IS STILL MORE EXPLOSIVE THAN THE FIRST
Much to my surprise, I found that
neither Nicholas Naranovitsch nor Bella nor my mother
would consent to witness my experiments with dynamite
that day.
As my old chum approached to greet
me on the lawn before breakfast the day following,
I could not help admiring his fine, tall, athletic
figure. I don’t know how it is, but I have
always felt, somehow, as if I looked up at him, although
we were both exactly the same height six
feet one without our boots. I suppose it must
have been owing to his standing so erect, while I
slouched a little. Perhaps my looking up to
him mentally had something to do with it.
“You’ll come to-day, won’t
you?” I said, referring to the experiments.
“Of course I will, old boy;
but,” he added, with a smile, “only on
one condition.”
“What may that be?”
“That you don’t bother Bella with minute
details.”
Of course I promised not to say a
word unless asked for explanations, and after breakfast
we all went to a part of the grounds which I wished
to bring under cultivation. It was at that time
encumbered with several large trees, old roots, and
a number of boulders.
“Come along with us, Lancey,”
I said to the groom, who was also my laboratory assistant,
and whom I met in the stable-yard, the scene of his
memorable blowing-up. “I am about to try
the effect of an explosive, and wish you to understand
the details.”
“Yes, sir,” replied Lancey,
with a respectful touch of his cap; “I must
say, sir, if you’ll allow me, I never knowed
any one like you, sir, for goin’ into details
except one, and that one ”
“Ah, yes, I know, that was your
friend the Scotch boy,” said I, interrupting;
but Lancey was a privileged servant, and would not
be interrupted.
“Yes, sir,” he resumed,
“the Scotch boy Sandy. We was at school
together in Edinburgh, where I got the most o’
my edication, and I never did see such a boy, sir,
for goin’ into ”
“Yes, yes, Lancey, I know; but
I haven’t time to talk about him just now.
We are going to the bit of waste ground in the hollow;
follow us there.”
I was obliged to cut him short, because
this Scotch hero of his was a subject on which he
could not resist dilating on the slightest encouragement.
Arrived at the waste ground, we met
the manager of a neighbouring mine, who was deeply
learned in everything connected with blasting.
“I have brought my mother and
sister, you see, Mr Jones,” said I, as we approached.
“They don’t quite believe in the giant-power
which is under your control; they seem to think that
it is only a little stronger than gunpowder.”
“We can soon change their views
on that point,” said the manager, with a slight
bow to the ladies, while I introduced Nicholas as an
officer of the Russian army.
“This is one of the stones you
wish to blast, is it not?” said Mr Jones, laying
his hand on an enormous boulder that weighed probably
several tons.
“It is,” I answered.
The manager was a man of action grave
of countenance and of few words. He drew a flask
from his pocket and emptied its contents, a large
quantity of gunpowder, on the boulder. Asking
us to stand a little back, he applied a slow match
to the heap, and retired several paces.
In a few seconds the powder went off
with a violent puff and a vast cloud of smoke.
The result was a little shriek of alarm from my mother,
and an exclamation from Bella.
“Not much effect from that,
you see,” said the manager, pointing to the
blackened stone, yet it was a large quantity of powder,
which, if fired in a cavity inside the stone, would
have blown it to pieces. “Here, now, is
a small quantity of dynamite.” (He produced
a cartridge about two inches in length, similar to
that which I had shown to my mother at breakfast.)
“Into this cartridge I shall insert a detonator
cap, which is fastened to the end of a Pickford fuse thus.”
As he spoke, he inserted into the
cartridge the end of the fuse, to which was attached
a small cap filled with fulminate of mercury, and
tied it tightly up. This done, he laid the cartridge
on the top of the boulder, placed two or three similar
cartridges beside it, and covered all with a small
quantity of sand, leaving the other end of the fuse
projecting.
“Why the sand?” asked Bella.
“Because a slight amount of
confinement is advantageous,” replied Mr Jones.
“If I were to bore a short hole in the stone,
and put the dynamite therein, the result would be
still more effective; but the covering I have put
on it will suffice, and will serve all the better to
show the great difference between this explosive and
gunpowder.”
“But,” said my mother,
who had a tendency to become suddenly interested in
things when she began to have a faint understanding
of them; “but, Mr Jones, you did not give the
powder fair play. If you had covered it
with sand, would not its effect have been more powerful?”
“Not on the stone, madam; it
would only have blown off its covering with violence,
that would have been all. Now, ladies and gentlemen,
if you will retire behind the shelter of that old
beech-tree, I will light the fuse.”
We did as we were desired. The
manager lighted the fuse, and followed us. In
a few moments there occurred an explosion so violent
that the huge boulder was shattered into several pieces,
which were quite small enough to be lifted and carted
away.
“Most amazing!” exclaimed Bella, with
enthusiasm.
It was quite obvious that she had
no anticipation of such a thorough result. Nicholas,
too, who I may mention had no natural turn of taste
for such matters, was roused to a state of inquiry.
To a question put by him, Mr Jones
explained that, taking its powers into consideration,
dynamite was cheaper than gunpowder, and that it saved
much labour, as it would have taken two men a considerable
time to have bored an ordinary blasthole in the boulder
he had just broken up.
I now led the way to another part
of the ground on which grew a large beech-tree, whose
giant roots took a firm grasp of the ground.
It was a hundred years old at least; about twelve
feet in circumference, and sixty feet high.
One similar tree I had had cut down; but the labour
had been very great, and the removal of the stump excessively
troublesome as well as costly.
Mr Jones now went to work at the forest-giant.
In the ground underneath the tree he ordered Lancey
to make a hole with a crowbar. Into this he pressed
some cartridges of dynamite with a wooden rammer.
Then the cartridge, with the detonator inside of it;
and the fuse, extending from its mouth, was placed
in contact with the charge under the tree. The
hole was next closed up with some earth, leaving about
a foot of the fuse outside. The light was then
applied, and we retired to a safe distance.
In a few moments the charge exploded. The tree
seemed to rise from its bed. All the earth under
it was blown out, and the roots were torn up and broken,
with the exception of four of the largest, which were
fully ten inches in diameter. A small charge
of dynamite inserted under each of these completed
the work, and the old giant, slowly bowing forward,
laid his venerable head upon the ground.
Another charge was next placed in
the soil under some loose and decayed roots, which
were easily broken to pieces, so as to permit of their
removal. Thus, in a short time and at little
cost, were trees and roots and boulders torn up and
shattered.
“But is dynamite not very dangerous,
Mr Jones?” asked my mother, as we walked slowly
homeward.
“Not at all dangerous, at
least not worth speaking of,” replied the manager;
“nitro-glycerine by itself is indeed very dangerous,
being easily exploded by concussion or mere vibration;
but when mixed with infusorial earth and thus converted
into dynamite, it is one of the safest explosives
in existence not quite so safe, indeed,
as gun-cotton, but much more so than gunpowder.
Any sort of fire will explode gunpowder, but any
sort of fire will not explode dynamite; it will only
cause it to burn. It requires a detonator to
explode it with violence. Without its detonator,
dynamite is a sleeping giant.”
“Ay, mother,” said I,
taking up the subject, “the case stands thus:
gunpowder is a big athlete, who slumbers lightly; any
spark can wake him to violent action: but dynamite
is a bigger athlete, who sleeps so soundly that a
spark or flame can only rouse him to moderate rage;
it requires a special shake to make him wide-awake,
but when thus roused his fury is terrific, as you
have just seen. And now,” I added, as we
drew near the house, “we will change the subject,
because I have this morning received two letters,
which demand the united consideration of our whole
party. I will therefore call up Bella and Nicholas,
who have fallen behind, as usual. Mr Jones will
excuse my talking of family matters for a few minutes,
as replies must be sent by return of post.”
I then explained that one of the letters
was an invitation to me and my mother and sister,
with any friends who might chance to be visiting us,
to go to Portsmouth to witness a variety of interesting
experiments with torpedoes and such warlike things;
while the other letter was an offer by a friend, of
a schooner-built yacht for a moderate sum.
“Now, Nicholas,” said
I, apologetically, “I’m sorry to give you
such an explosive reception, but it cannot be helped.
If you don’t care about torpedoes, you may
remain here with my mother and Bella; but if you would
like to go, I shall be happy to introduce you to one
or two of my naval friends. For myself, I must
go, because ”
“We will all go, Jeff,”
interrupted Bella; “nothing could be more appropriate
as a sequel to this morning’s experiments.
A day among the torpedoes will be most interesting,
won’t it?”
She looked up at Nicholas, on whose
arm she leaned. He looked down with that peculiar
smile of his which seemed to lie more in his eyes than
on his lips, and muttered something about a day anywhere
being, etcetera, etcetera.
My mother remarked that she did not
understand exactly what a torpedo was, and looked
at me for an explanation. I confess that her
remark surprised me, for during the course of my investigations
and inventions, I had frequently mentioned the subject
of torpedoes to her, and once or twice had given her
a particular description of the destructive machine.
However, as she had evidently forgotten all about it,
and as I cannot resist the temptation to elucidate
complex subjects when opportunity offers, I began:
“It is a machine, mother, which ”
“Which bursts,” interrupted Bella, with
a little laugh.
“But that is no explanation,
dear,” returned my mother; “at least not
a distinctive one, for guns burst sometimes, and soap-bubbles
burst, and eggs burst occasionally.”
“Bella,” said Nicholas,
who spoke English perfectly, though with a slightly
foreign accent, “never interrupt a philosopher.
Allow Jeff to proceed with his definition.”
“Well, a torpedo,” said I, “is an
infernal machine ”
“Jeff,” said my mother, seriously, “don’t ”
“Mother, I use the word advisedly
and dispassionately. It is a term frequently
given to such engines, because of their horrible nature,
which suggests the idea that they were originated in
the region of Satanic influence. A torpedo,
then, is a pretty large case, or box, or cask, or
reservoir, of one form or another, filled with gunpowder,
or gun-cotton, or dynamite, which is used chiefly
under water, for blowing-up purposes. Sometimes
men use torpedoes to blow up rocks, and sunken wrecks;
and sometimes, I grieve to say it, they blow up ships
and sailors.”
“Dreadful! my dear,” said
my mother; “nevertheless I should like to go
with you on this excursion, and see what devices men
invent for the purpose of killing each other.”
“Very well, that’s settled,”
said I. “Now, as to the other letter about
the yacht. I will buy it, mother, and go on a
cruise to the Mediterranean, on one condition, namely,
that you and Nicholas and Bella go with me.”
“Impossible!” exclaimed
my mother, firmly; “I never could bear the sea.”
“But you’ve had little experience of it,”
said I.
“Well, not much but I cannot bear
it.”
“Now, mother,” said I,
coaxingly, “here is Bella dying to go to sea,
I know. Nicholas has loads of time, and cannot
be left behind, and I wish very much to go; but all
will fall to the ground if you refuse to accompany
us. We cannot leave you in this house alone.
The sea air will certainly do you good, and if it
does not, we can land, you know, at Lisbon, Gibraltar,
Nice, anywhere, and return home overland.”
“Well, then, I will go,” returned my pliant
mother.
“That’s right,”
said I, sitting down to write. “Now, then,
all of you get ready to go to London this afternoon.
We shall spend a day or two there, because, before
leaving, I must see the first Lord of the Admiralty
on particular business. Afterwards we shall run
down to Portsmouth by the afternoon express, spend
the night there, and so be ready to face the torpedoes
in the morning.”