Outside Gresham College today, it was as busy as usual with carriages and horses clogging the streets and crowds of people everywhere.
The speaker of the day was George Airy, but to Arthur's disappointment, he was neither a chemical expert nor a medical genius.
He was a professional in astronomy, physics, and mathematics.
As a man who obtained the position of a Mathematics Professor at Cambridge University at the age of 25 and became a Professor of Astronomy, as well as the director of the Cambridge observatory at 27, George Airy was certainly a rare genius.
The only problem was that the content of his lecture left Arthur somewhat perplexed—"The Trajectories of Planetary Motion With the Moon as an Example."
Arthur was actually more interested in the personal animosity between George Airy and Mr. Faraday than in a blackboard full of formulas.