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I have been leading you;till; as their mouths dropped a little open in their eager interest; and their lids forgot to wink in their gaze upon his face; and so their eyebrows seemed a little lifted in curiosity;till; I say; each man felt as if he were himself the inventor; who had bridged difficulty after difficulty; as if; indeed; the whole were too simple to be called difficult or complicated。 The only wonder was that the Board of Longitude; or the Emperor Napoleon; or the Smithsonian; or somebody; had not sent this little planet on its voyage of blessing long before。 Not a syllable that you would have called rhetoric; not a word that you would have thought prepared; and then Brannan sat down。
That was Ben Brannan's way。 For my part; I like it better than eloquence。
Then I got up again。 We would answer any questions; I said。 We represented people who were eager to go forward with this work。 (Alas! except Q。; all of those represented were on the stage。) We could not go forward without the general assistance of the community。 It was not an enterprise which the government could be asked to favor。 It was not an enterprise which would yield one penny of profit to any human being。 We had therefore; purely on the ground of its benefit to mankind; brought it before an assembly of Boston men and women。
Then there was a pause; and we could hear our watches tick; and our hearts beat。 Dear George asked me in a whisper if he should say anything more; but I thought not。 The pause became painful; and then Tom Coram; prince of merchants; rose。 Had any calculation been made of the probable cost of the experiment of one moon?
I said the calculations were on the table。 The brick alone would cost 60;000。 Mr。 Orcutt had computed that 214;729 would complete two flywheels and one moon。 This made no allowance for whitewashing the moon; which was not strictly necessary。 The fly…wheels and water…power would be equally valuable for the succeeding moons; it any were attempted; and therefore the second moon could be turned off; it was hoped; for 159;732。
Thomas Coram had been standing all the time I spoke; and in an instant he said: 〃I am no mathematician。 But I have had a ship ground to pieces under me on the Laccadives because our chronometer was wrong。 You need 250;000 to build your first moon。 I will be one of twenty men to furnish the money; or I will pay 10;000 to…morrow for this purpose; to any person who may be named as treasurer; to be repaid to me if the moon is not finished this day twenty years。〃
That was as long a speech as Tom Coram ever made。 But it was pointed。 The small audience tapped applause。
Orcutt looked at me; and I nodded。 〃I will be another; of the twenty men;〃 cried he。 〃And I another;〃 said an old bluff Englishman; whom nobody had invited; who proved to be a Mr。 Robert Boll; a Sheffield man; who came in from curiosity。 He stopped after the meeting; said he should leave the country the next week; and I have never seen him since。 But his bill of exchange came all the same。
That was all the public subscribing。 Enough more than we had hoped for。 We tried to make Coram treasurer; but he refused。 We had to make Haliburton treasurer; though we should have liked a man better known than he then was。 Then we adjourned。 Some nice ladies then came up; and gave; one a dollar; and one five dollars; and one fifty; and so on;and some men who have stuck by ever since。 I always; in my own mind; call each of those women Damaris; and each of those men Dionysius。 But those are not their real names。
How I am wasting time on an old story! Then some of these ladies came the next day and proposed a fair; and out of that; six months after; grew the great Longitude Fair; that you will all remember; if you went to it; I am sure。 And the papers the next day gave us first…rate reports; and then; two by two; with our subscription… books; we went at it。 But I must not tell the details of that subscription。 There were two or three men who subscribed 5;000 each; because they were perfectly certain the amount would never be raised。 They wanted; for once; to get the credit of liberality for nothing。 There were many men and many women who subscribed from one dollar up to one thousand; not because they cared a straw for the longitude; nor because they believed in the least in the project; but because they believed in Brannan; in Orcutt; in Q。; or in me。 Love goes far in this world of ours。 Some few men subscribed because others had done it: it was the thing to do; and they must not be out of fashion。 And three or four; at least; subscribed because each hour of their lives there came up the memory of the day when the news came that the was lost; George; or Harry; or John; in the; and they knew that George; or Harry; or John might have been at home; had it been easier than it is to read the courses of the stars!
Fair; subscriptions; and Orcutt's reserve;we counted up 162;000; or nearly so。 There would be a little more when all was paid in。
But we could not use a cent; except Orcutt's and our own little subscriptions; till we had got the whole。 And at this point it seemed as if the whole world was sick of us; and that we had gathered every penny that was in store for us。 The orange was squeezed dry!
II
HOW WE BUILT IT
The orange was squeezed dry! And how little any of us knew;skilful George Orcutt; thoughtful Ben Brannan; loyal Haliburton; ingenious Q。; or poor painstaking I;how little we knew; or any of us; where was another orange; or how we could mix malic acid and tartaric acid; and citric acid and auric acid and sugar and water so as to imitate orange…juice; and fill up the bank…account enough to draw in the conditioned subscriptions; and so begin to build the MOON。 How often; as I lay awake at night; have I added up the different subscriptions in some new order; as if that would help the matter: and how steadily they have come out one hundred and sixty…two thousand dollars; or even less; when I must needs; in my sleepiness; forget somebody's name! So Haliburton put into railroad stocks all the money he collected; and the rest of us ground on at our mills; or flew up on our own wings towards Heaven。 Thus Orcutt built more tunnels; Q。 prepared for more commencements; Haliburton calculated more policies; Ben Brannan created more civilization; and I; as I could; healed the hurt of my people of Naguadavick for the months there were left to me of my stay in that thriving town。
None of us had the wit to see how the problem was to be wrought out further。 No。 The best things come to us when we have faithfully and well made all the preparation and done our best; but they come in some way that is none of ours。 So was it now; that to build the BRICK MOON it was necessary that I should be turned out of Naguadavick ignominiously; and that Jeff。 Davis and some seven or eight other bad men should create the Great Rebellion。 Hear how it happened。
Dennis Shea; my Double;otherwise; indeed; called by my name and legally so;undid me; as my friends supposed; one evening at a public meeting called by poor Isaacs in Naguadavick。 Of that transaction I have no occasion here to tell