The Day's Work
The Day's Work
by
Rudyard Kipling
eBooks@Adelaide
2009
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Table of Contents
- The Bridge-Builders
- A Walking Delegate
- The Ship That Found Herself
- The Tomb of His Ancestors
- The Devil and the Deep Sea
- William the Conqueror - Part I
- William the Conqueror - Part II
- ·007
- The Maltese Cat
- ‘Bread upon the Waters’
- An Error in the Fourth Dimension
- My Sunday at Home
- The Brushwood Boy
Table of Contents
Next
Last updated on
Mon Mar 30 14:57:07 2009 for
eBooks@Adelaide.
Rudyard Kipling
The Day's Work
The Bridge-Builders
THE LEAST that Findlayson, of the Public Works Department, expected was
a C.I.E.; he dreamed of a C.S.I.. Indeed, his friends told him that he
deserved more. For three years he had endured heat and cold,
disappointment, discomfort, danger, and disease, with responsibility
almost to top-heavy for one pair of shoulders; and day by day, through
that time, the great Kashi Bridge over the Ganges had grown under his
charge. Now, in less than three months, if all went well, his Excellency
the Viceroy would open the bridge in state, an archbishop would bless it,
and the first trainload of soldiers would come over it, and there would be
speeches.
Findlayson, C. E., sat in his trolley on a construction line that ran
along one of the main revetments—the huge stone-faced banks that flared
away north and south for three miles on either side of the river and
permitted himself to think of the end. With its approaches, his work was
one mile and three-quarters in length; a lattice-girder bridge, trussed
with the Findlayson truss standing on seven-and-twenty brick piers. Each
one of those piers was twenty-four feet in diameter, capped with red Agra
stone and sunk eighty feet below the shifting sand of the Ganges’ bed.
Above them was a railway-line fifteen feet broad; above that, again, a
cart-road of eighteen feet, flanked with footpaths. At either end rose
towers, of red brick, loopholed for musketry and pierced for big guns, and
the ramp of the road was being pushed forward to their haunches. The raw
earth-ends were crawling and alive with hundreds upon hundreds of tiny
asses climbing out of the yawning borrow-pit below with sackfuls of stuff;
and the hot afternoon air was filled with the noise of hooves, the rattle
of the drivers’ sticks, and the swish and roll-down of the dirt. The river
was very low, and on the dazzling white sand between the three centre
piers stood squat cribs of railway~sleepers, filled within and daubed
without with mud, to support the last of the girders as those were riveted
up. In the little deep water left by the drought, an overhead crane
travelled to and fro along its spile-pier, jerking sections of iron into
place, snorting and backing and grunting as an elephant grunts in the
timberyard. Riveters by the hundred swarmed about the lattice side-work
and the iron roof of the railway line hung from invisible staging under
the bellies of the girders, clustered round the throats of the piers, and
rode on the overhang of the footpath-stanchions; their fire-pots and the
spurts of flame that answered each hammer-stroke showing no more than pale
yellow in the sun’s glare. East and west and north and south the
construction-trains rattled and shrieked up and down the embankments, the
piled trucks of brown and white stone banging behind them till the
side-boards were unpinned, and with a roar and a grumble a few thousand
tons’ more material were flung out to hold the river in place.
Findlayson, C. E., turned on his trolley and looked over the face of
the country that he had changed for seven miles around. Looked back on the
humming village of five thousand work-men; up stream and down, along the
vista of spurs and sand; across the river to the far piers, lessening in
the haze; overhead to the guard-towers—and only he knew how strong those
were—and with a sigh of contentment saw that his work was good. There
stood his bridge before him in the sunlight, lacking only a few weeks’
work on the girders of the three middle piers—his bridge, raw and ugly as
original sin, but pukka—permanent—to endure when all memory of
the builder, yea, even of the splendid Findlayson truss, has perished.
Practically, the thing was done.
Hitchcock, his assistant, cantered along the line on a little
switch-tailed Kabuli pony who through long practice could have trotted
securely over trestle,and nodded to his chief.
“All but,” said he, with a smile.
“I’ve been thinking about it,” the senior answered. “Not half a bad job
for two men, is it?”
“One—and a half. ’Gad, what a Cooper’s Hill cub I was when I came on
the works!” Hitchcock felt very old in the crowded experiences of the past
three years, that had taught him power and responsibility.
“You were rather a colt,” said Findlayson. “I wonder how
you’ll like going back to office-work when this job’s over.”
“I shall hate it!” said the young man, and as he went on his eye
followed Findlayson’s, and he muttered, “Isn’t it damned good?”
“I think we’ll go up the service together,” Findlayson said to himself.
“You’re too good a youngster to waste on another man. Cub thou wast;
assistant thou art. Personal assistant, and at Simla, thou shalt be, if
any credit comes to me out of the business!”
Indeed, the burden of the work had fallen altogether on Findlayson and
his assistant, the young man whom he had chosen because of his rawness to
break to his own needs. There were labour contractors by the
half-hundred—fitters and riveters, European, borrowed from the railway
workshops, with, perhaps, twenty white and half-caste subordinates to
direct, under direction, the bevies of workmen—but none knew better than
these two, who trusted each other, how the underlings were not to be
trusted. They had been tried many times in sudden crises—by slipping of
booms, by breaking of tackle, failure of cranes, and the wrath of the
river—but no stress had brought to light any man among men whom Findlayson
and Hitchcock would have honoured by working as remorselessly as they
worked them-selves. Findlayson thought it over from the beginning: the
months of office-work destroyed at a blow when the Government of India, at
the last moment, added two feet to the width of the bridge, under the
impression that bridges were cut out of paper, and so brought to ruin at
least half an acre of calculations—and Hitchcock, new to disappointment,
buried his head in his arms and wept; the heart-breaking delays over the
filling of the contracts in England; the futile correspondences hinting at
great wealth of commissions if one, only one, rather doubtful consignment
were passed; the war that followed the refusal; the careful, polite
obstruction at the other end that followed the war, till young Hitchcock,
putting one month’s leave to another month, and borrowing ten days from
Findlayson, spent his poor little savings of a year in a wild dash to
London, and there, as his own tongue asserted and the later consignments
proved, put the fear of God into a man so great that he feared only
Parliament and said so till Hitchcock wrought with him across his own
dinner table, and—he feared the Kashi Bridge and all who spoke in its
name. Then there was the cholera that came in the night to the village by
the bridge works; and after the cholera smote the small-pox. The fever
they had always with them. Hitchcock had been appointed a magistrate of
the third class with whipping powers, for the better government of the
community, and Findlayson watched him wield his powers temperately,
learning what to overlook and what to look after.
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