1907 Recordofaeronaut00bacorich
1907 Recordofaeronaut00bacorich
1907 Recordofaeronaut00bacorich
OF
THE UNIVERSITY
OF CALIFORNIA
PRESENTED BY
PROF. CHARLES A. KOFOID AND
MRS. PRUDENCE W. KOFOID
The Record of an Aeronaut
i
yi
The Record of
an Aeronaut
Being the Life of John M. Bacon
By his Daughter
Gertrude Bacon
London
John Long
Norris Street, Haymarket
MCMVII
First Published in 1907
CONTENTS
CHAPTER PACK
I. FAMILY HISTORY . . . .11
II. CHILDHOOD MEMORIES . .
-27
III. ANECDOTES AND REMINISCENCES . .
38
IV. A BERKSHIRE VILLAGE FIFTY YEARS AGO .
57
V. "THE CHILD is FATHER OF THE MAN" .
74
VI. ALMA MATER . . . .
.91
VII. SORROW AND DISAPPOINTMENT . .no
VIII. THE HOME AT COLD ASH . .
.124
IX. A FIRST BALLOON ASCENT . . .
144
XIV.
XV.
A
THE
PERILOUS VOYAGE
AMERICAN
....
OBSERVATIONS AND ADVENTURES
254
ESCAPES . . . .
.270
XVI. ACOUSTIC MYSTERIES AN EXCITING DESCENT 286
.
.
.
...
...
14
72
78
Lord Francis Douglas
Old Court, Trinity
The Home at Coldash
.
.
.
.
. ...
.
...
91
98
. .
125
Rising above the Crystal Palace Grounds . .
.159
Cricket from Aloft
Bacon
Bacon
at the
..
Norway Eclipse
at the Indian Eclipse
.
.
.
.
...
.
...
.
159
208
208
Bacon's first Scientific
. ...
.
...
.
.215
223
Descent on Telegraph Wires
Leaving the Crowd
Above the Suburbs
.
.
.
.
.
.
...
...
223
224
224
Over Kent
Over Kent
Shadow
Swanley Junction
of the Balloon on the ground
. . ...
...
. . 228
228
Leaving Clifton College Grounds
Above Bristol
The Maplin Lighthouse
. .
.
. ...
...
229
229
.
.
. ...
...
239
239
Above the Clouds
Descending in the Sea
. .
.
.
. ... 246
249
Newbury from a Balloon . . . .
251
Balloon
A
filling at Newbury Gasworks
mile above the Cloud-Floor
Distress Messages thrown from Balloon
.
.
.
...
.
...
. .
263
263
268
The Descent at Neath . . . . 268
After the " Leonid " Voyage , > . . 269
The English Eclipse Expedition at Wadesborough . .
276
7
List of Illustrations
PAGE
The Yerkes Observatory . . . . .
277
The Great Refractor, Yerkes Observatory . .
277
Bacon and Admiral Fremantle about
Gasworks . .
to
. ...
ascend from Newbury
278
Entering the Thunder-cloud . *, . . .
279
A Calm Descent
A Rough Descent
.
.
.
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
.
284
284
292
View, two thousand feet above Trafalgar Square
Dawn over the Medway
Dawn
. . ...
.
...
. .
293
294
Descent at
Descent near Hertford
London by Night
. .
.
.
. ... 294
296
Ludgate Hill . . .
300
Looking up the River
Balloon versus Cycle Race Mustering . ...
. . .
300
302
Rising above Fulham . .
303
Capturing the Despatches . .
303
Leaving Douglas
Derby Castle, Isle of
First Glimpse of Scotland
.
Man
Sundown
.
. .
.
...
.
.
.
.
.
318
318
32
.,
9
Preface
Besides recording his aerial adventures, it has also been
my endeavour to represent him as the broad-minded,
many-sided, lovable personality he was, and paint him
as he appeared to those who knew him best.
Neither have I, in this volume, enlarged on Bacon's
strictly scientific work, or attempted any epitome or
r6sum of the results he obtained. For such a task I
am not competent, nor if I were is this the place for it.
In conclusion, I would beg to tender my most grateful
thanks to the many friends who have helped me in my
task by the loan of letters, photographs, etc., among whom
must be especially mentioned Mr. Stephen
arding
Terry, Mr. Thomas Webb, Mr. E. J. Forster, Dr. R.
Lachlan, Mr. G. Dixon, and Mr. T. C. Beynon.
GERTRUDE BACON
, LONDON, July, 1907
THE RECORD
OF AN AERONAUT
FAMILY HISTORY
cognizance.
ii
The Record of an Aeronaut
Be this as it may, the family record since those distant
days has been such as to leave its descendants small cause
for dissatisfaction with their unromantic patronymic.
Least of all the subject of these pages, who gloried ex-
ceedingly in his illustrious kinsfolk and the family tra-
ditionwhich the punning motto, "ProBa conScientia,"
beneath his own crest so aptly expressed. Pedigree
hunting was at one time a hobby with him, and he
laboured long and laboriously to trace the branches of
a family tree which bears more than a usual share of
famous names. Highest of all among his namesakes he
"
held in reverence and esteem Roger, the Learned Monk
of Ilchester," called by his wondering, if scandalized
" "
and persecuting contemporaries, Doctor Mirabilis a
mighty mind, hundreds of years ahead of the cramping
thirteenth century in which he lived ; a light burning
transmitted the family story to his son, and drew for him
the family coat of arms arms which it was left for a
;
13
The Record of an Aeronaut
later generation to discover were those of the Bacons of
Maunsell.
But if the loss of his paternal acres was a deeply rank-
ago.
First in order, as was fitting, came the sculptor's
greatest patron, King George the Third. Most emphati-
cally did Bacon oppose the too prevalent notion that this
monarch did not possess superior intellectual quali-
fications. In support of his eager contention to the exact
contrary he quotes Dr. Johnson, and also Lord Erskine,
who once remarked to him (Bacon), " The King is a
damned clever fellow ! He has as much sense in his
little finger as is contained in the heads of all his Cabinet
"
put together !
"
Because I do not, as so many other painters do, enter
my study to consider what I shall paint, but to paint
what I have considered."
Then there was Thomas Lawrence, young, handsome,
and of polished manners Barry, quarrelsome and
;
penurious, who
lived in a house, filthily dirty, without
a servant, and, to save himself the trouble of making his
bed every day, nailed down the bed-clothes at the sides
and wedged himself in and out between them; Banks,
whose face wore so grave and solemn a look that when
"
he once began a speech, Gentlemen, I come to you with
a cheerful countenance," his audience shrieked with
delighted laughter Nollekens and Flaxman, Copley,
;
19
The Record of an Aeronaut
John Bacon, R.A., was a man of a deeply religious
turn of mind and it is small wonder that in days when
;
Where the man and the angel have got Sir John Moore,
And are quietly letting him down through the floor.
pages.
John Bacon the younger sculptor was a gentle, re-
20
Family History
tiring man pronounced evangelical views. He lacked
of
25
The Record of an Aeronaut
ing knowledge ever wholly efface the stamp of first im-
pressions. It is fortunate that my father has left behind
26
II
CHILDHOOD MEMORIES
a small effort of memory there will come into
WITH
my mind the far-off recollection of the evening of
a long warm summer day, the sun already set, and a
vaguely oppressive stillness in the air, broken only by
the dull drone of insect life. I had strayed alone to the
limit of our home grounds, thinking proudly for the
fiftieth time of how
had that day attained the dignified
I
they had seen, and they were already more than an hour
late.
and though these may have been largely drawn from the
imagination they doubtless possessed a substratum of
truth and reality.
Not more than two or three parishes intervened be-
tween our neighbourhood and that of which Richard
Jefferies wrote, and the ruder element as well as the more
untutored and superstitious which he has portrayed
were not far to seek. Away on the heath was surely
the very fortune-teller whom he described. The self-
same gipsies encamped could point
in the hollow. I
Years after, when the inn had changed hands and while
alterations were being made in an outhouse, the skeleton
of a full-grown man was found beneath the floor. Then
it was that a story of bygone days was recalled. A
drover stopping the night at that house had incau-
tiously boasted of the large sum of money he carried.
37
Ill
38
Anecdotes and Reminiscences
"
but Westward Ho " had been before the world for a
!
" "
couple of years, and the author of Alton Locke was
already distrusted by many, admired by more, and re-
garded by some with a genuine hero-worship. Of these
there was no lack in our home circle, and thus I knew
to expect a man whom I must needs revere. But " West-
"
ward Ho had as yet been denied me, and the only work
!
39
The Record of an Aeronaut
temporary at Cambridge, and it was of this son, about
the time I am describing, that the Dons of Trinity used
to tell a characteristic story. Being asked at the High
Table what expectations he entertained about his son,
"
Kingsley is reported to have replied, I hope he may
40
Anecdotes and Reminiscences
basin. Whereupon he not only went himself to the well
for fresh water, but sternly rated his late friend for her
negligence.
The other incident occurred in Newbury street, where
some loutish individual, clumsily backing into him, trod
heavily on his foot. On this Charles Kingsley seized the
fellow by both shoulders, and turning him about said
"
with characteristic emphasis, My good man, if the Al-
mighty had meant you to walk backwards He would have
"
given you eyes at the back of your head, depend upon it !
cheer, and it seems that the visit went off right well till
it came to the matter of family prayer, when there ap-
47
The Record of an Aeronaut
house from Lambourn and were about to take their
"
leave, Robert Milman said, My lord, let me show you
the short way home," which would mean a stiff bit of
" "
since did they not pick the big uns off the field
52
Anecdotes and Reminiscences
much and hungry to boot. Of course the
in the flesh,
workhouse authorities had got wrong with the names,
and some other pauper unknown had been the passive
principal at William's supposed funeral. But the old
people could not reason all this out, and were hard to
convince that their son was yet alive.
As I have referred to the neighbouring parish of Lam-
bourn, I make mention of a
should certainly not omit to
boy two years my whose
seniorhome was there. We have
53
The Record of an Aeronaut
breed of dogs ;
the picturesqueness of the scene ;
the
artistic beauty of that struggle of nature's most grace-
ful creatures. Yet if you have ever regarded that struggle
at close quarters, as the hare with eyes straining back-
feel ;
in which case perhaps they suppose that it is no
torture to a creature toknow that it is hopelessly caught.
Have such ever taken note of a live mouse in a trap ?
I have given examples of the quondam ignorance and
57
The Record of an Aeronaut
labour on our lawn, a work of many days which endured
as a monument through many weeks. As a stupendous
work of art I do not think the Ice Palace of Montreal
impressed me more. The tremendous accumulation of
snow around the house was more than the labour avail-
able could well deal with. Great limbs of trees came
down, and all avenues, save a few of the most indispens-
able, remained blocked.
But outside the grounds the scene beat all description,
surpassing anything that had been witnessed by any
villager living. On the main highway, one of the highest
and most exposed in the country, the snow had swept
up in a mighty ridge, drifting across from the valleys,
and piling itself till it hid the hedge-rows a wild, wide ;
linger longer.
I am
aware that in speaking of exceptional times in
one's early recollection one is apt to overestimate.
The tendency in after life is to regard all that impressed
one most in early days as unparalleled in its way. The
veteran of to-day would declare that no one ever sang
likeJenny Lind, no one ever played cricket like Alfred
Mynn. Moreover bitter weather would specially appeal
to a child, and even a short spell would affect his imagina-
58
Berkshire Village Fifty Years Ago
tion as much and more than a long-continued winter
would in after years. Thus I am prepared to admit that
my childish estimate of the great winters that occurred
while I was yet in my teens is subject to discount.
Cold winters frequently come in batches, more par-
ticularly in pairs. It was in the winter previous, i.e. in
been living, and where the mob broke into the bakers'
shops, the cause being the rise of the fourpenny loaf to
ninepence.
These facts read to all of us to-day altogether excep-
tional. Yet they were by no means unprecedented.
They were even exceeded in the first year of the century,
when it is stated that " street lamps could not be lighted
on account of the oil being frozen while none of . . .
59
The Record of an Aeronaut
the seat of war. Some ,or all these causes may have ac-
counted for a spirit of superstitious fear that had gone
abroad. This infatuation, strongly marked in our un-
tutored part of the country, may be traced in many ways
and many places.
Take one example, which, commented on by our
common folk, took strong though not abiding hold upon
my boyish imagination. The winter was wearing on
and it was now mid-February, when tidings came from
Devon that footprints of a mysterious and, as it was hinted,
supernatural appearance, had traced themselves in the
snow round about Exmouth, Dawlish, Torquay, and many
other principal towns. These footprints were said to
resemble those of a donkey, but the mystifying and
alarming fact about them was that, instead of proceeding
in a rational manner with treads right and left, the im-
pressions showed that foot followed foot in a single line,
while the uncanny visitor passed only once by each house
that he visited, sometimes choosing the ground, some-
times the roof, and sometimes the top of a high wall,
but never, even on the narrowest ledge, disturbing the
snow to right or left. More staggering than all was the
statement that this nameless being had traversed more
than a hundred miles of a most devious and irregular
route in a single night.
The story once abroad, the mystery and marvel grew
apace, and this in spite of all that could be done to restore
public equanimity. Professor Owen, with a carefully
executed drawing of the footprints before him, assured
the public that the traces were those of a badger ; that
"
and by a picture of the state of
justified his doing so
the public mind, of the villages, the labourers, their
wives and children, old crones and trembling old men not
daring to out after sunset or to go out half a mile into
stir
and it was during this period that late one winter's after-
noon a woodman brought an alarming story into our
own one of the neighbouring
village to the effect that in
"
woods he had just encountered a tar'ble wild beast,
peace of mind.
I have spoken of the general sense of mismanagement
in high quarters which prevailed, but I may have failed
to convey an idea of the real exasperation that was openly
expressed. The fearless, outspoken denunciations of
"
Mr. (after Sir) W. H. Russell, the correspondent of The
"
Times were in everybody's mouth, and warmly com-
mented on, and became, I think, in my own case a valuable
piece of early education. The sort of things which,
listening open-mouthed, heard uttered nearly half a I
haphazard :
"
The year has overturned our faith in many things,
shaken many convictions, and dissipated many illusions.
. .The public time would have been best employed in
.
neglects. . . .
Together with misgivings as to general-
ship we were beginning to entertain other doubts. To-
64
Berkshire Village Fifty Years Ago
was unsportsmanlike to practise on the poultry or the
cat therefore with a sense of proper pride I went in quest
;
of the sun ;
and on this a gloom greater than that of
nature settles on him till the moon gets up and completes
his astonishment. In this attitude he sits out the night,
and is struck completely dumb when the sun gets up again.
Here is quite enough to set any boy thinking, and he
presently begins to wonder what he is coming to next,
when looking on he reads how " East and west and north
and south from the watch towers of the four quarters of
the globe peals the solemn mandate, Onward." No one
will fail to understand that this was a book in a thousand
73
"THE CHILD IS FATHER OF THE MAN."
"XT OT much remains to be added to this personal record
1 ^ of Bacon's early days. A few loose threads may be
gathered up, a few additional incidents recorded. Three
events in particular, which belong to this time, merit
reference, because they appealed, each in different fashion,
strongly to the boyish mind, and were often alluded to
in later years.
One was the digging of the Great Well. Lambourn
Woodlands stands high and exposed upon the confines
of the wide chalk downs of North Berkshire, and, as was
inevitable in such a spot, the water-supply was poor and
insufficient. In summer time
the streams were always
dry, and quite a short spell of drought sufficed to drain
the shallow springs and wells. At the Vicarage the
nuisance grew insupportable, and it was resolved, at
whatever cost, to dig down through the chalk until the
deep waters were reached, even though this would entail
a well of depth quite unknown in that part of the world.
grandfather had come recently from a curacy in
My
the West Country, where, among the miners, the sinking
of deep shafts was well understood. He did not realize
when he entrusted the digging of his well to local workmen
that he was giving them a task in which they would find
themselves, very literally, beyond their depth. The
result was nearly a tragedy. As they burrowed deeper
and deeper into the ground a spot was reached where
74
" "
The Child is Father of the Man
the air was no longer safe to breathe, and the order was
nigh fatal.
After this little difficulty was got over the well grew
the last match that the youthful Bacon was present, and
saw All England make 85 and 70, while Hungerford Park
marked 162 and 185, really beating their adversaries in
the first innings. Or it might have been the second
match of the three, when All England made 54 in the
first innings and the same number in the second, while Hun-
the kind of boy that elder women rave over and pet and
spoil only there were no women beside his mother to
spoil Johnny, for he had no sisters and few friends, so
that he saw little enough of ladies, and in consequence
was shy and abashed in their presence. Another attrac-
tion he possessed was a boy's voice of most unusual
sweetness and purity. Once, as quite a little fellow, he
accompanied his father on a rare visit to some friends at
a distance, and on Sunday morning, in Romsey Abbey,
he stood and sang, all unconsciously, beside another
guest sharing the same pew Sir Frederick Ouseley.
After the service was over the great man took the father
aside, and then and there begged that he might have the
genuity.
Bacon was nothing if not original and ingenious.
Anything daring and unusual had the strongest attrac-
tion for him all through life, and it was but natural he
should become a ringleader of lawless deeds. He had
two accomplices. One, a successful soldier, now the
sole survivor, looks back with an indulgent smile upon
his early misdeeds. The other was a young nobleman,
Lord Francis Douglas, brother to the eighth Marquis
of Queensberry. It added considerably to the unholy
pleasure of these three young' scamps that their wicked-
F 81
The Record of an Aeronaut
ness was quite unsuspected, and that they knew them-
selves especially beloved by Pritchett as the best- behaved
boys of his school, a pattern to their companions. This
fact did not in the least deter them from climbing down
from their bedroom windows night after night to let the
ling down the chimney, scattering the fire about the room,
and bringing with it clouds of soot and dust. Of course
the class had to be dismissed until order was restored,
and then the bricklayer was sent for to make investiga-
tion, but, curiously enough, never could find anything
wrong. No
one, save the accomplices, suspected the
innocent-looking Bacon, who had climbed up on the roof
in the dusk, balanced the brick with great skill, and then,
with the aid of a black thread, completed the disaster.
It was Bacon also, I understand, who discovered that
by applying one's mouth to a certain gas-burner on an
upper landing and blowing with all one's might, the gas
in one of the classrooms could be extinguished, causing
much confusion and smell, and an interruption of work,
82
"
The Child is Father of the Man '
"
DEAREST FATHER,
"
Without any definite object, and partly for want
of anything else to do, I had the cheek and audacity,
the other day, to write to a Mr. Ellacombe, a Rector in
'
83
The Record of an Aeronaut
seems the most tantalizing thing just to fall short of
"JOHN M. BACON."
while ever
Brignal banks were wild and fair,
And Greta words were green.
timely end.
The Rev. Arthur Headlam was a Cambridge man,
Wrangler and First Class in the Classical Tripos. The
care of his three hundred parishioners did not absorb all
his leisure or energies, and for many years he took pupils
to coach for the University, three or four at a time.
The villagers still have lively recollections of the " young
"
gentlemen whose youthful high spirits enlivened the
quiet monotony the place. Their favourite sport
of
was fishing in the Tees but Bacon set a new fashion.
Fishing was not in his line. Instead he sought out a
87
The Record of an Aeronaut
friendly mechanician in Barnard Castle, who initiated
him into the mysteries of the lathe and the arts of the
mechanical engineer. This was very characteristic of
the lad, and it was also natural with him that he in-
fected others with his own enthusiasm. Handicraft
became quite the fashion at the Vicarage, and the
other pupils left their fishing-rods to try their hands
at manufacturing little boxes and wooden rollers and
the like, with an ardour generally much in advance of
their skill.
Bacon was always a pioneer. The craze for physical
training now
possessed him. There was much bathing
and swimming in the Tees, walking, running and jumping ;
worthy.
My father was acknowledgedly Mr. Headlam's favourite
pupil. He possessed more than the usual share of brains
and intelligence, and he was moreover a hard worker
and inspired with an ardent desire to learn. He planned
for himself ambitious schemes for University success,
as the following letter shows and when, throughout
life, Bacon's ambitions failed of their attainment it was
never through fault of his own.
88
"
The Child is Father of the Man "
"
DEAREST FATHER,
"
I have spoken to Mr. Headlam at length, and
your best.
"
All this, of course, you know, and he says it rests
with you whether you think it best for me, with a mod-
erate chance of a small fellowship, to risk the getting
of it, or to go to Trinity and read for as high a place in
Honours as possible. The former course would be the
less expensive, and he gives me some hope of gaining a
upon the youth as it does on all who have eyes for the
;
90
LORD FRANCIS DOUGLAS
Page 91
VI
/ ALMA MATER.
went up to Cambridge in October, 1865. Some
BACON
three months before this an event had occurred which
affected him, aswas but natural, very deeply. This was
the tragic death of the school fellow he had so lately
griefs ;
of love and birthand death, of hope and despair.
He loved every stick and stone of the place he loved
the atmosphere, he loved the life. Outside of his passion
for the daring, the adventurous, the unusual, his nature
was academic to the finger-tips. He was at his happiest
and brightest among his University friends, he looked
his best in cap and gown he walked his lightest and
;
for all that his forehead is lofty and his brows are noble,
is yet the grandest development of the human race
whether his sympathies are quite so broad, his outlook
92
Alma Mater
Master's Lodge yet WhewelPs mighty presence made
even to the meanest servant of the College.
itself felt
story was told of how the dying man had asked for the
curtains of his window to be drawn aside that he might
once more see the sun shining on the Great Court, and
the blue sky, which he had ever declared was never so
blue as when glimpsed above the pinnacles of Trinity.
Then came the peaceful death, and a great shadow seemed
to fall across the college, and the blank void of an irre-
parable loss.
"
First all the twelve bells speaking freely were an-
swered immediately by the ghosts of their own selves
by that indescribable far-off sound, weird and solemn,
95
The Record of an Aeronaut
widening out their intervals so as to count out, with
equal strokes, the invariable length of each bar of the
solemn music as marked by the stately swing of the
tenor ;
and in this impressive manner each bell in dying
filling the gap with more and more
leaves the survivors
measured utterance. Presently but two are speaking,
answering one another with long resounding beats.
Finally the great tenor swings on a few strokes alone,
its deep funereal, muffled voice ending the long-drawn
cadence."
Our hero knew well all about these same fine bells, and
described them as an expert. Mr. Ellacombe had been
as good as his word.The introduction to the Cambridge
ringers had been given, and Bacon had enrolled himself
a member of that famous campanological association
"
The Ancient Society of College Youths." The written
and unwritten lore of the belfry was expounded to him.
The mysteries of change ringing had already been ac-
" "
quired the intricacies of
; Evening Pleasure and
"
Triple Bob Major," the cabalistic passwords of
" " "
single," caters," tittums," and the like, no longer
presented any difficulties. To ring up the great tenor
of St. Mary's was a favourite exercise of his and a highly
esteemed privilege. By way of other recreation he took
up rowing, and sported the dark blue blazer of the First
Trinity Boat Club. But it was at the gymnasium he
chiefly distinguished himself. Under the skilful training
of George Jackson the original, by the way as he was
" "
proud enough himself to testify, of Mr. George in
" " Bacon a
Dickens 's Bleak House developed into
first-class
gymnast.
His favourite exercises were with the flying trapeze,
and he gave exhibitions of his skill in this direction at
village entertainments at home until his mother's
blood
96
Alma Mater
ran cold with horror at his daring. He was an adept with
the leaping pole, he had won prizes for throwing the
cricket ball, he loved swimming and diving, riding and
possible.
There were troublous times at Cambridge just then.
A highly unpopular Vice-Chancellor was in power, and
as a consequence something like active rebellion broke
forth among the undergraduates. The men grew out of
hand, and all sorts of One
lawless acts were perpetrated.
99
The Record of an Aeronaut
wooden panels given way like matchwood and precipi-
tated him among the foremost into the building. There
followed a wild scene as the infuriated undergraduates
they could lay their hands on. They went and returned
triumphantly, one bearing a hat box and the other a
three -railed towel-horse. Nor let them be unduly
blamed. All sense of the relative worth of movables
seems to disappear in a fire. During the recent burning
of a great Scotch house, crammed with priceless treasures,
a party of soldiers from the neighbouring barracks were
told off to assist in the salving and while some hurled
;
covered the mental bias that this ascent gave me," wrote
Bacon many years afterwards. " I dreamed of balloons
in happy nightmares for long days to come, and when-
ever I allowed myself to speculate on some possible
excursion which should be out of the common, somehow
the idea of a balloon would always intrude itself."
Henceforward there was ever present at the back of
his mind the resolution to make, one day, a balloon
ascent himself. But for the present, and for many a year
to come, he had other things to think about. Long
hours of night reading by the light of an inefficient lamp
began to tell upon his sight. Presently his eyes broke
down altogether, under the and for months he
strain,
was tortured by that most dread spectre that can well
haunt a man the fear of blindness. Work had perforce
to be abandoned, just at the most critical point, and his
time at the University was extended by another year,
in thehope that matters might improve before his final
than if
they had all been budding Senior Wranglers or
Double Firsts. Speaking generally (for of course there
are many exceptions), the man who is content with a
" "
poll degree is pretty certain to be lacking either in
industry or brains or both and it is a truism that it
requires a wise man to teach a fool. The Bacons soon
acquired a reputation for steering even the stupidest
and (and some were very stupid
idlest of their pupils
soon, all over the town, pianos were tinkling, and lusty
young voices chanting these novel but improving ditties.
For a long while the immensely popular and much sought
after verses were circulated among the Bacon pupils
undergraduate needs.
Mr. Myers died in November, 1870, and John Bacon
in theMarch following. His son felt his loss most keenly,
but at the time there were other matters to distract his
mind. His own marriage was near at hand. On April
nth, 1871, the wedding took place at the parish church
of Millom, in Cumberland, and after a short honeymoon
upon Parker's Piece, which for the next five years was
to be their home.
109
VII
are a few of the names which catch the eye in looking down
the long lists of men whose days of undergraduate life
coincided more or less with my father's, and with most
of whom he came more or less into contact. Among
the Dons were two successive Bishops of Durham Light-
foot, Hulsean Professor of Divinity, and Westcott,
Regius Professor. H. Fawcett was the Professor of
Political Economy; Charles Kingsley, of Modern History;
W. Sterndale Bennett, of Music. Adams, discoverer of
opinions. This was in the days ere yet the narrow bounds
of authority had been aught relaxed, and the teachings
of Darwin, Spencer,, and other pioneers had come upon
the world with the added shock of novelty. It was in
Clifford's rooms that Bacon first heard the clash of arms
112
Sorrow and Disappointment
formerly Under Librarian at the University Library,
and at the time of his death travelling, at the expense of
the University, on an entomological survey of remote
"
His early death, and W. K. Clifford's, have been the
greatest loss to science not only in England, but in the
world, in our time. Half a dozen of us old fogies could
have been better spared."
Professor Balfour met his death on the Alps in July,
History.
Bacon's first few months of married life opened aus-
piciously enough. There was abundanceof pupils ;
"
Now,my men, you are doing no good here Here's !
"
sixpence apiece for you. Go off and drink my health !
BACON'S
village on the Oxfordshire side of the Thames,
not far from Moulsf ord. He chose this spot in order to
be near his second brother, Frank, who by this time had
left the Service, had married, and lately had been dis-
Bacon was the type of man who loves his own nest and
Such were the people and such was the home where
Bacon found himself in his thirtieth year. He was now
a man of leisure. His health at that time did not allow
of his earning his own livelihood, nor was there any
necessity for him to do so. But he was the last man in
the whole world to remain idle. He read largely on all
but especially astronomical subjects, and began
scientific,
to form the very extensive library which presently,
vague, but the time the drummer kept beyond all praise
and with the band arrived the people, all in their best
and cleanest clothes, and there was the pleasant smell of
flowers and trampled grass and fresh vegetables, the
keen excitement over the awarding of the prizes, the
ever-increasing area.
In these and similar labours, in all manner of in- and
outdoor pursuits, in visiting and entertaining friends,
and all the while to Bacon in winning back health and
strength, passed four pleasant, peaceful years. In the
autumn of the year after they came to Coldash he took his
wife abroad to Paris and Switzerland, and they both
from the dark sky and piled by the fierce wind in mountain
drifts that reached the tops of the hedges. Coldash was
in a state of siege, and not only Coldash but every out-
paws upon his chest, and many times bowled over the
little girl who threw sticks in thepond for his delectation
and got wet through when he shook himself over her after
his swim. That night, the second night of the storm,
Lion, tied up in the yard, barked wildly and ceaselessly,
The Record of an Aeronaut
apparently for no reason, for, true to his instincts, he loved
the snow and preferred to sleep on it rather than inside
his kennel. Morning came, and still no postman reached
the beleaguered village, but soon tidings got about of a
doing the particular work which has made his name and
fame. The very circumstances of his trouble compelled
him to lead a quiet, retired life, rarely to leave home, to
entertain few friends, to abandon intercourse with the
world outside his own immediate circle. Yet surely,
ifour Christian beliefs count for anything, these fourteen
years of purest devotion and self-sacrifice, patient hope,
brave endeavour, manly fortitude, uncomplaining re-
signation and noble example, yield place to none in true
value and importance, and rank higher than all earthly
success and honour in that complex whole which makes
the Man. Lacking these years, he had lacked surely
much wonderful power of sympathy and under-
of the
Lacking these years, his best loved, and those few who had
hiswhole heart, would have lacked an ensample which
all their lives long will stand to them in highest and
holiest recollection.
Not even his own children knew, though they might
if he was to
preserve health and spirits he must seek out-
side distraction. Forthwith he threw himself heart and
soul into every kind of pursuit possible to him under the
advantage. He
ingratiated himself immediately with
allwith whom he came into contact. Had his tastes and
inclination really lay, as he once thought they did, to-
wards the life of a parish priest, there is no doubt he would
have made a highly popular and successful one.
For seven years he held his position at Shaw, driving
the four intervening miles in summer and riding them
in winter, always with such regularity that the cottagers
whose houses he passed on Sunday morn-
set their clocks
show was the first and very popular addition, and village
matrons brought their favourites in baskets, and children
staggered under their unwilling burdens, who frequently
escaped at the last moment and rows of sleek pussies
;
138
The Home at Coldash
the ringing team and specially shared with him all his
old man
happily and harmlessly many evenings that
might otherwise have been spent to less advantage.
For very many years, long after the ringing days were
over, the old farmer, by tacit consent, would come up
two and three nights a week, one being invariably Satur-
day, to play billiards, drink his single glass of whisky,
and discourse with great shrewdness on every conceivable
topic. Between him and my father there existed the
truest bond of friendship and mutual esteem. There
was nothing that either would not do for the other, but
it fell to Bacon's lot to perform the last office for his old
comrade. One bitter cold winter afternoon he was sum-
moned hastily by tidings of an accident, and, hurrying to
the farm, found that the old man, chilled by a long drive
from market, had fallen on his head from the cart he was
descending from on to the iron-hard ground of his own
yard. It was Bacon who lifted the poor grey head and
tried vainly to force stimulant down the lifeless throat.
but no shock was too strong for the old Scotchman, who
therefore remained incorrigible to the end of the chapter.
Nevertheless, by dint of much patience and by specially
"
invented and extraordinarily simplified scores," most
successful results were attained. The Coldash Ringers
became famous throughout the whole neighbourhood,
and were greatly sought after for all manner of enter-
tainments, often going many miles to exhibit their skill
and add to the pleasure of their neighbours. Bacon's
bells were of specially soft tone, and in later years he
almost doubled their number with his own hands, making
the moulds from which the metal was cast in a local
140
The Home at Coldash
foundry, and then turning these rough castings in his
lathe, tuningthem carefully (by no means an easy task),
making the handles and clappers, and completing them
in every particular. The long range of handbells was
quite a feature of the Coldash home, and afforded no little
amusement to visitors and friends long after the old
team was scattered and gone.
Out of the interest excited by this new venture grew
a handbell competition, which for several summers was
a famous annual institution at Coldash. Campano-
logical experts, from St. Paul's and elsewhere, were the
judges, and competing teams came from all the country-
side, the whole neighbourhood flocking to hear them.
The success of these institutions encouraged Bacon to add
to them. The good old country competition once
widely popular of a ploughing match had died out in
South Berkshire, and Bacon set himself the task of re-
viving it. Various meetings took place under his gui-
dance. The movement was very popular, and, due to
his exertions and with the addition of his own original
" "
attractions, caught on immediately. As in the case
of the cottage show, others took the enthusiasm and
followed suit, and ploughing matches are once more
common functions in the neighbourhood.
The next hobby was bee culture. In those days,
twenty years ago, interest was first being aroused in local
and specially village industries, and in the means by which
the labourer might be taught to add to his earnings and
to the limited interests of his life. Bacon became bitten
with the idea. He started bees himself, made his own
hives and appliances, went long distances to consult
authorities (for in those days the science of bee-keeping
was in its infancy), read up every book on the subject,
and adopted every latest improvement. Whatever
141
The Record of an Aeronaut
work he undertook he gave his whole soul to, with the
result that he always achieved success, and with bee-
keeping he was very successful indeed.
Where he succeeded others must share too. He
thirsted to impart his new-found knowledge. The out-
come of his desires was "The Newbury District Bee
Association. President, The Queen (bee). Hon. Sec.,
J. M. Bacon. Expert, S. Knight, Jnr." Not much in
the way of subscription was needed to float and work the
new enterprise, for there were no salaries, Bacon did the
printing, and he and his wife made the bee tent with
their own hands. The " expert " was another true and
trusty friend, who can to this day recall merry memories
of long drives to outlying parishes, the secretary driving
hismare in a tax-cart laden with tent poles and canvas
" "
and apparatus, a skep of bees between their legs,
which probably came unsecured before the end of the
journey, with exciting results; or of bee-driving ex-
"
periences when the bees got nasty," and the two men
behind the black gauze curtains had to appear serenely
unconscious of bees up their sleeves, and bees down their
have followed him through fire and water, but they drew
the line at bees. His own gardener was the biggest
coward of the lot. He used to complain loudly that the
row of hives interfered with his work in the kitchen garden,
and tell endless stories of the way in which he had been
" "
attacked. But they never sting you, do they, Alfred ?
[I
His skill increased rapidly, and proportionately his
rockets grew in size until they culminated with a leviathan
of twelve pounds or more, the case strengthened by
For all this his own hard work and personal influence
were entirely to thank. He had his ringing team to help
him, but he himself was always present on club nights
to keep the ball rolling, and he spent his time in devising
fresh amusements and developments. The barn was
enlarged to twice its original dimensions a stage was ;
i47
The Record of an Aeronaut
such a neighbourhood, but talent was discovered in un-
likely quarters, and not the most finished and elaborate
performances at the Lyceum or His Majesty's were ever
received with more whole-hearted and rapturous applause.
The barn came in useful also for other kinds of meetings.
At the close of 1885 was fought the first General Election
after the extension of the franchise. For the first time
the unsophisticated Berkshire yokel found himself the
149
The Record of an Aeronaut
that came to hand.One peculiar method of education
he adopted was to set various Subjects on which, after
due interval for preparation, we children had to deliver,
without notes, and in the presence of a small audience,
something that we proudly termed a "lecture." This
proceeding possessed special advantages of its own. My
father held that many men (though perhaps scarcely as
away into the skies. But the filling was really going
on apace. The skipper himself soon made his
152
A First Balloon Ascent
Captain Dale was a short, powerfully built man of
thirty or so, full of life and energy, with a keen grey
eye and jovial manner. He was full of spirits about
our venture, for he had made some two hundred
ascents,but never one that promised better luck.
The upper currents, if they kept steady for two hours
more, would carry us over the very heart of London,
a piece of good fortune which had never happened
"
before in his experience. And what do you think
"
of the weather, Captain ? I asked. His manner
of answering the question struck me. Craning his
neck backwards and shading his eyes, he bent his gaze
steadily on the light drifting haze far, far up. That
was the point of the sky that most concerned him.
"
All is clear for 6,000 feet, if the clouds don't come
up." That was the great question, and none could
answer it, for that was the exceptionally wet summer
we allremember, and no day was to be trusted.
Meanwhile the mushroom grew on and began to
gather its skirts into shapely
proportions. Pre-
sently therewas a smell of gas and the Captain put
his nose down and sniffed the gale, and all his little
charge had to put out all they knew. Then the car,
which had been at some distance, was brought up
and cleverly run into the spot where a perfect tangle
of ropes, moored still kept the
to a pile of sandbags,
156
A First Balloon Ascent
the Captain's voice was heard ordering, encouraging,
larly so as, with a "Look out, there, "he and two others
jumped in pell-mell upon us.
That was our release, for we could now raise our
heads, as the ropes were all taut and in place.
Then there was no more delay, for bag after bag was
handed out, till the huge craft seemed but a feather-
" "
weight. Out with one more and! so we were
free and away.
Now solemnly aver that from this moment
I will
penetrated my
leather wallet, riddling its contents
and harpooning me like a whale, until I was rescued
by my companions. was now apparent why the
It
man of so many voyages was so jubilant over this
one. It was impossible to tell till we were actually
" "
This won't do," he said. The Palace balloon
must go a lot higher over London." " Luff," he
cries, and puts the helm hard a-port. This is what
you would suppose he would have done. What he
really did was to empty half a bag into empty space.
As he did so we saw to our dismay a stone go plunging
down. What billet that stone found it is vain to
inquire, but a few weeks afterwards there was an
" "
indignant letter in the Standard from some
suburban householder, complaining that he had had
his roof smashed by a stone from Captain Dale's
balloon. But blame did not really attach to him.
According to the contract, it was the Palace Company
that had to supply the ballast and were answerable
for what was in it.
158
RISING ABOVE THE CRYSTAL PALACE GROUNDS
See page 157
"
was flying faster than a horse could trot. Keep
"
cool," cried our pilot, and do just what I tell you."
Then he made us all rise and hold each a bag of ballast
with its mouth open and ready for prompt use.
A further discharge of gas brought us down to the
level of the trees, and we should have infallibly fouled
a big elm but for a couple of hatfuls of sand smartly
dropped by one of us. Clearing the topmost boughs,
we got a view of the next field, a meadow of about
two acres with tall trees at the further end. In a
moment Dale decided to try his luck, and opened
the valve to the full, which brought us down with a
"
to be sure ! But our Captain had an eye for busi-
"
ness, and cut in, Look here you've a horse and cart
;
winded now for life, and you'll have to pay for that ;
164
A First Balloon Ascent
title testifies, to the memory of the chief actor in
our little enterprise. On the 2gth of June, 1892,
165
X
AN UNCONVENTIONAL CLERIC.
over which the wordy battle has surged to and fro is now
166
An Unconventional Cleric
tacitly conceded with scarce a thought.
Perhaps it is
tolerance, perhaps indifference, perhaps greater wisdom,
that is to thank. Be that as it may, the noise of warfare
has faded into distance, the weapons have been laid
aside, and Peace spreads her wings once more over the
deserted battlefield.
It was far otherwise half a generation ago.The fight
was then at its fiercest, was altogether impossible
and it
167
The Record of an Aeronaut
These observatories, I recall, were put to many other
than their original purposes. They were connected with
the houseby a home-made telephone, and in warm wea-
ther we turned them into a sort of glorified summer
house. We children learned our lessons in them, my
father made them his study, and once, when the house
was crowded, he and his little son passed the night there
in hammocks slung from the roof. This, however, by the
way. They served their legitimate use on many a frosty
winter evening and clear summer night when Bacon spent
long and happy hours with his telescopes, making stellar
observations, but more especially sketching lunar detail,
a work for which his equipment seemed best fitted, with
results that he published from time to time in scientific
sufficiently striking.
In sharp contrast to the spirit of patient, humble in-
quiry and cautious utterance on the one hand, he heard
not seldom the dogmatic assertion of ecclesiasticism
hurled with anathemas at the so-called unbeliever. In
168
An Unconventional Cleric
place of the prudent statements, delivered only after
laborious investigation and thought, was too often the
rash dogmatism of ignorance. Bacon's blood boiled
"
Our flocks have grown thinner.
"
That our hold upon them is less and ever lessening,
and
"
That the old faith is being boldly challenged.
And went on and expound as the causes, that
to enforce
"
The world has progressed, while we have not.
"
That being out of date, we are also out of touch.
"
That neither what we practise nor even what we
preach bears any true resemblance to what Christ taught."
For the rest a couple of quotations shall suffice :
"
And why all this sad blunder on our part ? Why
do we fall back on that marvellous special pleading,
which a Ballantine might envy, in order to hold our
position? Few things distress me more. Beyond mea-
sure I wonder at the elasticity that divines discover in
their text,and the surpassing ingenuity with which they
can make white read like black, but most profoundly do
I distrust both. And in Heaven's name why are we in
this false position ? We are taunted with being literal
*
"
But what of our general attitude ? Is a desperate
was made.
Henceforward Bacon gave up his clerical work, and
with it the conventional coat and collar of his calling.
Nevertheless, although he never resumed the latter out-
ward signs of his profession, he did not wholly abandon
duty. True, he scarcely ever preached again. "I am
waiting for the time when I can have a lantern screen
stretched across the chancel arch, and a photograph of
the Orion Nebula, or some other glory of the heavens, to
talk about," he would declare. But brother clerics in
distress could ever rely upon his ready services, and special
friends count on his help at Church festivals and the
like. Bacon was always a Churchman, in the highest
sense of the word, all his life. If his beliefs and aspira-
tions had been less real to him than they were he would
not have striven so hard to free them from the fettering
bonds of conventionalism and insincerity.
Now that Bacon's work at Shaw was at an end he
had more time to spend on other things, to start new
interests and to improve on old ones. A good portion
173
The Record of an Aeronaut
of eachsummer was still devoted to the Cottage Show,
which year by year developed fresh features until it
became an absolutely unique function, as popular as it
was unusual. As the best way of illustrating Bacon's
originality and fertile fancy in this direction, let us briefly
recall the scene at one of these alfresco village entertain-
ments, held about this time.
The bills advertising the Coldash Show of 1892 con-
tained, in addition to the usual notices, the startling
announcement of an important archaeological discovery.
Experts, it was stated, had lately determined the site, in
the grounds of Sunnyside, of an ancient battlefield,
probably of Plantagenet date. The occasion of the
Cottage Show, held on the very spot, would be taken
advantage of for theopening of the barrow, when im-
portant discoveries might be anticipated.
So interesting and mysterious a statement naturally
excited much local curiosity, which combined with a
fine afternoon to draw a record concourse of visitors, who
duly inspected the flowers, vegetables, cats, donkeys,
and other exhibits, found pleasure (not being over-
critical) the performance of the rustic band, and
in
how the tables were turned, and the Sheriff came under
sentence of death, and was forced to plead piteously
for his life how King Richard grew bloodthirsty, and
;
fully to the daylight, and found his host, and his host's
children (who had been blowing down a small lead pipe
in the outer observatory), laughingly awaiting him at
the top, he probably desired no further experiences. If
efficiency.
enthusiastically to a brother :
"
I met with atriumph yesterday in the work
little
"
The hournear midnight, and I am sitting alone
is
"
It is now two
o'clock, and I have changed places
with my colleague and taken my turn below among the
vaults, and a couple of hours have passed pleasantly
1*6
m
An Unconventional Cleric
would be a week's work to visit every part. Another
day (or night) I must try again."
"
That the peak of the misshapen and unsupported
pointed stone, some sixteen feet high, should still with
any accuracy lie in the same line of sight as it originally
did, would be the greatest marvel of all relating to
Stonehenge."
In the autumn of 1892 came a happy enough little
reminder of past times in the shape of a visit to Cam-
bridge, where Bacon had not now been for over sixteen
years. It is the pleasant custom of Trinity College at
intervals to invite, during vacation, its former members,
An Unconventional Cleric
mercifully brief. After but three days spent in bed, she
died, on the 19 th of January, 1894, peacefully in her
189
XI
couldj
boast ; of how it carried through large photographic
exhibitions, said by experts to be the best outside London,
to which the Queen lent her name and the Royal Family
contributed their own snap-shots of how it broadened
;
Lady St. Helier, then Sir Francis and Lady Jeune, whose
country house, Arlington Manor, favourite resort of
"
So long as we were anywhere within the outskirts
of Ostend every one we spoke to replied in fluent French.
Half a dozen miles out in the country it was very different.
On our road to Bruges, after about an hour's hard jolting
N 193
The Record of an Aeronaut
alongside one of those endless canals which evidently
go on for ever, we were overtaken by a thunderstorm,
and took refuge in the outbuildings of a small farm.
The farmer came to us,and we explained our plight in
French, then in English, then we invented words in all
languages, but it was no use. Then he brought his wife,
and then all his family, and then his carter but they
;
194
In Search of the Corona
were indelibly impressed on his memory, he had no
recollectionwhatever of actually reaching the earth
showing that Nature in such cases proves more merciful
than we often venture to hope.
The ascent itself was an ordinary afternoon's voyage,
undertaken for no sterner purpose than as a pleasant
experience. Even in those days, however, Bacon was
on the look-out for acoustical phenomena, and the strange
" " "
spasmodic yelping noise, suggesting a dog just
underneath the car," of artillery practice on Plumstead
Marshes a mile below, a sound that on earth is heard as
a resounding boom, came in for special comment. The
incidents of the race, skilfully contested on each side,
afforded valuable object-lessons in the relative speed
of upper and lower air-currents, the poise of a balloon,
which never for a single second is in absolute quiescence
in space, and the tremendous art which lies in such an
apparently simply act as the discharge of a small quantity
of ballast. By careful attention to all these details
alone their craft was enabled to win the race, which
terminated, after three happy hours, near Rainham
Creek, in Essex. It was on this occasion that Bacon
first made
the acquaintance of that unrivalled aeronaut,
Mr. Percival Spencer, his companion and friend in so
many subsequent aerial adventures.
In the summer of 1896 there occurred an all-important
event. On the gth of August of that year a total eclipse
of the sun took place, visible along a narrow tract of
earth which ran, for part of its course, across the upper
consequences.
"
Our vessel, the Norse King," since under other
"
management rechristened the Argonaut," carried a
distinguished party. All the astronomical world was
"
Stavanger. 27.7.96.
"
DEAR FORSTER,
"
can give some account of our start, a very fair
I
start so far, though a little bit rough for some of our party.
partly on myself.
"
Our baggage room a sight, with all the bulky
is in-
grave ;
and between the sharp volleys
of the firing party
"
rang out the shrill bugle notes of the reveille," symbol
of the joyful Resurrection.
of blue could be traced here and there, and for the time,
203
The Record of an Aeronaut
theirs, and by their suggestion and help he was enabled
to include in his instrumental outfit for the Indian Eclipse
an apparatus never before employed for the purpose, but
from which valuable results might well be anticipated.
It had long been a question of importance to astrono-
mers whether the Solar Corona, which changes so com-
pletely in form from one eclipse to the next, alters ap-
preciably within the short period of totality. Satis-
factorily to test this point with the photographic means
until then employed in eclipse work was practically im-
possible, but Mr. Nevil Maskelyne suggested that the
then newly invented animatograph might be enlisted to
matter and he now set to work to adapt such
settle the ;
ate, and we did not lack for hearty good wishes as the
boat train steamed out of Liverpool Street. At Tilbury
our little party of sixteen boarded the P. & O. vessel
" "
Egypt lying in midstream but the fog never lifted,
;
and not until noon next day did our boat quit her moor-
ings in the muddy, crowded river. Once started, how-
ever, fortune favoured us,and a safe and pleasant voyage
brought us to Bombay on the i6th of January. Bundles
of letters were awaiting our arrival. Bacon's untiring
efforts of past months had not proved in vain. A govern-
204
In Search of the Corona
ment, vast and powerful enough to control its 996,000
square miles of territory, and two hundred and thirty
millions of souls, and yet able to stoop to the needs of
sixteen helpless English astronomers stranded in its
midst, had responded to our prayers, and provided us
with camping ground, tents, furniture, and servants even
then awaiting our pleasure at Buxar. This was good
hearing indeed, and with light hearts we started on our
thousand-mile train journey, and cheerfully endured
"
the heat, the dust, and midnight uprousings for medical
"
inspection that the plague regulations entailed on all
coming from infected Bombay.
Benares was our first halting-place that nightmare
city of dark and dreadful rites, painted, flower-decked
putrid holy wells, loathsome fakirs, filthy temples,
idols,
and corpses smouldering on the banks of the muddy
Ganges. After two nights spent here we pushed on to our
"
Ours was indeed an ideal encampment, possessing
every charm that life under canvas is capable of. Half a
dozen luxurious sleeping tents were picturesquely grouped
in the shady recesses of a mango grove, shielded at the
" "
far end by our mess tent, a Swiss Cottage of noble
The great eclipse was past and over, and the shadow
fleeing at lightning speed over land and sea to realms
of space unknown.
The little party of astronomers had made good use of
their ninety-six seconds. Valuable photographs and
notes had been secured, and one novel result in the shape
of a set of light tests that seemed to show that the rapid
return of the light, apparently much more rapid than its
withdrawal, is an objective and not merely a subjective
phenomenon. The animatograph had worked admirably,
and that night the precious film was removed from the
machine and carefully stowed away to await development
in England. Telegrams, of course, had to be despatched,
and the Guildhall Club that evening was gladdened by the
receipt of a single unbeautiful word "Abcess" which,
however, by the aid of a carefully prepared code, they were
"
able to expand as follows Weather perfect. Obser-
:
"
Ludlow Castle Hotel,
"
Delhi.
"Jan. 26, '98.
"
DEAR FORSTER,
"
You will have had my
telegram and learned the
splendid success that attended astronomers along their
whole line across India. We ourselves are triumphant,
and feel that we have enjoyed such an experience as can
never come into our lives again.
"
The Viceroy's enormous encampment adjoined ours,
and to furnish it the resources of the country had been
taxed to the utmost. In spite of this, however, Govern-
ment supplied us with a camp of our own on quite a
princely scale, and posted a guard of some thirty police
over us night and day. Nor was this unnecessary. The
concourse was unparalleled. Elephants, camels, bullock-
carts, and every conceivable species of conveyance, passed
us, and the natives, gathered from all India, trooped by
incessantly in countless thousands to their strange rites
in their holy river. Those days and nights spent under
canvas were certainly the most novel and most delightful
in my and we fear that all else in India will by com-
life,
Who was the and when and where the theft was
thief
214
BACON'S FIRST SCIENTIFIC BALLOON ASCENT
Mr. J. N. Maskelyne, Dr. Lachlan, Captain Lynn-Smart, Bacon, Prof. Turner,
Mr. N. Maskelyne
Page 215
XII
"
huge receivers." Bandsmen with musical instruments,
volunteers with rifles, a stationary engine to which were
ever and anon there broke over the field the terrific re-
challenge.
Ever since the day of his first ascent, and indeed before
that, his library had, of course, contained all the literature
he could lay hands on concerning the history of aero-
nautics ;place of honour being reserved to Glaisher's
"
fascinating Travels in the Air." Naturally the scientific
aspect of ballooning appealed most strongly to Bacon's
mind, and in reading of the brilliant results arrived at in
the past it him again and again as deplorable that
struck
of late years the balloon, as a means of scientific research
unrivalled in its way had completely fallen into
disuse. In early days scientists had been quick to recog-
nize its possibilities. As far back as 1802 Gay Lussac
and others were learning by its means all sorts of physical
facts till then unknown or unproved. Continental
savants attested its value again and again, and after
fifty years the British Association awoke, somewhat
"
veteran Charles Green, Father of English Aeronautics,"
hero of the Nassau voyage, as aeronaut. These ascents
221
The Record of an Aeronaut
sounds with startling volume, this time refused to answer
to the usual signals and not until a height of under a
;
ruffled water ;
but the nature of the sound tested makes
some difference to the results obtained.
223
The Record of an Aeronaut
"
It was
desirable to attain a considerable height, and
to continue the observations as long as possible. On the
eve of starting I appealed to our aeronaut and asked him
if, as the day was calm, we might not dispense with the
far from being yet over. The wind that had been so
light in the Palacegrounds was now blowing half a gale
along the bleak high cliff. In consequence of this we at
once bowled over, and as we had no grapnel we began
dragging very rapidly. All who are familiar with Hast-
ings can picture the spot hard by the sea, on the eastern
outskirts,and will understand how only one field separ-
ated us from the top of the high cliff. Along this field
we now began to coast, at an accelerating pace which,
to say the least, grew Right across the middle
exciting.
of this field, however, was drawn a substantial fence of
"
ber of the World " contained the following verses
away ;
but by skilful adjustment of the ballast the
exactly poised balloon was conveyed breast-high, without
effort, by these two cheerful helpers to the spot. They
might have saved themselves the trouble, however, for
" "
that inhospitable public refused to open its doors to
what it evidently supposed were belated hooligans,
despite (or perhaps in consequence of) showers of pebbles
on the windows and bugle-calls on the horn. Disgustedly
the party, having succeeded in rousing a local carrier,
drove five miles to Maidstone, where they arrived, cold
and the town clocks were striking three.
tired, as
232
" 11
morning.
233
XIII
"
I was as yet no nearer learning more about those all-
" "
Swin Middle " and the Mouse blink their warn-
"
the
" "
ing beams. Ideal was indeed the word to describe
such an observatory, and probably never in all his life
did Bacon thrill with keener delight or happier anticipa-
tion than when, Trinity House yielding graciously to his
235
The Record of an Aeronaut
bold request, he started in the middle of November for his
self-imposed exile (of unknown duration) to a Robinson
Crusoe island entirely after his own heart.
Very miscellaneous was his luggage, consisting as it did
of all manner of acoustical and meteorological instru-
"
ments, paraboloid ears," bed and bedding, and pro-
visions (even to water-supply) for several weeks. He
was particularly anxious, meet with a fog,
I recall, to
among and
his other experiences, altogether before he
was ready for it his desire was gratified. He left home
one Monday afternoon bound for Blackwall, where he
"
was to join the Trinity House yacht Vestal," then
starting on her monthly visitation to the lighthouses and
lightships of the district. The next news heard of him
was a hurried card " Dense fog. Should have been
:
" '
Vestal,' 9 p.m. Monday.
"
DEAREST GARTIE,
"
Never since Indian days have I met with such
extreme attention and courtesy. The fog at Blackwall
Station was so dense that it seemed impossible to venture
outside, and the whole of the staff were out on fatigue
duty with fog signals. By feeling the outside wall I tried
to grope my way to the watchman of the dock. I missed
his gate, however, and finding the way blocked by a
chain I got under it and tried a little further, but gave
it up as hopeless and went back. Lucky I did, for a few
more steps would have taken me over the wall into the
river.
"The station-master, who proved a splendid friend,
felt sure I couldn't move out of the station, and offered
236
Observations and Adventures
me The only safe way of reaching Trinity Wharf
a bed.
would be by a walk of two miles, and an old hand could
hardly find the way. Eventually he thought of a plan.
He took me himself (first class, at the Company's ex-
deck, coal and oil, a big buoy to replace one carried away,
237
The Record of an Aeronaut
and I know not what else below. I have my own private
steward. Be chary of your telegrams, as they involve
some little favour. I too shall not wire often. Best
love to you both.
"
Your own Dad."
keep in touch with the land they are shut off from for
several weeks at a stretch. By such intercourse, too,
they form friendships with men with whom they hold
frequent converse, perhaps for years, whose voices and
modes of speech they are familiar with, but whose faces
tiny world. Bacon asked his friends how they bore the
strain of so long incarceration alone together, and re-
ceived reply that they seldom or never quarrelled, but
after the first week or so, when all topics of conversation
were completely exhausted and, in their narrow life,
no events arose to create more, relapsed into silence
rarely broken.
Bacon's days on the Maplin were marked out by a strict
sleep until dawn after which, rising for good, the day's
;
ing with delight the friendly visitor who broke the dreary
sameness of their lives, looked after his needs with utmost
vigilance. For the rest, the distant guns across the
mouth, the hooters of the passing vessels, and the
river's
deep boom of the bell buoy, brought him their own mess-
239
The Record of an Aeronaut
ages. Fog banks sank down upon the brown waters and
rose again, winds blew, waves curled, and clouds drifted
" "
with a purpose and through the darkness the Mouse
;
" "
and the Swin winked wicked green and yellow eyes
upon him with a meaning he was quick to interpret.
It was with much regret, and heartiest best wishes on the
prolonged reverberation.
It was a strange and marvellously impressive expe-
244
Observations and Adventures
anyhow be averted. The heavy and costly dynamo, bor-
rowed property and highly treasured, must go overboard,
no matter at what risk to heads below and the trail rope
;
a fit of some kind had seized him, and that his wits had
entirely forsaken him, as, screaming and foaming at the
246
ABOVE THE CLOUDS
Page 246
Observations and Adventures
mouth, he clung convulsively to the ropes. The first
duty was obviously to get him down from his dangerous
position, and with infinite difficulty Bacon and Spencer,
climbing on the edge of the car, unfastened his clenched
fingersand half supported, half dropped him down into
the basket beneath. Here he lay inert among the sand-
proposed that, for the first time, the new discovery should
be applied to balloon travel, and apparatus carried in a
free balloon capable of receiving messages transmitted
from earth. As possessing no little importance from a
strategic and military point of view, the experiment
excited wide interest in many quarters, and was freely
commented on in the daily press. Full precautions
were taken for its success. A lofty pole in the field at
Newbury, whence the balloon was to ascend, carried one of
the necessary long vertical wires, while the other wire
was run up the rigging of the balloon to the top of the
silk. The transmitting apparatus was considered too
heavy to bear aloft, and the aeronauts contented them-
"
selves with carrying the small receiver," being thus able
only to receiveand not to transmit the wireless messages.
The result proved a signal success. The day was perfect,
the sky flecked with summer clouds, behind which the
balloon became presently hidden from view. Above
the rolling vapour, in a fairyland of their own, the aero-
nautical party were as completely severed from earth and
251
The Record of an Aeronaut
the friends they had left behind them as it was possible
to conceive. And yet not so, for there in the car between
them the delicate bell of the little apparatus they carried
continued to tinkle forth the messages which Mr. Maske-
lyne, in the field now ten or twelve miles away, was still
253
XIV
A PERILOUS VOYAGE
the 1 6th of November, 1899, astronomers pre-
ON dicted a return of that great shower of meteors,
" "
radiating from the constellation Leo and known as the
"
Leonids," whose periodic recurrence thrice a century,
at thirty-three years' interval, had until then been one
of the great events of astronomical chronology. The
last display, in 1866, had proved a marvellous sight, still
fresh in the memories of the older generation. All classes,
and not the scientific world alone, were deeply interested
in the coming marvel ;
and half England were forming
resolutions to sit up and
until the early hours that night,
rouse up the children to behold a wonder they would
remember all the rest of their lives.
eyes, could still trace the dim light of our Davy lamp
hovering over the town. Then it vanished in the mist
and the crowd went home to bed, expecting by breakfast-
time at latest to hear tidings of our descent, probably
not so very far distant. Bacon had, of course, promised
the Guildhall Club that he would wire them the earliest
intimation on reaching the ground. Yet hour by hour
went by and no news came and when morning wore to
;
passage through the fog, and the gas chilled in the colder
upper Mr. Spencer hesitated indeed at the seventh
air.
A Perilous Voyage
ingly there were many poultry farms below and since ;
the cocks aroused the dogs, and the dogs in turn woke
came,
"
No " and then I understood. In another half-
!
hour the sun would have risen, and with bright beams be
drying the silk and expanding the gas, in which case
should we not rise instead of fall, and rise for how long ?
The next half-hour passed almost in silence but the ;
"
Large balloon from Newbury overhead, above clouds.
Cannot descend. Telegraph to sea coast (coastguards)
to be ready to rescue.
"
BACON AND SPENCER, n
a.m. Nov. 16."
"
badly torn in the leg Of course I promptly pictured
!
ing monster.
"
Come and help us " shouted my father
! ;
"
then as they still did not move Come and help, you
:
"
fools ! Don't stand gaping there ! But never before
in the memory of man had
so strange an object fallen
from a cloudy sky on the outskirts of the town of Neath,
and for a few moments longer the cautious Welshmen
refused to approach. The hurried arrival of the land-
owner and neighbouring residents, however, soon inspired
them with confidence, and never surely was a more hos-
pitable welcome accorded to wayworn travellers. It was
half-past two when we stepped at length from our basket
world upon terra firma, after what Mr. Spencer declared
was the roughest landing of all his long experience. Our
voyage then had lasted for ten hours, and terminated but a
mile and a half from the sea, towards which we were di-
269
XV
THE AMERICAN ECLIPSE SOME
NARROW ESCAPES
ensuing winter brought Bacon many lecture
THE
engagements from all over the country. As a
popular lecturer he was scoring a big success. His
natural eloquence, his power of lucid explanation, his
fine voice and fascinating personality, combined with
the novelty and adventurous nature of his subject and
the unique interest of his illustrations to render him
extremely popular upon the platform. For himself
lecturing was a real delight, both for its own sake and
because it brought him many delightful acquaintances,
and not a few close friends, in all parts of the kingdom.
With the spring of 1900 came fresh occupations and dis-
tractions.
On the 28th of May was to take place another Total
Solar Eclipse, visible this time in Spain, Portugal, and
Northern Africa, and also along a narrow track crossing
certain of the Southern States of America. The British
Astronomical Association was again rising to the occasion,
and organizing expeditions of its members, of whom the
"
Tuesday.
"
A
rough wet day at last, with big waves, but our
boat behaves splendidly, and has made its record run
*
Excitement as to the fate of beleaguered Mafeking, the news of
whose relief greeted our arrival at New York, explains this craving
for news.
272
The American Eclipse
of 388 miles. We have learned a little of North Caro-
lina (our destination) from a fellow-passenger. Puff-
adders and rattlesnakes abound, the country is wild, with
boundless pine forests, and if we are lucky we shall get
the natives to build us a birch-bark hut. This should
"
Thursday.
"
Colder yet, but bright and fresh, with a fine wild
sea. None of us have been the least ill on the voyage,
which we expect to end to-morrow night.
"
Friday.
"
Fogs are putting us back again, and we can't
get in at least before to-morrow morning, and may miss
the Cunard mail home. Writing will be somewhat dim-
cult in future, but I will try and send some tidings in
another week. Sharks are round us, and one bit off our
running log yesterday. Remember us to all.
"
Yours very sincerely,
"
JOHN M. BACON."
"
have spent a long morning in this hall studying
I
274
The American Eclipse
the great cities, buried amid cotton plantations and the
endless pine forests of the south, the little townlet of about
1000 inhabitants, the greater part blacks, descendants
of the former slaves, pursued its peaceful sleepy existence,
nor fretted itself unduly about the minor worries of life.
" "
Take it easy should surely have been the borough
motto inscribed upon the white front of the Court House,
the one substantial building of the place, on whose out-
side steps, smoking in the sun, would sit for hours the
'
Professor Young ;
from the Smithsonian Institute, Wash-
ington, Professor Langley each with a large and scarcely
less distinguished following which, with lady astronomers
from Vassar, and many other scientific celebrities, formed
a shining galaxy of intellect unrivalled in the annals of
shadow-seeking. The instrumental outfit of this great
gathering was in proportion to its importance, covering
acres of ground, and constituting by far the most im-
especial honour.
276
THE GREAT REFRACTOR, YERKES OBSERVATORY
Page 277
The American Eclipse
Too much space has already been devoted to descrip-
tions of eclipses to allow of more than the brief statement
now that, on the momentous day itself, weather con-
ditions were perfect, and the spectacle proved no less
in the air, slowly recede from sight and melt into the
sky, presently perceived, with no little alarm, a frowning,
ominous thunder-pack, dark and closely compacted, rise
against the wind full in the path of the aeronauts, whom
they now
anticipated would beat a hasty retreat from so
perilous a position and effect a forced descent. To their
astonishment and concern, however, the balloon con-
tinued its course, and was slowly enveloped in the ap-
increasing rumblings.
Possibly the four in the balloon (young Bacon was of
the party) were too much occupied with their experi-
ments and the exhilaration engendered by their situation,
to pay much attention to their surroundings. Certainly
they were not in the best position to observe the sky,
hidden as it was by the great mass of the silk, drawn
closer over the car than usual by the shrinking of the
"
We were chiefly concerned that day in taking the read-
ings of our instruments, and just after making the first
entries and noting it was only five minutes from the start,
my eye caught far down the outline of a domed building
and enclosure which was strangely familiar. What place
was it so close to the Crystal Palace grounds that lay
below ? looked again, and it was no longer below but
I
already in our wake and fast receding and then the truth
;
landing-place awaited.
Open ploughed fields were beneath, and in one of these
the carcame slanting down with a crash, only instantly
to rebound again and clear a copse before she once more
touched earth. This time the impact was harder, and
there followed a few moments of ugly dragging, the heavy
anchor trailing useless behind, leaping from field to field ;
the oak was tough, very tough yet bough after bough
A ROUGH DESCENT
Page 284
The American Eclipse
temporary Review" (to which Bacon had often con-
tributed), and Manager for Messrs. Isbister and Co.,
wrote suggesting to my father
that his unique experiences
and scientific investigations might well form the contents
of an interesting volume. Bacon, who had not until then
285
XVI
There you find the purest air in all our great Metropolis :
290
Acoustic Mysteries
seemed as if exposed and desolate a spot no damage
in so
could possibly ensue, but on the slopes of the hill was a
large sheepfold from among whose hundreds of woolly
occupants the shepherd had with great care chosen
out the twenty best to be taken to the local sheep-fair
on the morrow. This select party were penned in a corner
291
The Record of an Aeronaut
night, when the little motor-car got off the track in the
darkness and was lost, hopelessly, at midnight, in the
wilds of Salisbury Plain, proved somewhat interesting
at the time. Here it may suffice to record as a curious
fact that, the same acoustic experiment being repeated
shortly afterwards, a Captain of Royal Artillery, standing
on the Wiltshire Beacon, heard without difficulty the
signals from the Hampshire Beacon, in spite of a stiff
breeze blowing at right angles to the line joining the
two stations.
As a corollary to these tests of the travel of sound
through air arose experiments as to the audibility of
made and
signals received beneath the surface of water.
The importance, from a utilitarian point of view, of
chism.
293
The Record of an Aeronaut
"
To the station."
"
And where have you come from ? "
"
From the Asylum. We have been there to tea."
The porter's face darkened and stiffened. " But I never
saw you arrive. How did you come ? "
"
Oh, we came in a balloon," was Bacon's innocent and
airy answer. But it proved altogether the wrong reply,
for the janitor, very stern by now, remarked that it was
explanations had cleared the air, and the path, the aero-
nauts could not but feel that those facetious friends who
dubbed them " balloonatics " were nearer the mark than
they supposed.
In the night balloon voyage of a couple of days later
Mr. C. W. Wyllie, the well-known artist, occupied a seat
in the car a fact permanently recorded by a fine black-
and-white drawing of the star-spangled metropolis, its
uneasy slumber as
ling gems, lying in the stillness of its
an enchanted city of a magician's dream. It was a
matchless scene indeed over which they passed, revealed
but to a very few and not less impressive was the
elect,
295
The Record of an Aeronaut
After some interval, occupied by the firing of aerial
bombs and so forth, the balloon swooped low beneath
the cloud, and soon the long trail-rope, after skipping
some telegraph wires, caught itself up in the branches
of an oak tree and held fast. No amount of pulling
sufficed to freeit, and the very effect of such efforts on
again.
But the gas of the balloon had become chilled in the
few minutes we had spent upon the earth, and when all
the sand, even to the last grain, had been exhausted, we
still rested, though lightly, on the ground. Whereupon
Mr. Spencer, hauling out his pocket-knife, cut adrift the
long heavy trail-rope, and left it coiling like a huge brown
"
snake across the field. Rail it back to London," he
shouted to the porter below, as, lightened of its weight,
we sprang upwards into the cloud, and this time, so
and expanding the chilled gas, the cloud floor fell lower
and lower beneath us, and the tell-tale aneroid marked
off a fresh thousand feet in every five minutes :
13,000,
296
DESCENT NEAR HERTFORD
Page 256
Acoustic Mysteries
" "
14,000, 15,000. Nearly three miles ! cried Bacon
" "
delightedly. By have ever been
far the highest I !
299
XVII
enemy, and try and catch the balloon and secure the
dispatches it was supposed to be conveying. The com-
petition was approved by the Commander-in-Chief, and
a fine muster of men from the 26th Middlesex, the Tower
Hamlets, the Artists' Corps, and others, in uniform,
supplemented by many civilian cyclists, vaulted on to
their bicycle saddles in hot pursuit as the balloon rose
hiding, the
if country were wooded. Pursuers and pur-
sued alike were keen for another trial, and so a fortnight
later a second race was organized, starting this time
from the Crystal Palace, and on a day when widely
different conditions prevailed.
For this time, although along the surface of the ground
the wind travelled but slowly, at the level of the clouds
it blew in strength and soon after the start a some-
;
307
The Record of an Aeronaut
cliff he would see better still. Therefore, argued Bacon,
from a balloon at not too great an elevation his power
would be yet further increased, and he would be enabled
to see thebottom of a shallow sea in a way that could not
by any other means be obtained. It needs no pointing
out that in these days of submarines, sunken mines,
torpedoes, and the like, the possibility of seeing beneath
the waves becomes of the vastest naval importance, and
thus at once it becomes evident that, far from a balloon
being useless at sea, it might, under certain circumstances,
prove of the utmost value.
This granted, there immediately arise many other
points of much interest such as the feasibility of steer-
;
"
on a British gunboat was a revelation to one
Life
whose knowledge of sea voyages had been confined to
liners. Being put on board, it is needless to say that,
though the hour was early, all was in perfect order, with
spotless decks, and every inch of brass shining brilliantly
in the sunlight. Then the cutters, which had been ashore
for our bulky gear, were hauled up to the davits with the
sheer strength of seventy men, giving way together as
' '
"
Calmer air and a rising glass have restored the hope
312
g
remains ;
the wind veers treacherously about the one
"
Friday Night.
"
The same stormy weather prevails here, with the wind
impetuous in strength, and dangerous in direction.
Upper clouds are flying so fast that the gunboat could
not possibly overhaul us if in distress, and life-belts would
not long preserve life in this wild sea. A wind due north
or due south would suffice, and would be safe with any
313
The Record of an Aeronaut
point of west in it. North-east would also serve, but
veering as it does between south and east there would
be the gravest danger of being carried out to the ocean
through the North Channel. Moreover, the present
force of gale renders inflation impossible. Our
the
'
316
Across the Irish Sea
in their thousands came pouring into Douglas. By noon
15,000 people at least were crowded into the space before
the Peveril Hotel, swarming like bees upon the roofs,
the piers, the beach, everywhere where a glimpse could be
there were voices, both human and canine, and two men
brewing, and now a wild sea of lank collies and the like,
madly tearing and entangled, surged over the ground,
while their masters belaboured them with sticks."
was Colonel Ewing, of Stroquhon, the owner of the
It
house they had passed over, and laird of the land, who
eventually appeared on the disordered scene and ex-
tended all help and hospitality in his power. Their
landing-place was the Glen of Glenesslyn, fourteen miles
from Dumfries and about eighty-five in a straight line
from Douglas, which distance they had covered in a rare
and historical sky voyage over land and sea never tra-
versed by balloon before.
323
XVIII
" 10
Private. Downing Street,
"November igth, 1904.
"
DEAR SIR,
"
In reply to your letter of the I4th, I think that
if the Russian Naval Attache desires to have your assist-
ance for any investigations bearing on the North Sea
Disaster, it would be only right that you should give it.
Anything which conduces to a knowledge of the truth
must be valuable.
"
Please keep the Admiralty informed of what you
propose to do, as I think there should be an Admiralty
representative present.
"
I remain,
" Yours faithfully,
"A. J. BALFOUR."
eighty miles
away. Was
this mere coincidence, or
"
another wonderful instance of those phenomenal far
"
shots every now and again to be met with ?
The second ascent was a fortnight later, again from the
Crystal Palace, but under widely different circumstances.
Yielding to the wishes of many who had found the previous
hunts exciting and instructive, Bacon had once again
arranged a military race of cycles versus balloon, but this
time, to vary the proceedings, and lend a new interest,
he introduced a novel feature. On the former occasions
the balloon was presumably escaping with despatches
332
The Balloon in Warfare
from beleaguered Paris, pursued by the Prussians without
the walls. This order was now reversed, and the aero-
nauts, starting from neutral ground, and taking every
advantage of upper currents, were to endeavour to drop
actually within the besieged city, thus carrying out a
manoeuvre discussed but never actually accomplished in
the war of 1871. Moreover, it was announced in the
333
The Record of an Aeronaut
The day was fine and bright, with a breeze
of the ascent
" "
so light that Paris had perforce to be declared at a
very moderate distance. There were a large muster of
military cyclists, mostly of the 26th Middlesex, whose
commanding officer had a seat in the balloon car, and,
the secret having been well preserved, the appearance of
"
the General," as he was supported to the basket, his
and limp limbs suggesting extreme nervousness,
livid face
336
ABOVE A LONDON FOG
Page 337
XIX
THE LAST
autumn and winter this year brought back to
LATE
Bacon, as they had for several years past, a return
and a renewal of observations concerning one
of interest in
of his pet subjects of investigation London fog. Per-
sonal experience alone would have sufficed to make the
matter one of much moment to him, for the state of his
lungs rendered him specially sensitive to the influence of
fog ;
and many choking winter visits to the Metropolis,
when he could scarcedraw breath, and many long, cold
journeys north, when the dark, reeking pall hung heavy
over the Black Country, were enough in themselves to
draw his special attention to our island's annual scourge.
But more than this was the experience of many of his
339
The Record of an Aeronaut
ance with great amusement. The following day they
took a liberty of another kind.
Flying westward from London on an unfamiliar track,
their voyage ended in the grounds of a private house of
more than ordinary pretensions. They had no intention,
of course, of intruding on such a spot, but when a balloon
flies close to the ground, in a wind, at the close of its
help it."
"
Do you know where you are ? Do you know what
"
house this is ?
"
I haven't the slightest idea."
"
Cumberland Lodge, the residence of His Royal
"
Highness Prince Christian said Robert, expecting the
!
340
The Last
London at a height so low that at one moment they
apparently only just escaped collision with the dome of St.
Paul's, which suddenly loomed up, a huge dark monster,
before them and later on they held animated conversa-
;
344
The Last
occupied the neighbouring Martinsell Hill. Inkpen Beacon
and Greenham Common, next in order, were manned by
Newbury and the masters and boys at Clays-
friends ;
Harrow-on-the-Hill ;
while Hampstead Heath completed
the series. To each of these stations, save the last,
were issued two kinds of signal rockets, supplied by
Messrs. Brock one a sound-signal capable of being
;
"
heard over a distance of twenty miles, the other a para-
"
chute rocket bearing a very brilliant light. Thus
each beacon had two means of passing its message on to
its neighbour across the country when, at ten o'clock
precisely on the appointed night, Bristol started the
alarm. At the same time, from Newbury, central station
of the line, Bacon's balloon climbed into the air, firing
peaceful scene, the sun lifted from the mists of the morn-
ing, and the scent of dew rose off the deserted Berkshire
downland. With daylight came a freshening of the
breeze, and the balloon sped faster, and then, nearing
the ground, her trail narrowly escaped impact with an
347
The Record of an Aeronaut
and now, at the close, it was this courageous spirit,
still
place in him. Not until his last brief illness was the truth
revealed, and then, indeed, doctors, nurses, and friends
alike stood amazed at the marvellous power of the daunt-
less mind over the frail body. The dread disease of the
lungs, for thirty years kept in abeyance and forgotten,
had, with declining years, reasserted itself, and all un-
suspected by others, and, it would seem, even by himself,
had been following its fell course for months, perhaps
for years past. Yet never for a moment in all this period
of decreasing power had Bacon relaxed his wonderful
energy, nor had his unfailing spirits flagged and this it
;
"
LONDON,
"
December i$th, 1904.
"
SIR,
"
Votes of thanks are not the order of the day at the
Birkbeck College, so I can only take this means of saying
how greatly I appreciated your lecture yesterday even-
ing. You contrived to give in a popular way a great deal
of information, your descriptions of certain voyages were
most realistic, and your lantern slides were delightful,
especially those of the clouds from above.
"
I am not looking for a reply, and I am therefore
giving no address. Again thanking you for your lecture,
and hoping that you may be able to do the things you
have projected in the not far distant future,
"
I am, yours sincerely
"
HUBERT A. GILL."
guard, the aeronaut who had shared with him his greatest
peril, and his own faithful servant. Thus were drawn
The Last
together at the last, as it were, the threads of a lifetime.
The brave eldest brother, Maunsell, who but ten days
before had buried one younger brother, now read the
burial service over another, while around the grave stood
Bacon's nearest and dearest, his best-loved friends, and
those who loved him longest and most truly.
Bacon was but in his fifty-ninth year, in the midst of
his new-found happiness, in the height of his labour aud
ambition. He might have been spared for many years
more of valuable work in the field of scientific research
and of domestic joy at home. And yet it cannot be
doubted that he died as he would have wished in
harness, with his mental strength yet undiminished, his
powers of usefulness yet unimpaired, his heart yet fresh
and young. In the recollection of the outside world his
memory will stand as the man of science, the original
knew and loved him best, it will ever seem that some-
thing of the vastness, the purity, the serenity of the
realms he so delighted in, had entered into his own soul ;
and that in the wideness of his outlook, the boundlessness
of his sympathies, the utter absence of all smallness of
"
THE HEAVENS DECLARE THE GLORY OF GOD."
351
INDEX
Animatograph
109; children born, 118, 121,
204, 207, 210, 212, 214, 271, 277
Arabia, exploring 131, 348 illness, 118 ;goes to ;
by balloon, 341,
Coldash, 124 ; first balloon
342, 343
ascent, 1 50 gives up clerical
Ashdown Coursing, 53
;
354
Index
D
D'Aguilar, Baron, 22 Galton, Sir Douglas, 338
Dale, Captain, 151, 165, 194 Gay Lussac, 218
Darwin, Professor G. H., no George the Third, King, 15, 16, 17,
Descents, rough, 163, 222, 226, 18
267, 284 Ghost stories, 31, 52, 97
Disraeli, 22 Glaisher, James, 218
Dixon, G., 10 "
Globe " newspaper, 269, 288
Dogger Bank, 324 Grant Allen, 241
"
Dominion of the Air," 326 Green, Charles, 72, 218, 252, 342
Dotheboys Hall, 87 Gregory, Dean, 234
Douglas, Lord Francis, 8 1, 91, 295 Gunpowder factory, descent in,
Douglas, Lieut. Sholto, 310 339
Douglas, Isle of Man, 312
Downing, Dr. A. M. W., 68, 196
H
Dundas, Admiral, 57 Hale, Professor, 276
Dust in the atmosphere, 287 Harston, 108
Hastings, descent at, 225
E Headlam, Rev. A., 8$, 87, 89
Earth currents, experiments, 180,
Herschel, Sir John, 234
182
" " Hollond, Robert, 72
Echo, lagging of the, 244
Hot-air military balloon, 301, 326
Echo at Woodstock, 250
Huggins, Sir William, 219, 324
Eclipse, American, 270
Hughes, Tom, 48
Indian, 203
Huxley, Professor, 113, 166
Norwegian, 195
Education of children, 149
Ellacombe, Rev. H. T., 83, 84,
Illness aloft, 247
89, 96
India, visit to, 203
Ewing, Colonel, of Stroquhon, 323
Irish Sea, crossing, 308
Eyre, Henry, 154, 159
F
Parish, Professor, 115, 220 Jackson, George, 96
"
Fawcett, Professor H., in Jacqueminot, General," 333
Field, Rev., 116 Jubilee, Diamond, 203
Fire at Wymondham, 101
Firework making, 144 K
Flaxman, 19 Kaufmann, Angelica, 19
Fog, 236, 337 Keble, 21
Footprints, mysterious, 60 Kelvin, Lord, 219
Forster, E. J., 10, 190,197,211,272 Kingsley, Charles, 38, 54, in, 128
Frederick >n, Lord Bishop of, 21 Kingsley, Maurice, 39, 110
Fremantle, Admiral, 278, 281, 285, Kirkpatrick, A. F., 1 10
307 Kite competition at Worthing,
Fuseli, 19 330
355
Index
Kite flying, 79, 80, 287 Milman, Bishop, 46
Knight, Stephen, 142, 350 Monck Mason, 72
Morley, Arnold, no
Morley, John, 81
"
Morning Post," 312, 324
Lachlan, Dr, R. 10, 221, 224
Motoring, 250, 335
Lambourn Woodlands, 23, 27, 38,
Myers, Rev. C. J., 103, 104, 109
57, 74
Myers, Fred, 103,118
Langley, Professor, 276
Myers, Gertrude, 104
Lawrence, Sir Thomas, 19
Mynn, Alfred, 76
Leatherhead, accident at, 304
Lecturing, 173, 240, 270, 286, 326,
347, 348 N
Leonid meteors, balloon voyage,
Nassau, balloon voyage, 72
254 Neath, descent at, 268
"
Levitation," 71
Nelson, Hon. and Rev. J. H, 134,
1 1 1
Lightfoot, Bishop, 94,
145, 190
Littlecote Hall, 69
Nelson, J. E., 190
Lodge, Sir Oliver, 338
Newbury, 124, 173, 190, 215, 251,
London, crossing by balloon, 159,
256, 278, 344
221, 293, 295, 340 New York, 273
London by night, 183, 184, 294,
Niagara, 278
300
Night balloon ascents, 231, 257,
Lousada, Mary, 22
294, 330, 344
Nollekens, 19
M Norfolk Broads, experiments on,
Mackenzie, Sir James, 25 292
Maidstone, descent at, 232 North Stoke, 1 24
Man, Isle of, 312, 314, 318 Norway Eclipse, 195
Maplin Lighthouse, 235, 238
Martin, Sir George, 53
Maskelyne, A., 272
Maskelyne, J. N., 192, 203, 219, Oundle, descent at, 299
251, 301, 326 Ouseley, Sir Frederick, 78
Maskelyne, Nevil, 203, 204, 212, Owen, Professor, 60
219, 234, 251, 271, 272, 277, 281,
326
Maunder, E. W., 196, 203
Maunder, Mrs. 196 Paget, Sir George, 119
Maxim, Sir Hiram, 330 Palmer, Professor E. H., 1 14
Medley, Bishop, 21 Paraboloid " ear," 220, 291
Meyrick, Rev. E., 55, 78 Parabolic sounding-board, 115,
Military balloons, 301, 306, 326 220
Military balloon race, 302, 306, Pemberton, Canon, 347
332 Ploughing match, 141
356
Ind ex
Popham, F. L., 71 Shaw, 134, 135, 170, 215
Preaching, 135, 173 Simpson, Thomas, 243
Prince of Wales, 324 Snowstorm, great, 57, 131
Printing, 137 Society of Arts, 14, 241, 287
Pritchett, Rev. W. H., 80, 82, 295 Sound experiments, see Acoustic
Proctor, R. A., 121, 241 Sounds, hearing of distant, 290,
297, 33i
Spencer, Percival, 195, 221, 225,
245, 297, 305, 310, 346
Queen Victoria's funeral, 289 Spencer, Stanley, 221, 256, 350
Stanford, Professor C. V., no
Steering trials, 319
R Stokes, Professor G. G., ill
Race, balloon v. cycle, 302, 306, Stonehenge, 187
332 Storm, balloon in, 280, 282
Ramsay, Professor, 219, 229 Swallowfield, 335, 350
Rawlinson, Sir H., 342 Swinbourne, 232
Rayleigh, Lord, 219
"Renard," H.M.S., 310, 312, 316,
3i8, 321
8
Tees, river, 86
Reynolds, Sir Joshua, 14, 1
Tennyson, Hallam, in
Ripping valve, 255
Tent-making, 137
Ritchey, Professor, 276
Robin Hood, 176 Terry, Stephen H., 10
Thatcham Church, 216, 231
Rolls, Hon. C. S., 307
Thomson, Professor J. J., 219
Royal Society, 324
Thunderstorm at Woodlands, 76
Russell, R.A., 19
Thunderstorm, balloon in, 280
Russell, Sir W. H., 62 "
Times " newspaper, 254, 277
Trinity College, Cambridge, 89,
92,97, 187,271
Trinity House, 215, 217, 235
Sadler, 73, 309
Turner, Professor H. H., 219
St. Helier, Lord, 192
Tyndall, Professor, 217, 237
St. Helier, Lady, 22, 192
St. Paul's Cathedral,
experiments
in, 181, 234, 300,
338
Schulenburg, Count von, 330
Scientific balloon Vadso, 198
ascents, 215,
Valintine, Captain T. B. H., 335
2l8, 221, 223, 227, 229, 231, 242,
Valintine, Stella, 335
245, 251, 254, 278, 28l, 282, 293,
294. 307, 33, 344
Scilly Isles, 241, 287
Sea-bottom, visibility of, 307, 320
W
Sea Reaeh, descent at, 331 Wadesborough, 273, 274
Sedgwick, Adam, no Washington, 274
357
Index
Water, travel of sound through, Winters, hard, 57, 59, 131
292 Wireless telegraphy from balloon,
Webb, Thomas, 10 251, 281
Welsh, 218 Wise, 252, 341
West, Benjamin, 19 Wood, Sir H. T., 293
BERKELEY, CA 94720
YC 19429
M3138536