登陆注册
14731600000046

第46章

By July 5 the whole of the six-wire cable had been recovered, and a portion of the three-wire cable, the rest being abandoned as unfit for use, owing to its twisted condition. Their work was over, but an unfortunate accident marred its conclusion. On the evening of the 2nd the first mate, while on the water unshackling a buoy, was struck in the back by a fluke of the ship's anchor as she drifted, and so severely injured that he lay for many weeks at Cagliari. Jenkin's knowledge of languages made him useful as an interpreter; but in mentioning this incident to Miss Austin, he writes, 'For no fortune would I be a doctor to witness these scenes continually. Pain is a terrible thing.'

In the beginning of 1859 he made the acquaintance of Sir William Thomson, his future friend and partner. Mr. Lewis Gordon, of Messrs. R.

S. Newall & Co., afterwards the earliest professor of engineering in a British University, was then in Glasgow seeing Sir William's instruments for testing and signalling on the first Atlantic cable during the six weeks of its working. Mr. Gordon said he should like to show them to 'a young man of remarkable ability,' engaged at their Birkenhead Works, and Jenkin, being telegraphed for, arrived next morning, and spent a week in Glasgow, mostly in Sir William's class-room and laboratory at the old college. Sir William tells us that he was struck not only with Jenkin's brightness and ability, but with his resolution to understand everything spoken of; to see, if possible, thoroughly into every difficult question, and to slur over nothing. 'I soon found,' he remarks, 'that thoroughness of honesty was as strongly engrained in the scientific as in the moral side of his character.' Their talk was chiefly on the electric telegraph; but Jenkin was eager, too, on the subject of physics. After staying a week he returned to the factory; but he began experiments, and corresponded briskly with Sir William about cable work.

That great electrician, indeed, seems to have infected his visitor during their brief contact with the magnetic force of his personality and enthusiasm.

The year was propitious, and, in addition to this friend, Fortune about the same time bestowed a still better gift on Jenkin. On Saturday, February 26, during a four days' leave, he was married to Miss Austin at Northiam, returning to his work the following Tuesday. This was the great event of his life; he was strongly attached to his wife, and his letters reveal a warmth of affection, a chivalry of sentiment, and even a romance of expression, which a casual observer would never have suspected in him. Jenkin seemed to the outside world a man without a heart, and yet we find him saying in the year 1869, 'People may write novels, and other people may write poems, but not a man or woman among them can say how happy a man can be who is desperately in love with his wife after ten years of marriage.' Five weeks before his death he wrote to her, 'Your first letter from Bournemouth gives me heavenly pleasure --for which I thank Heaven and you, too, who are my heaven on earth.'

During the summer he enjoyed another telegraph cruise in the Mediterranean, a sea which for its classical memories, its lovely climate, and diversified scenes, is by far the most interesting in the world. This time the Elba was to lay a cable from the Greek islands of Syra and Candia to Egypt. Cable-laying is a pleasant mode of travel.

Many of those on board the ship are friends and comrades in former expeditions, and all are engaged in the same venture. Some have seen a good deal of the world, both in and out of the beaten track ; they have curious 'yarns to spin,' and useful hints or scraps of worldly wisdom to bestow. The voyage out is like a holiday excursion, for it is only the laying that is arduous, and even that is lightened by excitement.

Glimpses are got of hide-away spots, where the cable is landed, perhaps.

on the verge of the primeval forest or near the port of a modern city, or by the site of some ruined monument of the past. The very magic of the craft and its benefit to the world are a source of pleasure to the engineer, who is generally made much of in the distant parts he has come to join. No doubt there are hardships to be borne, sea-sickness, broken rest, and anxiety about the work--for cables are apt suddenly to fail, and the ocean is treacherous; but with all its drawbacks this happy mixture of changing travel and profitable labour is very attractive, especially to a young man.

The following extracts from letters to his wife will illustrate the nature of the work, and also give an idea of Jenkin's clear and graphic style of correspondence :-May 14.--'Syra is semi-eastern. The pavement, huge shapeless blocks sloping to a central gutter; from this base two-storeyed houses, sometimes plaster, many-coloured, sometimes rough-hewn marble, rise, dirty and ill-finished, to straight, plain, flat roofs; shops guiltless of windows, with signs in Greek letters; dogs, Greeks in blue, baggy, Zouave breeches and a fez, a few narghilehs, and a sprinkling of the ordinary continental shop-boys. In the evening I tried one more walk in Syra with A----, but in vain endeavoured to amuse myself or to spend money, the first effort resulting in singing DOODAH to a passing Greek or two, the second in spending--no, in making A---- spend--threepence on coffee for three.'

Canea Bay, in Candia (or Crete), which they reached on May 16, appeared to Jenkin one of the loveliest sights that man could witness.

May 23.--'I spent the day at the little station where the cable was landed, which has apparently been first a Venetian monastery and then a Turkish mosque. At any rate the big dome is very cool, and the little ones hold batteries capitally. A handsome young Bashi-Bazouk guards it, and a still handsomer mountaineer is the servant; so I draw them and the monastery and the hill till I'm black in the face with heat, and come on board to hear the Canea cable is still bad.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 梦境显示器——梦入桃花深处

    梦境显示器——梦入桃花深处

    这是一部喜剧科幻小说,很生活化,没有星际大战,没有世界末日。笔者自己定义为“文派科幻”,如何?一位专门利用梦境进行创作的另类作家,沉醉梦境不能自拔。一台梦境显示器,显示着作家那美丽的梦境。一群人力图帮助梦中人醒来,却一个个进入梦境并流连忘返。一伙极力摆脱当前处境的人也进入了桃花源。一个美丽的传统的故事在未来科学技术的帮助下重新演绎。
  • 路过,你心中的城

    路过,你心中的城

    暗恋,是一种慢性的毒,是一种灼骨的痛,是一副没有涂色的简笔画,在每一个孤独的时刻,一次一次写下你的名字,一次一次为你写下情书,却不曾写下你的地址,任凭邮差送去海角天涯,慕容文倩是一个天真单纯,有点害羞,胆怯的小女生,所以一直不敢勇敢面对,缘分使然,让她遇到了一个她所喜欢的人,却一直不敢表白,这段感情就一直埋藏在心里,她为他做任何事他却不知道,最终,她所喜欢的人有了别人后,而她,最后抑郁成疾......
  • 疯癫侠

    疯癫侠

    一场意外,让他家破妻亡,命运却意外的给了他可以改变一切的力量这个世界太黑暗,他要当一个大侠,他要复仇,要为这个不平世,主持正义。却没想到大侠也没那么好当,竟然还要从极道的流氓做起,一脚踏入,他又才发现,世上的黑白,善恶,本没那么明晰的界线。人性的多面,从来都不是非善即恶,世上之事也不是非黑即白,良善也可以狠辣,流氓也可以多情。一入江湖万丈深,敌人,朋友,兄弟,女人,真情假意,尔虞我诈,他纵能力拔山兮,也无法任意妄为,人在江湖身不由已。
  • 龙羊记

    龙羊记

    主角在探寻祖传宝物隐含的秘密的时候意外的穿越到古代,可是这却打乱了历史和时空的正常秩序。在看似正常的世界里,慢慢发生着不寻常的故事。
  • 傲娇男神的日常

    傲娇男神的日常

    这是一个妖,神还有普通人的和谐日常生活故事,期中考试:凛宁“老师,我的笔写不了。”老师近看,马上就赏了凛宁一个暴栗“你别用神力把笔冻住啊。”“哦”;又过了一会凛宁又说“老师,我的笔还是写不了啊。”,老师再次靠近一看,无语了:认真的,你别把试卷冻成冰块啊.....
  • 莲心

    莲心

    本书是作者从公开发表的几十万字里精选而成的散文集。乃体察万物留痕,书写灵魂成长。以文字为药,细烹慢熬,医治时光里温柔的疼痛和生命中隐秘的渴望。笔调清新优美,思想灵动澄明。如同一朵从血液里盛开的莲花,带来抵达人心的温暖和芳醇。
  • 虎愤天下谁争锋

    虎愤天下谁争锋

    男儿当持三尺青锋,立不世之战功。仲家帝国历经700余年历史,逐渐没落,各地诸侯虎视眈眈、招兵买马。秦王秦阳接手时秦国已经占据东北方向,而秦阳更是北征乌候、南攻魏赵。却被魏赵依靠连江天险死死守住,最终被活活拖死在连江军营,一代明君殒命于此,可怜秦国大业被宦官张铭败坏。从此天下更加的纷乱。
  • 京华碧血录

    京华碧血录

    《京华碧血录》二十五章,时政小说。原名《庚辛剑腥录》。《京华碧血录》一书,在近代反映庚子事变的小说中,思想内容是比较进步的。作品在写作技巧上,完全摆脱了章回小说传统,而学习外国小说的表达技巧,只分章,而无回目。在叙述、结构上均具现代色彩。
  • 余生可否有个我

    余生可否有个我

    笑倾城从小到大都一直追着轩逸跑,直有一天对方被她追没了。一脸蒙蔽,怎么办,自己老公被她追丢了。
  • 太监的逆袭

    太监的逆袭

    离奇穿越,废材吊丝变天才。本以为可以在异世风流一世,谁又料命运多变,命根不幸被割。凭着体内的三个奇葩大神,他走上了修行之路。没有什么逻辑,就是升级,就是无敌,就是搞笑,就是离奇。