友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!阅读过程发现任何错误请告诉我们,谢谢!! 报告错误
热门书库 返回本书目录 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 进入书吧 加入书签

the brick moon-第7章

按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页,按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页,按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!



c meeting called by poor Isaacs in Naguadavick。  Of that transaction I have no occasion here to tell the story。  But of that transaction one consequence is that the BRICK MOON now moves in ether。  I stop writing; to rest my eye upon it; through a little telescope of Alvan Clark's here; which is always trained near it。  It is moving on as placidly as ever。

It came about thus。  The morning after poor Dennis; whom I have long since forgiven; made his extraordinary speeches; without any authority from me; in the Town Hall at Naguadavick; I thought; and my wife agreed with me; that we had better both leave town with the children。 Auchmuty; our dear friend; thought so too。  We left in the seven o'clock Accommodation for Skowhegan; and so came to Township No。 9 in the 3d Range; and there for years we resided。  That whole range of townships was set off under a provision admirable in its character; that the first settled minister in each town should receive one hundred acres of land as the 〃minister's grant;〃 and the first settled schoolmaster eighty。  To No。 9; therefore; I came。  I constituted a little Sandemanian church。  Auchmuty and Delafield came up and installed me; and with these hands I built the cabin in which; with Polly and the little ones; I have since spent many happy nights and days。  This is not the place for me to publish a map; which I have by me; of No。 9; nor an account of its many advantages for settlers。  Should I ever print my papers called 〃Stay…at…home Robinsons;〃 it will be easy with them to explain its topography and geography。 Suffice it now to say; that; with Alice and Bertha and Polly; I took tramps up and down through the lumbermen's roads; and soon knew the general features of the lay of the land。  Nor was it long; of course; before we came out one day upon the curious land…slides; which have more than once averted the flow of the Little Carrotook River; where it has washed the rocks away so far as to let down one section more of the overlying yielding yellow clay。

Think how my eyes flashed; and my wife's; as; struggling though a wilderness of moosewood; we came out one afternoon on this front of yellow clay!  Yellow clay of course; when properly treated by fire; is brick!  Here we were surrounded by forests; only waiting to be burned; yonder was clay; only waiting to be baked。  Polly looked at me; and I looked at her; and with one voice; we cried out; 〃The MOON!〃

For here was this shouting river at our feet; whose power had been running to waste since the day when the Laurentian hills first heaved themselves above the hot Atlantic; and that day; I am informed by Mr。 Agassiz; was the first day in the history of this solid world。  Here was water…power enough for forty fly…wheels; were it necessary to send heavenward twenty moons。  Here was solid timber enough for a hundred dams; yet only one was necessary to give motion to the fly…wheels。  Here was retirement;freedom from criticism; an escape from the journalists; who would not embarrass us by telling of every cracked brick which had to be rejected from the structure。  We had lived in No。 9 now for six weeks; and not an 〃own correspondent〃 of them all had yet told what Rev。 Mr。 Ingham had for dinner。

Of course I wrote to George Orcutt at once of our great discovery; and he came up at once to examine the situation。  On the whole; it pleased him。  He could not take the site I proposed for the dam; because this very clay there made the channel treacherous; and there was danger that the stream would work out a new career。  But lower down we found a stony gorge with which George was satisfied; he traced out a line for a railway by which; of their own weight; the brick…cars could run to the centrings; he showed us where; with some excavations; the fly…wheels could be placed exactly above the great mill… wheels; that no power might be wasted; and explained to us how; when the gigantic structure was finished; the BRICK MOON would gently roll down its ways upon the rapid wheels; to be launched instant into the sky!

Shall I ever forget that happy October day of anticipation?

We spent many of those October days in tentative surveys。  Alice and Bertha were our chain…men; intelligent and obedient。  I drove for George his stakes; or I cut away his brush; or I raised and lowered the shield at which he sighted  and at noon Polly appeared with her baskets; and we would dine al fresco; on a pretty point which; not many months after; was wholly covered by the eastern end of the dam。  When the field… work was finished we retired to the cabin for days; and calculated and drew; and drew and calculated。  Estimates for feeding Irishmen; estimates of hay for mules;George was sure he could work mules better than oxen;estimates for cement; estimates for the preliminary saw…mills; estimates for rail for the little brick…road; for wheels; for spikes; and for cutting ties; what did we not estimate foron a basis almost wholly new; you will observe。  For here the brick would cost us less than our old conceptions;our water…power cost us almost nothing;but our stores and our wages would cost us much more。

These estimates are now to me very curious;a monument; indeed; to dear George's memory; that in the result they proved so accurate。  I would gladly print them here at length; with some illustrative cuts; but that I know the impatience of the public; and its indifference to detail。  If we are ever able to print a proper memorial of George; that; perhaps; will be the fitter place for them。  Suffice it to say that with the subtractions thus made from the original estimates;even with the additions forced upon us by working in a wilderness;George was satisfied that a money charge of 197;327 would build and start THE MOON。  As soon as we had determined the site; we marked off eighty acres; which contained all the essential localities; up and down the little Carrotook River;I engaged George for the first schoolmaster in No。 9; and he took these eighty acres for the schoolmaster's reservation。  Alice and Bertha went to school to him the next day; taking lessons in civil engineering; and I wrote to the Bingham trustees to notify them that I had engaged a teacher; and that he had selected his land。

Of course we remembered; still; that we were near forty thousand dollars short of the new estimates; and also that much of our money would not be paid us but on condition that two hundred and fifty thousand were raised。  But George said that his own subscription was wholly unhampered: with that we would go to work on the preliminary work of the dam; and on the flies。  Then; if the flies would hold together;and they should hold if mortise and iron could hold them;they might be at work summers and winters; days and nights; storing up Power for us。  This would encourage the subscribers; it would encourage us; and all this preliminary work would be out of the way when we were really ready to begin upon the MOON。

Brannan; Haliburton; and Q。 readily agreed to this when they were consulted。  They were the other trustees under an instrument which we had got St。 Leger'1' to draw up。  George gave up; as soon as he might; his other appointments; and taught me; meanwhile; where and how I was
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 0 0
未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!