September/October 2007
Essay: Letter to a Young Scientist
In his newly released memoir Avoid Boring People, James Watson laces autobiography with advice. In the following excerpt, he tells the story of his role in determining the structure of DNA.
By James Watson
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The result: James Watson with his DNA models.
Credit: Andreas Feininger/Time-Life Pictures/Getty Images |
I arrived in Cambridge in the fall of 1951 sensing a majesty of place and intellectual style unmatched anywhere in the world. The city's great university, reflecting almost 900 years of English history, is centered on the banks of the River Cam, whose modest waters move northeast across East Anglia to the market city of Ely. Ely's massive 12th-century cathedral had long towered over the vast flat fenland marshes that emptied into the still 40 miles of river from Cambridge to the shallow waters of the Wash, the estuary over which tides from the North Sea still roar twice daily. It was the draining over many centuries of the fens that created the rich agricultural fields and wealth of the great East Anglia estate owners. Their benefactions in return helped create along the "backs" of the Cam the many elegant student residences, dining halls, and chapels that already many centuries ago marked out Cambridge as a market city of extraordinary grace and beauty.
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