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+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76767 ***
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Frontispiece: SMEATON'S LIGHTHOUSE ON THE EDDYSTONE ROCK.]
+
+
+
+
+ THE STORY OF
+ JOHN SMEATON
+
+ AND
+
+ THE EDDYSTONE LIGHTHOUSE.
+
+
+
+ "And as the evening darkens, lo! how bright.
+ Through the deep purple of the twilight air,
+ Beams forth the sudden radiance of its light
+ With strange, unearthly splendour in its glare!
+
+ "And the great ships sail outward and return,
+ Bending and bowing o'er the billowy swells;
+ And ever joyful, as they see it burn,
+ They wave their silent welcomes and farewells.
+ LONGFELLOW.
+
+
+
+ London
+ T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW.
+ EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.
+ 1900
+
+
+
+
+Contents.
+
+I. Ancient and Modern Lighthouses
+
+II. The Eddystone Lighthouse
+
+III. How John Smeaton Rose in Life
+
+IV. Smeaton in Private Life--His Last Years and Character
+
+
+
+
+The following pages are founded on Mr. Smiles' "Lives of the
+Engineers," vol. ii.; "Smeaton and Lighthouses" (edition 1844); "Les
+Phares;" "Lighthouses and Lightships," by W. H. Davenport Adams; and
+Smeaton's own account of the "Eddystone Lighthouse." Some minor
+authorities have also been consulted.
+
+
+
+
+THE STORY OF JOHN SMEATON.
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ANCIENT AND MODERN LIGHTHOUSES.
+
+As soon as man began to go down to the deep in ships, and to extend
+his enterprise from sea to sea, so soon must he have recognized the
+necessity of lighthouses; or, at least, of some system of signals by
+which he might guide his course at night when approaching a perilous
+coast, or seeking to enter the wished-for harbour.
+
+His first attempt in this direction was probably nothing more than
+the kindling of a huge fire on some elevated promontory or headland,
+or on the summit of some lofty hill, whence its warning glare could
+be seen for miles around. But as, on windy nights, much difficulty
+would be experienced in keeping up the blown and scattered flames, no
+doubt he would soon conceive the idea of providing a sufficient
+shelter.
+
+[Sidenote: Lighthouses of antiquity.]
+
+So obvious was the value of these fiery beacons, and so impossible
+did it seem to the ancient mariner to navigate the dangerous seas
+without their help, that he was led to ascribe their origin to
+supernatural wisdom. According to the Greeks, they were invented by
+Hercules. There is good reason to believe, however, that long before
+the ocean was furrowed by a Greek keel, light-towers or fire-beacons
+had been erected by the Libyans and the Cuthites along the low and
+perilous shores of Lower Egypt. During the day they served as
+landmarks, and during the night as beacons. Their purpose being
+essentially sacred, they were also used as temples, and dedicated to
+the gods. Regarded by the seaman with reverence as well as
+gratitude, he enriched them with costly offerings. Some authorities
+suppose that charts of the Mediterranean coast and of the channels of
+the Nile were painted on their walls, and that these charts were
+afterwards transferred to sheets of papyrus. The priests in charge
+of them taught the sciences of hydrography and pilotage, and how to
+steer a vessel's course by the aid of the stars and planets. On the
+summit a fire was ever burning; the fuel being placed in a machine of
+iron or bronze, composed of three or four branches, each representing
+a dolphin or some other marine animal, and all connected by
+decorative work. The machine was fastened to the extremity of a
+strong pole or shaft, like a mast, and so placed that its radiance
+was mainly directed seaward.
+
+[Sidenote: Homer and the fire-towers.]
+
+The impression which the fire-towers produced on the mind is finely
+described by Homer in a well-known passage of the "Iliad:"--
+
+ "As to seamen o'er the wave is borne
+ The watch-fire's light, which, high among the hills,
+ Some shepherd kindles in his lonely fold."
+
+
+It is said that the first regular pharos, or light-tower, was erected
+by one Lesches, on the Sigæan promontory, at the mouth of the
+Hellespont.
+
+Though the most ancient, the honour was not reserved to it of
+bequeathing its name to its successors. This honour was bestowed on
+the celebrated tower erected on the island of Pharos, off the harbour
+of Alexandria, which served as a model for some of the noblest
+lighthouses built in later ages. Thus, it was the type followed by
+the Emperor Claudius in the pharos raised at Ostia, near the mouth of
+the Tiber, which appears to have been the completest of any on the
+Italian coast. This pharos was situated upon a breakwater, or
+artificial island, which occupied the mid channel between the two
+massive piers that formed the harbour, and its ruins were extant as
+late as the fifteenth century, when they were visited by Pope Pius
+II. Scarcely inferior in architectural excellence was the pharos
+which conducted the homeward-bound into the prosperous harbour of
+Puteoli; or that which Augustus erected at Ravenna; or that which
+from the mole of Messina poured its useful splendour over the
+seething waters of Charybdis; or that which embellished the island of
+Capreæ, the favourite retreat of Tiberius, and was destroyed by an
+earthquake shortly before the emperor's death.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Ancient lighthouses.]
+
+We read of a famous lighthouse at the mouth of the river
+Chrysorrhoas, which flows into the Thracian Bosporus (that is, the
+Strait of Constantinople). On the crest of the hill washed by this
+river may be seen, says an old writer, the Timean Tower, a tower of
+extraordinary height, from whose summit the spectator may survey a
+wide expanse of sea. It has been built for the safety of the
+navigator, and fires are kindled upon it for his guidance; a
+precaution all the more necessary because the shores of this strait
+are without ports, and no anchor can reach the bottom. But the
+barbarians in the neighbourhood light other fires upon elevated
+points of the coast, in order to deceive the mariner, and profit by
+his shipwreck.
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Alexandrian pharos.]
+
+The pharos, or lighthouse, at Alexandria, to which we have referred,
+was built by an architect named Sostrates, in the reign, it is said,
+of Ptolemæus Philadelphus. The island on which it stood lay in front
+of the wealthy city of Alexandria, so as to protect both its
+harbours, the Greater Harbour and the Haven of Happy Return, from the
+northern gales, and the inrush of the Mediterranean.
+
+It forms a ledge of dazzlingly white calcareous rock, the northern
+slope of which is fringed with islets, which, in the fourth and fifth
+centuries of our era, were inhabited by Christian hermits. A deep
+inlet on that side was called the Pirates' Creek, because, in very
+early times, it had been the resort of the Carian and Samian
+sea-rovers.
+
+The island was connected with the mainland by an artificial mound, or
+causeway, which, from its extent, seven stadia (about three-quarters
+of a mile), was called the _Heptastadium_. In its whole length a
+couple of breaks occurred, to allow of the passage of the waters, and
+each break was spanned by a drawbridge. At the island-extremity
+stood a temple dedicated to Hephæstos, the god of fire, and, at the
+other, the great Gate of the Moon. The lighthouse was erected at the
+eastern end, on a kind of rocky peninsula; and as it was built of
+white stone, and of a very considerable elevation, it was equally a
+notable landmark from the low sandy Egyptian plains and from the
+surrounding waters.
+
+It is generally believed that this splendid erection, which is
+estimated to have measured from 550 to 580 feet in height, fell into
+decay between 1200 and 1300, and was finally destroyed by the Turkish
+conquerors of Egypt. That it existed in the twelfth century, we know
+from the description given by an Arab writer, named Edrisi; a
+description which our readers will probably be pleased to peruse:--
+
+This pharos, he says, has not its equal in the world, for skill of
+construction or for solidity; since, to say nothing of the fact that
+it is built of the best stone, its separate layers of masonry are
+cemented together by molten lead, and this so firmly, that the whole
+is indissoluble, though the northern waves incessantly beat against
+it. From the rock to the middle gallery or stage the measurement is
+exactly seventy fathoms; and from this gallery to the summit,
+twenty-six fathoms.
+
+[Sidenote: The interior described.]
+
+We ascend to the gallery by an inner staircase of sufficient width.
+This staircase goes no further, and the building, from the gallery
+upwards, decreases considerably in diameter. In the interior, and
+under the staircase, some chambers have been built. From the gallery
+we continue our ascent by a very narrow flight of steps: in every
+part it is pierced with loopholes, to give light to persons making
+use of it, and to assist them in obtaining a proper footing.
+
+This edifice, adds our authority, is singularly remarkable, as much
+on account of its height as of its massiveness. It is of exceeding
+usefulness, its fire burning night and day for the guidance of
+navigators. They are well acquainted with its light, and steer their
+course accordingly, for it is visible at the distance of a day's
+sail.* During the night it shines like a star; by day you can
+distinguish it by its smoke.
+
+* There is, of course, some exaggeration here.
+
+
+[Sidenote: A Roman pharos.]
+
+Lighthouses or beacons were first introduced into England by the
+Romans, to whom we are indebted for so much that is valuable and
+useful. On the crest of the high hill at Dover still stands the
+pharos, which is supposed to have been built for the guidance of
+vessels from the coasts of France to the Roman station at Portus
+Rutupiæ (now Richborough) near Sandwich, or to Regulbium (now known
+as the Reculvers) on the Thames.
+
+At the present day it is nothing more than a massive shell. In the
+inside the walls are vertical and squared; on the outside, they
+incline to assume a conical form. Of the building, as we now see it,
+only the basement is of Roman work; the octagonal chamber above was
+constructed in the reign of Henry VIII. The dimensions are about
+fourteen feet square.
+
+[Sidenote: English beacons.]
+
+The English beacons were of a ruder and more primitive construction
+than the Roman. We read in Lambarde, the old topographer, that
+"before the time of King Edward III. they were made of great stacks
+of wood; but about the eleventh year of his reign it was ordained
+that in one shire [Kent] they should be high standards, with their
+pitch-pots"--that is, tall masts, to whose summit was fastened a
+vessel full of burning pitch. Those beacons, however, were more
+frequently used to warn the country on the approach of a hostile
+fleet than for the purpose of lighting the coasts, though,
+doubtlessly, they answered both objects. Professor Faraday suggests
+that the first idea of a lighthouse was the candle in the cottage
+window, guiding the husband across the water or the pathless moor.
+The main point to be secured was a steady light, and it mattered not
+whether this was obtained from pitch-pots, coals, or oil. Wood,
+however, as the material readiest at hand, was most generally used.
+
+The Tour de Cordouan, situated at the mouth of the Gironde, was long
+lit up by fires of wood; while, until a comparatively recent period,
+the lighthouses at Spurn Head, north of the Humber, and on the Isle
+of May, at the entrance to the Firth of Forth, were lighted by
+braziers of burning coal.
+
+[Sidenote: On Dungeness.]
+
+Our English Kings were quick to perceive the importance of insuring
+greater safety to the vessels composing their commercial navy; and in
+1525, Henry VIII. granted a charter to the "brotherhood of the Holy
+Trinity" (now known as the Trinity House), for the purpose of
+assisting and protecting navigation by licensing and regulating
+pilots, and planting beacons, lighthouses, and buoys along the
+British coasts. But, as Mr. Smiles remarks, the only step taken to
+carry out objects of such national interest was the granting of
+leases by the Crown, for a definite number of years, to private
+persons willing to find the means of building and maintaining lights,
+in return for permission to levy tolls on all passing shipping. Yet
+not much was done to render our dangerous coasts easier of approach
+by means of well-supplied lights. The first erected was on Dungeness
+in the reign of James I. About the same time some parts of the
+Cornish coast were lighted up; for we read in the "Travels of the
+Grand Duke Cosmo, about two centuries ago, that the Plymouth shipping
+paid fourpence per ton for the lights which were in the lighthouses
+at night." Fourpence in those days was worth about as much as five
+shillings in our own, so that the tax must have fallen very heavily
+on merchantmen. It is also recorded, in the annals of the old town
+of Rye, that a light was hung out from the south-east angle of the
+Ypres Tower, as a guide for vessels entering the harbour in the night
+time; and that this proving insufficient, another light was ordered
+by the corporation "to be hung out o' nights on the south-west corner
+of the church, for a guide to vessels entering the port." A
+pitch-pot was formerly hung from the spire of old Arundel Church, as
+a beacon for vessels which wished to enter the port of Little
+Hampton, and the iron support of the apparatus is still to be seen.
+
+[Sidenote: Lighting the coasts.]
+
+It is obvious that lights such as these were exceedingly imperfect.
+It was difficult to maintain an equable radiance; they were not
+visible far out at sea; and they were easily affected by variations
+of weather, great gales, tempests, or thick mists. Moreover, as
+navigation increased, and ships more frequently threaded the narrow
+pass or dangerous channel, more lights became necessary, and thus the
+old system of lights had to give way to a more regular and extensive
+lighthouse system.
+
+[Sidenote: The modern system.]
+
+The first modern lighthouse of a solid and permanent character
+erected on the shores of England was built, it is said, at Lowestoft
+in Suffolk, in 1609. In 1665 one was erected at Hunstanton Point;
+and in 1680, a third on the Scilly Isles. About the same time were
+established the lighthouses at Dungeness and Orfordness. But all
+these wore of clumsy construction, of very slight elevation, and of
+inconsiderable illuminating power. To inaugurate the modern
+lighthouse the genius of John Smeaton was needed; and from the date
+of his marvellous monument on the Eddystone Rock up to the present
+time, nearly every dangerous point of our coasts, every harbour and
+every river-mouth, has been included in the system of defence which
+guards our imperial commerce, and enables the seaman to navigate the
+British waters in almost perfect safety.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE EDDYSTONE LIGHTHOUSE.
+
+About fourteen miles to the south-west of Plymouth harbour, and out
+in the deep and billowy channel, lies a reel or ledge of rocks,
+known, in allusion to the swirl of currents always tossing and
+seething around it, by the name of the Eddystone.
+
+This reef is situated in a line with Lizard Head in Cornwall, and
+Start Point in Devonshire.
+
+Consequently, it forms a perilous obstruction, not only in the
+water-way which leads to the great arsenal and haven of South Devon,
+but in the track of all vessels entering or leaving the English
+Channel; which, we may add, is frequented by a greater number of
+ships than any other part of the wide ocean.
+
+[Sidenote: The Eddystone rock.]
+
+When the tide is up, its hoary crest is scarcely visible, but its
+position is shown by the eddy which washes to and fro above it; at
+low tide, several low, jagged, and dreary ridges of gneiss lift their
+heads from the boiling waves. During a stiff breeze from the
+south-west, these form the centre, the focus, as it were, of a
+boiling caldron of waters, and no ship enticed within their vortex
+can escape destruction.
+
+[Sidenote: Henry Winstanley.]
+
+As may be supposed, the erection of a lighthouse on rocks so perilous
+came to be regarded as an urgent need soon after men had learned the
+value of commercial enterprise. The task, however, seemed so
+dangerous, not to say impossible, that no one ventured to attempt it,
+until 1696, when it was undertaken by a noble and patriotic
+gentleman, named Henry Winstanley, who was much grieved by the loss
+of life which annually occurred there.
+
+Winstanley is described as one of those eccentric but ingenious men
+who find a peculiar pleasure in mystifying their friends, and in
+throwing a kind of glamour or magical atmosphere over our daily,
+commonplace, realistic life. He made use of his scientific knowledge
+to play the most extraordinary practical jokes. You went to spend a
+night or two at his old Essex manor-house. On entering your
+bed-room, you nearly tripped over an old slipper. You kicked it
+aside, and, lo, a ghost immediately started from the floor. In your
+sudden alarm you flung yourself into the nearest chair: out sprang a
+couple of arms, and clasped you and held you a prisoner. You went
+into the garden, and sought repose in a woodbine-trellised arbour.
+Your seat and yourself shot away from the pleasant alcove, and were
+quickly floating in the middle of the adjoining canal!
+
+The author of such devices as these might be, and was, a noble and
+chivalrous gentleman, but he was also, unquestionably, a very
+eccentric character! His eccentricity displayed itself in the
+lighthouse which his chivalrous humanity instigated him to build on
+the Eddystone Rock. On first glancing at an engraving of it, you
+hardly know whether you see before you a Chinese pagoda or a Turkish
+minaret, grafted on a circular tower, and ornamented with cranes and
+chains like a London warehouse!
+
+Winstanley began his work in 1696.
+
+The first summer--and, of course, it was in summer only that men
+could labour on that wind-swept, wave-worn rock--was occupied in
+excavating twelve holes, and fastening as many irons in them, to
+serve for the superstructure.
+
+[Sidenote: Progress of the work.]
+
+Very slowly and drearily did the work go on; for though it was the
+"sweet summer-time," out in the wild channel the weather would
+frequently prove of such terrible violence that, for ten or fourteen
+days in succession, the waters would boil and toss about the
+rocks--vexed by contrary winds, and by the inrush of the swelling
+billows from the main ocean--and mount one upon another, like
+maddened horses, and leap and bound to such a height as completely to
+bury the reef and all upon it, and effectually prevent any vessel or
+boat from drawing near. On such days the men, you may be sure,
+thanked God that they were housed safely on the green shores of Devon.
+
+
+The second summer was spent in building up a solid circular mass of
+masonry, twelve feet high and fourteen feet in diameter. In the
+third summer this huge pillar was enlarged two feet at the base, and
+the superstructure was carried up to a height of sixty feet. "Being
+all finished," says the engineer, "with the lantern, and all the
+rooms that were in it, we ventured to lodge in the work. But the
+first night the weather became bad, and so continued, that it was
+eleven days before any boats could come near us again; and not being
+acquainted with the height of the sea's rising, we were almost
+drowned with wet, and our provisions in as bad a condition, though we
+worked day and night as much as possible to make shelter for
+ourselves. In this storm we lost some of our materials, although we
+did what we could to save them; but the boat then returning, we all
+left the house, to be refreshed on shore: and as soon as the weather
+did permit we returned and finished all, and put up the light on the
+14th November 1698; which being so late in the year, it was three
+days before Christmas before we had relief to go on shore again, and
+were almost at the last extremity for want of provisions; but, by
+good Providence, then two boats came with provisions and the family
+that was to take care of the light; and so ended this year's work."
+
+[Sidenote: Winstanley's lighthouse.]
+
+In the course of the fourth summer the foundations were considerably
+strengthened, and the remainder of the work appertaining to the
+fabric itself was completed. We are told, and the extant engravings
+show us, that it bore, in its finished condition, a close resemblance
+to "a Chinese pagoda, with open galleries and fantastic projections."
+Round the lantern ran a wide open gallery; so wide and open, indeed,
+that it was possible, when the sea ran high, for a six-oared boat to
+be lifted up by the waves and driven through it. Such an edifice
+could not long withstand the violence of the gale or the fury of the
+waters; but this much was gained by its construction,--it was shown
+that a lighthouse could be erected on this sea-girt rock, and,
+therefore, the achievement deserves to be described as "one of the
+most laudable enterprises which any heroic mind could undertake, for
+it filled the breast of the mariner with new hope."
+
+
+[Sidenote: The great storm.]
+
+Winstanley was very proud of his work, and so convinced, it is said,
+of its thorough stability, that he frequently expressed a wish to be
+under its roof in the fiercest hurricane that ever blew beneath the
+face of heaven, assured that it would not shake one joist or beam.
+Heaven sometimes takes the presumptuous at their word! Winstanley,
+with his workmen and light-keepers, had fixed his residence in the
+tower, when a tremendous storm arose, which, on the 26th of November,
+1702, blew a hurricane of unprecedented violence. The sea rolled its
+billows heavily, and the wind raged, and masses of cloud darkened the
+horizon, and all Nature seemed convulsed by the elemental strife.
+
+When the dawn broke, the people of Plymouth hastened to the beach,
+and turned their anxious gaze towards the Eddystone. The waters
+swirled and seethed around and about the rock; but where was the
+lighthouse, the fantastic structure raised by the ready brain and
+daring soul of Winstanley?
+
+During the night it had been swept away, and not a memorial remained
+of its ill-fated occupants.
+
+The melancholy incident forms the theme of a striking ballad by Jean
+Ingelow, which concludes in the following manner:--
+
+ "And it fell out, fell out at last,
+ That he would put to sea,
+ To scan once more his lighthouse-tower
+ On the rock o' destiny.
+
+ "And the winds woke, and the storm broke,
+ And wrecks came plunging in;
+ None in the town that night lay down
+ Or sleep or rest to win.
+
+ "The great mad waves were rolling graves,
+ And each flung up its dead;
+ The seething flow was white below,
+ And black the sky o'erhead.
+
+ "And when the dawn, the dull gray dawn,
+ Broke on the trembling town,
+ And men looked south to the harbour mouth,
+ The lighthouse-tower was down!
+
+ "Down in the deep where he doth sleep
+ Who made it shine afar,
+ And then in the night that drowned its light,
+ Set, with his pilot star."
+
+
+[Sidenote: John Rudyerd.]
+
+The usefulness of a beacon on the Eddystone Rock had been so
+abundantly proved that it was not long before an attempt was made to
+replace Winstanley's unfortunate structure. A Captain Lovet obtained
+a ninety-nine years' lease of the rock from the Trinity House
+Corporation, and engaged as his architect a silk-mercer on Ludgate
+Hill, named John Rudyerd. The reasons that led him to make so
+curious a choice are unknown, but the event proved that it was a
+sensible one. Rudyerd designed a graceful and even elegant building,
+choosing a circle for the outline, and studying the greatest
+simplicity, so as to offer the least possible resistance to wind and
+wave.
+
+In order to obtain a firm foundation, he divided the surface of the
+rock into seven slightly unequal stages, and in these he dug or
+excavated six and thirty holes, varying in depth from twenty to
+thirty inches. Each hole was six inches square at the top, gradually
+narrowing to five inches, and then again expanding and flattening to
+nine inches by three at the bottom. Into these dove-tailed cavities
+or sockets were inserted strong iron bolts, weighing from two to five
+hundredweight, according to length and structure.
+
+These bolts held fast a course of squared oak-timbers laid lengthwise
+on the lowest of the seven stages, so as to reach the level of the
+stage or step immediately above it. Another set of beams was then
+laid diagonally covering those already laid, and raising the level
+surface to the height of the third stage. The next course was
+deposited longitudinally, and the fourth diagonally, and so on
+alternately, until a basement of solid timber was erected, two
+courses higher than the highest point of the rock.
+
+[Sidenote: His lighthouse.]
+
+Rudyerd's lighthouse is generally described as a fabric of wood; but
+this is incorrect. To obtain the necessary solidity, and a
+sufficient weight to counteract the weight of the waters of the
+Channel, he combined courses of Cornish granite with his courses of
+timber, in the proportion of five to two, so far as the basement
+went: that is, he laid two courses of timber, and then five of
+granite, and then two more of timber; all being firmly secured by
+iron bolts and cramps. On this substructure, which measured 63 feet
+in height, with a base of 23 feet, he raised four stories of timber,
+crowned by an octagonal lantern, 10 feet 6 inches in diameter, and a
+ball of 2 feet 3 inches in diameter. The total elevation, from the
+lowest surface of the rock to the top of this ball, was 92 feet.
+Rudyerd completed his work in 1709.
+
+[Sidenote: On fire!]
+
+For a long period of years, nearly half a century, it withstood the
+attacks of wind and wave, and many a vessel was kept from destruction
+by its warning light. On the 2nd of December 1755, it was fated to
+fall before an unexpected enemy. There were three keepers resident
+in the lighthouse at the time. One of them, whose turn it was to
+watch, entered the lantern, at about two o'clock A.M., to snuff the
+candles, and, to his horror, discovered it to be filled with smoke.
+On opening the door which led to the balcony, to permit of its
+escape, a flame instantly leaped from the interior of the cupola. He
+hastened to alarm his companions, and vigorous efforts were made to
+extinguish the fire; but these proved ineffectual, owing to the
+dryness of the woodwork, and the difficulty of raising a sufficient
+supply of water to the top of the building. Fortunately for the
+keepers, the flames were descried from the shore, and a well-manned
+boat put off to their relief.
+
+It reached the Eddystone about ten o'clock, when the fire had been
+raging for eight hours. The building was wholly destroyed; and the
+keepers, who had been driven away by the falling beams, the red-hot
+iron, and molten lead, were found, in a panic-stricken condition,
+crouching in a recess or cavern on the east side of the rock. They
+were carried into the boat, and conveyed ashore. Curious to relate,
+they were no sooner landed than one of them stole away, and was never
+afterwards heard of. His flight gave rise to a suspicion that the
+fire was not accidental; yet, when we remember that a lighthouse rock
+affords no means of escape for its inmates, we can hardly suppose it
+to be the place an incendiary would select for the scene of his
+wicked attempt. It is possible that the man's nerves had been so
+tried by the terrible nature of the peril he had undergone, that he
+knew not what he did.
+
+[Sidenote: The lightkeeper's fate.]
+
+Of the other two light-keepers, one, named Henry Hall, met with a
+singular fate. While engaged in dashing some buckets of water on the
+burning roof of the cupola, he chanced to look upwards, and a mass of
+molten lead fell down upon his head, face, and shoulders, burning him
+severely. On his arrival ashore, he persisted in asserting that a
+portion of the liquefied metal had gone down his throat. His medical
+attendant regarded the assertion as the offspring of a disordered
+imagination; but the man rapidly grew worse, and on the twelfth day
+of his illness, after an attack of violent convulsions, expired. A
+_post-mortem_ examination of his body then took place, and Hall's
+story was found to be true; for in the stomach lay a flat, oval piece
+of lead, seven ounces and five drachms in weight!
+
+
+[Sidenote: John Smeaton.]
+
+Acting on the old maxim of "Try, try, and try again," the Trinity
+House Corporation determined to erect another light-tower on the
+Eddystone, and intrusted the work to a mathematical instrument maker,
+named John Smeaton, who had already acquired a reputation as an
+ingenious mechanician.
+
+Smeaton at this time was thirty-two years of age. As we shall tell
+the story of his brave and industrious life hereafter, it will
+suffice us now to state that he had shown himself in a variety of
+experiences, skilful, prompt, patient, and indefatigable; never
+baffled by a difficulty, fertile in resource, and incapable of
+faltering in any enterprise he had deliberately undertaken.
+
+[Sidenote: Design of his lighthouse.]
+
+On examining into the conditions of the task which had devolved upon
+him, he came to the conclusion that the structures of his
+predecessors had both been deficient in weight; and that if Rudyerd's
+had not been destroyed by fire, it would not much longer have
+resisted the fury of the tempest. He announced his intention,
+therefore, of raising a fabric of such solidity that the sea should
+give way to _it_, and not _it_ to the sea; and he determined to build
+it entirely of stone. Moreover, Winstanley and Rudyerd had wasted
+much valuable time, from the difficulty of landing on the rock, and
+the impossibility of working on it continuously for any length of
+time. But Smeaton proposed to moor a vessel within a quarter of a
+mile of the scene of action, which should accommodate his company of
+workmen; and thus they would be prepared to seize every opportunity
+of launching their boat, and carrying their materials to the rock,
+instead of making a long voyage from Plymouth on each occasion.
+
+So far as concerned the design of his intended erection, he was ready
+to adopt Rudyerd's idea of a cone, but he proposed to enlarge its
+diameter considerably; and the type he kept constantly before his eye
+was the trunk of an oak tree, which is equally remarkable for
+gracefulness and strength, and withstands successfully the most
+furious gales, when other forest trees are bent or broken.
+
+The autumn of 1756 was occupied in the transport of the granite and
+other materials to the rock, in their preparation, and in the
+excavation of the steps or stages on which the foundation was to be
+laid.
+
+[Sidenote: Laying the foundation.]
+
+Early in June 1757 the work of erection began. The first stone,
+weighing two tons five hundredweight, was laid on the 12th. On the
+next day was finished the first course, consisting of four stones, so
+ingeniously dove-tailed into one another and into the rock as to form
+a single compact mass. The sloping form of the rock, to which the
+foundation was, of course, adapted, required only this small number
+of stones for the first course; the diameter of the masonry gradually
+increasing until the highest level surface was reached. Thus:--
+
+[Illustration: Eddystone lighthouse foundation]
+
+The second course, completed on the 30th of June, consisted of
+thirteen blocks of granite; the third course, completed on the 11th
+of July, of twenty-five; the fourth, on the 31st, of thirty-three.
+The sixth course was laid down by the 11th of August; and as it rose
+above the high-water mark, Smeaton was entitled to consider that he
+had conquered the greatest difficulties of his task.
+
+[Sidenote: Fixing the blocks.]
+
+Up to this point the mode of procedure in laying and fixing each
+great block of granite was as follows:--
+
+The stone to be set being hung in the tackle, and its bed of mortar
+spread, was then lowered into its place, beaten with a heavy wooden
+mall, and levelled with a spirit-level; and the stone being
+accurately brought to its marks, was considered as set in its proper
+position. The next thing was to keep it there, notwithstanding the
+utmost violence of the sea might beat upon it before the mortar was
+thoroughly hard and dry. Therefore the carpenter dropped into a
+couple of vertical grooves, which had been previously cut in "the
+waist" of the stone, each an inch deep and three inches wide, two
+oaken wedges, one upon its head, the other with its point downwards,
+so that the two in each groove would lie heads and points.
+[Illustration: Foundation wedges.] With an iron bar, about two inches
+and a half broad, a quarter of an inch thick, and two feet and a half
+long, he then drove down one wedge upon the other--very gently at
+first, so that the opposite pairs of wedges, being equally tightened,
+would equally resist each other, and the stone would therefore keep
+its place. In like manner, a couple of wedges were pitched at the
+top of each groove; the dormant wedge (_i.e._, the one with the point
+upward) being held in the hand, while the drift wedge (i.e., the one
+with the point downward) was driven with a hammer. So much as
+remained above the upper surface of the stone was cut away with saw
+or chisel; and, generally, a couple of thin wedges were driven very
+moderately at the butt-end of the stone, whose tendency being to
+force it out of its dove-tail, they would, by moderate driving,
+assist in preserving the steadiness of the entire mass, in opposition
+to any violent agitation arising from the sea.
+
+[Sidenote: Progress of the work.]
+
+The stone thus firmly secured, a certain portion of mortar was
+liquefied, and the joints having been carefully "pointed," this
+liquid cement was poured in with iron ladles, so as to occupy every
+vacant space. The heavier part of the cement naturally fell to the
+bottom, while the fluid was absorbed by the stone. The vacancy thus
+left at the top was repeatedly refilled, until all remained solid;
+then the top was pointed, and, where necessary, defended by a layer
+of plaster.
+
+The whole of the foundation having thus been brought to a proper
+level, some other means were required to secure a similar degree of
+solidity for the superstructure.
+
+A hole, one foot square, was accordingly cut right through the middle
+of the central stone in the sixth course; and at equal distances in
+the circumference were sunk eight other sockets, each one foot
+square, and six inches deep. A strong plug of hard marble, also one
+foot square, but twenty-two inches long, was driven into the
+aforementioned central cavity, and set fast with mortar and wedges.
+This course, however, was only thirteen inches in depth; consequently
+the marble plug rose nine inches above the surface.
+
+Upon the block thus prepared was set the central stone of the next
+course, having a similar hole in the middle, so as to receive the
+upper portion of the marble plug. Hence it is clear that no force or
+pressure of the sea, acting horizontally on any one of these central
+stones, could move it from its position, unless it were able to cut
+in two the marble plug; and to prevent the upper stone from being
+lifted, in case its mortar was destroyed, it was fixed down by four
+trenails. The blocks surrounding the central were dove-tailed
+together as before; and thus one course rose above another without
+any interruption, except from the occasional inrush of the waves or
+violence of the weather.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's industry.]
+
+In his superintendence of the difficult and laborious work, Smeaton's
+activity and perseverance were unwearied. As soon as it had been so
+far accomplished as to present the appearance of a level platform, he
+could not deny himself the pleasure of a promenade upon it; but
+making a false step, and being unable to recover himself, he fell
+over the brink of the masonry, and among the rocks on the west side.
+As it was low water at the time, he received no serious injury. He
+dislocated his thumb, however, and as medical assistance was not
+available, he set it himself,--afterwards returning to his work. The
+incident is characteristic of the firmness and resolution which
+Smeaton exhibited throughout his busy career.
+
+[Sidenote: Building the light tower.]
+
+The ninth course was laid on the 30th of September, and concluded the
+operations for the year.
+
+On the 12th of May 1758, Smeaton and his "merry men" returned to the
+lonely wave-washed rock, and were delighted to find their work
+intact. The cement seemed to have become as hard as the stone
+itself, from which, indeed, it was scarcely distinguishable.
+
+Lusty arms and willing hearts made rapid progress; and by September,
+the twenty-fourth course was reached and laid. It completed the
+"solid" part of the building, and was designed to form the floor of
+the store-room; so that Smeaton had good reason to be satisfied with
+the progress made. But he knew how great an advantage it would be to
+exhibit a light in the coming winter; and therefore he resolved on
+completing the storeroom, if within the range of the possible, and
+planting a light above it.
+
+The building had hitherto been carried up as a solid mass of masonry,
+like a breakwater or seawall, to a height of 35 feet 4 inches above
+its base, and 27 feet above the summit of the rock. It was now
+reduced to 16 feet in diameter. Of this limited space it was needful
+to make good use, so far as was consistent with the primary and
+indispensable condition of strength. The rooms were built with a
+diameter of 12 feet 4 inches, the walls being 2 feet 2 inches thick.
+These walls were built up of single blocks, and so shaped that a
+complete circle was formed by sixteen pieces, which were bound
+together with strong iron clamps, and secured to the lower courses by
+marble plugs in the fashion already described. That no damp might
+make its way through the vertical joints, flat stones were introduced
+into each, in such a manner as to be lodged partly in one block and
+partly in another. With all these careful and ingenious
+contrivances, the twenty-eighth course was completely set by the 30th
+of September.
+
+[Sidenote: Progress of the work.]
+
+This and the next course received the vaulted flooring, which
+answered the double purpose of the ceiling of the lower and the floor
+of the upper store-rooms. For additional security, a deep groove was
+here cut into the outer surface of the course, in which a massive
+iron chain was embedded in molten lead. The next course was laid and
+set after the same pattern; and by the 10th of October Smeaton had
+nearly completed his arrangements for establishing a light and
+lightkeepers at the Eddystone, when they were interrupted by legal
+difficulties, which had arisen between the lessee of the rock and the
+Trinity House Corporation.
+
+These were not settled until the following year, so that Smeaton was
+unable to resume operations before the 5th of July. He worked,
+however, with so much vigour that the second stage was finished by
+the 21st; and on the 29th the fortieth course was set, and the third
+floor finished.
+
+[Sidenote: "Laus Deo."]
+
+The main column, or body, of the lighthouse was completed on the 17th
+of August, consisting of forty-six courses of masonry, and attaining
+an elevation of 70 feet. The last work done was singularly
+appropriate: the masons carved the words "Laus Deo" (Praise be to
+God!) on the last stone set above the lantern. All honest work
+should thus be dedicated to Him through whose infinite goodness we
+are permitted to achieve it. And, at an earlier date, Smeaton, in
+devout recognition of the Eternal Power, had inscribed on the course
+of masonry beneath the ceiling of the upper store-room, "Except the
+LORD build the house, they labour in vain that build it." It was in
+this spirit that the great engineer entered upon and accomplished his
+wonderful enterprises; and it is in this spirit that each of us
+should go through our daily toil, as if feeling ourselves ever in the
+immediate presence of our Father, and knowing that we strive, and
+endure, and hope, and suffer before his all-seeing eye.
+
+The iron-work of the balcony and lantern were next erected, and the
+gracefully strong and massive structure was crowned by a gilded ball.
+
+The interior of Smeaton's lighthouse was (and is) arranged as
+follows:--
+
+[Sidenote: Interior of the lighthouse.]
+
+On the ground-floor--Store-room, with a door-way, but no windows.
+
+First stage, or story--Upper store-room, with two loopholed-windows.
+
+Second stage--Kitchen, with fire-place and sink; two settles, with
+lockers; a dresser, with drawers; two cupboards; and a rack for
+dishes. Four windows.
+
+Third stage--Bedroom, with three cabin-beds, each large enough for an
+adult; three drawers, and two lockers in each, to receive the
+clothing and other property of the light-keepers. Four windows.
+
+Fourth--Lantern, with circular bench, or seat.
+
+[Sidenote: A narrow escape.]
+
+In fixing the window-bars, Smeaton met with an accident which might
+easily have been attended with fatal results. He thus describes the
+circumstances:--
+
+"After the boat was gone, and it became so dark that we could not see
+any longer to pursue our occupations, I ordered a charcoal-fire to be
+made in the upper store-room, in one of the iron pots we used for
+melting lead, for the purpose of annealing the blank ends of the
+bars; and they were made hot all together in the charcoal. Most of
+the workmen were set round the fire; and by way of making ourselves
+comfortable, by screening ourselves and the fire from the wind, the
+windows were shut, and, as well as I remember, the copper cover or
+hatch put over the man-hole of the floor of the room where the fire
+was--the hatch above being left open for the heated vapour to ascend.
+I remember to have looked into the fire attentively to see that the
+iron was made hot enough, but not overheated. I also remember I felt
+my head a very little giddy; but the next thing of which I had any
+sensation or idea was finding myself upon the floor of the room
+below, half drowned with water. It seems that, without being further
+sensible of anything to give me warning, the effluvia of the charcoal
+so suddenly overcame all sensation, that I dropped down upon the
+floor; and had not the people hauled me down to the room below, where
+they did not spare for cold water to throw in my face and upon me, I
+certainly should have expired upon the spot."
+
+Smeaton, however, was reserved for useful service; and on the 16th of
+October the welcome light shone once more from the dreaded Eddystone
+Rock. And the storm-tossed mariner, as he saw in the distance its
+helpful ray, and was guided by it how to steer his course, gratefully
+acknowledged the genius and resolution of the man who had raised it
+above the whirl of waters, and planted it in a tower so fair and
+strong.
+
+[Sidenote: The light on the rock.]
+
+For more than a century it has withstood the storm, an enduring
+monument to the fame of its great architect. At times, when the
+billows roll in from the Atlantic with more than ordinary fury, and
+the white-crested waters come up the Channel under the impulse of a
+south-west gale, the lighthouse is shrouded in spray, and its flame
+for a moment obscured. But the shadow passes away, and again across
+the wild waves it shines like a signal-star. Occasionally, when a
+mighty wave strikes it, the central mass of water runs up the tall,
+shapely column, and leaps quite over the lantern; or it beats against
+the masonry, as if to topple it from its foundation, and the windows
+rattle, and the building seems smitten with a sharp shudder. But the
+wind dies down, and the sea grows calm, leaving the lighthouse firmly
+planted on its rock.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+HOW JOHN SMEATON ROSE IN LIFE.
+
+John Smeaton, one of the most distinguished of British engineers, was
+born at Austhorpe Lodge, near Leeds, on the 8th of June 1724.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's early years.]
+
+His father was a respectable attorney, who came of an old Yorkshire
+family; his mother, a quick-witted, firm, gentle-mannered woman, was
+not unworthy of such a son. He was taught at home during his earlier
+years, and a happy home it was. Leeds, in those days, had not
+attained to its present immense proportions, and Austhorpe was
+completely in the country, sheltered by the noble park and
+overhanging woods of Temple-Newsham. There was ample scope for the
+healthy, active boy, to indulge himself in his favourite pursuits,
+which had all of them a mechanical character. He was never so happy,
+says one of his biographers, as when put in possession of any cutting
+tool, by which he could make his little imitations of houses, pumps,
+and wind-mills. Even while still in petticoats, he was continually
+dividing circles and squares; and the only playthings in which he
+took a genuine pleasure were his working models. If any carpenters
+or masons chanced to be employed in the neighbourhood of Austhorpe,
+the boy was sure to find his way amongst them; and there he would
+spend hour after hour, watching the men at work, and observing how
+they handled their tools. Holmes tells us that, having one day taken
+due note of the operations of some mill-wrights, shortly afterwards,
+to the terror of his family, he was seen fixing a rude likeness of a
+wind-mill on the top of his father's barn.
+
+Another time, when watching the procedure of a party of men engaged
+in refixing the village pump, he was fortunate enough to obtain from
+them a piece of bored pipe, which he succeeded in fashioning into a
+working-pump that actually raised water.
+
+[Sidenote: The young mechanic.]
+
+At a proper age, the boy was sent to the Leeds grammar-school, where
+he received, it is supposed, the largest part of his school
+instruction. In geometry and arithmetic he made very rapid progress;
+but, as is the case with most clever and industrious boys, he learned
+more at home than at school. Every leisure moment was occupied by
+his tools and machines. He acquired, in time, a mechanical dexterity
+and ingenuity which were really surprising, and availed him in the
+performance of some amusing surprises. Thus, it happened that some
+mechanics came into the neighbourhood to erect a "fire-engine," as
+the steam-engine was then called, for the purpose of pumping water
+from the Garforth coal-mines, and day after day Smeaton visited the
+spot for the purpose of watching their operations.
+
+Carefully examining their methods, he made use of the knowledge so
+acquired to construct a miniature engine at home, appropriately
+equipped with pumps and other apparatus; and he even succeeded in
+setting it in motion before the colliery engine was completed. He
+first tried its powers upon one of the fish-ponds in front of the
+house at Austhorpe, which he quickly contrived to pump dry, and so
+killed all the fish in it, greatly to the surprise as well as the
+annoyance of his father.
+
+Working on in this way, with assiduous application, young Smeaton, by
+the time he had arrived at his fifteenth year, had made a
+turning-lathe, on which he turned wood and ivory; and it was his
+delight to make presents of little boxes and other articles of his
+own manufacture to his friends. He also learned to work in metals,
+which he fused and forged without any assistance; and by the age of
+eighteen he handled his tools as dexterously as any regular smith or
+joiner.
+
+[Sidenote: Always at work.]
+
+"In the year 1742," says Mr. Holmes, his biographer and friend, "I
+spent a month at his father's house; and being intended myself for a
+mechanical employment, and a few years younger than he was, I could
+not but view his works with astonishment. He forged his iron and
+steel, and melted his metal. He had tools of every sort for working
+in wood, ivory, and metals. He had made a lathe, by which he cut a
+perpetual screw in brass--a thing little known at that day, and
+which, I believe, was the invention of Mr. Henry Hindley of York,
+with whom I served my apprenticeship. Mr. Smeaton soon became
+acquainted with him, and spent many a night at Mr. Hindley's house
+till daylight, conversing on these subjects."
+
+[Sidenote: Removal to London.]
+
+In his sixteenth year, our hero--for every biographer must have a
+hero--was removed from school to his father's office, where he was
+engaged in the uncongenial task of copying dreary legal folios, and
+acquiring as much knowledge of law as might fit him for an attorney's
+profession. As Mr. Smeaton had a good connection in Leeds, he not
+unnaturally wished his son to profit by it; but the future engineer
+revolted from "Blackstone's Commentaries" and "Coke upon Littleton;"
+and though, like a good son, he attended assiduously to his office
+duties, every day he found the burden of a detested occupation
+heavier to bear. Towards the end of 1742, partly with the view of
+furthering his professional duties, and partly for the sake of taking
+him away from his all-engrossing mechanical pursuits, Mr. Smeaton
+sent him to London. Here he made a vigorous attempt to subdue his
+tastes to his father's wishes; but utterly failing, he wrote to him
+an earnest appeal for permission to follow what was clearly an
+unconquerable bias.
+
+With equal kindness and wisdom, his father consented, and young
+Smeaton immediately entered the service of a philosophical
+instrument-maker. He applied himself to his new vocation with such
+admirable energy, and it was so entirely fitted to the measure of his
+talents, that in a very short time he was able to relieve his father
+from all expenses connected with his maintenance.
+
+[Sidenote: Rising in life.]
+
+It is not to be supposed that a young man with so much strength of
+purpose and clearness of intellect would devote himself only to the
+mechanical part of his profession. He read industriously and
+methodically, so as to obtain a knowledge of the principles of
+theoretical science; he sought the society of educated men; he
+regularly attended the meetings and lectures of the Royal Society.
+He started in business on his own account in 1750, when he was only
+twenty-six; and in the same year he read a paper before the Royal
+Society on certain improvements effected by himself and Dr. Knight in
+the mariner's compass. In 1751 he invented a machine to measure a
+ship's way at sea, and experimented with it in a voyage down the
+Thames, and in a short cruise on board the _Fortune_ sloop-of-war.
+
+[Sidenote: Work and method.]
+
+The activity and fertility of his mind are abundantly demonstrated by
+the nature of the work which occupied him in the following year. In
+April we read of a paper from his pen detailing certain improvements
+which he had contrived in the air-pump; in June he describes an
+ingenious modification in ship-tackle by means of pulleys, so
+arranged that one man might easily raise a ton weight; in November he
+describes certain experiments which had been made with Captain
+Savary's steam-engine, the precursor of James Watt's. Meantime he
+was engaged in researches into "the Natural Powers of Water and Wind
+to Turn Mills and other Machines depending on a Circular Motion;"
+which afterwards gained him the Royal Society's gold medal--almost
+the highest honour a man of science can receive in England. Now, it
+is obvious that to accomplish so much honest and valuable work, and
+at the same time to carry on his business, required great
+application, great energy, great method. And it must be conceded
+that throughout life Smeaton was an unwearied seeker after knowledge;
+that his two main objects were, self-improvement and the public
+welfare; self-improvement being necessary that he might render the
+gifts he possessed of the highest possible usefulness to society.
+"One of his maxims," says Smiles, "was, that 'the abilities of the
+individual are a debt due to the common stock of public happiness;'
+and the steadfastness with which he devoted himself to useful work,
+in which he at the same time found his own true happiness, shows that
+the maxim was no mere lip-utterance on his part, but formed the very
+mainspring of his life. From an early period he carefully laid out
+his time with a view to getting the most good out of it: so much for
+study, so much for practical experiments, so much for business, and
+so much for rest and relaxation."
+
+[Sidenote: The value of order.]
+
+Let the young reader take note of this, and in like manner find for
+everything its fitting and sufficient time. There is much wisdom in
+the adage, "A place for everything, and everything in its place;" but
+it is equally necessary that there should be "an hour for everything,
+and everything in its hour." The best talents, the best
+opportunities, will be wholly wasted, unless their possessor can
+recognize the value of method. The man who does not systematize his
+time, who does not economize it so as to accomplish in each day the
+largest possible amount of work, without haste or unhealthy pressure,
+will make but an indifferent use of his gifts, and will assuredly
+lose many precious hours. He will be always too late; always
+endeavouring to overtake the lost moments, and never succeeding in
+doing so; until at length such a weight will accumulate upon him of
+work undone and opportunities neglected, that, in his exhaustion and
+discontent, he will lose all hope, and sink into the idleness of
+apathy. Method is the secret of success: the methodical student will
+get out of the twenty-four hours all that it is possible to get out
+of them; while the irregular and disorderly will lose a more or less
+considerable portion of them, according to the degree of his want of
+system.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton abroad.]
+
+Smeaton devoted a portion of his time to the study of French, in
+order that he might be able to read the valuable scientific treatises
+contained in that language, and also that he might be able to take a
+journey which he contemplated into the Low Countries, for the purpose
+of inspecting the great canal works of the Dutch engineers.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton in Holland.]
+
+He carried out his intention in 1754, when he traversed Holland and
+Belgium--mostly on foot, or in the _truckschuyts_ or canal boats,
+which form the national conveyance of those countries--and carefully
+inspected the most remarkable achievements of mechanical science in
+the districts through which he passed.
+
+It was with no little interest he found himself in a land which has
+been literally rescued from the sea by the efforts of human skill and
+industry; a great portion of which, even in comparatively modern
+times, was buried deep beneath the waters of ocean; a land to which
+nature has been so unkindly, and for which man has done so much. In
+a certain sense, Holland is the creation, as well as the trophy, of
+the engineer; and wherever Smeaton went, he found himself in the
+engineer's track. From Rotterdam he travelled by Delft, famous for
+its pottery, and the Hague, to the great commercial emporium of
+Amsterdam, and thence, as far north as Holder, examining with
+critical attention the huge dikes and embankments raised by the
+labour of man to prevent the sea from recovering its own.
+
+At Amsterdam he saw with delight and surprise its admirable harbour
+and spacious docks. In Smeaton's time, London had no accommodation
+of this description, and the numerous fleets which flocked to the
+British metropolis dropped anchor in the Thames, and loaded and
+unloaded at the river quays.
+
+Passing round the country by Utrecht, he proceeded to inspect the
+great sea-sluices at Brill and Helvoetsluys, through which the inland
+waters found a channel of egress, while the billows of ocean were
+prevented from forcing an entrance. During this journey he made
+copious notes of all he saw, and the information thus acquired was of
+great use to him in his after-labours as a canal and harbour engineer.
+
+[Sidenote: The Eddystone lighthouse.]
+
+He returned to England in 1755; and shortly afterwards the
+opportunity came to him which, we believe, comes to every man of
+industrious habits and steadfast purpose--the opportunity, by a
+prudent employment of which, we may place ourselves in a position to
+turn our gifts to good account, and do something for the advantage of
+our fellows. The lighthouse erected by Rudyerd on the Eddystone
+Rock, of which we have already given a description, was swept away by
+a destructive fire on the 2nd of December, and it became necessary to
+replace it by a new one. The proprietors applied to the President of
+the Royal Society to recommend to them an engineer who might be
+safely intrusted with a work so important. The then President, the
+Earl of Macclesfield, replied "that there was one of their own body
+whom he could venture to recommend for the work; yet that the most
+material part of what he knew of him was his having, within the
+compass of the last seven years, recommended himself to the Society
+by the communication of several mechanical contrivances and
+improvements; and though he had at first made it his business to
+execute things in the instrument way (without ever having been bred
+to the trade), yet, on account of the merit of his performances, he
+had been chosen a member of the Society; and that, for about three
+years past, having found the business of a philosophical
+instrument-maker not likely to afford an adequate recompense, he had
+wholly applied himself to various branches of mechanics."
+
+Upon this recommendation the proprietors acted, and Smeaton was
+engaged to erect the Eddystone lighthouse.
+
+[Sidenote: Preparing for the work.]
+
+The subject was wholly new to him, and therefore, as was his custom,
+he began to investigate it in all its bearings before he took any
+decisive step. One of the earliest conclusions at which he arrived
+was, that the new lighthouse ought to be built of stone, as the most
+durable and the safest material. He came to this decision from a
+careful examination of the plans and models of the two former
+lighthouses, which showed him that their leading defect was want of
+weight; of weight sufficient not only to resist the sea, but to
+compel the sea to yield to the building, so that it might neither
+rock in the winds nor tremble before the waves.
+
+[Sidenote: A visit to the rock.]
+
+As soon as he had made up his mind as to the principles on which the
+lighthouse should be constructed, he paid a visit to its intended
+site. He arrived at Plymouth about the end of March, but it was the
+2nd of April before he could embark for the Eddystone, owing to the
+violence of the wind and the heavy sea that was running in the
+Channel. On reaching the rock, the billows beat upon it with so much
+fury that it was impossible to land. All that Smeaton could do was
+to view the rocky cone--"the mere crest of the mountain whose base
+was laid so far down in the sea-deeps beneath--over which the waves
+were lashing, and to form a more adequate idea of the very narrow as
+well as turbulent site on which he was expected to erect his
+building."
+
+Three days later, however, he ventured on a second trip, when he
+succeeded in landing on the rock, and thoroughly examining it. The
+only traces he could find of the lighthouses erected by his
+predecessors were the iron branches fixed by Rudyerd, and remains of
+those fixed by Winstanley.
+
+On a third voyage to the rock, Smeaton was baffled by the wind, which
+compelled him to return to harbour without even obtaining a sight of
+it. After five more days, during which the engineer was employed in
+looking out a proper site for a work-yard, and examining the granite
+in the neighbourhood for the purposes of the building, he made a
+fourth voyage, and although the vessel reached the rock, the wind
+blew so freshly and the breakers dashed so furiously that it was
+again found impossible to land. He could only direct the boat to lie
+off and on, while he watched the breaking of the sea and its action
+on the reef. A fifth trial, after the lapse of a week, proved
+equally unsuccessful. After rowing about all day with the wind
+ahead, the party found themselves at night about four miles from the
+Eddystone, near which they anchored until morning; but a storm of
+wind and rain arising, they were compelled to return to Plymouth
+without succeeding in their object.
+
+[Sidenote: Try, try, and try again.]
+
+The sixth attempt--we record these minute particulars because they
+give such a vivid illustration of Smeaton's persevering energy--was
+successful, and on the 22nd of April, after the lapse of seventeen
+days, Mr. Smeaton landed a second time.
+
+After a careful inspection, the party retired to their sloop, which
+lay off until the tide had fallen, when Smeaton again landed, and the
+night being very calm, he continued on the rock until nine in the
+evening.
+
+On the 23rd he again landed, and pursued his operations; but this
+time he was interrupted by the ground-swell, which dashed the waves
+upon the reef, and, the wind rising, the sloop was forced to put back
+to Plymouth. During this visit, however, our engineer had secured
+some fifteen hours' occupation on the rock, and taken the dimensions
+of all its parts, to enable him to construct an accurate model of the
+foundation of the proposed structure. To correct the drawing,
+however, and to insure the utmost exactness, he determined upon
+attempting an eighth and final voyage of inspection on the 28th of
+April.
+
+[Sidenote: The eighth attempt.]
+
+Again the violence of the sea foiled him in his design.
+
+Another fortnight passed, a fortnight of unfavourable weather; but
+the time was not wasted. The engineer elaborated his design, and
+made all the preliminary arrangements to proceed with the work. He
+also drew up a careful code of regulations for the instruction and
+government of the artificers and others who were to be employed upon
+it. And this being done, he arranged for a journey to London, but
+not until he had paid three more visits to the rock for the purpose
+of correcting his measurements.
+
+In August 1756, as we have already related, the erection of the
+lighthouse was begun, and operations were continued until the end of
+November, in spite of the obstacles offered by a violent sea and
+unfavourable winds.
+
+The return of the workmen to port, in their store-vessel the
+_Neptune_, was safely accomplished, though the voyage was not
+unattended with danger.
+
+[Sidenote: A storm at sea.]
+
+Unable, in consequence of the violence of the gale, to make Plymouth
+harbour, the _Neptune_ was steered for Fowey, on the coast of
+Cornwall. Higher and higher rose the wind, until it blew quite a
+storm; and in the night Mr. Smeaton, hearing a sudden alarm and
+outcry amongst the crew overhead, ran upon deck half-dressed to learn
+the cause. It was raining heavily, and the hurricane lashed the
+waters into a whirlpool of spray and foam. "It being very dark,"
+says Smeaton, "the first thing I saw was the horrible appearance of
+breakers almost surrounding us; John Bowden, one of the seamen,
+crying out, 'For God's sake, heave hard at that rope, if you mean to
+save your lives!' I immediately laid hold of the rope, at which he
+himself was hauling as well as the other seamen, though he was also
+managing the helm. I not only hauled with all my strength, but
+called to and encouraged the workmen to do the same thing." The sea
+was dashing with terrible fury, and with a roar which drowned all
+other sounds, upon the rocks. The _Neptune's_ jib-sail was all at
+once rent into a thousand shreds; and to save the main-sail, it was
+lowered, when, happily, the vessel obeyed her helm, swung round, and
+put out to sea. At daybreak her crew found themselves out of sight
+of land, and driving towards the Bay of Biscay. But as the gale had
+abated, they soon got the vessel's head round again, and stood for
+the coast. Before night they sighted the Land's End, but could not
+then make the shore. For another night and day they were tossed to
+and fro, almost helplessly. A vessel coming in sight, they exhibited
+signals of distress; she bore down, and directed them how to steer
+for the Scilly Islands. The wind veering round, however, they bore
+up again for the Land's End, passed the Lizard and Rame Head, and,
+finally, after being blown about at sea for four days, dropped anchor
+in Plymouth Sound, much to their own contentment and to the
+satisfaction of their friends, who were despairing of their
+reappearance.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's activity.]
+
+Having fully described the gradual erection of the Eddystone
+lighthouse in a previous chapter, we will not weary the reader with a
+repetition of details with which he is already acquainted. But
+reference may appropriately be made to the energy and restless
+activity with which Smeaton watched the progress of the enterprise.
+If there was any position of danger his men hesitated to occupy, he
+immediately stepped forward and took the foremost place. One
+morning, in the summer of 1757, when heaving up the moorings of the
+store-ship, preparatory to starting for the rock, the links of the
+buoy chain were exposed to a considerable strain upon the davit-roll,
+which was of cast-iron, and began to bend upon its convex surface.
+To remedy this, Smeaton ordered the carpenter to cut some trenails
+into small pieces, and split each length into two, with the view of
+applying them between the chain and the roll at the flexure of each
+link, so as to relieve the strain. One of the men remarked that if
+the chain should break anywhere between the roll and the tackle, the
+person engaged in inserting the wooden wedges might be cut in two by
+the chain, or carried overboard along with it. Smeaton, who never
+required others to undertake what he would not do himself,
+immediately put aside his men, took the "post of honour," as he
+called it, and superintended the getting in of the chain, link by
+link, until it was all on board.
+
+We borrow the following interesting sketch from Mr Smiles:--
+
+While living at Plymouth, he says, the restless, enthusiastic
+engineer was accustomed every morning to take his post on the grassy
+summit of the Hoe, and with his telescope to survey the famous rock.
+
+[Sidenote: The Plymouth Hoe.]
+
+The Hoe is an elevated promenade, occupying a high ridge of land
+between Mill Bay and the entrance to the harbour, with the citadel at
+its eastern extremity. It forms the seaport of Plymouth, and
+commands the beautiful and varied scenery of the Sound. In front of
+it lies St. Nicholas's Island, bristling with fortifications; beyond,
+rising in verdurous slopes and terraces from the water's edge, is
+Mount Edgcumbe Park, with its masses of luxuriant foliage backed by
+green hills. The land juts out on either side the bay in rocky
+points, which are crowned with forts and batteries; while in the
+distance now, though not in Smeaton's time, extends the nobly massive
+rampart of the breakwater, midway between the bluffs of Redding and
+Staddon Points, so as to arrest the long roll of the Atlantic waves,
+and protect the placid expanse of the great harbour. It was from the
+Hoe that our ancestors first descried the immense array of the
+Spanish Armada advancing threateningly toward the English coast. It
+was the favourite watch-tower, so to speak, of Sir Francis Drake in
+those times of difficulty and peril, as it was now of Smeaton in less
+critical circumstances: and it may be added, that these two men, each
+so illustrious in his special vocation, possessed many characteristic
+qualities in common; perseverance, patience, heroic endurance,
+indomitable resolution; the qualities, in fact, by which great deeds
+are accomplished.
+
+[Sidenote: A famous hill.]
+
+Smeaton, when he ascended the Hoe after a stormy night at sea, had
+neither eye nor thought for the picturesque beauties or historical
+associations of the scene before him. All he could think of was his
+lighthouse on the rock. He knew that he had brought the fullest
+resources of skill, and care, and prevision to bear upon its
+erection, yet he could not avoid a feeling of anxiety as to the
+security of the foundation. Many there were who still went about
+asserting that no fabric of stone could possibly stand upon the
+wave-worn, wind-beaten rock; and again and again the engineer, in the
+first dim light of morning, came to see if their ill-omened
+predictions had been fulfilled. Sometimes he had to wait long, until
+he could see a tall white column of spray rise aloft into the morning
+air. _Then_ he breathed freely, and shut up his telescope, and
+thanked God that his labour had not been undone. And as the morning
+advanced, and the light grew fuller and stronger, he was able to
+discern his shapely light-tower, standing, erect and firm, above the
+whirl of waters.
+
+
+[Sidenote: The Eddystone lighthouse.]
+
+The Eddystone lighthouse, as Mr. Smiles remarks, has now withstood
+the storms of a century, and at the moment we write it still occupies
+its advanced position, in front of the dangerous south-western coast,
+a remarkable monument to the genius and perseverance of its
+architect. At times, when the swell of the Atlantic rushes up the
+Channel with more than ordinary violence, impelled by a south-west
+wind, its tall pillar is shrouded in thick wreaths of spray, and its
+keen light-star for a moment is obscured. But the cloud passes, and
+again the welcome radiance streams across the waters, at once a guide
+and a warning to the homeward-bound. Occasionally a strong wave will
+strike full upon it, and its central portion, swiftly gliding up the
+perpendicular shaft, leaps, with one tremendous bound, over the
+lantern. At other times, a billow will break against it with a fury
+which seems to menace the security of its foundation. To those
+within, the report is like that of heavy artillery, and the windows
+rattle, and the whole building quivers from top to base. But the
+shudder which then runs throughout the lighthouse, instead of being a
+sign of weakness, is the "strongest proof of the unity and close
+connection of the fabric in all its parts."
+
+
+[Sidenote: "The Eddystone in sight!"]
+
+"Many a heart has leapt with gladness at the cry of 'The Eddystone in
+sight!' sung out from the main-top. Homeward-bound ships, from
+far-off ports, no longer avoid the dreaded rock, but eagerly run for
+its light as the harbinger of safety. It might even seem as if
+Providence had placed the reef so far out at sea as the foundation
+for a beacon such as this, leaving it to man's skill and labour to
+finish His work. On entering the English Channel from the west and
+south, the cautious navigator feels his way by careful soundings on
+the great bank which extends from the Channel into the Atlantic; and
+these are repeated at fixed intervals until land is in sight. Every
+fathom nearer shore increases a ship's risks, especially in nights
+when, to use the seaman's phrase, it is 'as dark as a pocket.' The
+men are on the lookout, peering anxiously into the dark, straining
+the eye to catch the glimmer of a light; and when it is known that
+'the Eddystone is in sight,' a thrill runs through the ship, which
+can only be appreciated by those who have felt or witnessed it after
+long months of weary voyaging. Its gleam across the waters has thus
+been a source of joy, and given a sense of relief to thousands; for
+the beaming of a clear light from one known and fixed spot is
+infallible in its truthfulness, and a safer guide for the seaman than
+the bearings of many hazy and ill-defined headlands."
+
+
+[Sidenote: Usefulness of the lighthouse.]
+
+We find little record of Smeaton's engagements between 1759, when he
+completed his great undertaking, and 1764, when he applied for and
+obtained the appointment of receiver for the Derwentwater Estates.*
+It may be, as one of his biographers remarks, that, as yet, there was
+little demand in England for the constructive skill of so bold and
+able an engineer. Not but that there was work enough: for the
+highways were in a deplorable condition; in many districts
+intercommunication was rendered difficult by the want of sufficient
+bridges; in the commercial ports of the country dock accommodation
+was almost unknown; but England was then too poor, or her energies
+were too exclusively concentrated upon maritime enterprise and
+colonial extension, for her to undertake to supply these deficiencies
+on any extensive scale.
+
+
+* These estates were confiscated by the Crown, on the death of the
+last Earl of Derwentwater,--executed for high treason,--and conferred
+by Parliament on Greenwich Hospital.
+
+
+[Sidenote: His engineering works.]
+
+His reputation, however, was gradually extending throughout the
+kingdom, and in 1760 we find him consulted by the magistrates of
+Dumfries respecting the improvement of the Nith. He was similarly
+consulted as to the lockage of the river Wear, the opening up of the
+navigation of the Chelmer to Chelmsford, of the Don above Doncaster,
+of the Devon in Clackmannanshire, of the Tetney Haven navigation near
+Louth, and the improvement of the river Lea; but the improvements he
+recommended do not seem to have been carried out, through want of
+funds. In truth, his first great engineering enterprise was
+undertaken in his own county, where he was employed in extensive
+repairs of the dams and locks on the river Calder; and he effected
+many important improvements in that navigation, which confirmed the
+general belief in his skill and judgment. At the same time he
+carried out extensive works on the river Aire from Leeds to its
+junction with the Ouse.
+
+To Smeaton also is mainly due the recovery of the inundated lands in
+the Lincoln Fens, and in the low levels between Doncaster and Hull.
+The river Witham, between Lincoln and Boston, was still, it is said,
+a source of constant grief and loss to the farmers along its banks.
+It had become choked up by neglect, so that "not only had the
+navigation of the river become almost lost, but a large extent of
+otherwise valuable land was constantly laid under water."
+
+At a still later period he undertook to improve the drainage of the
+North Level of the Fens, and the outfall of the Nene at Wisbeach.
+For this purpose he recommended the construction of a powerful
+outfall-sluice at the mouth of the Nene.
+
+Other works in which he was consulted, and in which his engineering
+ability was signally manifested, may here be mentioned: the drainage
+of the lands adjacent to the river Went, in Yorkshire; of the Earl of
+Kinnoul's lands lying along the Almond and the Tay, in Perthshire;
+the Adling Fleet Level, at the junction of the Ouse and the Trent;
+Hotham Carrs, near Market-Weighton; the Lewes Laughton Level, in
+Sussex; the Potterick Carr Fen, near Doncaster; the Torksey Bridge
+Fen, near Gainsborough; and the Holderness Level, near Hull.
+
+[Sidenote: Old London Bridge.]
+
+In 1763, he was called upon by the Corporation of London to advise
+them as to the best means of improving, widening, and enlarging Old
+London Bridge. In order to accommodate the increased traffic on the
+river, two arches of the bridge had been thrown into one, but with
+the effect of so augmenting the rush of the water as to loosen the
+adjoining piers, by washing away the bed of the river under their
+foundations. The alarm was so great that few persons would pass
+either over or under the bridge; and the Corporation hastily summoned
+Smeaton, who was then in Yorkshire, to their assistance. On his
+arrival, he proceeded immediately to examine the bridge, and to sound
+about the foundations of the piers as minutely as possible. He then
+advised the Corporation to repurchase the stones of the city gates,
+which had recently been taken down and their material sold, and cast
+them into the river outside the startings, or buttresses of the
+piers, to protect them from the action of the tide. His advice was
+adopted; and simple as were the means suggested, they proved entirely
+efficacious.
+
+[Sidenote: Works on the Calder.]
+
+This method of checking the impetuous ravages of water, says Holmes,
+he had practised before with success on the river Calder. "On my
+calling on him in the neighbourhood of Wakefield, he showed me the
+effects of a great flood, which had made a considerable passage over
+the land; this he stopped at the bank of the river, by throwing in a
+quantity of large, rough stones, which, with the sand and other
+materials washed down by the river, filling up their interstices, had
+become a barrier to keep the river in its usual course."
+
+
+Smeaton next appears in the character of a bridge-builder. The
+handsome bridges at Perth, Coldstream, and Banff were erected by him.
+With reference to the first of these, it should be explained that the
+Tay being subject to frequent inundations, it was requisite that
+great care should be taken with the foundations, which were laid down
+by means of coffer-dams. That is, a row of piles was driven into the
+river-bed, and round about and between them was thrown a quantity of
+gravel and earth mixed together, so as to render the enclosed space
+impervious to water. Pumping power was then applied, and the bed of
+the river within the coffer-dam was laid completely dry; after which
+the soil was excavated to a proper depth, and a firm foundation
+obtained for the piles. Piles were driven into the earth underneath
+the intended foundation-frame, and then the building was carried
+upwards in the usual way.
+
+[Sidenote: The Perth bridge.]
+
+The Perth bridge is a handsome structure, consisting of seven
+principal arches, and measures about nine hundred feet in length. It
+was completed and opened for traffic in 1772.
+
+His success in this notable undertaking secured him a very
+considerable amount of engineering business in the North. At
+Edinburgh he found employment in improving the water-supply for that
+city; at Glasgow, in strengthening and securing the old bridge. Far
+more important were the works he executed in designing and
+constructing the Forth and Clyde Canal, which links together the east
+and west coasts of Scotland, the North Sea and the Irish Sea.
+
+[Sidenote: The Forth and Clyde Canal.]
+
+After a careful examination of the various lines which had been
+proposed for the canal, Smeaton strongly recommended the adoption of
+the most direct route possible, and suggested that the depth of the
+canal should be sufficient to accommodate vessels of large burden.
+Lord Dundas, the principal promoter of the scheme, adopted Smeaton's
+ideas, and took the necessary steps for obtaining an Act to authorize
+the construction of the Forth and Clyde Canal, which was accordingly
+commenced in 1768.
+
+This canal runs nearly parallel with the famous wall of Antoninus,
+erected by the Romans to protect the southern Lowlands from the
+predatory attacks of the wild tribes of Caledonia. It begins at a
+point near Grangemouth, on the Forth, and ends at Bowling, on the
+Clyde, a few miles below Glasgow. Its length is about 38 miles, and
+it includes 39 locks, with an elevation of 156 feet from the sea to
+the summit-level.
+
+It was one of the most difficult works, we are told, which, up to
+that time, had been constructed in Great Britain. The engineer's
+resources were severely tested by the occurrence of rocks and
+quicksands: in some places the canal was carried over deep rivers, in
+others along embankments exceeding twenty feet in height. It
+traverses numerous roads and scores of rivulets; besides the streams
+of the Luggie (celebrated by the peasant-poet David Gray), and the
+Kelvin (immortalized by Burns). The bridge over the latter is 275
+feet long and 68 feet high. The depth of the canal averages 8 feet.
+The total cost of the undertaking did not amount to £200,000.
+
+
+[Sidenote: The bridge at Coldstream.]
+
+Smeaton's next engagement was to construct a bridge across the Tweed
+at Coldstream. It consists of five principal arches, of which the
+central has a span of 60 feet 8 inches; the two lateral, of 60 feet 5
+inches each; and the two land or side arches, 58 feet. It was
+completed at a total cost of about £6000; and opened in October 1766,
+having been upwards of three years in building. It will serve to
+show the great advance that has been made in engineering science
+since the days of Smeaton, when we state that a similar bridge could
+now be erected in nine months; though, owing to the rise in wages and
+in the price of materials, at a much greater cost.
+
+Smeaton also furnished the design for the bridge over the river
+Deveron, near Banff, in Scotland. It consists of seven arches,
+segments of circles, and measures 410 feet in length, and 20 feet in
+width. It resembles, in its leading features, the bridge at Perth;
+and its simple yet graceful aspect, added to the exceeding beauty of
+its position, renders it a much-admired object, and one of great
+pictorial interest.
+
+[Sidenote: The bridge at Hexham.]
+
+Smeaton built only one bridge in England, and, strange to say, it was
+his only failure. He was requested, in 1777, to furnish a design for
+a bridge to be erected across the Tyne at Hexham; and a very handsome
+structure, of nine arches, it proved to be. But it had scarcely been
+finished before a subsidence took place in the foundation of one of
+the piers; and an attempt was made to remedy the defect by
+"sheet-piling," and by filling up the cavities in the river's bed
+with rough rubble-stones.
+
+[Sidenote: A great misfortune.]
+
+In the spring of 1782, however, a violent spate swept down the river,
+and in the course of a few hours the beautiful Hexham Bridge lay in
+ruin at the bottom of the Tyne. Writing to his engineer, he
+said:--"All our honours are now in the dust! It cannot now be said
+that in the course of thirty years' practice, and [after being]
+engaged in some of the most difficult enterprises, not one of
+Smeaton's works has failed! Hexham Bridge is a melancholy instance
+to the contrary...... The news came to me like a thunderbolt, as it
+was a stroke I least expected, and even yet can scarcely form a
+practical belief as to its reality. There is, however, one
+consolation that attends this great misfortune; and that is, that I
+cannot see that anybody is really to blame, or that anybody is
+blamed, as we all did our best, according to what appeared; and all
+the experience I have gained is, not to attempt to build a bridge
+upon a gravel bottom in a river subject to such violent rapidity."
+
+
+[Sidenote: Harbour-building.]
+
+Among his various engineering enterprises, Smeaton was employed in
+the improvement and construction of various harbours.
+
+His first work of this kind was at St. Ives, in Cornwall. Here he
+received much help from nature, which had provided a well-sheltered
+bay enclosed between two elevated headlands, known as the Island and
+Penower Point, respectively. Thus it was protected from the winds of
+the north, west, and south, and from the prevalent storms from the
+south-west, which beat with so much violence on the iron-bound
+Cornish coast. All that Smeaton, therefore, had to do, was to afford
+security for shipping from gales rising in the east and north-east;
+and this he effected by constructing a pier running nearly south from
+the southern angle of the Island. The port thus formed has proved of
+great advantage to the town, which is now one of the principal seats
+of the pilchard fishery, and the emporium of a busy mining district.
+
+Smeaton's skill was also called into requisition for many other
+harbours: Whitehaven, Workington, and Bristol, on the west coast; ye,
+Christchurch, and Dover, on the south; and Yarmouth, Lynn,
+Scarborough, and Sunderland, on the east.
+
+[Sidenote: A harbour of refuge.]
+
+His principal work in harbour-construction, however, was that which
+he accomplished at Ramsgate.
+
+"The proximity of this harbour to the Downs," says Mr. Smiles, "and
+to the mouth of the Thames, rendered it of considerable importance;
+and its improvement for purposes of trade, as well as for the shelter
+of distressed vessels in stormy weather, was long regarded as a
+matter of almost national importance. The neighbourhood of Sandwich
+was first proposed for a harbour of refuge as early as the reign of
+Queen Elizabeth, and the subject was revived in succeeding reigns.
+In 1737, Labelye, the architect of [old] Westminster Bridge, was
+called upon to investigate the subject; and ten years later, a
+committee of the House of Commons, after taking full evidence and
+obtaining every information, reported that 'a safe and commodious
+harbour may be made into the Downs near Sandown Castle, fit for the
+reception and security of large merchantmen and ships of war, which
+would also be of great advantage to the naval power of Great
+Britain.' The estimated cost of the proposed harbour was, however,
+considered too formidable, although it was under half a million; and
+the project lay dormant until a violent storm occurred in the Downs
+in 1748, by which a great number of ships were forced from their
+anchors and driven on shore. Several vessels, however, found safety
+in the little haven at Ramsgate, which was then only used by
+fishermen, the whole extent of its harbour accommodation consisting
+merely of a rough rubble-pier."
+
+It would seem that this circumstance once more directed the attention
+of the public to Ramsgate as a suitable site for a harbour of refuge
+for vessels caught in a gale in the Downs.
+
+[Sidenote: Proceedings at Ramsgate.]
+
+Petitions on the subject were addressed to the House of Commons, and
+the Government taking it up, an Act was passed in 1749 authorizing
+the construction of a harbour at Ramsgate.
+
+The trustees invited plans from various individuals, and from these
+selected a curious combination; adopting the west pier of one of the
+amateur engineers, and the east pier of another, the former to be of
+stone, and the latter of timber. The east pier was designed by a
+trustee; the west, by a ship-captain resident at Margate.
+
+While the works, thus strangely designed, were in progress, the
+Harbour Trustees proposed to reduce their area, and consequently the
+accommodation to be afforded to shipping. As soon as their intention
+became known, the shipping interest memorialized Parliament against
+it. In 1755 an inspection of the works was ordered, and led to their
+suspension, nor were they again resumed for a period of fully six
+years, during which the Government officials and the Harbour Trustees
+carried on a war of words. When they were once more set on foot,
+they proved eminently unsatisfactory, so far as their object was
+concerned, the protection of shipping; large quantities of sand and
+silt rapidly collecting in the harbour, and threatening to choke it
+up altogether.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's proposal.]
+
+This awkward circumstance induced the Harbour Board, in 1770, to call
+Mr. Smeaton to their councils. After a careful examination, he
+ascertained that no fewer than 268,700 cubic yards of sand and mud
+had already silted up, every tide bringing in a fresh quantity and
+depositing it in the tranquil water of the harbour, which possessed
+no natural scour to carry it away. In order to create such a scour,
+Smeaton proposed the construction of an adequate number of sluices,
+fed by an artificial backwater. He showed that Ramsgate harbour,
+having a sound bottom of chalk, was excellently adapted to insure the
+success of such a scheme; and pointed out that if the silt could thus
+be set in motion, the tide, running diagonally upon the harbour
+mouth, would easily carry it away.
+
+The proposition of our engineer, in detail, was as follows:--
+
+To enclose two spaces of four acres each, provided with nine
+draw-gates: namely, four upon the westernmost, and five upon the
+easternmost basin, the whole pointing in three different directions;
+two towards the curve of the west pier, four towards the harbour
+mouth, and three towards the curve in the east pier.
+
+To give the sluices all possible effect, he recommended the
+construction of a caisson, shaped somewhat like the pier of a bridge,
+which, being floated to its place, and then sunk, might serve to
+direct the current right or left, according to circumstances.
+
+After some discussion, the trustees resolved to adopt Smeaton's plan;
+but as it was not carried out in strict accordance with his
+intentions, another failure occurred, necessitating a recourse for
+the second time to his advice.
+
+Among the improvements which he now recommended was the construction
+of a new dock, the first stone of which was laid in July 1784.
+
+In the course of the excavations numerous springs were tapped, and
+these breaking through the pavement with which the dock had been
+laid, Portland stone was substituted, in blocks of considerable size.
+These, too, proved of no avail, and Smeaton was again sent for, with
+the result that the execution of all further works connected with the
+harbour was put into his hands. The dock was rebuilt; a timber floor
+was laid throughout in the most complete manner possible; an
+additional thickness was given to the walls; the east pier was
+rebuilt of stone, and carried out into deep water to a further extent
+of 350 feet. In constructing this extension, Smeaton first employed
+the diving-bell in building the foundations, employing a square iron
+chest, weighing about half a ton. It measured four feet six inches
+in height and length, and three feet in width. Two men could work
+together in its interior, and these were supplied with a constant
+current of fresh air by means of a forcing-pump placed in a boat
+which floated above them.
+
+[Sidenote: Works at Ramsgate.]
+
+The works, when finished, proved successful, and Ramsgate harbour
+still remains the best upon the south-east coast, affording a refuge
+in stormy weather to vessels of considerable draught of water. It
+includes an area of forty-two acres, the piers extending 310 feet
+into the sea, with an opening between the pier-heads of 200 feet in
+width. The inner basin serves the purpose of a wet dock, and there
+is also a dry dock in which ships can be repaired. A lighthouse has
+been erected on the east pier. In the season, when Ramsgate is
+crowded with visitors, the two piers afford ample opportunities for
+promenading, and present a scene of much liveliness and interest,
+which is enhanced by the numerous vessels at anchor in the basin, and
+by a picturesque background of chalky cliffs and grassy hills and
+shining sands.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton in the North.]
+
+In addition to his numerous works on the English coast, Smeaton was
+largely employed in Scotland, in inspecting the harbours there, and
+devising schemes for increasing their security and amount of
+accommodation.
+
+[Sidenote: Eyemouth Harbour.]
+
+We learn from Mr. Smiles that in 1770 the harbour at Aberdeen was
+altered in accordance with his suggestions; and a great depth of
+water was obtained over the bar at its mouth, as well as in the
+channel of the river Dee, by the erection of a north pier, and other
+additions. Improvements were also carried out at Dundee and Dunbar
+under his superintendence. He constructed the small harbours at
+Portpatrick on the west, and Eyemouth on the east coast. "Both of
+these," says our authority, "were in a great measure formed by
+nature, and the improvement of them demanded comparatively small
+skill on the part of the engineer. He had merely to follow the
+direction of the rocks, which provided a natural foundation for his
+piers at both places. Of his little harbour at Eyemouth he was
+somewhat proud, as it was one of the first he constructed, and very
+effectually answered its purpose at a comparatively small outlay of
+money. It lies at the corner of a bay, opposite St. Abb's Head, on
+the coast of Berwickshire, and is almost landlocked, excepting from
+the north. Smeaton accordingly carried his north pier into deep
+water, for the purpose of protecting the harbour's mouth from that
+quarter, as well as enlarging the accommodation of the haven. The
+harbour was thus rendered perfectly safe in all winds, and proved of
+great convenience and safety to the fishing-craft by which it is
+chiefly frequented."
+
+It is to be observed that Smeaton, unlike some of our modern
+engineers, was very solicitous to do his work economically, and that
+he always contented himself with recommending such improvements or
+modifications as would answer the desired purpose, without seeking to
+gain a brilliant reputation by ambitious and costly schemes.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's activity.]
+
+These details, of bridges and harbours, and piers and sluice-gates,
+may not be interesting to the reader, but they are valuable as
+illustrations of the credit which Smeaton enjoyed as a successful and
+capable engineer, and of his restless industry and indefatigable
+perseverance. He crowded an extraordinary amount of good and useful
+achievement into his active life, and whatever he did was done so
+carefully and conscientiously as never to require patching or
+re-doing. In the course of his engineering labours he traversed
+Great Britain from north to south, and east to west; and there was
+scarcely a bridge or a canal in the kingdom which he did not restore,
+enlarge, or in some way improve. As might be expected, he remained,
+throughout his life, the great authority on all questions connected
+with lighthouses. He erected those which on Spurn Head still guard
+the mouth of the Humber, and at other parts of the coast his services
+were called into requisition to secure their improved lightage. He
+was also consulted by Government respecting the national dockyards at
+Portsmouth and Plymouth. When a new water company was started to
+supply some hitherto unprovided town or district, or when an old
+company found it necessary to afford increased accommodation,
+recourse was had to the inexhaustible skill and ingenuity of Smeaton,
+who for a considerable period was really consulting engineer to the
+nation. He was called upon to advise the landowner who wished to
+drain his estates, and the coal-owner who desired to work his mines
+more safely and efficiently. There seems to have been no department
+of engineering science in which he was not largely and successfully
+employed.
+
+[Sidenote: A water-pumping engine.]
+
+It is said of him, and without exaggeration, that he was ready to
+supply a design of any new machine, from a fire-bucket or a ship's
+pump to a turning-lathe or a steam-engine. His genius was equally at
+home with small things as with great. Whatever he designed was
+remarkable for the finish and neatness of its execution. "The
+water-pumping engine which he erected for Lord Irwin, at
+Temple-Newsham, near his own house at Austhorpe, to pump the water
+for the supply of the mansion, is an admirable piece of workmanship,
+and continues at this day in good working condition. His advice was
+especially sought on subjects connected with mill-work,
+water-pumping, and engineering of every description,--flour-mills and
+powder-mills, wind-mills and water-mills, fulling-mills and
+flint-mills, blade-mills and forge-hammer mills. From a list left by
+him in his own handwriting, it appears that he designed and erected
+forty-three water-mills of various kinds, besides numerous
+wind-mills. [Sidenote: Smeaton and the steam-engine.] Water-power
+was then used for nearly all purposes for which steam is now applied,
+such as grinding flour, sawing wood, boring and hammering iron,
+fulling cloth, rolling copper, and driving all kinds of machinery."
+Smeaton also bestowed much attention on the development of the
+wonderful powers of the steam-engine, then only in its infancy. In
+order to experimentalize upon it, he erected a model engine, on
+Newcomen's principle, near his house at Austhorpe; and his fertile
+genius soon devised a variety of improvements which added to its
+utility. His Chacewater engine of 150 horsepower was looked upon as
+the finest and most powerful of its kind which had until then been
+erected. In this field of invention, however, it must be owned that
+he was completely surpassed by James Watt, the superior merit of
+whose condensing engine--notwithstanding the time and labour Smeaton
+had bestowed on the development of Newcomen's--he frankly
+acknowledged. After inspecting Watt's engine, he said at once: "That
+the old engine, even when made to do its best, was now driven from
+every place where fuel could be considered of any value."
+
+
+[Sidenote: A lesson for the reader.]
+
+During many years the opinion of Smeaton was considered of so much
+authority, that no engineering works of any importance were
+undertaken throughout the kingdom except on his advice, or under his
+superintendence. He was constantly consulted in Parliament, and was
+regarded as an arbiter or ultimate referee on all difficult questions
+connected with his profession.
+
+And it should be added, for the benefit of the young reader, that he
+was never in a hurry to give his opinion; and that he never gave it
+until he had made himself thoroughly acquainted with the subject on
+which it was sought. He was above all petty artifices, and never
+laid claim to the possession of universal knowledge. He did not
+pretend to be able to decide off-hand on a question he had not
+considered, but studied it thoroughly and patiently before he
+ventured on offering an opinion. Hence it was always received with
+the utmost deference, and the most implicit confidence was placed in
+his proved integrity.
+
+[Sidenote: Always "thorough."]
+
+Smeaton possessed the gift of fluent and clear description. He could
+make difficult points of engineering science intelligible even to
+non-professional readers or hearers; and in the courts of law he was
+frequently complimented by Lord Mansfield and the other judges for
+the light he so ingeniously threw upon abstruse and very difficult
+subjects. His secret was, his thorough knowledge of what he wrote or
+spoke about. He was always _thorough_, and hence he always spoke
+with the decision and confidence of a master. It is only imperfect
+knowledge which ever blunders into obscurity.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+SMEATON IN PRIVATE LIFE--HIS LAST YEARS AND CHARACTER.
+
+While Smeaton was thus reaping the reward of his diligent life and
+conscientious industry, he continued to make his home and
+resting-place at Austhorpe, near Leeds, where he had been born.
+There he carried on the mechanical experiments in which he had ever
+felt so intense a delight. His father had allowed him the privilege
+of a workshop in an outhouse, and he occupied it for many years;
+afterwards, when the house had become his settled residence, he
+erected an atelier, a study, and an observatory, all in one, for his
+own use. This building assumed the form of a square tower, four
+stories high. It stood apart from the house, on the opposite side of
+the court or green, and on the bank of a pleasant pool. Shrouded in
+ivy, and embowered among trees, it now forms a picturesque feature in
+the landscape. The ground-floor was devoted to his forge; the first
+floor contained his lathe; the second, his models; the third, his
+study; while the fourth was a sort of lumber-room and attic. From
+the little turreted staircase on the top a door opened upon the
+leads. A vane was fixed on the summit, and so arranged that it set
+in motion the hands of a dial on the ceiling of his drawing-room, and
+showed at any moment the precise direction in which the wind blew.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton in his study.]
+
+As soon as the engineer retired to his study, strict orders were
+issued that he was not to be disturbed on any account. No person was
+suffered to ascend the circular staircase which led to his retreat.
+If he heard a step below, he would immediately raise his voice to
+know the intruder's business. Even his smith, Waddington, was
+prohibited from trespassing on the sanctuary, and required, on such
+occasions, to wait in the lower apartment until Mr. Smeaton came down.
+
+When he was neither evolving plans nor drawing up reports, Smeaton
+delighted to occupy his leisure with astronomical studies and
+observations; and this scientific pastime he continued to indulge in
+even in the flush of his prosperous professional career, when he was
+the consulting engineer of all England. For many years he regularly
+contributed papers on astronomical subjects to the Royal Society, of
+which he was a Fellow. The instruments he used in making his
+observations were all of his own workmanship, and remarkable for
+their accuracy and finish.
+
+[Sidenote: Ingenious designs for tools.]
+
+His contrivances of tools, we are told, were endless, and he was
+constantly employed in inventing and making new ones. Of these
+interesting relics large quantities are still, says Smiles, in the
+possession of the son of his blacksmith, who lives in the
+neighbourhood of Austhorpe. When Mr. Smiles made inquiry after them,
+they were found lying in a heap in an open shed, begrimed and rusty.
+One mysterious article, after it had been thoroughly scrubbed and
+cleansed, proved to be a jack-plane, and the tool which Smeaton
+himself had handled. His drill was also found, the bow being formed
+of a thick piece of cane; his brace, his T square, his augers, his
+gouges, and his engraving tools.
+
+"There was no end of curiously arranged dividers; pulleys in large
+numbers, and of various sizes; cog-wheels, brass hemispheres, and all
+manner of measured, drilled, framed, and jointed brass-work. These
+remains of the great engineer are worthy of preservation. To
+mechanics, there is a meaning in every one of them. They do not
+resemble existing tools, but you can see at once that each was made
+for a reason; and one can almost detect what the contriver was
+thinking about when he made them so different from those we are
+accustomed to see. Even in the most trifling matters, such as the
+kind of wood or metal used, and the direction of the fibre of the
+wood, each detail has been carefully studied. Much even of the
+household furniture seems to have been employed in their fabrication,
+possibly to the occasional amazement of the ladies in Smeaton's house
+over the way. We are informed that so much 'rubbish,' as it was
+termed, was found in that square tower at his death, that a fire was
+kindled in the yard, and a vast quantity of papers, letters, books,
+plans, tools, and scraps of all kinds, were remorselessly burnt."
+
+[Sidenote: "A born mechanic."]
+
+There can be no question that Smeaton was "a born mechanic;" and to
+the end of his days a mechanic he remained, finding his greatest
+pleasure in mechanical pursuits. It is told of him that when new
+gates were erected at the entrances to Temple-Newsham Park, near his
+house at Austhorpe, he offered to supply the design; and they were
+accordingly constructed and hung after his plans. In the popular
+opinion, however, his noblest work, surpassing even the Eddystone
+lighthouse, is the ingenious hydraulic ram, by means of which the
+water is still raised in the beautiful grounds of Temple-Newsham.
+Occasionally he diversified his occupations in his atelier, and at
+his desk, by visits to his smithy. Here he was wont to experiment
+upon a boiler, the lower part of copper and the upper of lead, which
+he had fitted up in an adjacent building, for the purpose of
+ascertaining the evaporative power of different kinds of fuel, and of
+settling other questions connected with the all-absorbing subject of
+steam-power. [Sidenote: File _versus_ hammer.] He was on the best of
+terms with his smith, and if he thought him not very dexterous in the
+execution of any particular piece of work, he would take the tools
+himself, and show him how it ought to be done. He was fond of
+repeating the maxim, "Never let a file come where a hammer can go."
+
+[Sidenote: "Queer-fangled things."]
+
+When superintending the various works on which he was successively
+employed, if any workman showed a lack of skill, or seemed unable to
+proceed, he would at once take his tools and finish the task himself.
+"You know, sir," said the son of Smeaton's blacksmith to an inquirer,
+"workmen didn't know much about drawings at that time a-day, and so
+when Mr. Smeaton wanted any queer-fangled thing making, he'd cut one
+piece out of wood, and say to my father, 'Now, lad, go make me
+this,'--and so on for ever so many pieces; and then he'd stick all
+those pieces o' wood together, and say, 'Now, lad, thou knows how
+thou made each part, go make it now all in a piece.' And I've heard
+my father say 'at he's often been cap't to know how he could tell so
+soon when owt ailed it; for before ever he set his foot at t' bottom
+of his twisting steps, or before my father could get sight of his
+face, if t' iron had been wrong, thear'd been an angry word o' some
+sort, but t' varry next words were, 'Why, my lad, thou o'ud a' made
+it so and so: now go make another.'"
+
+
+It is related by his daughter, Mrs. Dickson, that early in life
+Smeaton attracted the notice of the eccentric Duke and Duchess of
+Queensberry, owing to the remarkable personal likeness between him
+and their favourite Gay, the poet.
+
+Their first acquaintance was made under sufficiently singular
+circumstances.
+
+When the engineer, one night, was walking in Ranelagh Gardens, then a
+fashionable place of resort, with Mrs. Smeaton, he observed an
+elderly lady and gentleman fixing their eyes upon him with a
+persistent gaze. At last they stopped, and the Duchess said, "Sir, I
+don't know who you are, or what you are, but so strongly do you
+resemble my poor dear Gay that we _must_ be acquainted; you shall go
+home and sup with us; and if the minds of the two men accord as do
+the countenances, you will find two cheerful old folks who can love
+you well; and I think (or you are a hypocrite), you can as well
+deserve it."
+
+[Sidenote: A guest at the Duke's.]
+
+The invitation thus frankly given was as frankly accepted, and proved
+the beginning of a friendship which continued cordial and
+uninterrupted so long as the Duke and Duchess lived.
+
+During Smeaton's visits a game at cards was sometimes proposed.
+Smeaton, however, disliked cards, and could never devote his
+attention to the game. On one occasion the stakes were already high,
+and it fell to Smeaton's lot to double them, when, neglecting to deal
+the cards, he appeared to be busily engaged in making some abstruse
+calculations on paper, which he placed upon the table. The Duchess
+asked eagerly what they referred to. Smeaton calmly replied, "You
+will recollect that the field in which my house stands measures about
+five acres three roods and seven perches, which, at thirty years'
+purchase, will be just my stake; and if your grace will make a duke
+of me, I presume the winner will not dislike my mortgage." The
+jesting lesson had its effect, and they never played again, except
+for the veriest trifle.
+
+
+[Sidenote: A benevolent character.]
+
+Smeaton, on one occasion, obtained a public appointment for a clerk
+in whom he placed the greatest confidence, and, conjointly with a
+friend, became security for him to a considerable amount. Not long
+afterwards this man committed the crime of forgery, was detected, and
+given up to justice. "The same post," says Mrs. Dickson, "brought
+news of the melancholy transaction, of the man's compunction and
+danger, of the claim of the bond forfeited, and of the refusal of the
+other person to pay the moiety. Being present when he read his
+letters, which arrived at a period of Mrs. Smeaton's declining
+health, so entirely did the command of himself second his anxious
+attention to her, that no emotion was visible on their perusal, nor,
+till all was put into the best train possible, did a word or look
+betray the exquisite distress it occasioned him. In the interim all
+which could soothe the remorse of a prisoner, every means which could
+save (which did, at least, from public execution), were exerted for
+him, with a characteristic benevolence, active and unobtrusive."
+
+
+[Sidenote: Not to be bought.]
+
+Smeaton was a man of blameless character; his integrity was as pure
+as his energy was unresting. Though his opportunities of amassing
+wealth were numerous, he cared but little for them. Profit was
+always, with Smeaton, a secondary consideration; his first aim being
+to execute the task intrusted to him with all the skill at his
+command. He never slighted his work, but attended to its minutest
+details. Many lucrative appointments were placed at his disposal.
+The Empress Catherine of Russia endeavoured, by the most splendid
+offers, to secure his services for her own country; but Smeaton was
+too sincere a patriot to be dazzled by any bribe. "The disinterested
+moderation of his ambition," says his daughter,--and says so
+truly,--"every transaction in private life evinced; his public ones
+bore the same stamp; and after his health had withdrawn him from the
+labours of his profession, many instances may be given by those whose
+concerns induced them to press importunately for a resumption of it;
+and when some of them seemed disposed to enforce their entreaties by
+further prospects of lucrative recompense, his reply was strongly
+characteristic of his simple manners and moderation. He introduced
+the old woman who took care of his chambers in Gray's Inn, and
+showing her, asserted that 'her attendance sufficed for all his
+wants.' The inference was indisputable, for money could not tempt
+that man to forego his ease, leisure, or independence, whose
+requisites of accommodation were compressed within such limits!"
+
+[Sidenote: The value of integrity.]
+
+A very high opinion of his probity and independence was formed by all
+who had transactions with him. The Princess Daschkaw, on behalf of
+the Empress of Russia, used every persuasion and offered every
+inducement to accept the superintendence of the vast projects she had
+conceived for the development of the resources of her empire. When
+all her negotiations failed, she remarked: "Sir, you are a great man,
+and I honour you! You may have an equal in ability, perhaps, but in
+character you stand alone. The English premier, Sir Robert Walpole,
+was mistaken, and my sovereign has the misfortune to find one man who
+has not his price."
+
+In all the social duties of life Smeaton was above praise; and he was
+quick to recognize and encourage real merit wherever he found it. To
+strangers his mode of expression might at times appear too warm and
+harsh; but this may be accounted for, perhaps, as Mr. Holmes accounts
+for it, by the intense application of his mind, which was always
+absorbed in the pursuit of truth, or engaged in extending the domains
+of human knowledge. Hence, if interrupted by anything not in
+accordance with the general current of his thoughts, he was apt to
+speak hastily. As a friend, he was sincere, earnest, generous; as a
+companion, interesting and entertaining, and his conversation was
+always fresh, happy, and suggestive.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton at home.]
+
+In his own home, and by his family and dependants, he was equally
+beloved and revered. After his wife's death in 1784, his two
+daughters managed his household until his own departure. The elder
+has left on record many graphic particulars of his mode of life, and
+has drawn his character in terms dictated by affection, yet, as
+unquestionable evidence shows, without undue exaggeration.
+
+Though communicative on most subjects, she says, and stored with
+ample and liberal observations on others, of himself he never spoke.
+In nothing does he seem to have stood more single than in being
+devoid of that egotism which more or less affects the world. It
+required some address, even in his family, to draw him into
+conversation directly relating to himself, his pursuits, or his
+success. Self-opinion, self-interest, and self-indulgence, seemed
+alike tempered in him by a modesty inseparable from merit; and by a
+moderation in pecuniary ambition, a habit of intense application, and
+a rigid temperance, which, however laudable, are certainly uncommon.
+
+[Sidenote: Father and master.]
+
+Devoted to his family with an affection so profound, a manner at once
+so cheerful and serene, that it is impossible to say whether the
+charm of conversation, the simplicity of instruction, or the
+gentleness with which it was conveyed, most endeared his home; a home
+in which, from their earliest years, his children could not recollect
+to have seen in him a sign of dissatisfaction, or to have heard a
+word of asperity. Yet with all this he ruled his household, not his
+household him. He was the loving and generous father, but he was
+also the firm and resolved master. But it is for "casuistry, or
+education, or rule, to explain his authority; it was an authority as
+impossible to dispute as it is to define."
+
+
+[Sidenote: Personal characteristics.]
+
+In person our engineer was of middle stature, broadly and strongly
+made, like most Yorkshiremen, and endowed with a constitution of
+great natural vigour. The expression of his countenance was marked
+by much gentleness and shrewdness. In his ordinary address he was
+plain, unpretending, simple, but never rude or awkward. He had the
+characteristic straightforwardness of speech of the north-countryman,
+and never hesitated to call a lie a lie, or to stigmatize an act of
+dishonesty or deception in the plainest possible terms. He spoke in
+the dialect of his native county, and had the good sense not to be
+ashamed of it. His incessant avocations prevented him from acquiring
+that polish and superficial refinement so much valued by little
+minds;--excellent things in themselves, but dearly purchased at the
+cost of sterling qualities of head or heart. He was born an
+engineer, a son of toil; and such he remained to the last.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton on literary work.]
+
+Towards the close of his life, Smeaton became an author; not,
+however, with a view to literary reputation, but in the hope he might
+do some service to those coming after him by an accurate account of
+the various important works in which he had been engaged as an
+engineer. He meditated several compilations of this character, but
+lived to complete only his "Narrative of the Construction of the
+Eddystone Lighthouse." He frankly tells us that he found the task of
+describing this structure far more difficult than that of raising it;
+and hence, like most unaccustomed writers, he became singularly
+impressed with a sense of the importance of literary composition.
+
+"I am convinced," he says in his preface, "that to write a book
+tolerably well is not a light or an easy matter; for, as I have
+proceeded in this task, I have been less and less satisfied with the
+execution. In truth, I have found much more difficulty in writing
+than I did in building, as well as a greater length of time and
+application of mind to be employed. I am indeed now older by
+thirty-five years than I was when I first entered on that enterprise,
+and therefore my faculties are less active and vigorous; but when I
+consider that I have been employed full seven years, at every
+opportunity, in forwarding this book, having all the original
+draughts and materials to go upon, and that the production of these
+original materials, as well as the building itself, were despatched
+in half that time, I am almost tempted to subscribe to the sentiment
+adopted by Mr. Pope, that
+
+ 'Nature's chief masterpiece is writing well.'
+
+It is true that I have not been bred to literature, but it is equally
+true that I was no more bred to mechanics: we must therefore conclude
+that the same mind has in reality a much greater facility in some
+subjects than in others."
+
+[Sidenote: The great engineer.]
+
+We agree with Mr. Smiles, however, in thinking that Smeaton's story
+of the Eddystone Lighthouse is very effectively told. It is
+distinguished by its intense dramatic interest; an interest arising
+from the contest it depicts between the colossal forces of nature and
+human resolution, energy, and skill. It has been well observed by
+the Earl of Ellesmere, in his "Essays on Engineering," that bloody
+battles have been won, and campaigns conducted to a successful issue,
+with less of personal exposure to physical danger on the part of the
+commander-in-chief, than was constantly encountered by Smeaton during
+the greater part of those years in which the lighthouse was in course
+of erection. "In all works of danger he himself led the way; was the
+first to spring upon the rock, and the last to leave it; and by his
+own example he inspired with courage the humble workmen engaged in
+carrying out his plans, who, like himself, were unaccustomed to the
+special terrors of the scene."
+
+
+[Sidenote: "Suum cuique."]
+
+We have next to speak of Smeaton's intellectual powers. That they
+were equal to work of the highest character we have already shown.
+He was abundantly fertile in resources; no difficulties or obstacles
+ever embarrassed him; his capacious mind seemed stored with an
+inexhaustible supply of ingenious expedients. He was the first of
+the great school of English engineers whose triumphs over nature are
+recorded in every part of the world. No undertaking ever perplexed
+that prompt, quick, and massive intellect. Hence his fame has gone
+on increasing. James Watt, who always spoke of him in language of
+warm admiration, calls him "_father_ Smeaton." In justice to him, he
+writes, "we should observe that he lived before Rennie, and before
+there were one-tenth of the artists there are now." _Suum cuique_;
+his example and precepts have made us all engineers. Robert
+Stephenson, half a century later, declared him to be the engineer of
+the highest intellectual eminence that had yet appeared in England.
+He pronounced him to be "the greatest philosopher in our [the
+engineering] profession this country has yet produced. He was indeed
+a great man, possessing a truly Baconian mind, for he was an
+incessant experimenter. The principles of mechanics were never so
+clearly exhibited as in his writings, more especially with respect to
+resistance, gravity, the power of water and wind to turn mills, and
+so on. His mind was as clear as crystal, and his demonstrations will
+be found mathematically conclusive. To this day there are no
+writings so valuable as his in the highest walks of scientific
+engineering; and when young men ask me, as they frequently do, what
+they should read, I invariably say, Go to Smeaton's philosophical
+papers; read them, master them thoroughly, and nothing will be of
+greater service to you. Smeaton was indeed a very great man."
+
+
+[Sidenote: "Clear as crystal."]
+
+We have said enough to prove that Smeaton was gifted with the most
+earnest industry, and we have dwelt at some length on his patience,
+resolution, and perseverance. He was a hard worker throughout his
+life, from six years old to sixty. And like all hard workers, like
+all men who have won renown or accomplished great things, he knew how
+to economize his time; how to utilize every moment; how to employ it
+in such a manner as to obtain from its use the most advantageous
+results. When at home, his forenoons were occupied in writing
+reports, and in the various transactions connected with his
+professional engagements; while his afternoons were devoted to the
+mechanical and scientific pursuits which formed his principal
+relaxation, working at his forge or in his workshop, making
+mechanical experiments, or preparing papers on scientific subjects
+for the Royal Society.
+
+[Sidenote: Numbering the hours.]
+
+He was endowed by nature with a strong constitution and a robust
+frame, but there is reason to apprehend that he tasked his mental
+powers too laboriously by his intense and continuous application to
+study during his long periods of seclusion at Austhorpe. As he
+advanced in years his sturdy strength of limb departed, and his
+physical powers gave way, while he was yet in his mature manhood.
+They were further impaired by the abstemious regimen which he was
+subsequently compelled to adopt. [Sidenote: The dreaded enemy.]
+Cerebral disease, moreover, was hereditary in his family, and he long
+dreaded the attack of paralysis, which eventually terminated his
+life. But, as Mr. Smiles says, this only made him the more eager to
+employ to the greatest advantage the time which it might yet be
+permitted him to live: and he dreaded above all things the blight of
+his mental powers--to use his own words, "lingering over the dregs
+after the spirit had evaporated"--chiefly as depriving him of the
+means of doing further good.
+
+The last public measure on which he was professionally engaged in
+London was the passing of a Bill through Parliament for the
+construction of the Birmingham and Worcester Canal. The opposition
+to it was fierce and protracted, and his support of the measure in
+committee entailed upon him great application, anxiety, and thought,
+His friends saw with much concern that the labour was too great for
+him, and were in constant alarm lest the powers of his vigorous mind
+should suddenly give way. The Bill, however, passed by a small
+majority, and Smeaton retired to his house at Austhorpe to enjoy the
+rest he so greatly needed.
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's last days.]
+
+On the 16th of September the blow fell. He was seized with an attack
+of paralysis while walking in the garden. Happily he regained the
+use of his mental faculties, and was able to thank the Almighty that
+his intellect was spared.
+
+During his illness he dictated several letters to his old friend, Mr.
+Holmes, in which he minutely described his health and feelings. In
+one of them he says pathetically, "I conclude myself nine-tenths
+dead, and the greatest favour the Almighty can do (as I think), will
+be to complete the other part; but as it is likely to be a lingering
+illness, it is only in his power to say when that is likely to
+happen."
+
+Smeaton bore his trial, however, with the equanimity of a Christian,
+and was very cheerful and resigned. Sometimes he would complain that
+he had lost his old quickness of apprehension; but recovering himself
+quickly, he would excuse the momentary impatience, and remark, with a
+smile, "It could not be otherwise; the shadow must lengthen as the
+sun goes down." He expressed particular pleasure in seeing the
+customary occupations of his family resumed, and took the same
+interest as ever in reading, drawing, music, and conversation. Nor
+were his remarks less apt or instructive or entertaining than when he
+was in the flush of health. One evening he was asked to explain some
+phenomena respecting the moon, which, from the window of his
+apartment, could be seen shining in full-orbed splendour. He replied
+to the questions addressed to him very fully and clearly. Then,
+fixing his gaze on the beautiful sphere, he contemplated it
+steadfastly for some time, observing, "How often have I looked up to
+it with inquiry and wonder; and how often have I looked forward to
+the period when I shall have the vast and privileged views of an
+hereafter, and all will be comprehension and pleasure!" Smeaton was
+thus consoled in his last days by the only consolation which, under
+such circumstances, ever proves effectual,--that which flows from a
+reverent trust in the constant presence of a Divine Father. Though
+not ostentatious in his religious professions, he had learned the
+value of religious truth, and he knew that in passing through the
+valley of the shadow his sole help and support was the mercy of a
+Redeemer. And hence he listened with delight to the promises of Holy
+Writ, and joined with fervour in the ministrations of religion.
+
+[Sidenote: The engineer's death.]
+
+The great engineer's illness was not of long duration. He passed
+away on the 28th of October 1792, in the sixty-eighth year of his
+age. He was interred with his forefathers in the old parish church
+of Whitkirk, where a tablet was erected to his memory, bearing the
+following quaint inscription:--
+
+[Sidenote: Smeaton's monument.]
+
+ Sacred to the Memory
+
+ of
+
+ JOHN SMEATON, F.R.S.
+
+A man whom God had endowed with the most extraordinary abilities,
+which he indefatigably exerted for the benefit of mankind in works of
+
+ SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHICAL RESEARCH;
+
+More especially as an Engineer and Mechanic. His principal work, the
+Eddystone Lighthouse, erected on a rock in the open sea (where one
+had been washed away by the violence of a storm, and another had been
+consumed by the rage of fire), secure in its own stability, and the
+wise precautions for its safety, seems not unlikely to convey to
+distant ages, as it does to every nation of the Globe, the name of
+its constructor.
+
+ _He was born at Austhorpe, June 8, 1724;
+ And departed this life, October 28, 1792._
+
+ ------------
+
+ Also Sacred to the Memory of
+
+ ANN,
+
+ THE WIFE OF THE SAID JOHN SMEATON, F.R.S.,
+
+ Who died January 17, 1784.
+
+ THEIR TWO SURVIVING DAUGHTERS,
+
+ Duly impressed with sentiments of Love and Respect
+ for the kindest and tenderest of Parents,
+ Pay this Tribute to their Memory.
+
+
+Genius, or originality, is, for the most part, says Hazlitt, some
+strong quality in the mind, answering to and bringing out some new
+and striking quality in nature.
+
+According to this definition, Smeaton must be considered a man of
+genius. But Hazlitt goes on to say that capacity is not the same
+thing as genius. And he describes capacity as relating to the
+_quantity_ of knowledge, however acquired; while genius relates to
+its _quality_, and the mode of acquiring it. Capacity is the power
+over given ideas or combinations of ideas; genius is the power over
+those which are not given, and for which no obvious or precise rule
+can be laid down.
+
+[Sidenote: A man of capacity.]
+
+Smeaton, then, we should prefer to call a man of _capacity_; a man
+with a great power over given ideas or combinations of ideas. And
+along with this capacity he possessed a remarkable steadfastness of
+purpose, a determined will, an unconquerable perseverance. Without
+these adjuncts, indeed, capacity will avail but little. The only
+motto which it can take up and act upon is that expressed so pithily
+by the old poet:--
+
+ "See first that the design is wise and just;
+ That ascertained, pursue it resolutely.
+ Do not for one repulse forego the purpose
+ That you resolved to effect."
+
+
+Smeaton, in his childhood, making turning-lathes and designing pumps;
+Ferguson, the boy-astronomer, learning the positions of the stars
+with the help of a string of beads; Murray, afterwards the eminent
+Orientalist, teaching himself to write with a blackened brand on the
+whitewashed wall,--these are examples the youthful student should
+ever set before him. They are examples of what can be done by
+capacity, directing and controlling diligence, and zeal, and
+application.
+
+[Sidenote: What diligence can do.]
+
+A distinguished Italian author has put forward the theory that all
+men may become great men, may become poets, painters, and
+orators;--as if the sole difference between genius and mediocrity
+were the power of application. We think it impossible for any calm
+and sober judgment to accept such a hypothesis. We do not believe
+that any amount of diligence or perseverance, however continuous and
+well-directed, could convert a versifier into a Milton, or a
+blacksmith into a Smeaton. But then we may all take to ourselves the
+consolation that it is neither desirable nor necessary that we should
+all be Smeatons and Miltons; that what we have mainly to consider is
+this,--the doing our best in whatever position the will of Providence
+may have assigned to us, since, by so doing, we may reasonably hope
+to swell the sum of human happiness and human good. And the benefit
+we may derive from a study of the career and character of Smeaton is
+to be found in the encouragement it gives us to lead a life of
+patient and assiduous labour. For the reader, as for Smeaton, God
+has provided a vocation, if he will but earnestly seek to discover
+it; and when he once sees the path of duty before him, he will
+assuredly gain his reward if he perseveres in it with singleness of
+aim and loftiness of purpose.
+
+
+[Sidenote: Lessons from great lives.]
+
+If it is not necessary for every man to become a Watt or a Smeaton,
+and if it is not given to every man to win the success which a Watt
+or a Smeaton achieved, yet it is possible for each one of us to
+attain to a certain standard of character and capacity, and to
+acquire a reasonable measure of prosperity. As we have elsewhere
+written, biography is full of examples of what may be accomplished by
+a resolute will; what may be done by the industry that never wearies
+and the energy that never flags. Long and brilliant is the record of
+men who have attained greatness under the most unfavourable
+conditions. The great voyager who opened up a New World to the
+enterprise of the West was in early life a weaver. The able German
+historian of the Roman Republic began as a peasant. Sextus V., one
+of the most capable of the many capable men who have sat in the chair
+of St. Peter, commenced his career as a swine-herd. Every school-boy
+knows that Æsop, the most successful of all fabulists, was a slave;
+Homer,
+
+ "The blind old man of Scio's rocky isle,"
+
+a beggar; and Demosthenes, the orator, whose eloquence controlled the
+fierce democracy of Athens, the son of a sword-maker. What was
+Daniel Defoe, the author of the enchanting story of the Solitary in
+the far-off desert isle, but a hosier's apprentice? Or Gay, the poet
+and wit, but the drudge of a silk-mercer? James Watt sold
+spectacles, and invented the present steam-engine; George Stephenson,
+who began life as a miner's-boy at two shillings per week, founded
+the railway system of Great Britain; "Rare Ben Jonson," as his
+epitaph aptly designates him, second among our British dramatists to
+none but Shakspeare, handled the bricklayer's trowel; and Prideaux,
+the divine and scholar and critic, was employed to sweep the halls
+and galleries of Exeter College. Telford, the architect of the Menai
+Bridge, was a stone-mason's labourer; Rennie, the designer of London
+Bridge and the Bell-Rock Lighthouse, the son of a small farmer;
+Burns, the poet, who walked
+
+ "In glory and in joy,
+ Behind his plough upon the mountain-side,"
+
+was a poor cotter's son; Sir Richard Arkwright, the inventor of the
+power-loom, started in life as a barber; Gifford, the reviewer and
+critic, as a cobbler. [Sidenote: The moral of our book.] We see,
+then, that neither poverty, nor obscure birth, nor unfavourable
+circumstances in early life, nor lack of friends, nor all the
+obstacles and difficulties which seem so formidable in the eyes of an
+ease-loving world, can hold out against the steadfast purpose,
+against the presence of a clear brain and a courageous heart,
+determined to work and live and succeed. This is the lesson the
+preceding pages are intended to enforce; this is the encouragement
+the story of Smeaton's life should convey to the reader; this is the
+moral of all Biography, and one which the young should never
+forget,--a moral full
+
+ "Of courage, hope, and faith!"
+
+
+
+
+ The Lighthouse
+
+ The rocky ledge runs far into the sea,
+ And on its outer point, some miles away,
+ The lighthouse lifts its massive masonry,--
+ A pillar of fire by night, of cloud by day.
+
+ Even at this distance I can see the tides,
+ Upheaving, break unheard along its base;--
+ A speechless wrath, that rises and subsides
+ In the white lip and tremor of the face.
+
+ And as the evening darkens, lo! how bright,
+ Through the deep purple of the twilight air,
+ Beams forth the sudden radiance of its light,
+ With strange, unearthly splendour in its glare.
+
+ Not one alone;--from each projecting cape
+ And perilous reef along the ocean's verge,
+ Starts into life a dim, gigantic shape,
+ Holding its lantern o'er the restless surge.
+
+ Like the great giant Christopher, it stands
+ Upon the brink of the tempestuous wave,
+ Wading far out among the rocks and sands,
+ The night-o'ertaken mariner to save.
+
+ And the great ships sail outward and return,
+ Bending and bowing o'er the billowy swells;
+ And ever joyful, as they see it burn,
+ They wave their silent welcomes and farewells.
+
+ They come forth from the darkness, and their sails
+ Gleam for a moment only on the blaze;
+ And eager faces, as the light unveils,
+ Gaze at the tower, and vanish while they gaze.
+
+ The mariner remembers when a child,
+ On his first voyage, he saw it fade and sink;
+ And, when returning from adventures wild,
+ He saw it rise again o'er ocean's brink.
+
+ Steadfast, serene, immovable, the same
+ Year after year, through all the silent night,
+ Burns on for evermore that quenchless flame,
+ Shines on that unextinguishable light!
+
+ It sees the ocean to its bosom clasp
+ The rocks and sea-sand with the kiss of peace;--
+ It sees the wild winds lift it in their grasp,
+ And hold it up, and shake it like a fleece.
+
+ The startled waves leap over it; the storm
+ Smites it with all the scourges of the rain;
+ And steadily against its solid form
+ Press the great shoulders of the hurricane.
+
+ The sea-bird wheeling round it, with the din
+ Of wings and winds and solitary cries,
+ Blinded and maddened by the light within,
+ Dashes himself against the glare, and dies.
+
+ A new Prometheus, chained upon the rock,
+ Still grasping in his hand the fire of Jove,
+ It does not hear the cry, nor heed the shock,
+ But hails the mariner with words of love.
+
+ "Sail on!" it says, "sail on, ye stately ships!
+ And with your floating bridge the ocean span;
+ Be mine to guard this light from all eclipse,--
+ Be yours to bring man nearer unto man!"
+
+ LONGFELLOW
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76767 ***
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+<title>
+The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Story of John Smeaton, by Anonymous
+</title>
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76767 ***</div>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-front"></a>
+<br>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-front.jpg" alt="SMEATON'S LIGHTHOUSE ON THE EDDYSTONE ROCK.">
+<br>
+SMEATON'S LIGHTHOUSE ON THE EDDYSTONE ROCK.
+</p>
+
+<h1>
+<br><br>
+ THE STORY OF<br>
+ JOHN SMEATON<br>
+</h1>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ AND<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+ THE EDDYSTONE LIGHTHOUSE.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br></p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "And as the evening darkens, lo! how bright.<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Through the deep purple of the twilight air,<br>
+ Beams forth the sudden radiance of its light<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With strange, unearthly splendour in its glare!<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "And the great ships sail outward and return,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bending and bowing o'er the billowy swells;<br>
+ And ever joyful, as they see it burn,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They wave their silent welcomes and farewells.<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONGFELLOW.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br></p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ London:
+ T. NELSON AND SONS, PATERNOSTER ROW.<br>
+ EDINBURGH; AND NEW YORK.<br>
+ 1900<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p class="t3b">
+Contents.
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+I. <a href="#chap01">Ancient and Modern Lighthouses</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+II. <a href="#chap02">The Eddystone Lighthouse</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+III. <a href="#chap03">How John Smeaton Rose in Life</a>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+IV. <a href="#chap04">Smeaton in Private Life&mdash;His Last Years and Character</a>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p>
+The following pages are founded on Mr. Smiles' "Lives of the Engineers,"
+vol. ii.; "Smeaton and Lighthouses" (edition 1844); "Les Phares;"
+"Lighthouses and Lightships," by W. H. Davenport Adams; and Smeaton's own
+account of the "Eddystone Lighthouse." Some minor authorities have also
+been consulted.
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap01"></a></p>
+
+<p class="t2">
+THE STORY OF JOHN SMEATON.
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER I.
+<br><br>
+ANCIENT AND MODERN LIGHTHOUSES.
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+As soon as man began to go down to the
+deep in ships, and to extend his
+enterprise from sea to sea, so soon must he
+have recognized the necessity of lighthouses; or,
+at least, of some system of signals by which he
+might guide his course at night when approaching
+a perilous coast, or seeking to enter the
+wished-for harbour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His first attempt in this direction was probably
+nothing more than the kindling of a huge
+fire on some elevated promontory or headland, or
+on the summit of some lofty hill, whence its
+warning glare could be seen for miles around.
+But as, on windy nights, much difficulty would
+be experienced in keeping up the blown and
+scattered flames, no doubt he would soon conceive
+the idea of providing a sufficient shelter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Lighthouses of antiquity.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So obvious was the value of these fiery beacons,
+and so impossible did it seem to the ancient
+mariner to navigate the dangerous seas without
+their help, that he was led to ascribe their origin
+to supernatural wisdom. According to the Greeks,
+they were invented by Hercules. There is good
+reason to believe, however, that long before the
+ocean was furrowed by a Greek keel, light-towers
+or fire-beacons had been erected by the Libyans
+and the Cuthites along the low and perilous
+shores of Lower Egypt. During the day they
+served as landmarks, and during the night as
+beacons. Their purpose being essentially sacred,
+they were also used as temples, and dedicated to
+the gods. Regarded by the seaman with reverence
+as well as gratitude, he enriched them with
+costly offerings. Some authorities suppose that
+charts of the Mediterranean coast and of the
+channels of the Nile were painted on their walls,
+and that these charts were afterwards transferred
+to sheets of papyrus. The priests in charge of
+them taught the sciences of hydrography and
+pilotage, and how to steer a vessel's course by the
+aid of the stars and planets. On the summit a
+fire was ever burning; the fuel being placed in a
+machine of iron or bronze, composed of three or
+four branches, each representing a dolphin or
+some other marine animal, and all connected by
+decorative work. The machine was fastened to
+the extremity of a strong pole or shaft, like a
+mast, and so placed that its radiance was mainly
+directed seaward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Homer and the fire-towers.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The impression which the fire-towers produced
+on the mind is finely described by Homer in a
+well-known passage of the "Iliad:"&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "As to seamen o'er the wave is borne<br>
+ The watch-fire's light, which, high among the hills,<br>
+ Some shepherd kindles in his lonely fold."<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+It is said that the first regular pharos, or
+light-tower, was erected by one Lesches, on the Sigæan
+promontory, at the mouth of the Hellespont.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though the most ancient, the honour was not
+reserved to it of bequeathing its name to its
+successors. This honour was bestowed on the
+celebrated tower erected on the island of Pharos,
+off the harbour of Alexandria, which served as a
+model for some of the noblest lighthouses built in
+later ages. Thus, it was the type followed by the
+Emperor Claudius in the pharos raised at Ostia,
+near the mouth of the Tiber, which appears to
+have been the completest of any on the Italian
+coast. This pharos was situated upon a breakwater,
+or artificial island, which occupied the mid
+channel between the two massive piers that formed
+the harbour, and its ruins were extant as late as
+the fifteenth century, when they were visited by
+Pope Pius II. Scarcely inferior in architectural
+excellence was the pharos which conducted the
+homeward-bound into the prosperous harbour of
+Puteoli; or that which Augustus erected at
+Ravenna; or that which from the mole of Messina
+poured its useful splendour over the seething
+waters of Charybdis; or that which embellished
+the island of Capreæ, the favourite retreat of
+Tiberius, and was destroyed by an earthquake
+shortly before the emperor's death.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Ancient lighthouses.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We read of a famous lighthouse at the mouth
+of the river Chrysorrhoas, which flows into the
+Thracian Bosporus (that is, the Strait of
+Constantinople). On the crest of the hill washed by
+this river may be seen, says an old writer, the
+Timean Tower, a tower of extraordinary height,
+from whose summit the spectator may survey a
+wide expanse of sea. It has been built for the
+safety of the navigator, and fires are kindled
+upon it for his guidance; a precaution all the
+more necessary because the shores of this strait
+are without ports, and no anchor can reach the
+bottom. But the barbarians in the neighbourhood
+light other fires upon elevated points of the
+coast, in order to deceive the mariner, and profit
+by his shipwreck.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Alexandrian pharos.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pharos, or lighthouse, at Alexandria, to
+which we have referred, was built by an architect
+named Sostrates, in the reign, it is said, of
+Ptolemæus Philadelphus. The island on which
+it stood lay in front of the wealthy city of
+Alexandria, so as to protect both its harbours, the
+Greater Harbour and the Haven of Happy Return,
+from the northern gales, and the inrush of
+the Mediterranean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It forms a ledge of dazzlingly white calcareous
+rock, the northern slope of which is fringed with
+islets, which, in the fourth and fifth centuries of
+our era, were inhabited by Christian hermits. A
+deep inlet on that side was called the Pirates'
+Creek, because, in very early times, it had been
+the resort of the Carian and Samian sea-rovers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The island was connected with the mainland
+by an artificial mound, or causeway, which, from
+its extent, seven stadia (about three-quarters of a
+mile), was called the <i>Heptastadium</i>. In its
+whole length a couple of breaks occurred, to
+allow of the passage of the waters, and each break
+was spanned by a drawbridge. At the
+island-extremity stood a temple dedicated to Hephæstos,
+the god of fire, and, at the other, the great
+Gate of the Moon. The lighthouse was erected
+at the eastern end, on a kind of rocky peninsula;
+and as it was built of white stone, and of a very
+considerable elevation, it was equally a notable
+landmark from the low sandy Egyptian plains
+and from the surrounding waters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is generally believed that this splendid
+erection, which is estimated to have measured
+from 550 to 580 feet in height, fell into decay
+between 1200 and 1300, and was finally destroyed
+by the Turkish conquerors of Egypt. That it
+existed in the twelfth century, we know from the
+description given by an Arab writer, named
+Edrisi; a description which our readers will
+probably be pleased to peruse:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This pharos, he says, has not its equal in the
+world, for skill of construction or for solidity;
+since, to say nothing of the fact that it is built
+of the best stone, its separate layers of masonry
+are cemented together by molten lead, and this
+so firmly, that the whole is indissoluble, though
+the northern waves incessantly beat against it.
+From the rock to the middle gallery or stage the
+measurement is exactly seventy fathoms; and from
+this gallery to the summit, twenty-six fathoms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The interior described.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We ascend to the gallery by an inner staircase
+of sufficient width. This staircase goes no further,
+and the building, from the gallery upwards,
+decreases considerably in diameter. In the interior,
+and under the staircase, some chambers have
+been built. From the gallery we continue our
+ascent by a very narrow flight of steps: in every
+part it is pierced with loopholes, to give light to
+persons making use of it, and to assist them in
+obtaining a proper footing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This edifice, adds our authority, is singularly
+remarkable, as much on account of its height as
+of its massiveness. It is of exceeding usefulness,
+its fire burning night and day for the guidance
+of navigators. They are well acquainted with
+its light, and steer their course accordingly, for it
+is visible at the distance of a day's sail.* During
+the night it shines like a star; by day you can
+distinguish it by its smoke.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+* There is, of course, some exaggeration here.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A Roman pharos.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lighthouses or beacons were first introduced
+into England by the Romans, to whom we are
+indebted for so much that is valuable and useful.
+On the crest of the high hill at Dover still
+stands the pharos, which is supposed to have
+been built for the guidance of vessels from the
+coasts of France to the Roman station at Portus
+Rutupiæ (now Richborough) near Sandwich, or
+to Regulbium (now known as the Reculvers) on
+the Thames.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the present day it is nothing more than a
+massive shell. In the inside the walls are vertical
+and squared; on the outside, they incline to
+assume a conical form. Of the building, as we now
+see it, only the basement is of Roman work; the
+octagonal chamber above was constructed in the
+reign of Henry VIII. The dimensions are about
+fourteen feet square.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+English beacons.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The English beacons were of a ruder and more
+primitive construction than the Roman. We read
+in Lambarde, the old topographer, that "before
+the time of King Edward III. they were made of
+great stacks of wood; but about the eleventh
+year of his reign it was ordained that in one shire
+[Kent] they should be high standards, with their
+pitch-pots"&mdash;that is, tall masts, to whose summit
+was fastened a vessel full of burning pitch. Those
+beacons, however, were more frequently used to
+warn the country on the approach of a hostile
+fleet than for the purpose of lighting the coasts,
+though, doubtlessly, they answered both objects.
+Professor Faraday suggests that the first idea of
+a lighthouse was the candle in the cottage
+window, guiding the husband across the water or
+the pathless moor. The main point to be secured
+was a steady light, and it mattered not whether
+this was obtained from pitch-pots, coals, or oil.
+Wood, however, as the material readiest at hand,
+was most generally used.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Tour de Cordouan, situated at the mouth
+of the Gironde, was long lit up by fires of wood;
+while, until a comparatively recent period, the
+lighthouses at Spurn Head, north of the Humber,
+and on the Isle of May, at the entrance to the
+Firth of Forth, were lighted by braziers of
+burning coal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+On Dungeness.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our English Kings were quick to perceive the
+importance of insuring greater safety to the
+vessels composing their commercial navy; and in
+1525, Henry VIII. granted a charter to the
+"brotherhood of the Holy Trinity" (now known
+as the Trinity House), for the purpose of
+assisting and protecting navigation by licensing and
+regulating pilots, and planting beacons,
+lighthouses, and buoys along the British coasts. But,
+as Mr. Smiles remarks, the only step taken to
+carry out objects of such national interest was the
+granting of leases by the Crown, for a definite
+number of years, to private persons willing to
+find the means of building and maintaining
+lights, in return for permission to levy tolls on all
+passing shipping. Yet not much was done to
+render our dangerous coasts easier of approach by
+means of well-supplied lights. The first erected
+was on Dungeness in the reign of James I.
+About the same time some parts of the Cornish
+coast were lighted up; for we read in the "Travels
+of the Grand Duke Cosmo, about two centuries
+ago, that the Plymouth shipping paid fourpence
+per ton for the lights which were in the
+lighthouses at night." Fourpence in those days was
+worth about as much as five shillings in our own,
+so that the tax must have fallen very heavily on
+merchantmen. It is also recorded, in the annals
+of the old town of Rye, that a light was hung
+out from the south-east angle of the Ypres Tower,
+as a guide for vessels entering the harbour in the
+night time; and that this proving insufficient,
+another light was ordered by the corporation "to
+be hung out o' nights on the south-west corner of
+the church, for a guide to vessels entering the
+port." A pitch-pot was formerly hung from the
+spire of old Arundel Church, as a beacon for
+vessels which wished to enter the port of Little
+Hampton, and the iron support of the apparatus
+is still to be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Lighting the coasts.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is obvious that lights such as these were
+exceedingly imperfect. It was difficult to
+maintain an equable radiance; they were not visible
+far out at sea; and they were easily affected by
+variations of weather, great gales, tempests, or
+thick mists. Moreover, as navigation increased,
+and ships more frequently threaded the narrow
+pass or dangerous channel, more lights became
+necessary, and thus the old system of lights had
+to give way to a more regular and extensive
+lighthouse system.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The modern system.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first modern lighthouse of a solid and
+permanent character erected on the shores of England
+was built, it is said, at Lowestoft in Suffolk, in 1609.
+In 1665 one was erected at Hunstanton Point;
+and in 1680, a third on the Scilly Isles. About
+the same time were established the lighthouses at
+Dungeness and Orfordness. But all these wore of
+clumsy construction, of very slight elevation, and
+of inconsiderable illuminating power. To
+inaugurate the modern lighthouse the genius of John
+Smeaton was needed; and from the date of his
+marvellous monument on the Eddystone Rock up
+to the present time, nearly every dangerous point
+of our coasts, every harbour and every river-mouth,
+has been included in the system of defence
+which guards our imperial commerce, and
+enables the seaman to navigate the British waters
+in almost perfect safety.
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap02"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER II.
+<br><br>
+THE EDDYSTONE LIGHTHOUSE.
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+About fourteen miles to the south-west
+of Plymouth harbour, and out in the
+deep and billowy channel, lies a reel
+or ledge of rocks, known, in allusion to the swirl
+of currents always tossing and seething around
+it, by the name of the Eddystone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This reef is situated in a line with Lizard Head
+in Cornwall, and Start Point in Devonshire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Consequently, it forms a perilous obstruction,
+not only in the water-way which leads to the great
+arsenal and haven of South Devon, but in the
+track of all vessels entering or leaving the
+English Channel; which, we may add, is frequented
+by a greater number of ships than any other part
+of the wide ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Eddystone rock.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the tide is up, its hoary crest is scarcely
+visible, but its position is shown by the eddy
+which washes to and fro above it; at low tide,
+several low, jagged, and dreary ridges of gneiss lift
+their heads from the boiling waves. During a
+stiff breeze from the south-west, these form the
+centre, the focus, as it were, of a boiling caldron
+of waters, and no ship enticed within their vortex
+can escape destruction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Henry Winstanley.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As may be supposed, the erection of a lighthouse
+on rocks so perilous came to be regarded
+as an urgent need soon after men had learned the
+value of commercial enterprise. The task,
+however, seemed so dangerous, not to say impossible,
+that no one ventured to attempt it, until 1696,
+when it was undertaken by a noble and patriotic
+gentleman, named Henry Winstanley, who was
+much grieved by the loss of life which annually
+occurred there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winstanley is described as one of those eccentric
+but ingenious men who find a peculiar pleasure
+in mystifying their friends, and in throwing a
+kind of glamour or magical atmosphere over our
+daily, commonplace, realistic life. He made use
+of his scientific knowledge to play the most
+extraordinary practical jokes. You went to spend
+a night or two at his old Essex manor-house. On
+entering your bed-room, you nearly tripped over
+an old slipper. You kicked it aside, and, lo, a
+ghost immediately started from the floor. In your
+sudden alarm you flung yourself into the nearest
+chair: out sprang a couple of arms, and clasped
+you and held you a prisoner. You went into the
+garden, and sought repose in a woodbine-trellised
+arbour. Your seat and yourself shot away from
+the pleasant alcove, and were quickly floating in
+the middle of the adjoining canal!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The author of such devices as these might be,
+and was, a noble and chivalrous gentleman, but
+he was also, unquestionably, a very eccentric
+character! His eccentricity displayed itself in the
+lighthouse which his chivalrous humanity
+instigated him to build on the Eddystone Rock. On
+first glancing at an engraving of it, you hardly
+know whether you see before you a Chinese
+pagoda or a Turkish minaret, grafted on a circular
+tower, and ornamented with cranes and chains
+like a London warehouse!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winstanley began his work in 1696.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first summer&mdash;and, of course, it was in
+summer only that men could labour on that
+wind-swept, wave-worn rock&mdash;was occupied in
+excavating twelve holes, and fastening as many irons
+in them, to serve for the superstructure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Progress of the work.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very slowly and drearily did the work go on;
+for though it was the "sweet summer-time," out
+in the wild channel the weather would frequently
+prove of such terrible violence that, for ten or
+fourteen days in succession, the waters would boil
+and toss about the rocks&mdash;vexed by contrary winds,
+and by the inrush of the swelling billows from the
+main ocean&mdash;and mount one upon another, like
+maddened horses, and leap and bound to such a
+height as completely to bury the reef and all upon
+it, and effectually prevent any vessel or boat from
+drawing near. On such days the men, you may
+be sure, thanked God that they were housed
+safely on the green shores of Devon.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+The second summer was spent in building up a
+solid circular mass of masonry, twelve feet high
+and fourteen feet in diameter. In the third
+summer this huge pillar was enlarged two feet at the
+base, and the superstructure was carried up to a
+height of sixty feet. "Being all finished," says
+the engineer, "with the lantern, and all the rooms
+that were in it, we ventured to lodge in the work.
+But the first night the weather became bad, and
+so continued, that it was eleven days before any
+boats could come near us again; and not being
+acquainted with the height of the sea's rising, we
+were almost drowned with wet, and our provisions
+in as bad a condition, though we worked day and
+night as much as possible to make shelter for
+ourselves. In this storm we lost some of our materials,
+although we did what we could to save them;
+but the boat then returning, we all left the house,
+to be refreshed on shore: and as soon as the
+weather did permit we returned and finished all,
+and put up the light on the 14th November 1698;
+which being so late in the year, it was three days
+before Christmas before we had relief to go on
+shore again, and were almost at the last extremity
+for want of provisions; but, by good Providence,
+then two boats came with provisions and the
+family that was to take care of the light; and so
+ended this year's work."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Winstanley's lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the course of the fourth summer the foundations
+were considerably strengthened, and the
+remainder of the work appertaining to the fabric
+itself was completed. We are told, and the
+extant engravings show us, that it bore, in its
+finished condition, a close resemblance to "a
+Chinese pagoda, with open galleries and fantastic
+projections." Round the lantern ran a wide open
+gallery; so wide and open, indeed, that it was
+possible, when the sea ran high, for a six-oared
+boat to be lifted up by the waves and driven
+through it. Such an edifice could not long
+withstand the violence of the gale or the fury of
+the waters; but this much was gained by its
+construction,&mdash;it was shown that a lighthouse could
+be erected on this sea-girt rock, and, therefore,
+the achievement deserves to be described as "one
+of the most laudable enterprises which any heroic
+mind could undertake, for it filled the breast of
+the mariner with new hope."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The great storm.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Winstanley was very proud of his work, and
+so convinced, it is said, of its thorough stability,
+that he frequently expressed a wish to be under
+its roof in the fiercest hurricane that ever blew
+beneath the face of heaven, assured that it would
+not shake one joist or beam. Heaven sometimes
+takes the presumptuous at their word! Winstanley,
+with his workmen and light-keepers, had
+fixed his residence in the tower, when a tremendous
+storm arose, which, on the 26th of November, 1702,
+blew a hurricane of unprecedented violence. The
+sea rolled its billows heavily, and the wind raged,
+and masses of cloud darkened the horizon, and all
+Nature seemed convulsed by the elemental strife.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the dawn broke, the people of Plymouth
+hastened to the beach, and turned their anxious
+gaze towards the Eddystone. The waters swirled
+and seethed around and about the rock; but
+where was the lighthouse, the fantastic structure
+raised by the ready brain and daring soul of
+Winstanley?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the night it had been swept away, and
+not a memorial remained of its ill-fated occupants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The melancholy incident forms the theme of a
+striking ballad by Jean Ingelow, which concludes
+in the following manner:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "And it fell out, fell out at last,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;That he would put to sea,<br>
+ To scan once more his lighthouse-tower<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On the rock o' destiny.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "And the winds woke, and the storm broke,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And wrecks came plunging in;<br>
+ None in the town that night lay down<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Or sleep or rest to win.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "The great mad waves were rolling graves,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And each flung up its dead;<br>
+ The seething flow was white below,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And black the sky o'erhead.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "And when the dawn, the dull gray dawn,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Broke on the trembling town,<br>
+ And men looked south to the harbour mouth,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The lighthouse-tower was down!<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "Down in the deep where he doth sleep<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Who made it shine afar,<br>
+ And then in the night that drowned its light,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Set, with his pilot star."<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+John Rudyerd.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The usefulness of a beacon on the Eddystone
+Rock had been so abundantly proved that it was
+not long before an attempt was made to replace
+Winstanley's unfortunate structure. A Captain
+Lovet obtained a ninety-nine years' lease of the
+rock from the Trinity House Corporation, and
+engaged as his architect a silk-mercer on Ludgate
+Hill, named John Rudyerd. The reasons that led
+him to make so curious a choice are unknown,
+but the event proved that it was a sensible one.
+Rudyerd designed a graceful and even elegant
+building, choosing a circle for the outline, and
+studying the greatest simplicity, so as to offer the
+least possible resistance to wind and wave.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In order to obtain a firm foundation, he divided
+the surface of the rock into seven slightly unequal
+stages, and in these he dug or excavated six and
+thirty holes, varying in depth from twenty to thirty
+inches. Each hole was six inches square at the
+top, gradually narrowing to five inches, and then
+again expanding and flattening to nine inches by
+three at the bottom. Into these dove-tailed
+cavities or sockets were inserted strong iron bolts,
+weighing from two to five hundredweight, according
+to length and structure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These bolts held fast a course of squared oak-timbers
+laid lengthwise on the lowest of the seven
+stages, so as to reach the level of the stage or step
+immediately above it. Another set of beams was
+then laid diagonally covering those already laid, and
+raising the level surface to the height of the third
+stage. The next course was deposited longitudinally,
+and the fourth diagonally, and so on alternately,
+until a basement of solid timber was erected, two
+courses higher than the highest point of the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+His lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rudyerd's lighthouse is generally described as
+a fabric of wood; but this is incorrect. To obtain
+the necessary solidity, and a sufficient weight to
+counteract the weight of the waters of the Channel,
+he combined courses of Cornish granite with his
+courses of timber, in the proportion of five to two,
+so far as the basement went: that is, he laid two
+courses of timber, and then five of granite, and
+then two more of timber; all being firmly secured
+by iron bolts and cramps. On this substructure,
+which measured 63 feet in height, with a base of
+23 feet, he raised four stories of timber, crowned
+by an octagonal lantern, 10 feet 6 inches in
+diameter, and a ball of 2 feet 3 inches in
+diameter. The total elevation, from the lowest
+surface of the rock to the top of this ball, was 92
+feet. Rudyerd completed his work in 1709.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+On fire!
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a long period of years, nearly half a century,
+it withstood the attacks of wind and wave, and
+many a vessel was kept from destruction by its
+warning light. On the 2nd of December 1755,
+it was fated to fall before an unexpected enemy.
+There were three keepers resident in the
+lighthouse at the time. One of them, whose turn it
+was to watch, entered the lantern, at about two
+o'clock A.M., to snuff the candles, and, to his
+horror, discovered it to be filled with smoke. On
+opening the door which led to the balcony, to
+permit of its escape, a flame instantly leaped from
+the interior of the cupola. He hastened to alarm
+his companions, and vigorous efforts were made
+to extinguish the fire; but these proved ineffectual,
+owing to the dryness of the woodwork, and the
+difficulty of raising a sufficient supply of water to
+the top of the building. Fortunately for the
+keepers, the flames were descried from the shore,
+and a well-manned boat put off to their relief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It reached the Eddystone about ten o'clock, when
+the fire had been raging for eight hours. The
+building was wholly destroyed; and the keepers, who
+had been driven away by the falling beams, the
+red-hot iron, and molten lead, were found, in a
+panic-stricken condition, crouching in a recess or
+cavern on the east side of the rock. They were
+carried into the boat, and conveyed ashore.
+Curious to relate, they were no sooner landed than
+one of them stole away, and was never afterwards
+heard of. His flight gave rise to a suspicion that
+the fire was not accidental; yet, when we remember
+that a lighthouse rock affords no means of
+escape for its inmates, we can hardly suppose it
+to be the place an incendiary would select for
+the scene of his wicked attempt. It is possible
+that the man's nerves had been so tried by the
+terrible nature of the peril he had undergone, that
+he knew not what he did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The lightkeeper's fate.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the other two light-keepers, one, named
+Henry Hall, met with a singular fate. While
+engaged in dashing some buckets of water on the
+burning roof of the cupola, he chanced to look
+upwards, and a mass of molten lead fell down
+upon his head, face, and shoulders, burning him
+severely. On his arrival ashore, he persisted in
+asserting that a portion of the liquefied metal had
+gone down his throat. His medical attendant
+regarded the assertion as the offspring of a
+disordered imagination; but the man rapidly grew
+worse, and on the twelfth day of his illness, after
+an attack of violent convulsions, expired. A
+<i>post-mortem</i> examination of his body then took
+place, and Hall's story was found to be true; for
+in the stomach lay a flat, oval piece of lead, seven
+ounces and five drachms in weight!
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+John Smeaton.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acting on the old maxim of "Try, try, and
+try again," the Trinity House Corporation
+determined to erect another light-tower on the
+Eddystone, and intrusted the work to a mathematical
+instrument maker, named John Smeaton, who had
+already acquired a reputation as an ingenious
+mechanician.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton at this time was thirty-two years of
+age. As we shall tell the story of his brave and
+industrious life hereafter, it will suffice us now to
+state that he had shown himself in a variety of
+experiences, skilful, prompt, patient, and
+indefatigable; never baffled by a difficulty, fertile in
+resource, and incapable of faltering in any
+enterprise he had deliberately undertaken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Design of his lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On examining into the conditions of the task
+which had devolved upon him, he came to the
+conclusion that the structures of his predecessors
+had both been deficient in weight; and that if
+Rudyerd's had not been destroyed by fire, it would
+not much longer have resisted the fury of the
+tempest. He announced his intention, therefore,
+of raising a fabric of such solidity that the sea
+should give way to <i>it</i>, and not <i>it</i> to the sea; and
+he determined to build it entirely of stone.
+Moreover, Winstanley and Rudyerd had wasted much
+valuable time, from the difficulty of landing on
+the rock, and the impossibility of working on it
+continuously for any length of time. But Smeaton
+proposed to moor a vessel within a quarter of
+a mile of the scene of action, which should
+accommodate his company of workmen; and thus
+they would be prepared to seize every opportunity
+of launching their boat, and carrying their
+materials to the rock, instead of making a long
+voyage from Plymouth on each occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So far as concerned the design of his intended
+erection, he was ready to adopt Rudyerd's idea of
+a cone, but he proposed to enlarge its diameter
+considerably; and the type he kept constantly
+before his eye was the trunk of an oak tree, which
+is equally remarkable for gracefulness and strength,
+and withstands successfully the most furious gales,
+when other forest trees are bent or broken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The autumn of 1756 was occupied in the
+transport of the granite and other materials to
+the rock, in their preparation, and in the
+excavation of the steps or stages on which the
+foundation was to be laid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Laying the foundation.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Early in June 1757 the work of erection
+began. The first stone, weighing two tons five
+hundredweight, was laid on the 12th. On the
+next day was finished the first course, consisting
+of four stones, so ingeniously dove-tailed into one
+another and into the rock as to form a single
+compact mass. The sloping form of the rock, to
+which the foundation was, of course, adapted,
+required only this small number of stones for the
+first course; the diameter of the masonry gradually
+increasing until the highest level surface was
+reached. Thus:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="capcenter">
+<a id="img-032"></a>
+<br>
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-032.jpg" alt="Eddystone lighthouse foundation">
+<br>
+Eddystone lighthouse foundation
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The second course, completed on the 30th of
+June, consisted of thirteen blocks of granite; the
+third course, completed on the 11th of July, of
+twenty-five; the fourth, on the 31st, of
+thirty-three. The sixth course was laid down by the
+11th of August; and as it rose above the
+high-water mark, Smeaton was entitled to consider
+that he had conquered the greatest difficulties of
+his task.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Fixing the blocks.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up to this point the mode of procedure in laying
+and fixing each great block of granite was as
+follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stone to be set being hung in the tackle,
+and its bed of mortar spread, was then lowered
+into its place, beaten with a heavy wooden mall,
+and levelled with a spirit-level; and the stone
+being accurately brought to its marks, was
+considered as set in its proper position. The next
+thing was to keep it there, notwithstanding the
+utmost violence of the sea might beat upon it
+before the mortar was thoroughly hard and dry.
+Therefore the carpenter dropped into a couple of
+vertical grooves, which had been previously cut in
+"the waist" of the stone, each an inch deep and
+three inches wide, two oaken wedges, one upon
+its head, the other with its point downwards, so
+that the two in each groove would lie heads and
+points.
+<img class="imgcenter" src="images/img-033.jpg" alt="Foundation wedges.">
+With an iron bar, about two inches and a half broad,
+a quarter of an inch thick, and two feet and a half long,
+he then drove down one wedge upon the other&mdash;very
+gently at first, so that the opposite pairs of wedges,
+being equally tightened, would equally resist each other,
+and the stone would therefore keep its place. In like
+manner, a couple of wedges were pitched at the top of
+each groove; the dormant wedge (<i>i.e.</i>, the one
+with the point upward) being held in the hand, while the
+drift wedge (i.e., the one with the point downward) was
+driven with a hammer. So much as remained above the
+upper surface of the stone was cut away with saw or
+chisel; and, generally, a couple of thin wedges were
+driven very moderately at the butt-end of the stone,
+whose tendency being to force it out of its dove-tail,
+they would, by moderate driving, assist in preserving
+the steadiness of the entire mass, in opposition to any
+violent agitation arising from the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Progress of the work.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stone thus firmly secured, a certain portion
+of mortar was liquefied, and the joints having
+been carefully "pointed," this liquid cement was
+poured in with iron ladles, so as to occupy every
+vacant space. The heavier part of the cement
+naturally fell to the bottom, while the fluid was
+absorbed by the stone. The vacancy thus left at
+the top was repeatedly refilled, until all remained
+solid; then the top was pointed, and, where
+necessary, defended by a layer of plaster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The whole of the foundation having thus been
+brought to a proper level, some other means were
+required to secure a similar degree of solidity for
+the superstructure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hole, one foot square, was accordingly cut
+right through the middle of the central stone in
+the sixth course; and at equal distances in the
+circumference were sunk eight other sockets, each
+one foot square, and six inches deep. A strong
+plug of hard marble, also one foot square, but
+twenty-two inches long, was driven into the
+aforementioned central cavity, and set fast with mortar
+and wedges. This course, however, was only
+thirteen inches in depth; consequently the marble
+plug rose nine inches above the surface.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon the block thus prepared was set the
+central stone of the next course, having a similar
+hole in the middle, so as to receive the upper
+portion of the marble plug. Hence it is clear that
+no force or pressure of the sea, acting horizontally
+on any one of these central stones, could move it
+from its position, unless it were able to cut in two
+the marble plug; and to prevent the upper stone
+from being lifted, in case its mortar was destroyed,
+it was fixed down by four trenails. The blocks
+surrounding the central were dove-tailed together
+as before; and thus one course rose above another
+without any interruption, except from the occasional
+inrush of the waves or violence of the weather.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's industry.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his superintendence of the difficult and
+laborious work, Smeaton's activity and perseverance
+were unwearied. As soon as it had been so far
+accomplished as to present the appearance of a
+level platform, he could not deny himself the
+pleasure of a promenade upon it; but making a
+false step, and being unable to recover himself, he
+fell over the brink of the masonry, and among
+the rocks on the west side. As it was low water
+at the time, he received no serious injury. He
+dislocated his thumb, however, and as medical assistance
+was not available, he set it himself,&mdash;afterwards
+returning to his work. The incident is
+characteristic of the firmness and resolution which
+Smeaton exhibited throughout his busy career.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Building the light tower.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ninth course was laid on the 30th of September,
+and concluded the operations for the year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 12th of May 1758, Smeaton and his
+"merry men" returned to the lonely wave-washed
+rock, and were delighted to find their work
+intact. The cement seemed to have become as hard
+as the stone itself, from which, indeed, it was
+scarcely distinguishable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lusty arms and willing hearts made rapid
+progress; and by September, the twenty-fourth course
+was reached and laid. It completed the "solid"
+part of the building, and was designed to form
+the floor of the store-room; so that Smeaton had
+good reason to be satisfied with the progress
+made. But he knew how great an advantage it
+would be to exhibit a light in the coming winter;
+and therefore he resolved on completing the
+storeroom, if within the range of the possible, and
+planting a light above it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The building had hitherto been carried up as a
+solid mass of masonry, like a breakwater or
+seawall, to a height of 35 feet 4 inches above its
+base, and 27 feet above the summit of the rock.
+It was now reduced to 16 feet in diameter. Of
+this limited space it was needful to make good
+use, so far as was consistent with the primary
+and indispensable condition of strength. The
+rooms were built with a diameter of 12 feet 4
+inches, the walls being 2 feet 2 inches thick.
+These walls were built up of single blocks, and so
+shaped that a complete circle was formed by
+sixteen pieces, which were bound together with
+strong iron clamps, and secured to the lower
+courses by marble plugs in the fashion already
+described. That no damp might make its way
+through the vertical joints, flat stones were
+introduced into each, in such a manner as to be
+lodged partly in one block and partly in another.
+With all these careful and ingenious contrivances,
+the twenty-eighth course was completely set by
+the 30th of September.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Progress of the work.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This and the next course received the vaulted
+flooring, which answered the double purpose of
+the ceiling of the lower and the floor of the upper
+store-rooms. For additional security, a deep groove
+was here cut into the outer surface of the course,
+in which a massive iron chain was embedded in
+molten lead. The next course was laid and set
+after the same pattern; and by the 10th of October
+Smeaton had nearly completed his arrangements
+for establishing a light and lightkeepers at the
+Eddystone, when they were interrupted by legal
+difficulties, which had arisen between the lessee
+of the rock and the Trinity House Corporation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These were not settled until the following year,
+so that Smeaton was unable to resume operations
+before the 5th of July. He worked, however,
+with so much vigour that the second stage was
+finished by the 21st; and on the 29th the fortieth
+course was set, and the third floor finished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+"Laus Deo."
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The main column, or body, of the lighthouse
+was completed on the 17th of August, consisting
+of forty-six courses of masonry, and attaining an
+elevation of 70 feet. The last work done was
+singularly appropriate: the masons carved the
+words "Laus Deo" (Praise be to God!) on the last
+stone set above the lantern. All honest work
+should thus be dedicated to Him through whose
+infinite goodness we are permitted to achieve it.
+And, at an earlier date, Smeaton, in devout
+recognition of the Eternal Power, had inscribed on
+the course of masonry beneath the ceiling of the
+upper store-room, "Except the LORD build the
+house, they labour in vain that build it." It was
+in this spirit that the great engineer entered upon
+and accomplished his wonderful enterprises; and
+it is in this spirit that each of us should go
+through our daily toil, as if feeling ourselves ever
+in the immediate presence of our Father, and
+knowing that we strive, and endure, and hope,
+and suffer before his all-seeing eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The iron-work of the balcony and lantern were
+next erected, and the gracefully strong and
+massive structure was crowned by a gilded ball.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The interior of Smeaton's lighthouse was (and
+is) arranged as follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Interior of the lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the ground-floor&mdash;Store-room, with a
+door-way, but no windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First stage, or story&mdash;Upper store-room, with
+two loopholed-windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Second stage&mdash;Kitchen, with fire-place and
+sink; two settles, with lockers; a dresser, with
+drawers; two cupboards; and a rack for dishes.
+Four windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Third stage&mdash;Bedroom, with three cabin-beds,
+each large enough for an adult; three drawers,
+and two lockers in each, to receive the clothing
+and other property of the light-keepers. Four
+windows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fourth&mdash;Lantern, with circular bench, or seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A narrow escape.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In fixing the window-bars, Smeaton met with
+an accident which might easily have been attended
+with fatal results. He thus describes the
+circumstances:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"After the boat was gone, and it became so
+dark that we could not see any longer to pursue
+our occupations, I ordered a charcoal-fire to be
+made in the upper store-room, in one of the iron
+pots we used for melting lead, for the purpose of
+annealing the blank ends of the bars; and they
+were made hot all together in the charcoal. Most
+of the workmen were set round the fire; and by
+way of making ourselves comfortable, by screening
+ourselves and the fire from the wind, the
+windows were shut, and, as well as I remember,
+the copper cover or hatch put over the man-hole
+of the floor of the room where the fire was&mdash;the
+hatch above being left open for the heated vapour
+to ascend. I remember to have looked into the
+fire attentively to see that the iron was made hot
+enough, but not overheated. I also remember I
+felt my head a very little giddy; but the next
+thing of which I had any sensation or idea was
+finding myself upon the floor of the room below,
+half drowned with water. It seems that, without
+being further sensible of anything to give me
+warning, the effluvia of the charcoal so suddenly
+overcame all sensation, that I dropped down upon
+the floor; and had not the people hauled me down
+to the room below, where they did not spare for
+cold water to throw in my face and upon me, I
+certainly should have expired upon the spot."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton, however, was reserved for useful
+service; and on the 16th of October the welcome
+light shone once more from the dreaded
+Eddystone Rock. And the storm-tossed mariner, as
+he saw in the distance its helpful ray, and was
+guided by it how to steer his course, gratefully
+acknowledged the genius and resolution of the
+man who had raised it above the whirl of waters,
+and planted it in a tower so fair and strong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The light on the rock.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For more than a century it has withstood the
+storm, an enduring monument to the fame of its
+great architect. At times, when the billows roll
+in from the Atlantic with more than ordinary
+fury, and the white-crested waters come up the
+Channel under the impulse of a south-west gale,
+the lighthouse is shrouded in spray, and its flame
+for a moment obscured. But the shadow passes
+away, and again across the wild waves it shines
+like a signal-star. Occasionally, when a mighty
+wave strikes it, the central mass of water runs up
+the tall, shapely column, and leaps quite over the
+lantern; or it beats against the masonry, as if to
+topple it from its foundation, and the windows
+rattle, and the building seems smitten with a
+sharp shudder. But the wind dies down, and
+the sea grows calm, leaving the lighthouse firmly
+planted on its rock.
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap03"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER III.
+<br><br>
+HOW JOHN SMEATON ROSE IN LIFE.
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+John Smeaton, one of the most
+distinguished of British engineers, was
+born at Austhorpe Lodge, near Leeds,
+on the 8th of June 1724.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's early years.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His father was a respectable attorney, who
+came of an old Yorkshire family; his mother, a
+quick-witted, firm, gentle-mannered woman, was
+not unworthy of such a son. He was taught at
+home during his earlier years, and a happy home
+it was. Leeds, in those days, had not attained to
+its present immense proportions, and Austhorpe
+was completely in the country, sheltered by the
+noble park and overhanging woods of Temple-Newsham.
+There was ample scope for the healthy,
+active boy, to indulge himself in his favourite
+pursuits, which had all of them a mechanical
+character. He was never so happy, says one of his
+biographers, as when put in possession of any
+cutting tool, by which he could make his little
+imitations of houses, pumps, and wind-mills. Even
+while still in petticoats, he was continually
+dividing circles and squares; and the only playthings
+in which he took a genuine pleasure were his
+working models. If any carpenters or masons
+chanced to be employed in the neighbourhood of
+Austhorpe, the boy was sure to find his way
+amongst them; and there he would spend hour
+after hour, watching the men at work, and
+observing how they handled their tools. Holmes
+tells us that, having one day taken due note of
+the operations of some mill-wrights, shortly
+afterwards, to the terror of his family, he was seen
+fixing a rude likeness of a wind-mill on the top
+of his father's barn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another time, when watching the procedure of
+a party of men engaged in refixing the village
+pump, he was fortunate enough to obtain from
+them a piece of bored pipe, which he succeeded in
+fashioning into a working-pump that actually
+raised water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The young mechanic.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a proper age, the boy was sent to the Leeds
+grammar-school, where he received, it is supposed,
+the largest part of his school instruction. In
+geometry and arithmetic he made very rapid
+progress; but, as is the case with most clever and
+industrious boys, he learned more at home than
+at school. Every leisure moment was occupied
+by his tools and machines. He acquired, in time,
+a mechanical dexterity and ingenuity which were
+really surprising, and availed him in the
+performance of some amusing surprises. Thus, it
+happened that some mechanics came into the
+neighbourhood to erect a "fire-engine," as the
+steam-engine was then called, for the purpose of
+pumping water from the Garforth coal-mines, and
+day after day Smeaton visited the spot for the
+purpose of watching their operations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carefully examining their methods, he made
+use of the knowledge so acquired to construct a
+miniature engine at home, appropriately equipped
+with pumps and other apparatus; and he even
+succeeded in setting it in motion before the
+colliery engine was completed. He first tried its
+powers upon one of the fish-ponds in front of the
+house at Austhorpe, which he quickly contrived
+to pump dry, and so killed all the fish in it, greatly
+to the surprise as well as the annoyance of his
+father.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Working on in this way, with assiduous
+application, young Smeaton, by the time he had arrived
+at his fifteenth year, had made a turning-lathe, on
+which he turned wood and ivory; and it was his
+delight to make presents of little boxes and other
+articles of his own manufacture to his friends.
+He also learned to work in metals, which he fused
+and forged without any assistance; and by the
+age of eighteen he handled his tools as dexterously
+as any regular smith or joiner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Always at work.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"In the year 1742," says Mr. Holmes, his
+biographer and friend, "I spent a month at his
+father's house; and being intended myself for a
+mechanical employment, and a few years younger
+than he was, I could not but view his works with
+astonishment. He forged his iron and steel, and
+melted his metal. He had tools of every sort for
+working in wood, ivory, and metals. He had
+made a lathe, by which he cut a perpetual screw
+in brass&mdash;a thing little known at that day, and
+which, I believe, was the invention of Mr. Henry
+Hindley of York, with whom I served my
+apprenticeship. Mr. Smeaton soon became acquainted
+with him, and spent many a night at Mr. Hindley's
+house till daylight, conversing on these subjects."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Removal to London.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his sixteenth year, our hero&mdash;for every
+biographer must have a hero&mdash;was removed from
+school to his father's office, where he was engaged
+in the uncongenial task of copying dreary legal
+folios, and acquiring as much knowledge of law
+as might fit him for an attorney's profession.
+As Mr. Smeaton had a good connection in Leeds,
+he not unnaturally wished his son to profit by it;
+but the future engineer revolted from
+"Blackstone's Commentaries" and "Coke upon
+Littleton;" and though, like a good son, he attended
+assiduously to his office duties, every day he
+found the burden of a detested occupation heavier
+to bear. Towards the end of 1742, partly with
+the view of furthering his professional duties, and
+partly for the sake of taking him away from his
+all-engrossing mechanical pursuits, Mr. Smeaton
+sent him to London. Here he made a vigorous
+attempt to subdue his tastes to his father's wishes;
+but utterly failing, he wrote to him an earnest
+appeal for permission to follow what was clearly
+an unconquerable bias.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With equal kindness and wisdom, his father
+consented, and young Smeaton immediately entered
+the service of a philosophical instrument-maker.
+He applied himself to his new vocation
+with such admirable energy, and it was so entirely
+fitted to the measure of his talents, that in a very
+short time he was able to relieve his father from
+all expenses connected with his maintenance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Rising in life.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is not to be supposed that a young man with
+so much strength of purpose and clearness of
+intellect would devote himself only to the mechanical
+part of his profession. He read industriously and
+methodically, so as to obtain a knowledge of the
+principles of theoretical science; he sought the
+society of educated men; he regularly attended
+the meetings and lectures of the Royal Society.
+He started in business on his own account in
+1750, when he was only twenty-six; and in the
+same year he read a paper before the Royal
+Society on certain improvements effected by
+himself and Dr. Knight in the mariner's compass.
+In 1751 he invented a machine to measure a
+ship's way at sea, and experimented with it in a
+voyage down the Thames, and in a short cruise
+on board the <i>Fortune</i> sloop-of-war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Work and method.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The activity and fertility of his mind are
+abundantly demonstrated by the nature of the work
+which occupied him in the following year. In
+April we read of a paper from his pen detailing
+certain improvements which he had contrived in
+the air-pump; in June he describes an ingenious
+modification in ship-tackle by means of pulleys,
+so arranged that one man might easily raise a ton
+weight; in November he describes certain
+experiments which had been made with Captain
+Savary's steam-engine, the precursor of James
+Watt's. Meantime he was engaged in researches
+into "the Natural Powers of Water and Wind to
+Turn Mills and other Machines depending on a
+Circular Motion;" which afterwards gained him
+the Royal Society's gold medal&mdash;almost the
+highest honour a man of science can receive in
+England. Now, it is obvious that to accomplish
+so much honest and valuable work, and at the
+same time to carry on his business, required great
+application, great energy, great method. And it
+must be conceded that throughout life Smeaton
+was an unwearied seeker after knowledge; that his
+two main objects were, self-improvement and the
+public welfare; self-improvement being necessary
+that he might render the gifts he possessed of the
+highest possible usefulness to society. "One of his
+maxims," says Smiles, "was, that 'the abilities
+of the individual are a debt due to the common
+stock of public happiness;' and the steadfastness
+with which he devoted himself to useful work,
+in which he at the same time found his own true
+happiness, shows that the maxim was no mere
+lip-utterance on his part, but formed the very
+mainspring of his life. From an early period he
+carefully laid out his time with a view to getting
+the most good out of it: so much for study, so
+much for practical experiments, so much for
+business, and so much for rest and relaxation."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The value of order.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let the young reader take note of this, and in
+like manner find for everything its fitting and
+sufficient time. There is much wisdom in the
+adage, "A place for everything, and everything
+in its place;" but it is equally necessary that
+there should be "an hour for everything, and
+everything in its hour." The best talents, the
+best opportunities, will be wholly wasted, unless
+their possessor can recognize the value of method.
+The man who does not systematize his time, who
+does not economize it so as to accomplish in each
+day the largest possible amount of work, without
+haste or unhealthy pressure, will make but an
+indifferent use of his gifts, and will assuredly lose
+many precious hours. He will be always too
+late; always endeavouring to overtake the lost
+moments, and never succeeding in doing so; until
+at length such a weight will accumulate upon him
+of work undone and opportunities neglected, that,
+in his exhaustion and discontent, he will lose all
+hope, and sink into the idleness of apathy. Method
+is the secret of success: the methodical student
+will get out of the twenty-four hours all that it
+is possible to get out of them; while the irregular
+and disorderly will lose a more or less considerable
+portion of them, according to the degree of
+his want of system.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton abroad.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton devoted a portion of his time to the
+study of French, in order that he might be able
+to read the valuable scientific treatises contained in
+that language, and also that he might be able to
+take a journey which he contemplated into the
+Low Countries, for the purpose of inspecting the
+great canal works of the Dutch engineers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton in Holland.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He carried out his intention in 1754, when he
+traversed Holland and Belgium&mdash;mostly on foot,
+or in the <i>truckschuyts</i> or canal boats, which form
+the national conveyance of those countries&mdash;and
+carefully inspected the most remarkable achievements
+of mechanical science in the districts through
+which he passed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was with no little interest he found himself
+in a land which has been literally rescued
+from the sea by the efforts of human skill and
+industry; a great portion of which, even in
+comparatively modern times, was buried deep beneath
+the waters of ocean; a land to which nature has
+been so unkindly, and for which man has done so
+much. In a certain sense, Holland is the
+creation, as well as the trophy, of the engineer; and
+wherever Smeaton went, he found himself in the
+engineer's track. From Rotterdam he travelled
+by Delft, famous for its pottery, and the Hague,
+to the great commercial emporium of Amsterdam,
+and thence, as far north as Holder, examining
+with critical attention the huge dikes and
+embankments raised by the labour of man to prevent
+the sea from recovering its own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Amsterdam he saw with delight and surprise
+its admirable harbour and spacious docks.
+In Smeaton's time, London had no accommodation
+of this description, and the numerous fleets
+which flocked to the British metropolis dropped
+anchor in the Thames, and loaded and unloaded
+at the river quays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Passing round the country by Utrecht, he proceeded
+to inspect the great sea-sluices at Brill
+and Helvoetsluys, through which the inland
+waters found a channel of egress, while the
+billows of ocean were prevented from forcing an
+entrance. During this journey he made copious
+notes of all he saw, and the information thus
+acquired was of great use to him in his
+after-labours as a canal and harbour engineer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Eddystone lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He returned to England in 1755; and shortly
+afterwards the opportunity came to him which,
+we believe, comes to every man of industrious
+habits and steadfast purpose&mdash;the opportunity,
+by a prudent employment of which, we may place
+ourselves in a position to turn our gifts to good
+account, and do something for the advantage of
+our fellows. The lighthouse erected by Rudyerd
+on the Eddystone Rock, of which we have already
+given a description, was swept away by a destructive
+fire on the 2nd of December, and it became
+necessary to replace it by a new one. The
+proprietors applied to the President of the Royal
+Society to recommend to them an engineer who
+might be safely intrusted with a work so
+important. The then President, the Earl of
+Macclesfield, replied "that there was one of their own
+body whom he could venture to recommend for
+the work; yet that the most material part of
+what he knew of him was his having, within the
+compass of the last seven years, recommended
+himself to the Society by the communication of
+several mechanical contrivances and improvements;
+and though he had at first made it his business to
+execute things in the instrument way (without
+ever having been bred to the trade), yet, on
+account of the merit of his performances, he had
+been chosen a member of the Society; and that,
+for about three years past, having found the business
+of a philosophical instrument-maker not likely
+to afford an adequate recompense, he had wholly
+applied himself to various branches of mechanics."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this recommendation the proprietors acted,
+and Smeaton was engaged to erect the Eddystone
+lighthouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Preparing for the work.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The subject was wholly new to him, and therefore,
+as was his custom, he began to investigate
+it in all its bearings before he took any decisive
+step. One of the earliest conclusions at which
+he arrived was, that the new lighthouse ought to
+be built of stone, as the most durable and the
+safest material. He came to this decision from a
+careful examination of the plans and models of the
+two former lighthouses, which showed him that
+their leading defect was want of weight; of weight
+sufficient not only to resist the sea, but to compel
+the sea to yield to the building, so that it might
+neither rock in the winds nor tremble before the
+waves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A visit to the rock.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as he had made up his mind as to the
+principles on which the lighthouse should be
+constructed, he paid a visit to its intended site. He
+arrived at Plymouth about the end of March, but
+it was the 2nd of April before he could embark
+for the Eddystone, owing to the violence of the
+wind and the heavy sea that was running in the
+Channel. On reaching the rock, the billows beat
+upon it with so much fury that it was impossible
+to land. All that Smeaton could do was to view
+the rocky cone&mdash;"the mere crest of the mountain
+whose base was laid so far down in the sea-deeps
+beneath&mdash;over which the waves were lashing, and
+to form a more adequate idea of the very narrow
+as well as turbulent site on which he was expected
+to erect his building."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three days later, however, he ventured on a
+second trip, when he succeeded in landing on the
+rock, and thoroughly examining it. The only
+traces he could find of the lighthouses erected by
+his predecessors were the iron branches fixed by
+Rudyerd, and remains of those fixed by Winstanley.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On a third voyage to the rock, Smeaton was
+baffled by the wind, which compelled him to
+return to harbour without even obtaining a sight
+of it. After five more days, during which the
+engineer was employed in looking out a proper
+site for a work-yard, and examining the granite
+in the neighbourhood for the purposes of the
+building, he made a fourth voyage, and although
+the vessel reached the rock, the wind blew so
+freshly and the breakers dashed so furiously that
+it was again found impossible to land. He could
+only direct the boat to lie off and on, while he
+watched the breaking of the sea and its action on
+the reef. A fifth trial, after the lapse of a week,
+proved equally unsuccessful. After rowing about
+all day with the wind ahead, the party found
+themselves at night about four miles from the
+Eddystone, near which they anchored until
+morning; but a storm of wind and rain arising, they
+were compelled to return to Plymouth without
+succeeding in their object.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Try, try, and try again.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sixth attempt&mdash;we record these minute
+particulars because they give such a vivid illustration
+of Smeaton's persevering energy&mdash;was successful,
+and on the 22nd of April, after the lapse
+of seventeen days, Mr. Smeaton landed a second
+time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a careful inspection, the party retired to
+their sloop, which lay off until the tide had fallen,
+when Smeaton again landed, and the night being
+very calm, he continued on the rock until nine in
+the evening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 23rd he again landed, and pursued his
+operations; but this time he was interrupted by
+the ground-swell, which dashed the waves upon
+the reef, and, the wind rising, the sloop was forced
+to put back to Plymouth. During this visit,
+however, our engineer had secured some fifteen hours'
+occupation on the rock, and taken the dimensions
+of all its parts, to enable him to construct
+an accurate model of the foundation of the
+proposed structure. To correct the drawing,
+however, and to insure the utmost exactness, he
+determined upon attempting an eighth and final voyage
+of inspection on the 28th of April.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The eighth attempt.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again the violence of the sea foiled him in his
+design.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another fortnight passed, a fortnight of
+unfavourable weather; but the time was not wasted.
+The engineer elaborated his design, and made all
+the preliminary arrangements to proceed with the
+work. He also drew up a careful code of regulations
+for the instruction and government of the
+artificers and others who were to be employed
+upon it. And this being done, he arranged for a
+journey to London, but not until he had paid three
+more visits to the rock for the purpose of
+correcting his measurements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In August 1756, as we have already related,
+the erection of the lighthouse was begun, and
+operations were continued until the end of November,
+in spite of the obstacles offered by a violent
+sea and unfavourable winds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The return of the workmen to port, in their
+store-vessel the <i>Neptune</i>, was safely accomplished,
+though the voyage was not unattended with
+danger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A storm at sea.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unable, in consequence of the violence of the
+gale, to make Plymouth harbour, the <i>Neptune</i>
+was steered for Fowey, on the coast of Cornwall.
+Higher and higher rose the wind, until it blew
+quite a storm; and in the night Mr. Smeaton,
+hearing a sudden alarm and outcry amongst the
+crew overhead, ran upon deck half-dressed to
+learn the cause. It was raining heavily, and the
+hurricane lashed the waters into a whirlpool of
+spray and foam. "It being very dark," says
+Smeaton, "the first thing I saw was the horrible
+appearance of breakers almost surrounding us;
+John Bowden, one of the seamen, crying out,
+'For God's sake, heave hard at that rope, if you
+mean to save your lives!' I immediately laid
+hold of the rope, at which he himself was hauling
+as well as the other seamen, though he was also
+managing the helm. I not only hauled with all
+my strength, but called to and encouraged the
+workmen to do the same thing." The sea was
+dashing with terrible fury, and with a roar which
+drowned all other sounds, upon the rocks. The
+<i>Neptune's</i> jib-sail was all at once rent into a
+thousand shreds; and to save the main-sail, it
+was lowered, when, happily, the vessel obeyed her
+helm, swung round, and put out to sea. At
+daybreak her crew found themselves out of sight of
+land, and driving towards the Bay of Biscay.
+But as the gale had abated, they soon got the
+vessel's head round again, and stood for the coast.
+Before night they sighted the Land's End, but
+could not then make the shore. For another night
+and day they were tossed to and fro, almost
+helplessly. A vessel coming in sight, they exhibited
+signals of distress; she bore down, and directed
+them how to steer for the Scilly Islands. The
+wind veering round, however, they bore up again
+for the Land's End, passed the Lizard and Rame
+Head, and, finally, after being blown about at sea
+for four days, dropped anchor in Plymouth Sound,
+much to their own contentment and to the satisfaction
+of their friends, who were despairing of
+their reappearance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's activity.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having fully described the gradual erection of
+the Eddystone lighthouse in a previous chapter,
+we will not weary the reader with a repetition of
+details with which he is already acquainted. But
+reference may appropriately be made to the energy
+and restless activity with which Smeaton watched
+the progress of the enterprise. If there was any
+position of danger his men hesitated to occupy, he
+immediately stepped forward and took the foremost
+place. One morning, in the summer of 1757,
+when heaving up the moorings of the store-ship,
+preparatory to starting for the rock, the links of
+the buoy chain were exposed to a considerable
+strain upon the davit-roll, which was of cast-iron,
+and began to bend upon its convex surface. To
+remedy this, Smeaton ordered the carpenter to
+cut some trenails into small pieces, and split each
+length into two, with the view of applying them
+between the chain and the roll at the flexure of
+each link, so as to relieve the strain. One of the
+men remarked that if the chain should break
+anywhere between the roll and the tackle, the person
+engaged in inserting the wooden wedges might be
+cut in two by the chain, or carried overboard
+along with it. Smeaton, who never required
+others to undertake what he would not do
+himself, immediately put aside his men, took the
+"post of honour," as he called it, and superintended
+the getting in of the chain, link by link, until it
+was all on board.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We borrow the following interesting sketch
+from Mr Smiles:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While living at Plymouth, he says, the restless,
+enthusiastic engineer was accustomed every morning
+to take his post on the grassy summit of the
+Hoe, and with his telescope to survey the famous
+rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Plymouth Hoe.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Hoe is an elevated promenade, occupying
+a high ridge of land between Mill Bay and the
+entrance to the harbour, with the citadel at its
+eastern extremity. It forms the seaport of
+Plymouth, and commands the beautiful and varied
+scenery of the Sound. In front of it lies
+St. Nicholas's Island, bristling with fortifications;
+beyond, rising in verdurous slopes and terraces
+from the water's edge, is Mount Edgcumbe Park,
+with its masses of luxuriant foliage backed by
+green hills. The land juts out on either side the
+bay in rocky points, which are crowned with forts
+and batteries; while in the distance now, though
+not in Smeaton's time, extends the nobly massive
+rampart of the breakwater, midway between the
+bluffs of Redding and Staddon Points, so as to
+arrest the long roll of the Atlantic waves, and
+protect the placid expanse of the great harbour.
+It was from the Hoe that our ancestors first
+descried the immense array of the Spanish Armada
+advancing threateningly toward the English coast.
+It was the favourite watch-tower, so to speak, of
+Sir Francis Drake in those times of difficulty and
+peril, as it was now of Smeaton in less critical
+circumstances: and it may be added, that these
+two men, each so illustrious in his special vocation,
+possessed many characteristic qualities in common;
+perseverance, patience, heroic endurance, indomitable
+resolution; the qualities, in fact, by which
+great deeds are accomplished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A famous hill.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton, when he ascended the Hoe after a
+stormy night at sea, had neither eye nor thought
+for the picturesque beauties or historical associations
+of the scene before him. All he could think
+of was his lighthouse on the rock. He knew that
+he had brought the fullest resources of skill, and
+care, and prevision to bear upon its erection, yet
+he could not avoid a feeling of anxiety as to the
+security of the foundation. Many there were who
+still went about asserting that no fabric of stone
+could possibly stand upon the wave-worn,
+wind-beaten rock; and again and again the engineer,
+in the first dim light of morning, came to see if
+their ill-omened predictions had been fulfilled.
+Sometimes he had to wait long, until he could see
+a tall white column of spray rise aloft into the
+morning air. <i>Then</i> he breathed freely, and shut
+up his telescope, and thanked God that his labour
+had not been undone. And as the morning
+advanced, and the light grew fuller and stronger,
+he was able to discern his shapely light-tower,
+standing, erect and firm, above the whirl of
+waters.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Eddystone lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Eddystone lighthouse, as Mr. Smiles remarks,
+has now withstood the storms of a century,
+and at the moment we write it still occupies its
+advanced position, in front of the dangerous
+south-western coast, a remarkable monument to the
+genius and perseverance of its architect. At
+times, when the swell of the Atlantic rushes up
+the Channel with more than ordinary violence,
+impelled by a south-west wind, its tall pillar is
+shrouded in thick wreaths of spray, and its keen
+light-star for a moment is obscured. But the
+cloud passes, and again the welcome radiance
+streams across the waters, at once a guide and a
+warning to the homeward-bound. Occasionally
+a strong wave will strike full upon it, and its
+central portion, swiftly gliding up the perpendicular
+shaft, leaps, with one tremendous bound, over the
+lantern. At other times, a billow will break
+against it with a fury which seems to menace the
+security of its foundation. To those within, the
+report is like that of heavy artillery, and the
+windows rattle, and the whole building quivers
+from top to base. But the shudder which then
+runs throughout the lighthouse, instead of being a
+sign of weakness, is the "strongest proof of the
+unity and close connection of the fabric in all its
+parts."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+"The Eddystone in sight!"
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Many a heart has leapt with gladness at the
+cry of 'The Eddystone in sight!' sung out from
+the main-top. Homeward-bound ships, from far-off
+ports, no longer avoid the dreaded rock, but
+eagerly run for its light as the harbinger of safety.
+It might even seem as if Providence had placed
+the reef so far out at sea as the foundation for a
+beacon such as this, leaving it to man's skill and
+labour to finish His work. On entering the English
+Channel from the west and south, the cautious
+navigator feels his way by careful soundings on the
+great bank which extends from the Channel into
+the Atlantic; and these are repeated at fixed
+intervals until land is in sight. Every fathom
+nearer shore increases a ship's risks, especially
+in nights when, to use the seaman's phrase, it is
+'as dark as a pocket.' The men are on the lookout,
+peering anxiously into the dark, straining the
+eye to catch the glimmer of a light; and when it
+is known that 'the Eddystone is in sight,' a
+thrill runs through the ship, which can only be
+appreciated by those who have felt or witnessed
+it after long months of weary voyaging. Its
+gleam across the waters has thus been a source of
+joy, and given a sense of relief to thousands; for
+the beaming of a clear light from one known and
+fixed spot is infallible in its truthfulness, and a
+safer guide for the seaman than the bearings of
+many hazy and ill-defined headlands."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Usefulness of the lighthouse.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We find little record of Smeaton's engagements
+between 1759, when he completed his great
+undertaking, and 1764, when he applied for
+and obtained the appointment of receiver for the
+Derwentwater Estates.* It may be, as one of
+his biographers remarks, that, as yet, there was
+little demand in England for the constructive
+skill of so bold and able an engineer. Not but
+that there was work enough: for the highways
+were in a deplorable condition; in many districts
+intercommunication was rendered difficult by the
+want of sufficient bridges; in the commercial
+ports of the country dock accommodation was
+almost unknown; but England was then too poor, or
+her energies were too exclusively concentrated upon
+maritime enterprise and colonial extension, for her
+to undertake to supply these deficiencies on any
+extensive scale.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+* These estates were confiscated by the Crown,
+on the death of the last
+Earl of Derwentwater,&mdash;executed for high
+treason,&mdash;and conferred by Parliament
+on Greenwich Hospital.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+His engineering works.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His reputation, however, was gradually extending
+throughout the kingdom, and in 1760 we
+find him consulted by the magistrates of Dumfries
+respecting the improvement of the Nith.
+He was similarly consulted as to the lockage of
+the river Wear, the opening up of the navigation
+of the Chelmer to Chelmsford, of the Don above
+Doncaster, of the Devon in Clackmannanshire, of
+the Tetney Haven navigation near Louth, and
+the improvement of the river Lea; but the
+improvements he recommended do not seem to have
+been carried out, through want of funds. In
+truth, his first great engineering enterprise was
+undertaken in his own county, where he was
+employed in extensive repairs of the dams and
+locks on the river Calder; and he effected many
+important improvements in that navigation, which
+confirmed the general belief in his skill and
+judgment. At the same time he carried out
+extensive works on the river Aire from Leeds to its
+junction with the Ouse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To Smeaton also is mainly due the recovery of
+the inundated lands in the Lincoln Fens, and in
+the low levels between Doncaster and Hull. The
+river Witham, between Lincoln and Boston, was
+still, it is said, a source of constant grief and loss
+to the farmers along its banks. It had become
+choked up by neglect, so that "not only had the
+navigation of the river become almost lost, but a
+large extent of otherwise valuable land was
+constantly laid under water."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a still later period he undertook to improve
+the drainage of the North Level of the Fens, and
+the outfall of the Nene at Wisbeach. For this
+purpose he recommended the construction of a
+powerful outfall-sluice at the mouth of the Nene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Other works in which he was consulted, and
+in which his engineering ability was signally
+manifested, may here be mentioned: the drainage
+of the lands adjacent to the river Went, in
+Yorkshire; of the Earl of Kinnoul's lands lying
+along the Almond and the Tay, in Perthshire;
+the Adling Fleet Level, at the junction of the
+Ouse and the Trent; Hotham Carrs, near Market-Weighton;
+the Lewes Laughton Level, in Sussex;
+the Potterick Carr Fen, near Doncaster; the
+Torksey Bridge Fen, near Gainsborough; and
+the Holderness Level, near Hull.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Old London Bridge.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In 1763, he was called upon by the Corporation
+of London to advise them as to the best
+means of improving, widening, and enlarging Old
+London Bridge. In order to accommodate the
+increased traffic on the river, two arches of the
+bridge had been thrown into one, but with the
+effect of so augmenting the rush of the water as
+to loosen the adjoining piers, by washing away
+the bed of the river under their foundations.
+The alarm was so great that few persons would
+pass either over or under the bridge; and the
+Corporation hastily summoned Smeaton, who was
+then in Yorkshire, to their assistance. On his
+arrival, he proceeded immediately to examine
+the bridge, and to sound about the foundations of
+the piers as minutely as possible. He then
+advised the Corporation to repurchase the stones of
+the city gates, which had recently been taken
+down and their material sold, and cast them into
+the river outside the startings, or buttresses of
+the piers, to protect them from the action of the
+tide. His advice was adopted; and simple as
+were the means suggested, they proved entirely
+efficacious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Works on the Calder.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This method of checking the impetuous ravages
+of water, says Holmes, he had practised before
+with success on the river Calder. "On my
+calling on him in the neighbourhood of Wakefield,
+he showed me the effects of a great flood, which
+had made a considerable passage over the land;
+this he stopped at the bank of the river, by
+throwing in a quantity of large, rough stones,
+which, with the sand and other materials washed
+down by the river, filling up their interstices,
+had become a barrier to keep the river in its
+usual course."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton next appears in the character of a
+bridge-builder. The handsome bridges at Perth,
+Coldstream, and Banff were erected by him.
+With reference to the first of these, it should be
+explained that the Tay being subject to frequent
+inundations, it was requisite that great care should
+be taken with the foundations, which were laid
+down by means of coffer-dams. That is, a row
+of piles was driven into the river-bed, and round
+about and between them was thrown a quantity
+of gravel and earth mixed together, so as to
+render the enclosed space impervious to water.
+Pumping power was then applied, and the bed of
+the river within the coffer-dam was laid
+completely dry; after which the soil was excavated
+to a proper depth, and a firm foundation obtained
+for the piles. Piles were driven into the earth
+underneath the intended foundation-frame, and
+then the building was carried upwards in the
+usual way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Perth bridge.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Perth bridge is a handsome structure,
+consisting of seven principal arches, and measures
+about nine hundred feet in length. It was
+completed and opened for traffic in 1772.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His success in this notable undertaking secured
+him a very considerable amount of engineering
+business in the North. At Edinburgh he found
+employment in improving the water-supply for
+that city; at Glasgow, in strengthening and
+securing the old bridge. Far more important
+were the works he executed in designing and
+constructing the Forth and Clyde Canal, which
+links together the east and west coasts of
+Scotland, the North Sea and the Irish Sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The Forth and Clyde Canal.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a careful examination of the various
+lines which had been proposed for the canal,
+Smeaton strongly recommended the adoption of
+the most direct route possible, and suggested that
+the depth of the canal should be sufficient to
+accommodate vessels of large burden. Lord Dundas,
+the principal promoter of the scheme, adopted
+Smeaton's ideas, and took the necessary steps for
+obtaining an Act to authorize the construction of
+the Forth and Clyde Canal, which was accordingly
+commenced in 1768.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This canal runs nearly parallel with the famous
+wall of Antoninus, erected by the Romans to
+protect the southern Lowlands from the predatory
+attacks of the wild tribes of Caledonia. It
+begins at a point near Grangemouth, on the
+Forth, and ends at Bowling, on the Clyde, a
+few miles below Glasgow. Its length is about
+38 miles, and it includes 39 locks, with an
+elevation of 156 feet from the sea to the
+summit-level.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was one of the most difficult works, we are
+told, which, up to that time, had been constructed
+in Great Britain. The engineer's resources were
+severely tested by the occurrence of rocks and
+quicksands: in some places the canal was carried
+over deep rivers, in others along embankments
+exceeding twenty feet in height. It traverses
+numerous roads and scores of rivulets; besides
+the streams of the Luggie (celebrated by the
+peasant-poet David Gray), and the Kelvin
+(immortalized by Burns). The bridge over the
+latter is 275 feet long and 68 feet high. The
+depth of the canal averages 8 feet. The total
+cost of the undertaking did not amount to £200,000.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The bridge at Coldstream.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton's next engagement was to construct a
+bridge across the Tweed at Coldstream. It consists
+of five principal arches, of which the central
+has a span of 60 feet 8 inches; the two lateral,
+of 60 feet 5 inches each; and the two land or
+side arches, 58 feet. It was completed at a
+total cost of about £6000; and opened in October
+1766, having been upwards of three years in
+building. It will serve to show the great
+advance that has been made in engineering science
+since the days of Smeaton, when we state that a
+similar bridge could now be erected in nine
+months; though, owing to the rise in wages and
+in the price of materials, at a much greater cost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton also furnished the design for the
+bridge over the river Deveron, near Banff, in
+Scotland. It consists of seven arches, segments
+of circles, and measures 410 feet in length, and
+20 feet in width. It resembles, in its leading
+features, the bridge at Perth; and its simple yet
+graceful aspect, added to the exceeding beauty of
+its position, renders it a much-admired object,
+and one of great pictorial interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The bridge at Hexham.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton built only one bridge in England,
+and, strange to say, it was his only failure.
+He was requested, in 1777, to furnish a design
+for a bridge to be erected across the Tyne
+at Hexham; and a very handsome structure,
+of nine arches, it proved to be. But it had
+scarcely been finished before a subsidence took
+place in the foundation of one of the piers; and
+an attempt was made to remedy the defect by
+"sheet-piling," and by filling up the cavities in
+the river's bed with rough rubble-stones.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A great misfortune.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the spring of 1782, however, a violent
+spate swept down the river, and in the course of
+a few hours the beautiful Hexham Bridge lay in
+ruin at the bottom of the Tyne. Writing to
+his engineer, he said:&mdash;"All our honours are
+now in the dust! It cannot now be said that
+in the course of thirty years' practice, and [after
+being] engaged in some of the most difficult
+enterprises, not one of Smeaton's works has
+failed! Hexham Bridge is a melancholy
+instance to the contrary...... The news came to
+me like a thunderbolt, as it was a stroke I least
+expected, and even yet can scarcely form a
+practical belief as to its reality. There is,
+however, one consolation that attends this great
+misfortune; and that is, that I cannot see that
+anybody is really to blame, or that anybody is
+blamed, as we all did our best, according to
+what appeared; and all the experience I have
+gained is, not to attempt to build a bridge upon
+a gravel bottom in a river subject to such violent
+rapidity."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Harbour-building.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among his various engineering enterprises,
+Smeaton was employed in the improvement and
+construction of various harbours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His first work of this kind was at St. Ives, in
+Cornwall. Here he received much help from
+nature, which had provided a well-sheltered bay
+enclosed between two elevated headlands, known as
+the Island and Penower Point, respectively. Thus
+it was protected from the winds of the north,
+west, and south, and from the prevalent storms
+from the south-west, which beat with so much
+violence on the iron-bound Cornish coast. All
+that Smeaton, therefore, had to do, was to afford
+security for shipping from gales rising in the east
+and north-east; and this he effected by constructing
+a pier running nearly south from the southern
+angle of the Island. The port thus formed has
+proved of great advantage to the town, which is
+now one of the principal seats of the pilchard
+fishery, and the emporium of a busy mining
+district.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton's skill was also called into requisition
+for many other harbours: Whitehaven, Workington,
+and Bristol, on the west coast; ye, Christchurch,
+and Dover, on the south; and Yarmouth,
+Lynn, Scarborough, and Sunderland, on
+the east.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A harbour of refuge.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His principal work in harbour-construction,
+however, was that which he accomplished at
+Ramsgate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"The proximity of this harbour to the Downs,"
+says Mr. Smiles, "and to the mouth of the Thames,
+rendered it of considerable importance; and its
+improvement for purposes of trade, as well as for
+the shelter of distressed vessels in stormy weather,
+was long regarded as a matter of almost national
+importance. The neighbourhood of Sandwich
+was first proposed for a harbour of refuge as early
+as the reign of Queen Elizabeth, and the subject
+was revived in succeeding reigns. In 1737,
+Labelye, the architect of [old] Westminster Bridge,
+was called upon to investigate the subject; and
+ten years later, a committee of the House of
+Commons, after taking full evidence and obtaining
+every information, reported that 'a safe and
+commodious harbour may be made into the
+Downs near Sandown Castle, fit for the reception
+and security of large merchantmen and ships of
+war, which would also be of great advantage to
+the naval power of Great Britain.' The estimated
+cost of the proposed harbour was, however,
+considered too formidable, although it was under
+half a million; and the project lay dormant until
+a violent storm occurred in the Downs in 1748,
+by which a great number of ships were forced
+from their anchors and driven on shore. Several
+vessels, however, found safety in the little haven
+at Ramsgate, which was then only used by fishermen,
+the whole extent of its harbour accommodation
+consisting merely of a rough rubble-pier."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It would seem that this circumstance once
+more directed the attention of the public to Ramsgate
+as a suitable site for a harbour of refuge for
+vessels caught in a gale in the Downs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Proceedings at Ramsgate.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Petitions on the subject were addressed to the
+House of Commons, and the Government taking
+it up, an Act was passed in 1749 authorizing the
+construction of a harbour at Ramsgate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The trustees invited plans from various individuals,
+and from these selected a curious combination;
+adopting the west pier of one of the
+amateur engineers, and the east pier of another,
+the former to be of stone, and the latter of
+timber. The east pier was designed by a trustee;
+the west, by a ship-captain resident at Margate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the works, thus strangely designed, were
+in progress, the Harbour Trustees proposed to
+reduce their area, and consequently the accommodation
+to be afforded to shipping. As soon as
+their intention became known, the shipping interest
+memorialized Parliament against it. In 1755
+an inspection of the works was ordered, and led
+to their suspension, nor were they again resumed
+for a period of fully six years, during which the
+Government officials and the Harbour Trustees
+carried on a war of words. When they were
+once more set on foot, they proved eminently
+unsatisfactory, so far as their object was
+concerned, the protection of shipping; large
+quantities of sand and silt rapidly collecting in the
+harbour, and threatening to choke it up altogether.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's proposal.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This awkward circumstance induced the
+Harbour Board, in 1770, to call Mr. Smeaton to
+their councils. After a careful examination, he
+ascertained that no fewer than 268,700 cubic
+yards of sand and mud had already silted up,
+every tide bringing in a fresh quantity and
+depositing it in the tranquil water of the harbour,
+which possessed no natural scour to carry it away.
+In order to create such a scour, Smeaton proposed
+the construction of an adequate number of sluices,
+fed by an artificial backwater. He showed that
+Ramsgate harbour, having a sound bottom of
+chalk, was excellently adapted to insure the
+success of such a scheme; and pointed out that if
+the silt could thus be set in motion, the tide,
+running diagonally upon the harbour mouth,
+would easily carry it away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The proposition of our engineer, in detail, was
+as follows:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To enclose two spaces of four acres each,
+provided with nine draw-gates: namely, four upon
+the westernmost, and five upon the easternmost
+basin, the whole pointing in three different
+directions; two towards the curve of the west
+pier, four towards the harbour mouth, and three
+towards the curve in the east pier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To give the sluices all possible effect, he
+recommended the construction of a caisson, shaped
+somewhat like the pier of a bridge, which, being
+floated to its place, and then sunk, might serve
+to direct the current right or left, according to
+circumstances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After some discussion, the trustees resolved to
+adopt Smeaton's plan; but as it was not carried
+out in strict accordance with his intentions,
+another failure occurred, necessitating a recourse
+for the second time to his advice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the improvements which he now
+recommended was the construction of a new dock,
+the first stone of which was laid in July 1784.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the course of the excavations numerous
+springs were tapped, and these breaking through
+the pavement with which the dock had been laid,
+Portland stone was substituted, in blocks of
+considerable size. These, too, proved of no avail,
+and Smeaton was again sent for, with the result
+that the execution of all further works connected
+with the harbour was put into his hands. The
+dock was rebuilt; a timber floor was laid
+throughout in the most complete manner possible; an
+additional thickness was given to the walls; the
+east pier was rebuilt of stone, and carried out into
+deep water to a further extent of 350 feet. In
+constructing this extension, Smeaton first
+employed the diving-bell in building the foundations,
+employing a square iron chest, weighing about
+half a ton. It measured four feet six inches in
+height and length, and three feet in width. Two
+men could work together in its interior, and these
+were supplied with a constant current of fresh
+air by means of a forcing-pump placed in a boat
+which floated above them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Works at Ramsgate.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The works, when finished, proved successful,
+and Ramsgate harbour still remains the best upon
+the south-east coast, affording a refuge in stormy
+weather to vessels of considerable draught of
+water. It includes an area of forty-two acres,
+the piers extending 310 feet into the sea, with
+an opening between the pier-heads of 200 feet in
+width. The inner basin serves the purpose of a
+wet dock, and there is also a dry dock in which
+ships can be repaired. A lighthouse has been
+erected on the east pier. In the season, when
+Ramsgate is crowded with visitors, the two piers
+afford ample opportunities for promenading, and
+present a scene of much liveliness and interest,
+which is enhanced by the numerous vessels at
+anchor in the basin, and by a picturesque
+background of chalky cliffs and grassy hills and
+shining sands.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton in the North.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In addition to his numerous works on the
+English coast, Smeaton was largely employed in
+Scotland, in inspecting the harbours there, and
+devising schemes for increasing their security and
+amount of accommodation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Eyemouth Harbour.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We learn from Mr. Smiles that in 1770 the
+harbour at Aberdeen was altered in accordance
+with his suggestions; and a great depth of water
+was obtained over the bar at its mouth, as well
+as in the channel of the river Dee, by the
+erection of a north pier, and other additions.
+Improvements were also carried out at Dundee and
+Dunbar under his superintendence. He constructed
+the small harbours at Portpatrick on the
+west, and Eyemouth on the east coast. "Both
+of these," says our authority, "were in a great
+measure formed by nature, and the improvement
+of them demanded comparatively small skill on the
+part of the engineer. He had merely to follow the
+direction of the rocks, which provided a natural
+foundation for his piers at both places. Of his
+little harbour at Eyemouth he was somewhat
+proud, as it was one of the first he constructed,
+and very effectually answered its purpose at a
+comparatively small outlay of money. It lies at
+the corner of a bay, opposite St. Abb's Head, on
+the coast of Berwickshire, and is almost
+landlocked, excepting from the north. Smeaton
+accordingly carried his north pier into deep water,
+for the purpose of protecting the harbour's mouth
+from that quarter, as well as enlarging the
+accommodation of the haven. The harbour was thus
+rendered perfectly safe in all winds, and proved
+of great convenience and safety to the fishing-craft
+by which it is chiefly frequented."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to be observed that Smeaton, unlike some
+of our modern engineers, was very solicitous to do
+his work economically, and that he always
+contented himself with recommending such
+improvements or modifications as would answer the
+desired purpose, without seeking to gain a brilliant
+reputation by ambitious and costly schemes.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's activity.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These details, of bridges and harbours, and
+piers and sluice-gates, may not be interesting to
+the reader, but they are valuable as illustrations
+of the credit which Smeaton enjoyed as a successful
+and capable engineer, and of his restless
+industry and indefatigable perseverance. He
+crowded an extraordinary amount of good and
+useful achievement into his active life, and whatever
+he did was done so carefully and conscientiously
+as never to require patching or re-doing. In
+the course of his engineering labours he traversed
+Great Britain from north to south, and east to
+west; and there was scarcely a bridge or a canal
+in the kingdom which he did not restore, enlarge,
+or in some way improve. As might be expected,
+he remained, throughout his life, the great
+authority on all questions connected with lighthouses.
+He erected those which on Spurn Head still
+guard the mouth of the Humber, and at other
+parts of the coast his services were called into
+requisition to secure their improved lightage.
+He was also consulted by Government respecting
+the national dockyards at Portsmouth and
+Plymouth. When a new water company was started
+to supply some hitherto unprovided town or
+district, or when an old company found it necessary
+to afford increased accommodation, recourse was
+had to the inexhaustible skill and ingenuity of
+Smeaton, who for a considerable period was really
+consulting engineer to the nation. He was called
+upon to advise the landowner who wished to drain
+his estates, and the coal-owner who desired to
+work his mines more safely and efficiently. There
+seems to have been no department of engineering
+science in which he was not largely and
+successfully employed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A water-pumping engine.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is said of him, and without exaggeration,
+that he was ready to supply a design of any new
+machine, from a fire-bucket or a ship's pump to a
+turning-lathe or a steam-engine. His genius was
+equally at home with small things as with great.
+Whatever he designed was remarkable for the
+finish and neatness of its execution. "The
+water-pumping engine which he erected for Lord Irwin,
+at Temple-Newsham, near his own house at
+Austhorpe, to pump the water for the supply of the
+mansion, is an admirable piece of workmanship,
+and continues at this day in good working
+condition. His advice was especially sought on
+subjects connected with mill-work, water-pumping,
+and engineering of every description,&mdash;flour-mills
+and powder-mills, wind-mills and water-mills,
+fulling-mills and flint-mills, blade-mills and
+forge-hammer mills. From a list left by him in his
+own handwriting, it appears that he designed and
+erected forty-three water-mills of various kinds,
+besides numerous wind-mills.
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton and the steam-engine.
+</span>
+Water-power was
+then used for nearly all purposes for which steam
+is now applied, such as grinding flour, sawing
+wood, boring and hammering iron, fulling cloth,
+rolling copper, and driving all kinds of
+machinery." Smeaton also bestowed much attention on the
+development of the wonderful powers of the
+steam-engine, then only in its infancy. In order
+to experimentalize upon it, he erected a model
+engine, on Newcomen's principle, near his house
+at Austhorpe; and his fertile genius soon devised
+a variety of improvements which added to its
+utility. His Chacewater engine of 150 horsepower
+was looked upon as the finest and most
+powerful of its kind which had until then been
+erected. In this field of invention, however, it
+must be owned that he was completely surpassed
+by James Watt, the superior merit of whose
+condensing engine&mdash;notwithstanding the time and
+labour Smeaton had bestowed on the development
+of Newcomen's&mdash;he frankly acknowledged.
+After inspecting Watt's engine, he said at once:
+"That the old engine, even when made to do its
+best, was now driven from every place where fuel
+could be considered of any value."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A lesson for the reader.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During many years the opinion of Smeaton
+was considered of so much authority, that no
+engineering works of any importance were
+undertaken throughout the kingdom except on his
+advice, or under his superintendence. He was
+constantly consulted in Parliament, and was
+regarded as an arbiter or ultimate referee on all
+difficult questions connected with his profession.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it should be added, for the benefit of the
+young reader, that he was never in a hurry to
+give his opinion; and that he never gave it until
+he had made himself thoroughly acquainted with
+the subject on which it was sought. He was
+above all petty artifices, and never laid claim to
+the possession of universal knowledge. He did
+not pretend to be able to decide off-hand on a
+question he had not considered, but studied it
+thoroughly and patiently before he ventured on
+offering an opinion. Hence it was always
+received with the utmost deference, and the most
+implicit confidence was placed in his proved
+integrity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Always "thorough."
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton possessed the gift of fluent and clear
+description. He could make difficult points of
+engineering science intelligible even to
+non-professional readers or hearers; and in the courts of
+law he was frequently complimented by Lord
+Mansfield and the other judges for the light he
+so ingeniously threw upon abstruse and very
+difficult subjects. His secret was, his thorough
+knowledge of what he wrote or spoke about.
+He was always <i>thorough</i>, and hence he always
+spoke with the decision and confidence of a master.
+It is only imperfect knowledge which ever
+blunders into obscurity.
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap04"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+CHAPTER IV.
+<br><br>
+SMEATON IN PRIVATE LIFE&mdash;HIS LAST YEARS AND CHARACTER.
+</h3>
+
+<p>
+While Smeaton was thus reaping the
+reward of his diligent life and
+conscientious industry, he continued to
+make his home and resting-place at Austhorpe,
+near Leeds, where he had been born. There he
+carried on the mechanical experiments in which
+he had ever felt so intense a delight. His father
+had allowed him the privilege of a workshop in
+an outhouse, and he occupied it for many years;
+afterwards, when the house had become his settled
+residence, he erected an atelier, a study, and an
+observatory, all in one, for his own use. This
+building assumed the form of a square tower, four
+stories high. It stood apart from the house, on
+the opposite side of the court or green, and on the
+bank of a pleasant pool. Shrouded in ivy, and
+embowered among trees, it now forms a picturesque
+feature in the landscape. The ground-floor was
+devoted to his forge; the first floor contained his
+lathe; the second, his models; the third, his study;
+while the fourth was a sort of lumber-room and
+attic. From the little turreted staircase on the
+top a door opened upon the leads. A vane was
+fixed on the summit, and so arranged that it set
+in motion the hands of a dial on the ceiling of his
+drawing-room, and showed at any moment the
+precise direction in which the wind blew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton in his study.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as the engineer retired to his study,
+strict orders were issued that he was not to be
+disturbed on any account. No person was suffered
+to ascend the circular staircase which led to
+his retreat. If he heard a step below, he would
+immediately raise his voice to know the intruder's
+business. Even his smith, Waddington, was
+prohibited from trespassing on the sanctuary, and
+required, on such occasions, to wait in the lower
+apartment until Mr. Smeaton came down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he was neither evolving plans nor drawing
+up reports, Smeaton delighted to occupy his
+leisure with astronomical studies and observations;
+and this scientific pastime he continued to indulge
+in even in the flush of his prosperous professional
+career, when he was the consulting engineer of all
+England. For many years he regularly contributed
+papers on astronomical subjects to the Royal
+Society, of which he was a Fellow. The instruments
+he used in making his observations were all
+of his own workmanship, and remarkable for their
+accuracy and finish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Ingenious designs for tools.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His contrivances of tools, we are told, were
+endless, and he was constantly employed in inventing
+and making new ones. Of these interesting relics
+large quantities are still, says Smiles, in the
+possession of the son of his blacksmith, who lives in
+the neighbourhood of Austhorpe. When Mr. Smiles
+made inquiry after them, they were found
+lying in a heap in an open shed, begrimed and
+rusty. One mysterious article, after it had been
+thoroughly scrubbed and cleansed, proved to be a
+jack-plane, and the tool which Smeaton himself
+had handled. His drill was also found, the bow
+being formed of a thick piece of cane; his brace,
+his T square, his augers, his gouges, and his
+engraving tools.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"There was no end of curiously arranged
+dividers; pulleys in large numbers, and of various
+sizes; cog-wheels, brass hemispheres, and all
+manner of measured, drilled, framed, and jointed
+brass-work. These remains of the great engineer are
+worthy of preservation. To mechanics, there is a
+meaning in every one of them. They do not
+resemble existing tools, but you can see at once
+that each was made for a reason; and one can
+almost detect what the contriver was thinking
+about when he made them so different from those
+we are accustomed to see. Even in the most
+trifling matters, such as the kind of wood or
+metal used, and the direction of the fibre of the
+wood, each detail has been carefully studied.
+Much even of the household furniture seems to
+have been employed in their fabrication, possibly
+to the occasional amazement of the ladies in
+Smeaton's house over the way. We are informed
+that so much 'rubbish,' as it was termed, was
+found in that square tower at his death, that a
+fire was kindled in the yard, and a vast quantity
+of papers, letters, books, plans, tools, and scraps
+of all kinds, were remorselessly burnt."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+"A born mechanic."
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There can be no question that Smeaton was "a
+born mechanic;" and to the end of his days a
+mechanic he remained, finding his greatest pleasure
+in mechanical pursuits. It is told of him that
+when new gates were erected at the entrances to
+Temple-Newsham Park, near his house at
+Austhorpe, he offered to supply the design; and they
+were accordingly constructed and hung after his
+plans. In the popular opinion, however, his
+noblest work, surpassing even the Eddystone
+lighthouse, is the ingenious hydraulic ram, by
+means of which the water is still raised in the
+beautiful grounds of Temple-Newsham. Occasionally
+he diversified his occupations in his atelier,
+and at his desk, by visits to his smithy. Here
+he was wont to experiment upon a boiler, the
+lower part of copper and the upper of lead, which
+he had fitted up in an adjacent building, for the
+purpose of ascertaining the evaporative power of
+different kinds of fuel, and of settling other
+questions connected with the all-absorbing subject of
+steam-power.
+<span class="sidenote">
+File <i>versus</i> hammer.
+</span>
+He was on the best of terms with
+his smith, and if he thought him not very
+dexterous in the execution of any particular piece of
+work, he would take the tools himself, and show
+him how it ought to be done. He was fond of
+repeating the maxim, "Never let a file come where
+a hammer can go."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+"Queer-fangled things."
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When superintending the various works on
+which he was successively employed, if any
+workman showed a lack of skill, or seemed unable to
+proceed, he would at once take his tools and finish
+the task himself. "You know, sir," said the son
+of Smeaton's blacksmith to an inquirer, "workmen
+didn't know much about drawings at that
+time a-day, and so when Mr. Smeaton wanted any
+queer-fangled thing making, he'd cut one piece
+out of wood, and say to my father, 'Now, lad,
+go make me this,'&mdash;and so on for ever so many
+pieces; and then he'd stick all those pieces o' wood
+together, and say, 'Now, lad, thou knows how thou
+made each part, go make it now all in a piece.' And
+I've heard my father say 'at he's often been
+cap't to know how he could tell so soon when owt
+ailed it; for before ever he set his foot at t' bottom
+of his twisting steps, or before my father could
+get sight of his face, if t' iron had been wrong,
+thear'd been an angry word o' some sort, but t'
+varry next words were, 'Why, my lad, thou o'ud
+a' made it so and so: now go make another.'"
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+It is related by his daughter, Mrs. Dickson,
+that early in life Smeaton attracted the notice of
+the eccentric Duke and Duchess of Queensberry,
+owing to the remarkable personal likeness between
+him and their favourite Gay, the poet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their first acquaintance was made under
+sufficiently singular circumstances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the engineer, one night, was walking in
+Ranelagh Gardens, then a fashionable place of
+resort, with Mrs. Smeaton, he observed an elderly
+lady and gentleman fixing their eyes upon him
+with a persistent gaze. At last they stopped, and
+the Duchess said, "Sir, I don't know who you are,
+or what you are, but so strongly do you resemble
+my poor dear Gay that we <i>must</i> be acquainted;
+you shall go home and sup with us; and if the
+minds of the two men accord as do the countenances,
+you will find two cheerful old folks who
+can love you well; and I think (or you are a
+hypocrite), you can as well deserve it."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A guest at the Duke's.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The invitation thus frankly given was as
+frankly accepted, and proved the beginning of a
+friendship which continued cordial and uninterrupted
+so long as the Duke and Duchess lived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During Smeaton's visits a game at cards was
+sometimes proposed. Smeaton, however, disliked
+cards, and could never devote his attention to the
+game. On one occasion the stakes were already
+high, and it fell to Smeaton's lot to double them,
+when, neglecting to deal the cards, he appeared to
+be busily engaged in making some abstruse
+calculations on paper, which he placed upon the
+table. The Duchess asked eagerly what they
+referred to. Smeaton calmly replied, "You will
+recollect that the field in which my house stands
+measures about five acres three roods and seven
+perches, which, at thirty years' purchase, will be
+just my stake; and if your grace will make a duke
+of me, I presume the winner will not dislike my
+mortgage." The jesting lesson had its effect, and
+they never played again, except for the veriest trifle.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A benevolent character.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton, on one occasion, obtained a public
+appointment for a clerk in whom he placed the
+greatest confidence, and, conjointly with a friend,
+became security for him to a considerable amount.
+Not long afterwards this man committed the crime
+of forgery, was detected, and given up to justice.
+"The same post," says Mrs. Dickson, "brought
+news of the melancholy transaction, of the man's
+compunction and danger, of the claim of the bond
+forfeited, and of the refusal of the other person to
+pay the moiety. Being present when he read his
+letters, which arrived at a period of Mrs. Smeaton's
+declining health, so entirely did the command of
+himself second his anxious attention to her, that
+no emotion was visible on their perusal, nor, till
+all was put into the best train possible, did a word
+or look betray the exquisite distress it occasioned
+him. In the interim all which could soothe the
+remorse of a prisoner, every means which could
+save (which did, at least, from public execution),
+were exerted for him, with a characteristic
+benevolence, active and unobtrusive."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Not to be bought.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton was a man of blameless character;
+his integrity was as pure as his energy was
+unresting. Though his opportunities of amassing
+wealth were numerous, he cared but little for them.
+Profit was always, with Smeaton, a secondary
+consideration; his first aim being to execute the task
+intrusted to him with all the skill at his
+command. He never slighted his work, but attended
+to its minutest details. Many lucrative appointments
+were placed at his disposal. The Empress
+Catherine of Russia endeavoured, by the most
+splendid offers, to secure his services for her own
+country; but Smeaton was too sincere a patriot to
+be dazzled by any bribe. "The disinterested
+moderation of his ambition," says his daughter,&mdash;and
+says so truly,&mdash;"every transaction in private
+life evinced; his public ones bore the same stamp;
+and after his health had withdrawn him from the
+labours of his profession, many instances may be
+given by those whose concerns induced them to
+press importunately for a resumption of it; and
+when some of them seemed disposed to enforce
+their entreaties by further prospects of lucrative
+recompense, his reply was strongly characteristic
+of his simple manners and moderation. He
+introduced the old woman who took care of his
+chambers in Gray's Inn, and showing her, asserted
+that 'her attendance sufficed for all his wants.' The
+inference was indisputable, for money could
+not tempt that man to forego his ease, leisure, or
+independence, whose requisites of accommodation
+were compressed within such limits!"
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The value of integrity.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A very high opinion of his probity and independence
+was formed by all who had transactions
+with him. The Princess Daschkaw, on behalf of
+the Empress of Russia, used every persuasion and
+offered every inducement to accept the superintendence
+of the vast projects she had conceived
+for the development of the resources of her
+empire. When all her negotiations failed, she
+remarked: "Sir, you are a great man, and I
+honour you! You may have an equal in ability,
+perhaps, but in character you stand alone. The
+English premier, Sir Robert Walpole, was mistaken,
+and my sovereign has the misfortune to
+find one man who has not his price."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In all the social duties of life Smeaton was
+above praise; and he was quick to recognize and
+encourage real merit wherever he found it. To
+strangers his mode of expression might at times
+appear too warm and harsh; but this may be
+accounted for, perhaps, as Mr. Holmes accounts
+for it, by the intense application of his mind,
+which was always absorbed in the pursuit of
+truth, or engaged in extending the domains of
+human knowledge. Hence, if interrupted by
+anything not in accordance with the general current
+of his thoughts, he was apt to speak hastily. As
+a friend, he was sincere, earnest, generous; as a
+companion, interesting and entertaining, and his
+conversation was always fresh, happy, and suggestive.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton at home.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his own home, and by his family and
+dependants, he was equally beloved and revered.
+After his wife's death in 1784, his two daughters
+managed his household until his own departure.
+The elder has left on record many graphic
+particulars of his mode of life, and has drawn his
+character in terms dictated by affection, yet, as
+unquestionable evidence shows, without undue
+exaggeration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though communicative on most subjects, she
+says, and stored with ample and liberal observations
+on others, of himself he never spoke. In
+nothing does he seem to have stood more single
+than in being devoid of that egotism which more
+or less affects the world. It required some
+address, even in his family, to draw him into
+conversation directly relating to himself, his pursuits,
+or his success. Self-opinion, self-interest, and
+self-indulgence, seemed alike tempered in him by
+a modesty inseparable from merit; and by a
+moderation in pecuniary ambition, a habit of
+intense application, and a rigid temperance, which,
+however laudable, are certainly uncommon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Father and master.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Devoted to his family with an affection so
+profound, a manner at once so cheerful and serene,
+that it is impossible to say whether the charm of
+conversation, the simplicity of instruction, or the
+gentleness with which it was conveyed, most
+endeared his home; a home in which, from their
+earliest years, his children could not recollect to
+have seen in him a sign of dissatisfaction, or to
+have heard a word of asperity. Yet with all this
+he ruled his household, not his household him.
+He was the loving and generous father, but he
+was also the firm and resolved master. But it is
+for "casuistry, or education, or rule, to explain
+his authority; it was an authority as impossible
+to dispute as it is to define."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Personal characteristics.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In person our engineer was of middle stature,
+broadly and strongly made, like most Yorkshiremen,
+and endowed with a constitution of great
+natural vigour. The expression of his countenance
+was marked by much gentleness and shrewdness.
+In his ordinary address he was plain,
+unpretending, simple, but never rude or awkward.
+He had the characteristic straightforwardness of
+speech of the north-countryman, and never hesitated
+to call a lie a lie, or to stigmatize an act of
+dishonesty or deception in the plainest possible
+terms. He spoke in the dialect of his native
+county, and had the good sense not to be ashamed
+of it. His incessant avocations prevented him
+from acquiring that polish and superficial
+refinement so much valued by little minds;&mdash;excellent
+things in themselves, but dearly purchased at the
+cost of sterling qualities of head or heart. He
+was born an engineer, a son of toil; and such he
+remained to the last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton on literary work.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards the close of his life, Smeaton became
+an author; not, however, with a view to literary
+reputation, but in the hope he might do some
+service to those coming after him by an accurate
+account of the various important works in which
+he had been engaged as an engineer. He meditated
+several compilations of this character, but
+lived to complete only his "Narrative of the
+Construction of the Eddystone Lighthouse." He
+frankly tells us that he found the task of describing
+this structure far more difficult than that of
+raising it; and hence, like most unaccustomed
+writers, he became singularly impressed with a
+sense of the importance of literary composition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"I am convinced," he says in his preface,
+"that to write a book tolerably well is not a
+light or an easy matter; for, as I have proceeded
+in this task, I have been less and less satisfied with
+the execution. In truth, I have found much
+more difficulty in writing than I did in building,
+as well as a greater length of time and application
+of mind to be employed. I am indeed now older
+by thirty-five years than I was when I first
+entered on that enterprise, and therefore my
+faculties are less active and vigorous; but when
+I consider that I have been employed full seven
+years, at every opportunity, in forwarding this
+book, having all the original draughts and materials
+to go upon, and that the production of these
+original materials, as well as the building itself,
+were despatched in half that time, I am almost
+tempted to subscribe to the sentiment adopted by
+Mr. Pope, that
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ 'Nature's chief masterpiece is writing well.'<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+It is true that I have not been bred to literature,
+but it is equally true that I was no more bred to
+mechanics: we must therefore conclude that the
+same mind has in reality a much greater facility
+in some subjects than in others."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The great engineer.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We agree with Mr. Smiles, however, in thinking
+that Smeaton's story of the Eddystone Lighthouse
+is very effectively told. It is distinguished
+by its intense dramatic interest; an interest
+arising from the contest it depicts between the
+colossal forces of nature and human resolution,
+energy, and skill. It has been well observed by
+the Earl of Ellesmere, in his "Essays on
+Engineering," that bloody battles have been won, and
+campaigns conducted to a successful issue, with
+less of personal exposure to physical danger on
+the part of the commander-in-chief, than was
+constantly encountered by Smeaton during the
+greater part of those years in which the
+lighthouse was in course of erection. "In all works
+of danger he himself led the way; was the first
+to spring upon the rock, and the last to leave it;
+and by his own example he inspired with courage
+the humble workmen engaged in carrying out his
+plans, who, like himself, were unaccustomed to
+the special terrors of the scene."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+"Suum cuique."
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have next to speak of Smeaton's intellectual
+powers. That they were equal to work
+of the highest character we have already shown.
+He was abundantly fertile in resources; no
+difficulties or obstacles ever embarrassed him; his
+capacious mind seemed stored with an
+inexhaustible supply of ingenious expedients. He
+was the first of the great school of English
+engineers whose triumphs over nature are recorded in
+every part of the world. No undertaking ever
+perplexed that prompt, quick, and massive
+intellect. Hence his fame has gone on increasing.
+James Watt, who always spoke of him in language
+of warm admiration, calls him "<i>father</i>
+Smeaton." In justice to him, he writes, "we
+should observe that he lived before Rennie, and
+before there were one-tenth of the artists there
+are now." <i>Suum cuique</i>; his example and
+precepts have made us all engineers. Robert
+Stephenson, half a century later, declared him to be
+the engineer of the highest intellectual eminence
+that had yet appeared in England. He pronounced
+him to be "the greatest philosopher in
+our [the engineering] profession this country has
+yet produced. He was indeed a great man,
+possessing a truly Baconian mind, for he was an
+incessant experimenter. The principles of
+mechanics were never so clearly exhibited as in his
+writings, more especially with respect to
+resistance, gravity, the power of water and wind to
+turn mills, and so on. His mind was as clear as
+crystal, and his demonstrations will be found
+mathematically conclusive. To this day there
+are no writings so valuable as his in the highest
+walks of scientific engineering; and when young
+men ask me, as they frequently do, what they
+should read, I invariably say, Go to Smeaton's
+philosophical papers; read them, master them
+thoroughly, and nothing will be of greater service
+to you. Smeaton was indeed a very great man."
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+"Clear as crystal."
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We have said enough to prove that Smeaton
+was gifted with the most earnest industry, and we
+have dwelt at some length on his patience,
+resolution, and perseverance. He was a hard worker
+throughout his life, from six years old to sixty.
+And like all hard workers, like all men who have
+won renown or accomplished great things, he
+knew how to economize his time; how to utilize
+every moment; how to employ it in such a manner
+as to obtain from its use the most advantageous
+results. When at home, his forenoons
+were occupied in writing reports, and in the
+various transactions connected with his
+professional engagements; while his afternoons were
+devoted to the mechanical and scientific pursuits
+which formed his principal relaxation, working
+at his forge or in his workshop, making mechanical
+experiments, or preparing papers on scientific
+subjects for the Royal Society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Numbering the hours.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was endowed by nature with a strong constitution
+and a robust frame, but there is reason
+to apprehend that he tasked his mental powers
+too laboriously by his intense and continuous
+application to study during his long periods of
+seclusion at Austhorpe. As he advanced in years
+his sturdy strength of limb departed, and his
+physical powers gave way, while he was yet in
+his mature manhood. They were further impaired
+by the abstemious regimen which he was
+subsequently compelled to adopt.
+<span class="sidenote">
+The dreaded enemy.
+</span>
+Cerebral disease,
+moreover, was hereditary in his family, and he long
+dreaded the attack of paralysis, which eventually
+terminated his life. But, as Mr. Smiles says, this
+only made him the more eager to employ to the
+greatest advantage the time which it might yet
+be permitted him to live: and he dreaded above
+all things the blight of his mental powers&mdash;to
+use his own words, "lingering over the dregs
+after the spirit had evaporated"&mdash;chiefly as
+depriving him of the means of doing further good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last public measure on which he was
+professionally engaged in London was the passing of
+a Bill through Parliament for the construction of
+the Birmingham and Worcester Canal. The
+opposition to it was fierce and protracted, and his
+support of the measure in committee entailed
+upon him great application, anxiety, and thought,
+His friends saw with much concern that the
+labour was too great for him, and were in constant
+alarm lest the powers of his vigorous mind should
+suddenly give way. The Bill, however, passed
+by a small majority, and Smeaton retired to his
+house at Austhorpe to enjoy the rest he so greatly
+needed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's last days.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 16th of September the blow fell. He
+was seized with an attack of paralysis while
+walking in the garden. Happily he regained the
+use of his mental faculties, and was able to thank
+the Almighty that his intellect was spared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During his illness he dictated several letters to
+his old friend, Mr. Holmes, in which he minutely
+described his health and feelings. In one of them
+he says pathetically, "I conclude myself nine-tenths
+dead, and the greatest favour the Almighty
+can do (as I think), will be to complete the other
+part; but as it is likely to be a lingering illness,
+it is only in his power to say when that is likely
+to happen."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton bore his trial, however, with the
+equanimity of a Christian, and was very cheerful
+and resigned. Sometimes he would complain
+that he had lost his old quickness of apprehension;
+but recovering himself quickly, he would
+excuse the momentary impatience, and remark,
+with a smile, "It could not be otherwise; the
+shadow must lengthen as the sun goes down." He
+expressed particular pleasure in seeing the
+customary occupations of his family resumed,
+and took the same interest as ever in reading,
+drawing, music, and conversation. Nor were
+his remarks less apt or instructive or entertaining
+than when he was in the flush of health.
+One evening he was asked to explain some
+phenomena respecting the moon, which, from the
+window of his apartment, could be seen shining in
+full-orbed splendour. He replied to the questions
+addressed to him very fully and clearly. Then,
+fixing his gaze on the beautiful sphere, he
+contemplated it steadfastly for some time, observing,
+"How often have I looked up to it with inquiry
+and wonder; and how often have I looked forward
+to the period when I shall have the vast and
+privileged views of an hereafter, and all will be
+comprehension and pleasure!" Smeaton was thus
+consoled in his last days by the only consolation which,
+under such circumstances, ever proves effectual,&mdash;that
+which flows from a reverent trust in the constant
+presence of a Divine Father. Though not
+ostentatious in his religious professions, he had
+learned the value of religious truth, and he knew
+that in passing through the valley of the shadow
+his sole help and support was the mercy of a
+Redeemer. And hence he listened with delight
+to the promises of Holy Writ, and joined with
+fervour in the ministrations of religion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+The engineer's death.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The great engineer's illness was not of long
+duration. He passed away on the 28th of
+October 1792, in the sixty-eighth year of his age.
+He was interred with his forefathers in the old
+parish church of Whitkirk, where a tablet was
+erected to his memory, bearing the following quaint
+inscription:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Smeaton's monument.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br></p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ Sacred to the Memory<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ of<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ JOHN SMEATON, F.R.S.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent" style="margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%">
+A man whom God had endowed with the most extraordinary abilities,
+which he indefatigably exerted for the benefit of mankind in works of
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ SCIENCE AND PHILOSOPHICAL RESEARCH;<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent" style="margin-left: 5%; margin-right: 5%">
+More especially as an Engineer and Mechanic. His principal work, the
+Eddystone Lighthouse, erected on a rock in the open sea (where one had
+been washed away by the violence of a storm, and another had been
+consumed by the rage of fire), secure in its own stability, and the wise
+precautions for its safety, seems not unlikely to convey to distant ages,
+as it does to every nation of the Globe, the name of its constructor.
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ <i>He was born at Austhorpe, June 8, 1724;<br>
+ And departed this life, October 28, 1792.</i><br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ Also Sacred to the Memory of<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ ANN,<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ THE WIFE OF THE SAID JOHN SMEATON, F.R.S.,<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ Who died January 17, 1784.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ THEIR TWO SURVIVING DAUGHTERS,<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ Duly impressed with sentiments of Love and Respect<br>
+ for the kindest and tenderest of Parents,<br>
+ Pay this Tribute to their Memory.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+Genius, or originality, is, for the most part,
+says Hazlitt, some strong quality in the mind,
+answering to and bringing out some new and
+striking quality in nature.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+According to this definition, Smeaton must be
+considered a man of genius. But Hazlitt goes
+on to say that capacity is not the same thing as
+genius. And he describes capacity as relating to
+the <i>quantity</i> of knowledge, however acquired;
+while genius relates to its <i>quality</i>, and the mode
+of acquiring it. Capacity is the power over given
+ideas or combinations of ideas; genius is the power
+over those which are not given, and for which no
+obvious or precise rule can be laid down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+A man of capacity.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton, then, we should prefer to call a man
+of <i>capacity</i>; a man with a great power over given
+ideas or combinations of ideas. And along with
+this capacity he possessed a remarkable steadfastness
+of purpose, a determined will, an unconquerable
+perseverance. Without these adjuncts, indeed,
+capacity will avail but little. The only
+motto which it can take up and act upon is that
+expressed so pithily by the old poet:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "See first that the design is wise and just;<br>
+ That ascertained, pursue it resolutely.<br>
+ Do not for one repulse forego the purpose<br>
+ That you resolved to effect."<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+Smeaton, in his childhood, making turning-lathes
+and designing pumps; Ferguson, the boy-astronomer,
+learning the positions of the stars
+with the help of a string of beads; Murray,
+afterwards the eminent Orientalist, teaching himself to
+write with a blackened brand on the whitewashed
+wall,&mdash;these are examples the youthful student
+should ever set before him. They are examples
+of what can be done by capacity, directing and
+controlling diligence, and zeal, and application.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+What diligence can do.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A distinguished Italian author has put forward
+the theory that all men may become great men,
+may become poets, painters, and orators;&mdash;as if
+the sole difference between genius and mediocrity
+were the power of application. We think it
+impossible for any calm and sober judgment to accept
+such a hypothesis. We do not believe that any
+amount of diligence or perseverance, however
+continuous and well-directed, could convert a
+versifier into a Milton, or a blacksmith into a
+Smeaton. But then we may all take to ourselves
+the consolation that it is neither desirable
+nor necessary that we should all be Smeatons and
+Miltons; that what we have mainly to consider is
+this,&mdash;the doing our best in whatever position the
+will of Providence may have assigned to us, since,
+by so doing, we may reasonably hope to swell the
+sum of human happiness and human good. And
+the benefit we may derive from a study of the
+career and character of Smeaton is to be found in
+the encouragement it gives us to lead a life of
+patient and assiduous labour. For the reader, as
+for Smeaton, God has provided a vocation, if he
+will but earnestly seek to discover it; and when
+he once sees the path of duty before him, he
+will assuredly gain his reward if he perseveres
+in it with singleness of aim and loftiness of purpose.
+</p>
+
+<p><br></p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">
+Lessons from great lives.
+</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If it is not necessary for every man to become
+a Watt or a Smeaton, and if it is not given to
+every man to win the success which a Watt or a
+Smeaton achieved, yet it is possible for each one
+of us to attain to a certain standard of character
+and capacity, and to acquire a reasonable measure
+of prosperity. As we have elsewhere written,
+biography is full of examples of what may be
+accomplished by a resolute will; what may be
+done by the industry that never wearies and the
+energy that never flags. Long and brilliant is
+the record of men who have attained greatness
+under the most unfavourable conditions. The
+great voyager who opened up a New World to
+the enterprise of the West was in early life a
+weaver. The able German historian of the Roman
+Republic began as a peasant. Sextus V., one of
+the most capable of the many capable men who
+have sat in the chair of St. Peter, commenced his
+career as a swine-herd. Every school-boy knows
+that Æsop, the most successful of all fabulists,
+was a slave; Homer,
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ "The blind old man of Scio's rocky isle,"<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+a beggar; and Demosthenes, the orator, whose
+eloquence controlled the fierce democracy of
+Athens, the son of a sword-maker. What was
+Daniel Defoe, the author of the enchanting story
+of the Solitary in the far-off desert isle, but a
+hosier's apprentice? Or Gay, the poet and wit,
+but the drudge of a silk-mercer? James Watt sold
+spectacles, and invented the present steam-engine;
+George Stephenson, who began life as a miner's-boy
+at two shillings per week, founded the railway
+system of Great Britain; "Rare Ben Jonson,"
+as his epitaph aptly designates him, second among
+our British dramatists to none but Shakspeare,
+handled the bricklayer's trowel; and Prideaux, the
+divine and scholar and critic, was employed to
+sweep the halls and galleries of Exeter College.
+Telford, the architect of the Menai Bridge, was a
+stone-mason's labourer; Rennie, the designer of
+London Bridge and the Bell-Rock Lighthouse,
+the son of a small farmer; Burns, the poet, who
+walked
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;"In glory and in joy,<br>
+ Behind his plough upon the mountain-side,"<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+was a poor cotter's son; Sir Richard Arkwright,
+the inventor of the power-loom, started in life as
+a barber; Gifford, the reviewer and critic, as a
+cobbler.
+<span class="sidenote">
+The moral of our book.
+</span>
+We see, then, that neither poverty, nor
+obscure birth, nor unfavourable circumstances
+in early life, nor lack of friends, nor all the
+obstacles and difficulties which seem so formidable
+in the eyes of an ease-loving world, can hold out
+against the steadfast purpose, against the presence
+of a clear brain and a courageous heart, determined
+to work and live and succeed. This is the
+lesson the preceding pages are intended to enforce;
+this is the encouragement the story of Smeaton's
+life should convey to the reader; this is the moral
+of all Biography, and one which the young should
+never forget,&mdash;a moral full
+</p>
+
+<p class="t3">
+ "Of courage, hope, and faith!"<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br></p>
+
+<p><a id="chap05"></a></p>
+
+<h3>
+ The Lighthouse
+</h3>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ The rocky ledge runs far into the sea,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And on its outer point, some miles away,<br>
+ The lighthouse lifts its massive masonry,&mdash;<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;A pillar of fire by night, of cloud by day.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ Even at this distance I can see the tides,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Upheaving, break unheard along its base;&mdash;<br>
+ A speechless wrath, that rises and subsides<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;In the white lip and tremor of the face.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ And as the evening darkens, lo! how bright,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Through the deep purple of the twilight air,<br>
+ Beams forth the sudden radiance of its light,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;With strange, unearthly splendour in its glare.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ Not one alone;&mdash;from each projecting cape<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And perilous reef along the ocean's verge,<br>
+ Starts into life a dim, gigantic shape,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Holding its lantern o'er the restless surge.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ Like the great giant Christopher, it stands<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Upon the brink of the tempestuous wave,<br>
+ Wading far out among the rocks and sands,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The night-o'ertaken mariner to save.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ And the great ships sail outward and return,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Bending and bowing o'er the billowy swells;<br>
+ And ever joyful, as they see it burn,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;They wave their silent welcomes and farewells.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ They come forth from the darkness, and their sails<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gleam for a moment only on the blaze;<br>
+ And eager faces, as the light unveils,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Gaze at the tower, and vanish while they gaze.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ The mariner remembers when a child,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;On his first voyage, he saw it fade and sink;<br>
+ And, when returning from adventures wild,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;He saw it rise again o'er ocean's brink.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ Steadfast, serene, immovable, the same<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Year after year, through all the silent night,<br>
+ Burns on for evermore that quenchless flame,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Shines on that unextinguishable light!<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ It sees the ocean to its bosom clasp<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;The rocks and sea-sand with the kiss of peace;&mdash;<br>
+ It sees the wild winds lift it in their grasp,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And hold it up, and shake it like a fleece.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ The startled waves leap over it; the storm<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Smites it with all the scourges of the rain;<br>
+ And steadily against its solid form<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Press the great shoulders of the hurricane.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ The sea-bird wheeling round it, with the din<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Of wings and winds and solitary cries,<br>
+ Blinded and maddened by the light within,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Dashes himself against the glare, and dies.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ A new Prometheus, chained upon the rock,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Still grasping in his hand the fire of Jove,<br>
+ It does not hear the cry, nor heed the shock,<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;But hails the mariner with words of love.<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ "Sail on!" it says, "sail on, ye stately ships!<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;And with your floating bridge the ocean span;<br>
+ Be mine to guard this light from all eclipse,&mdash;<br>
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;Be yours to bring man nearer unto man!"<br>
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+ &nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;LONGFELLOW<br>
+</p>
+
+<p><br><br><br><br></p>
+
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 76767 ***</div>
+</body>
+
+</html>
+
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook #76767
+(https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/76767)