carried away by it. Only a short time before, he had admitted with
truth that he knew nothing of
politics; but no sooner had he read
Paine than he felt completely enlightened. He now suddenly
discovered how much reason he and everybody else in England had for
being
miserable. While residing at Portsmouth, he had quoted to his
Langholm friend the lines from Cowper's 'Task,' then just
published,
beginning "Slaves cannot breathe in England;" but lo!
Mr. Paine had filled his
imagination with the idea that England was
nothing but a nation of bondmen and aristocrats. To his natural
mind, the kingdom had appeared to be one in which a man had pretty
fair play, could think and speak, and do the thing he would,--
tolerably happy, tolerably
prosperous" target="_blank" title="a.繁荣的;顺利的">
prosperous, and enjoying many blessings.
He himself had felt free to labour, to
prosper, and to rise from
manual to head work. No one had hindered him; his personal liberty
had never been interfered with; and he had
freely employed his
earnings as he thought proper. But now the whole thing appeared a
delusion. Those rosy-cheeked old country gentlemen who came riding
into Shrewsbury to quarter sessions, and were so fond of their
young Scotch surveyor occupying themselves in building
bridges,
maintaining infirmaries, making roads, and regulating gaols--
those county magistrates and members of
parliament, aristocrats all,
were the very men who, according to Paine, were carrying the
country
headlong to ruin!
If Telford could not offer an opinion on
politics before, because
he "knew nothing about them," he had now no such difficulty. Had
his advice been asked about the foundations of a
bridge, or the
security of an arch, he would have read and
studied much before
giving it; he would have carefully inquired into the chemical
qualities of different kinds of lime--into the
mechanicalprinciples of weight and
resistance, and such like; but he had no
such
hesitation in giving an opinion about the foundations of a
constitution of more than a thousand years' growth. Here, like
other young politicians, with Paine's book before him, he felt
competent to pronounce a
decisive judgment at once. "I am
convinced," said he,
writing to his Langholm friend, "that the
situation of Great Britain is such, that nothing short of some
signal revolution can prevent her from sinking into bankruptcy,
slavery, and insignificancy." He held that the national expenditure
was so enormous,*[13] arising from the
corruptadministration of
the country, that it was impossible the "bloated mass" could hold
together any longer; and as he could not expect that "a hundred
Pulteneys," such as his
employer, could be found to
restore it to
health, the
conclusion he arrived at was that ruin was
"inevitable."*[14] Notwithstanding the theoretical ruin of England
which pressed so heavy on his mind at this time, we find Telford
strongly recommending his
correspondent to send any good wrights he
could find in his neighbourhood to Bath, where they would be
enabled to earn twenty shillings or a
guinea a week at piece-work--
the wages paid at Langholm for similar work being only about half
those
amounts.
In the same letter in which these
observations occur, Telford
alluded to the
disgraceful riots at Birmingham, in the course of
which Dr. Priestley's house and library were destroyed. As the
outrages were the work of the mob, Telford could not
charge the
aristocracy with them; but with equal
injustice he laid the blame
at the door of "the clergy," who had still less to do with them,
winding up with the prayer, "May the Lord mend their hearts and
lessen their incomes!"
Fortunately for Telford, his
intercourse with the townspeople of
Shrewsbury was so small that his views on these subjects were never
known; and we very
shortly find him employed by the clergy
themselves in building for them a new church in the town of
Bridgenorth. His
patron and
employer, Mr. Pulteney, however, knew
of his
extreme views, and the knowledge came to him quite
accidentally. He found that Telford had made use of his frank to
send through the post a copy of Paine's 'Rights of Man' to his
Langholm
correspondent,*[15] where the
pamphlet excited as much
fury in the minds of some of the people of that town as it had done
in that of Telford himself. The "Langholm patriots "broke out into
drinking
revolutionary toasts at the Cross, and so disturbed the
peace of the little town that some of them were confined for six
weeks in the county gaol.
Mr. Pulteney was very
indignant at the liberty Telford had taken
with his frank, and a rupture between them seemed likely to ensue;
but the former was forgiving, and the matter went no further. It is
only right to add, that as Telford grew older and wiser, he became
more careful in jumping at
conclusions on political topics.
The events which
shortly occurred in France tended in a great measure
to heal his
mental distresses as to the future of England. When the
"liberty" won by the Parisians ran into riot, and the "Friends of Man"
occupied themselves in
taking off the heads of those who differed
from them, he became
wonderfully reconciled to the
enjoyment of the
substantial freedom which, after all, was secured to him by the
English Constitution. At the same time, he was so much occupied in
carrying out his important works, that he found but little time to
devote either to political
speculation or to versemaking.
While living at Shrewsbury, he had his poem of 'Eskdale' reprinted
for private
circulation. We have also seen several MS. verses by
him, written about the same period, which do not appear ever to
have been printed. One of these--the best--is entitled 'Verses to
the Memory of James Thomson, author of "Liberty, a poem;"' another
is a
translation from Buchanan, 'On the Spheres;' and a third,
written in April, 1792, is entitled 'To Robin Burns, being a
postscript to some verses addressed to him on the
establishment of
an Agricultural Chair in Edinburgh.' It would unnecessarily occupy
our space to print these effusions; and, to tell the truth, they
exhibit few if any indications of
poetic power. No
amount of
perseverance will make a poet of a man in whom the
divine gift is
not born. The true line of Telford's
genius lay in building and
engineering, in which direction we now propose to follow him.
[Image] Shrewsbury Castle
Footnotes for Chapter IV.
*[1] Letter to Mr. Andrew Little, Langholm, dated Shrewsbury Castle,
21st Feb., 1788.
*[2] This practice of noting down information, the result of
reading and
observation, was continued by Mr. Telford until the
close of his life; his last pocket
memorandum book, containing a
large
amount of
valuable information on
mechanical subjects--a sort
of engineer's vade mecum--being printed in the
appendix to the 4to.
'Life of Telford' published by his executors in 1838, pp. 663-90.
*[3] A
medical man, a native of Eskdale, of great promise, who died
comparatively young.
*[4] Letter to Mr. Andrew Little, Langholm.
*[5] It would occupy unnecessary space to cite these poems.
The following, from the verses in memory of William Telford, relates
to schoolboy days, After alluding to the lofty Fell Hills, which
formed part of the sheep farm of his deceased friend's father, the
poet goes on to say:
"There 'mongst those rocks I'll form a rural seat,
And plant some ivy with its moss compleat;
I'll benches form of fragments from the stone,
Which,
nicely pois'd, was by our hands o'erthrown,--
A simple
frolic, but now dear to me,
Because, my Telford, 'twas performed with thee.
There, in the centre,
sacred to his name,
I'll place an altar, where the lambent flame
Shall
yearly rise, and every youth shall join
The
willing voice, and sing the enraptured line.
But we, my friend, will often steal away
To this lone seat, and quiet pass the day;
Here oft recall the
pleasing scenes we knew
In early youth, when every scene was new,
When rural happiness our moments blest,
And joys untainted rose in every breast."
*[6] Letter to Mr. Andrew Little, Langholm, dated 16th July, 1788.
*[7] Ibid.