have gone to the stake to maintain the freedom of his beliefs; under Louis Philippe he denied the right of any government to exact an oath of allegiance which traversed his conscience, and he suffered for his courage. His stand earned him the respect even of his enemies, and brought the Government into contempt, even in the eyes of its supporters. Presently the stupidity of repression was brought home to the Government in a way it could understand—street fighting, riots, strikes, civil war, and an unanswerable order to get out and stay out. Louis Philippe and all his gang were ousted in 1848. One of the first acts of the Provisional Government was to abolish the oath of allegiance. With rare good sense the politicians realized that all such oaths are either unnecessary or worthless.

In 1852, when Napoleon III took charge, the oath was restored. But by this time Cauchy had won his battle. Word was quietly passed to him that he might resume his lectures without taking the oath. It was understood on both sides that no fuss was to be made. The Government asked no thanks for its liberality, nor did Cauchy tender any, but went on with his lectures as if nothing had happened. From then to the end of his life he was the chief glory of the Sorbonne.

In the interim between official instability and unofficial stability Cauchy had taken time out to splinter a lance in defence of the Jesuits. The trouble was the old one—the State educational authorities insisting that the Jesuit training incurred a divided allegiance, the Jesuits defending religious instruction as the only sound basis for any education. It was a fight up Cauchy's own alley and he sailed into it with eloquent gusto. His defence of his friends was touching and sincere but unconvincing. Whenever Cauchy got off mathematics he substituted emotion for reason.

The Crimean War afforded Cauchy his last opportunity for getting himself disliked by his harder-headed colleagues. He became an enthusiastic propagandist for a singular enterprise known as Work of the Schools of the Orient. “Work” here is intended in the sense of a particular “good work.”

“It was necessary,” according to the sponsors of the Work in
1855,
“to remedy the disorders of the past and at the same time impose a
double check on Muscovite ambition and Mohammedan fanaticism: above all to prepare the regeneration of peoples brutalized by the Koran . . . .” In short the Crimean War had been the customary bayonet preparing the way for the Cross. Deeply impressed by the obvious necessity of replacing the brutalizing Koran by something more humane, Cauchy threw himself into the project, “completing and consolidating . . . the work of emancipation so admirably begun by the arms of France.”

The Jesuit Council, grateful for Cauchy's expert help, gave him full credit for many of the details (including the collection of subscriptions) which were to accomplish “the moral regeneration of peoples enslaved to the law of the Koran, the triumph of the Gospel round the cradle and the sepulchre of Jesus Christ being the sole acceptable compensation for these billows of blood that have been shed” by the Christian French, English, Russians, Sardinians, and the Mohammedan Turks in the Crimean War.

It was good works of this character that caused some of Cauchy's friends, out of sympathy with the pious spirit of the orthodox religion of the time, to call him a smug hypocrite. The epithet was wholly undeserved. Cauchy was one of the sincerest bigots that ever lived.

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