We have now to enter upon
the records of three of the most active years of Sir Andrew Ramsay's
life, during which he achieved his chief geological triumph —the
unravelling of the complicated history of the ancient volcanic region of
which Snowdon forms the centre. Though the details of one working season
were closely similar to those of another, the story has so much interest
in the progress of the geological investigation of the British Isles,
that even at the risk of a certain amount of repetition it will be most
appropriate to keep the doings of each year distinct.
By the middle of April
1848 the work of the previous winter was at last happily at an end. It
had been an exceedingly onerous time for Ramsay, and he confessed now
and then that he had nearly reached the limits of his powers of
endurance. Before the season closed he was fain sometimes to shirk an
evening reception or discourse and take refuge in the reading of
Boswell's Life of Johnson, or some other favourite. It was, therefore,
with no little alacrity that he packed his portmanteau and started for
the field again on the 18th April. From that time till the middle of
December, with the exception of a little break to attend the British
Association meeting, and a few weeks spent in Scotland, he remained in
Wales, working out the geological structure of Caernarvonshire.
Beginning his campaign
with a tour of inspection along the south coast, he made his first visit
to the Isle of Wight, and spent some pleasant days with Forbes and
Bristow rambling along the base of the Dorsetshire cliffs. They had
among the incidents of this excursion an experience of one of the
difficulties >n the life of a geological surveyor in the more bucolic
parts of England. They were crossing a farm when the farmer rushed on
them with angry execrations and violent flourishings of a large spade,
with which he threatened to make an end of them if they did not
instantly move off his land. In vain they endeavoured to expostulate and
to explain their object. The infuriated tenant only became the more
defiant. Next day he had not cooled down, but now swung round a still
more lethal weapon, would listen to no remonstrance, and had at last to
be brought to his senses by a summons before a magistrate.
After brief visits to
Aveline and Jukes in the Breidden district, and tracing some new lines
there himself, he passed on to Selwyn at Port Madoc and Dolgelli. Room
may be found here for his memorandum of one day in this visit of
inspection.
'8th June.—Up again to
the hills south-west of Craig y Cae. Got in some faults and a lot of
strange dykes and spots of squirted traps. Selwyn and I separated and
took different ground, and often met again to compare and compile. A
lovely day, and the effects over the valley of Dolgellaw and the
towering range of Cader Idris most strange and glorious. At last all the
lower clouds (which long hung like a half-fallen curtain in the
foreground, behind which the sun gloriously illumined the distant glens
and precipices) cleared away, and all along the ridge of Cader and the
giant slopes of Aran Mowddy the shadows of scattered clouds flitted by
like the images of huge flying dragons. I like th;s plan of separation
and meeting. It is pleasant to get alone among the shattered rocks,
where one can soliloquise, sing, and shout at will without any man to
think you a fool. Home to dinner at six."
On the 14th of the same
month he took up his quarters at Llanberis, for the purpose of himself
attacking Snowdon and the surrounding region. The year before, during
the preliminary traverses with the Director-General, he had been able to
take a general or bird's-eye view of this picturesque district, and had
seen enough of its geology to recognise the extraordinary interest as
well as the extreme complexity of its problems. He had determined to
devote himself heart and soul to their solution, and now at the earliest
opportunity, in full vigour of body and Bind, he had come back to carry
his resolve into effect. His life and work at Llanberis may be best
pictured in a few extracts from his diary.
'21st June.—Out north to
Marchllyn Mawr. Descended to the lake. While minutely examining this
section, and hammering along, out jumped a trilobite and a lingula, some
600 or 700 feet down in these "Cambrians," as we called them. So here at
a blow vanishes the idea, which we all believed, that the rocks are
unfossiliferous beneath the trappy series. Therefore Barmouth, Longmynd,
and Llanberis purple lower ground, if one, still do not present the
beginning of life, unless a lingula and trilobite were first called into
existence where now reposes Marchllyn Mawr.
'30th.—Out after
breakfast to touch up part of the sandstones and make out part of the
Snowdon section on the ridge above the Pass of Llanberis. What with the
interminglings of ash and slate, I see it will be a matter of extreme
difficulty, especially as the rocks are much rolled.
'1st July.—Stormy and
cold. Up the Pass of Llanberis. Set to work to trace the steep ridge of
Llechog. Up and down twice, and half up and down several times. Steep
work, consequently not much to show for it. I climbed up and down places
that from the road seemed impracticable.'
These labours were for a
brief interval suspended while Ramsay went to Swansea to attend the
meeting of the British Association. Under the hospitable roof of Mr.
Dillwyn (whose son had married one of De la Beche's daughters), and with
Sir Henry himself as a guest in the house, he spent a memorably pleasant
week. He acted again as one of the secretaries of Section C, and read a
paper ' On some Points connected with the Physical Geology of the
Silurian District between Builth and Pen y bont, Radnorshire.'
'11th October.—Splendid
morning. Started at half-past nine for the hills at the top of the Pass,
and sent Gibbs to search the ridge of Snowdon. Sir H. and Forbes [who
had recently joined him at Llanberis] followed about half-past ten for
the top. While at work on the side of Crib goch I heard Selwyn's
well-known shrill shout, and soon discovered him on the top of a crag on
Crib goch. So we joined and compared notes, and soon put matters
straight at Glas lyn. We then passed on to the top, often standing to
discuss, and just as we got to the bottom of the peak descried our party
coming down. We stayed nearly an hour up, and then followed. Forbes was
making a bad sketch where the path turns down to Pen y gwryd ; Sir H.
and Gibbs fossilising.
'20th.—Gibbs and I
started at half past nine up Snowdon. Went down to the copper mine at
Llyn-du-r'Arddu. We climbed up the face of the cliff there, just by the
great fault—a fearful place. It was frozen over in many places with ice
and snow. It took us a whole hour to climb it, and we were frequently
obliged to stop when hi a secure position to beat our hands to warm
them. We had often to cut steps in the rock and ice. Gibbs never for a
moment lost his coolness, but I got a little nervous for two or three
minutes. Once up half-way it was impossible to return; we were obliged
to go up. Had a foot or hand given way one or both of us would have been
smashed Parted on the other side of the ridge. I walked across Snowdon
to Beddgelert. The top was covered with snow ; fine view. Got to
Beddgelert by six, just before Selwyn's dinner.
'2nd November.—Out on the
ridge on the north-east end of Crib goch. Sometimes misty, but on the
whole a good day. Finished all that side as far up as the upper end of
the Pass, and to the brook that runs from Llyn Llydaw. Excellent day's
work, especially as it fairly finished all that side of the Pass.
'15th.—Up the Pass and up
Glyder by the new path I discovered yesterday opposite Pont y grorn-lech.
This mountain begins to be as familiar to me as Charing Cross, and shows
evident symptoms of at length beginning to be licked into geological
shape.
Had a grand find of large
Orthides to-day in the ashy sandstones above the nodular trap. Gibbs and
I climbed to the summit of that huge tower-like precipice, from which
the masses of volcanic breccia have fallen, misnamed a cromlech. It is a
fearful cliff to look down, but wide and quite secure at the summit.'
To geologists, and
especially to those who are familiar with Sir Andrew Ramsay's name as a
writer on glacial phenomena, and who remember his early descriptions of
the ice-work in the Pass of Llanberis, it may be of interest to know
that he seems to have been at work for some months in that district
before his attention was arrested by its glaciation. We have seen how he
curtly dismissed Buckland's views when these were criticised adversely
at the Geological Society. While he makes many notes about other
geological matters observed by him on ground which he was examining for
the first time, or mapping in detail, he never alludes to the
superficial phenomena which a few years later so fascinated him. The
first reference to the subject in his diary occurs under date 3rd August
1848, on the occasion of a visit of Robert Chambers2
to him at Llanberis. It runs as follows : ' Selwyn, Reeks, and Smyth up
Snowdon; Chambers and I out on glacial excursion up the Pass, etc. Very
instructive work.' Next day he remarks that the party, including
Chambers, 'started for Llyn Idwal, and walked across the hills to
Llanberis. Splendid examples of glacial action.' Chambers had come
purposely to see the evidence of glaciers in the Welsh valleys, and to
compare it with what he was now familiar with in Scotland. It looks as
if this visit of his had really for the first time turned his
companion's eyes from the rocks themselves to the study of the manner in
which they have been worn and striated by ice. Ramsay seems to have been
still much in the state of mind so well described by himself a few years
later. ' We recollect well the unbelief and ridicule that greeted the
announcements of Agassiz and Buck-land in 1840-41, that glaciers once
occupied the greater valleys of the Highlands of Scotland and of Wales,
and how sceptics and shallow wits, whose geology perhaps rarely extended
beyond the precincts of turnpike roads, attributed the grooving and
striation of the rocks to cart-wheels and hob-nailed boots, and the
ice-polished rock surfaces to the sliding of the caudal corduroys of
Welshmen on the rocks, to slickensides and sea-waves, and to every
cause, indeed, but the true one.'
By the 15th November,
however, he had been led to recognise everywhere the peculiar smoothing
and polishing produced by moving ice ; for on that date, with regard to
the summit of the tower-like precipice referred to in the citation
above, he remarks that this summit ' is, as usual, well grooved with
glacial undulations.' Yet it is noteworthy that these are the only
allusions to glaciation in the jottings of his first year's work in
North Wales. He had evidently not yet realised the nature and force of
the proofs of former glaciers in this country. He had never been abroad.
The revelation which the first sight of a living glacier dashes upon the
mind of a geologist was still to come to him. And thus we find him
passing day after day up and down the Pass of Llanberis, heedless of the
ice-worn knolls and perched boulders which he was soon so
enthusiastically to visit and revisit, and so lovingly to sketch and map
and describe.
It has been the custom
for foreign governments from time to time to send delegates over to this
country for the purpose of personally seeing how the work of the
Geological Survey is carried on, with a view to the initiation or
improvement of geological surveys in their own countries, or for other
purposes where a knowledge of detailed geological mapping may be
desirable. During Ramsay's long stay this year at Llanberis he had two
such foreign visits. In June A. Sismonda, the well-known Tuscan
geologist, accompanied by a young French friend, was awaiting him in his
room one evening on his return, drenched and weary, from a long tramp on
the hills, and they subsequently accompanied him to his work in the
field. 'Sismonda not being much of a climber,' Ramsay writes, '
preferred the road to the rocky sides of the hills. He is still of the
Elie de Beaumont school, believes in prodigious terrestrial actions down
to the end of late Tertiary time, working with a force of which we have
now no experience — earthquakes shaking, traps heaving, and currents
sweeping. At night I got the Frenchman and him into a hot political
argument, the Frenchman being republican, the other monarchical. Their
animated countenances and rapid gestures were most unlike anything one
sees in an English debate.'
In August the advent of
two bearded Austrians, with large slouched hats, made some sensation
among the peasants of Llanberis. One of these visitors was the
distinguished Franz Ritter von Hauer, so long Director of the Geological
Survey of Austria, and now head of the great Museum of Vienna; the other
was Dr. Moritz Homes, a well-known Austrian geologist and
palaeontologist, '''hey accompanied Ramsay in some of his tramps over
Snowdon, and received much Survey information from him for a report they
were making to their Government. The diary records the ravenous
appetites of the party at the evening meals after long days in the keen
mountain air, and speaks of 'ogres devouring fish and legs of mutton.'
Not the least pleasant
episodes in the Llanberis life were the occasional visits of members of
the Survey staff. Selwyn, who was stationed at Beddgelert, would
sometimes work over the hills and spend the evening and night with
Ramsay, who in turn occasionally crossed the watershed, and landed in
time for dinner at Beddgelert. Edward Forbes, who had recently married,
brought his bride to Llanberis, and Ramsay took a room in their cottage
while they remained there. But no colleague was so welcome as his worthy
chief. On an October evening a car arrived at Llanberis with luggage,
but no traveller. Ramsay, however, recognised the old portmanteau, and,
sure enough, immediately after up came Sir Henry 'shouting and making as
much noise as possible.' They had long consultations together on Survey
plans and prospects, and one Sunday the Director-General became
specially communicative to his younger associate. The conversation is
thus reported : ' A walk in the light rain with Sir H., more than
usually agreeable. He was very kind and confidential, speaking in the
strongest manner about his. wish that I should succeed him, and
recommending me to write some good memoir speedily for our work, to
strengthen my case. "It is not Phillips," he said, "nor any other man on
the Survey you have to fearflbut such as Murchison and Lyell, who would
make an effort. Lyell has so often of late asked me how I did this and
that, that I begin to be suspicious." He further said he would try to
get an increase of pay for me, and that independently of Oldham, on the
ground of my larger charge. I said I would fain see the others with
larger pay. He replied, "You must have it first.'"
How cordial the relations
were between the chief and his lieutenant may be gathered from two notes
of De la Beche of this period :—
London, 18th November
1848.
My dear Ramsay—It is
refreshing and a comfort to get letters from your honest self, instead
of some that I do receive, and from those whom I have laboured to
benefit. I even got one three or four days since, containing a passage
which looked marvellous like a charge of impeding your fair fame. At
least, I cannot make anything else of it. But, mind you, this is
strictly between ourselves.
You give a capital
account of yourself and your rocky parliaments, making me long to be
climbing the hills instead of wending amid sooty streets. However, I
believe I am usefully here for the good cause; for the new building is
getting on famously, and, among other things, the lecture-room has
turned out famously as to light, sound, and accommodation-space.—Ever
sincerely,
H. T. De la Beche.
London, 7th December
1848.
My dear Ramsay—Yours
rejoiceth the cockles of my heart. Those great 'dones' of yours were
right welcome, as is also the intelligence that you will be shortly up
here. I have much to consult my geological son about—fossil proceedings,
etc. etc. . . .— Ever sincerely, H. T. De la Beche.
As reminiscences of the
winter season of 1848 49 in London, a few jottings from Ramsay's diary
may be inserted here. Besides the completion of their official map-work
and memoir-writing, the geologists of the Survey were wont to signalise
their assembling in London by a dinner, where they wore their official
buttons and sang songs which were written by them for the occasion. Of
the earliest of these annual gatherings no continuous record has been
preserved, but from the year 1850 onwards the original songs have been
entered in 'Ye Recorde Boke off ye Royale Hammereres, off whyche
Anciente Ordere Tooballcane and Thorr were erlie Knyghtes.' The subjects
chosen for these metrical effusions generally bore reference to some of
the work that had been in progress during the previous year, or to some
incidents in the life of some of the staff. For a number of years Ramsay
never failed to bring his contribution to the hilarity of the
after-dinner minstrelsy, sometimes producing as many as four original
songs, and singing them with great vigour. Some of these compositions
will find a place in later pages. The chronicle does not show that De la
Beche ever ventured into rhyme, though he figures prominently in many of
the songs. But his successor, Murchison, used to write, and, to the best
of his ability, sing his song at the annual dinner; while Forbes, Smyth,
Jukes, Salter, Baily, and many of the later members of the staff were
frequent rhymesters.
The dinner this year
(1849) was held in Covent Garden, and Ramsay records of it: ' We sat
down some twenty, Sir H. in the chair, Oldham vice. A right jolly
dinner; some capital songs, all original; Salter's and Smyth's best.'
The meetings of the
Geological Society are briefly noticed in the diary. Thus under date the
3rd January we get an amusing glimpse of the Council: ' Geological
Council to-day. Tough fighting about the Museum Committees. Greenough at
five began to speak, and said he could not speak for less than an hour.
Dismay reigned. However, he was stopped, and the debate adjourned. Club
dinner after; small but pleasant party. I sat between Sir Charles Lyeli
and Forbes. So-so night at the Society after. I spoke a few words on the
Ridgeway cutting. Sir Roderick Murchison was there—the first time I have
seen him for nearly two years. He has given up the wig on the Continent,
and looks much better in consequence."
Sir Henry's tenure of
office as President of the Society would terminate at the anniversary in
February, and Lyell had been nominated as his successor. The new
President takes the chair at the annual dinner which is held on the
evening of the anniversary, and it is his part to invite such official
or other guests as he may wish to be present. Lyell had now this arduous
and troublesome duty to discharge. Ramsay writes under date the 10th
February : ' Lyell with us a long time, anxious and waiting. He is
beating up prodigiously for big-wigs to attend the Geological dinner,
and will be miserable unless Sir Robert Peel be there. Sir R. ran over
the new Museum this morning with Sir H. and Dr. Buckland. He was (says
Sir H.) "charmed." He said the building of it was an act performed in
his administration on which he could always look back with pleasure.'
The anniversary of the
Geological Society took place on the 16th February, when De la Beche
gave his second and concluding annual address before vacating the
Presidency. In this discourse he announced his expectation that the
complicated district of North Wales would be completely surveyed during
that year. In this hope he made rather too little allowance for the
excessive and difficult detail which the area contained, for it was not
found possible to finish the region until the summer of next year. He
referred to the publication of the maps of Cardiganshire and
Montgomeryshire, and to the fact that those of other parts of North
Wales were in the hands of the engraver. Dorsetshire and Derbyshire were
nearly completed, and the mapping of the Tertiary deposits had advanced
into Hampshire.
Ramsay's account of this
anniversary meeting was as follows: 'Sir H.'s speechifying day—the
Geological Anniversary. Prestwich was awarded the Wollaston medal. In
rising to present it. Sir H. upset two large oil-lamps that stood on the
table before him and made a prodigious smash. All the house laughed, and
poor P. was a trille discomposed. He has a glorious head. Sir H.'s
speech was said to be excellent. I was obliged to run off to lecture.
Went down from College to the dinner at the Thatched House Tavern. I sat
betwixt Playfair and Captain James. Reeks, Bristow, Smyth, M'Coy, Tylor,
Austen, Forbes, and I were all in a lump. Lyell made a poor speaker in
the emir. Sedgwick made a magnificent speech, the Archbishop a goodish
one, Van der Weyer a good one, Sir H. a good one, Buckland a fair, Sir
Robert Peel a splendid one, Murchison an indifferent one, from trying
too much.'
Ramsay continued
frequently to attend the Royal Institution Friday evening discourses. He
thus chronicles the evening of the 9th February: 'Went to the Royal
Institution to hear Owen on Limbs. I stood on the steps. The lecture
seemed to be admirable. Much of it I highly admired, and much of it I
did not understand. The theatre was quite full. I saw many I knew : Dr.
Fitton looking good humoured, Sir Roderick looking anxious to keep
awake, Dr Mantell looking eager, Dr. Macdonald looking jolly and anxious
for a hole in Owen's coat, Sir Henry looking attentive and queer when
Owen came to the orthodox peroration, Sir Charles and Lady Lyell looking
knightly, Lady S--looking vulgar, Nicol looking Scotch, with a doubt in
his eye, and Mrs. F--looking at her dress.'
The Red Lions kept up
their London dinners, which were sometimes specially mirthful. Thus on
the 19th April Ramsay writes: 'Walked over to Anderton's with Reeks to
dine with the Red Lions. Capital party, Lankester in the chair. I sat
between him and Sheean, a barrister, and the great original of the
Mulligan of Ballymulligan. He seems a capital fellow, though, and sang
some excellent songs. Turn-berry sang well, and put the whole table in a
roar. I scarcely recollect a better evening. Owen was capital, and made
a most humorous speech, contrasting the pleasure of sitting in this
snowy night, so cosy and merry round the table, with the horrors of the
Royal Society then sitting, where the members, on cold benches, in a
room with newly-lighted smoke-belching fires, sat listening to a dull
paper, with the prospect of one still duller before them. Percy enjoyed
himself in his usual hearty style.'
Of the dinner-parties and
receptions, room can be found here for the mention of two only.
'18th February. — Sir
Roderick Murchison's dinner at seven. When I walked into the
drawing-room Lady Murchison came running up to me with both her hands
out, and made me sit down beside her. . . . Sedgwick was there, Pentland,
and Lockhart, Sir Walter's son-in-law. I was delighted to meet him. We
had a capital evening. Lockhart was most amusing and interesting. He
told a strange story of Lord Brougham, who, it appears, never goes home
from any party without first going and taking tea with Lola Montes! I
wish I could recollect half the things he said. He is a thorough man of
the world and of society, and most gentlemanly, though a trifle abrupt
in manner. I did not altogether like the way he spoke of my old friend
Dr. Chalmers and his posthumous works.
'2nd March.—Went to
Barlow's. A crowd there ; among others Dilke and his wife, Baden Powell
and his wife, Lady Shelley, Miss Grant, Captain and Mrs. Smyth,
Warington and Miss Smyth. Louis Blanc! Some ladies made a demi-lion of
Aim. I was ashamed of them, and wondered Barlow could ask such a man to
his house. I would be ashamed to have so foolish and mischievous a
fellow in mine. He is a little pragmatical individual, insignificant in
person, and insignificant in any appearance of an enlarged intellect.
Petitesse is the word that expresses him in all things.'
In the prospect of soon
taking the field again, he wrote to Aveline from London on 27th March :—
My dear Talbot—My
lectures will be over this week. I shall examine the class on Tuesday,
and as soon after as possible, that is to say, when I have got rid of
Gibbs and the fossils, I shall fly to the country. It will probably take
me all that week after Tuesday to finish with Gibbs. Then I join Jukes
for a few days. Thereafter I shall go to the Shrewsbury country,
principally to look at the Silurians and traps that Smyth traced in,
before publishing the map. A few days should do that. I then purpose
taking you by storm on my way to Caernarvonshire, so that I may see what
sort of strange ground you are on, and also that we may hold a grand
geological palaver. I fancy it will be well-nigh the end of April ere I
can reach you. Where do you think you may have progressed to by that
time ?
But it was the usual fate
of such prospective plans of work that they could not be carried out
within the specified time. It was the 20th April before Ramsay could
leave London. He first joined Jukes, who had been at work in the
Staffordshire coal-field, and who was now about to run some horizontal
sections in the Dudley district. These two friends were becoming every
year more closely knit together in intimate friendship. Ramsay, for
instance, writes: ' Jukes rises daily in my esteem; he is a noble
fellow.' It was while this Midland work was in progress that the
official intimation reached Ramsay of his election into the Royal
Society. As far back as the 21st April he had heard from his
kind-hearted chief that he was one of the fifteen candidates selected by
the Council. He might well regard himself as fortunate in reaching this
honour after not more than eight years spent in the active prosecution
of scientific work.
On the completion of the
section-running with Jukes he once more made some critical traverses
across the Wrekin country, and it was the 20th June before he found
himself back at Llanberis to resume the survey of Caernarvonshire. Some
extracts from his diary and letters will show the nature and progress of
his occupation during the campaign of 1849.
'2nd June.—A jolly day on
Glyder; clear but cold. Got a clearer notion of things to-day than I had
in weeks of work towards the close of last year among the fogs.
'29th.—Y Glyder fawr;
glorious day, but extremely warm. Scarce seem to have made any
impression on it yet, it is so tough and difficult to climb.
'20th.—Across the hills
by Mynydd Perfedd, nearly to the Ogwen, and from thence making out the
section up to Twll-du—a most rough and craggy walk. A glorious day,
which I perfectly enjoyed. Lunched on the banks of Llyn Idwal. Then
scrambled up to Twll-du, as far up the gap as I could go—full of rare
rock-plants. Thence I scrambled up the cliff, and got home by half-past
six. Found twelve or thirteen letters.
'6th July.—Took horse and
rode to Caernarvon [to have the accounts sworn-to before a magistrate],
and got them off to Reeks. As I rode home I found them busy on this side
of Caernarvon sinking for coal. I hallooed to a man to hold my horse a
moment while I ran into the field and talked with the sinkers, etc. They
have gone down seventy yards or so, the first seven yards in drift. They
asked my opinion. I told them to let me know when they came to the coal,
and I would come down and eat it.
11th.—Over the hills
tracing the Bwlch-y-gywion trap, and so back by the felspar stuff up
some hideous banks. It was exceedingly fatiguing, but I got a good day's
work done.'
Llanberis, 12th July
1849.
My dear Talbot—At length
since Monday last we have had fine weather here, and I have worked so
hard that I am quite fatigued to-day, and stay at home to despatch some
maps, and knock off the arrears of correspondence. I think the ground I
am at present at work on is really the most fatiguing I have yet
experienced in Wales. It is not merely walking up and along steep
places, but actual climbing, hands and feet, and on hills so high that
it often takes two or three hours to get to the district in the first
instance. I fancied ere I came I should be done ere this, but I haven't
more than a half or two-thirds finished yet.
'16th.—Started at
half-past ten, and by dint of sharp walking was at Twll-du by twelve.
Down to Llyn Idwal, and traced all the lines round and through the lake
and down to the lower margin of Llyn Ogwen, and then up by the Pass-y-benglog
and the west ridge of Cwm Bochlwyd, tracing a line to the top of Y
Glyder fawr. It was dreadfully tough work, and it was past six by the
time I got to the top of Glyder, so that though I would fain have
carried on my line, I was somewhat tired both in the legs and of the
subject, and therefore deemed it wiser to leave its prosecution for a
fresh day. Overtook a nice-looking young fellow in the Pass with a
knapsack on his back, and entering into conversation, we walked down
together. It lightened the way a bit. Dined at nine.
'26th.—Immediately after
breakfast started on a long tramp round by Capel Curig way, tracing the
outside boundary of the Glyder fawr trap, and intending to come home
over Trefan. But it was too far, and, besides, the work would lead in
another direction. So I came back down that rough hillside above the
lake and Pen-y-gwryd. It is a terribly stony place. I got into the Pass
about six, and was shortly after right well pleased to spy a large
two-horse return car coming down the road. Jumped therein. Just about
Pont-y-gromlech heard a shouting, and looking up the side of Glyder, saw
all my fellow-lodgers and Dent rushing down the hill. They all got in or
on the affair, two hanging on behind like footmen. So with mickle
laughter we drove home to dinner.
'6th August.—As I could
not sleep quiet in my grave had I not been up Snowdon, to see that bit
on the Beddgelert side of Cwm-y-Clogwyn that bothered Selwyn and me so
much, I revisited it to-day, and came back over the top. No one was
there but myself.
' 10th.—Started from
Llanberis at nine. Met a Capel Curig car, and changed into it at the top
of the Pass, and was at work by half-past eleven or twelve on this side
of Y Glyder fach. The mist persecuted me dreadfully. It came rolling
down as soon as I got up a considerable height, and then, when I began
to descend a little, would partially clear up; but rushing down again, I
was forced to try the section on the low ground, and then having made
out a certain amount of that, I traced a line up the hill. No sooner had
the mist got me well up than, shifting his quarters, he rushed down the
valley, obscured Y Trefan, thicker and thicker, boiling and seething,
and if I but looked at a bit of ground, down he came upon it and
enveloped my head in the mist. At last 1 was fain to leave about seven.
When once I was well down in the valley the white clouds all cleared
away from the hills, as far as I could see, though when once or twice I
looked back with a speculating eye, I could just see the hill-tops
suddenly get partially obscured, as if old Kuhleborn were saying, "You
needn't come here, young man, or I'll be down upon you in no time." Got
home to the inn about half-past eight, and had a "rough tea."
'11th.—Started after
breakfast and began to trace lines from Y Trefan up to Y Glyder fach.
Just as I got to the top of the ridge, a gale of wind came on,
accompanied by a deluge of rain and a thick mist. I couldn't see thirty
yards. A compass was nearly useless, for the ground was so rough that I
could not walk in a given direction ten yards, and the place was cliffy
on sundry sides. By and by, calculating how the wind blew, I turned my
face to it and began carefully to descend, and after two hours' cautious
work, in difficult rocky ground, the mist suddenly partially opened, and
I found myself just above the north end of Llyn-y-Cwm. So I descended to
the Pass amid falling waters and sheets of rain, and trudged down to
Llanberis soaked to the skin, with my boots full of water. Dined at
nine.
'15th.—Out on the ridge
of Glyder Fach tracing round the lines in the direction of the east side
of Cwm Tryfan. Dreadfully wet. Yet I worked on in desperation, and as
there were some intervals between the heavy storms of rain, I got a good
deal done. Home by seven well soaked.
'24th.—Out shortly after
nine intending to have noted the section along the north side of the
valley of the Llugwy. But in true geological fashion, I got led on and
on to the top of Carnedd Llewelyn, and then taking advantage of the fine
day, I walked all along the ridge to Carnedd Dafydd, and across Braich-du
down to Llyn Ogwen. A glorious day and magnificent views of the Nant
Francon range, with Snowdon at the back ; also all the country down to
Cader, Aran Mowddy, etc. Home at seven.'
Capel Curig, 30th August
1849.
My dear Aveline—I am in
despair about getting away from here. With one clear day I could slash
in a lot of country, all up as far as the watershed of Carnedd Llewelyn
and Carnedd Dafydd, so that I am loath to leave to see you, lest that
very day should occur when I am away. Clear hill-tops are so scarce that
one day when they are so is worth a fortnight of foggy weather. I have
promised to make a run to Aber to look for lodgings for Jukes to occupy
immediately after his marriage, and if possible I shall work my way
there to-morrow, and next day trace a line from Bangor to Caernarvon,
which would enable me to colour in a large piece of map, and so make the
work look somewhat more forward. Early next week, then, I might perhaps
manage to see you, for I am anxious to do so before going to Brummagem,
where I act the swell groomsman to Jukes. It rains to-day without
intermission.—Ever yours sincerely,
Andw. C. Ramsay.
Among the letters that
came to him in this season of gloomy weather, the following note from De
la Beche may be quoted :—
57 St. Stephen's Green,
Dublin, August 1849.
My dear Ramsay—Here I am
once again. We had a famous passage last evening, and to-day I start,
with Oldham, to the south.
If you go to the Wisdom
Meeting [the meeting of the British Association at Birmingham], we can
talk over some of our matters; and if not, I would get down to you
afterwards. Matters are in good train at the Muzzy, and all going right,
as it looks now; trumps will turn up there, I trust, next spring.
Rattling by the skirts of
the Welsh hills last evening, the clouds seemed somewhat low, and
looking up the valley of the Conway, I thought of the wet bother you
have lately had, and of the troublesome quarters you are now in. 'Tis
very tiresome for you. Once out of the high grounds of Wales, and we
shall rapidly move ahead. -—Very sincerely, H. T. De i.a Beche.
Ramsay did attend the '
Wisdom Meeting,' making a rapid journey thither, and acting with Jukes
and Oldham as Secretaries of the Geological Section. But he was soon
back at work again in North Wales. After carrying his boundary-lines
from the Llanberis district northwards, until he had joined them up to
those which had been mapped from Bangor, he left Llanberis on the 3rd
September and stationed himself at Capel Curig, with the view of working
out the structure of the group of mountains rising to the east of Nant
Francon. Mr. Aveline was at work in the district lying to the
north-east, and the two colleagues wrere enabled before the end of the
season to join up their lines. Mr. Selwyn, having completed the survey
of the ground lying between the Snowdon range on the north and
Ffestiniog and Tremadoc on the south, was now at work in the Lleyn
peninsula from Pwlheli. But there were still several portions of
boundary to be settled along his northern limits. Ramsay had thus
occasion to visit both his comrades from the central station of Capel
Curig.
'6th September.—Attacked
the side of Carnedd Dafydd; a hard day's work ; was not home till
half-past seven. I found the coffee-room full; Quakers in it who had
been botanising.
'8th. — Started for
Carnedd Llewelyn; glorious day and glorious day's work. Finished this
side of the hill, all the way to the watershed, and was twice on the
top.
'2nd October.—To Pen-y-gwryd.
Struck up and had my last rap at old Glyder. I was sorry to part with
him. Many a bright and many a stormy day have I passed on his sides, and
as I scaled his cliffs many a happy hour have I spent en route home
searching for ferns. The day was glorious, bright and warm. The world
scarcely ever before seemed more bright and beautiful. I regained my
voice and sang. I perfectly regained the use of my legs, and scaled the
rocks strong and fearless as of yore.'
Capel Curig, 26th October
1849.
My dear Aveline— . . .
What precious weather since Monday till to-day! I got a good slash of
work done to-day. In a few more days I must have a meet with you again
to join up west of Llyn Crafnant and east of Llyn Geirionydd. I met Sir
H. on Saturday at Bangor, and stayed with him till Monday. We had a
short rap at Anglesey at very old rocks—older than the Cambrian.- Yours
ever sincerely,
Andw. C. Ramsay.
The last sentence of this
letter has a peculiar interest to geologists. It shows that the first
impression made on Ramsay's mind by the older rocks of Anglesey was that
they were pre-Cainbrian. He afterwards came to regard them as altered
Cambrian ; but his original and unbiassed judgment on the subject is now
recognised to have been the true one.
Capel Curig, 31st October
1849.
My dear Bill [His brother
William.] — ... Winter does indeed approach, and it often looks
sufficiently savage here, specially when the wind comes roaring down the
glen, driving the rain before it in sheets for four whole days. Then ho!
to see the rivers burst their bounds, and the lakes rise up a yard or
two! Then old Kuhleborn reigns triumphant, and I, the enchanted knight,
fall in love with all the female waiters and chambermaids, the daughters
being lantern -jawed.
Then besides, I have work
to do, and have begun to read up for the production of a third
Introductory Lecture. What awful stuff the Wernerian disciples wrote, to
be sure! I am busy analysing Jameson's (of Edinburgh) old writings. He
was a disciple and pupil of Werner's, a favourite pupil, and by St.
Anthony a Tours, I protest t' ye, it is about as easy to extract
buttermilk from millstones, as to make sense out of the maze of words in
which they lost themselves. And all that, too, under the guise of
extreme exactitude!
But, somehow or other, o'
nights, after a tough day in the air, I don't feel inclined for that dry
work, or indeed for any serious work whatever. What then? Why, I have
generally lots of letters to write, both of Survey import and in the
friendly way. There's the home-circle, Sharpe, his honour Judge Johnes,
Playfair's jewel, Mrs. Forbes, the Rev. W R. S. Williams, our vicar, Dr.
Falconer of Bath, and many others which (that I may not now weary myself
writing lists of names, and so deprive my mother of the continuation of
that inestimable catalogue with which, she will be glad to hear, I must
fill my next letter) I forbear to mention. Then 1 now and then write
verses. And yet again, when these delights fail, have I not some rare
and delectable books, poets, and historiographers? For, look ye, how can
a man weary with the choice and truth-telling histories of Alcofribas
Nasier at his elbow, purchased by me at Birmingham for the small sum of
6s. 6d., and containing more wisdom and erudition than all the collected
works of Hume and Smollet, Gibbon, Herodotus, Titus Plinius, Ferguson,
Aristotle, Macaulay, Justinian (see his Pandects), Aulus Gellius,
Avicenna, Froissart, Mrs. Trimmer, Bishop Stillingfleet, MachiJ-velli,
Lamartine, Fox of ye Martyrology, Dean Swift, Phillip de Commines, Jean
Paul Richter, Gawain Douglas, Knickerbocker, Anthony Count Hamilton,
Barbour, the Rabbi Benjamin of Tudela, Ruddiman, Plutarchus, Mosheim,
Mrs. Trollope, Thuanus, Rev. Thomas Burnett, Major Sabine, and many
others, whose names I shall continue in my next letter ?--Yours
affectionately, A. C. R.
'2nd
November.—Magnificent day. Got a splendid day's work done, taking up the
Llynbodgynwydd ash, and carrying it all round nearly to Trefriw, and so
back by Llyn Geirionydd. It was a glorious day's work, and a glorious
day to work in, so still and sunny. Speaking of peace, I conceived a
sonnet on the way home, when I saw the mountains rise high and solemn
into the sky in the twilight.'
Peace, vexed soul! there
is a God above.
What though an evil destiny hath blighted
Thy fervent hope, quenching the dawning love
That, like a penetrating sunbeam, lighted
Life's shadowy path; beyond thy narrow care
The world is bright as ever. Look around!
The earth is strewn with flowers, how passing fair!
The ringing voices of the brooks resound
In the low valleys, moss-grown rock and cam,
And the tall water-reeds reflected rest
On the deep bosom of the mountain tarn,
Telling of peace: the far-off mountain crest,
Piercing the sky, how strong, though tempest-riven!
Calleth aloud of rest, and points the way to heaven.
'19th.-—A tremendous
day's work with Selwyn, all across Dolwyddelan, up Cwm Penanmen, and
round by Pwll Francon and Bettws y coed.'
Capel Curig, 26th
November 1849.
My dear Willie—The lines
you allude to are Cowper's—Would I describe a preacher, such as Paul, I
would describe him sober, grave, sincere, etc.
You will find them, I
think, in 'The Sofa. [The lines thus quoted from memory are not quite
accurately given, and occur not in 'The Sofa,' but in 'The Timepiece,'
line 395.] It is a fine description. Martin Luther, however, is my
favourite among more modern divines. A man also ' sober, grave, sincere'
; but not always grave — a great divine and reformer and eke a great
composer of sacred music, one who was not always grave, but sang his
ballad 'with a full round mouth,' and was fond of a cask of good beer,
as his letter to the Elector of Saxony (I think) proves, when he thanked
him for one while attending a congress of divines. It is always worth
living in the world while good beer remains in it. We may thank our
Saxon ancestors for that blessing.
'28th.—After breakfast
started for the hills above Llyn Bychan on the west side of the fault;
finished them ; re-mapped Mynydd Danlyn, and crossed to the other side
by the lower end of Llyn Crafnant. While loitering about, taking a final
look, I spied Aveline coming down anxiously, with his hat pulled over
his eyes, his coat-collar turned up, his gaiters hanging about his
heels, taking long strides and looking out ahead, but never holloaing,
as another man might have done. So we joined and walked merrily down to
Trefriw together.
'4th December.—Had a long
consultation with Aveline and Jukes [at Aber] on the maps, and proved
that Snowdon, Glyder, and all are not lower than the Bala lime and
ashes. Jukes and I then started for the hills, and had a splendid day
among the intrusive traps. Aveline returned to Trefriw, and Selwyn came
up from Clynnog fawr. Joking and making fun all of us all night.'
The campaign in Wales had
thus lasted for fully six months, and was prolonged even into the stormy
and inclement weather of December. It had been eminently successful, for
a large tract of rough mountainous ground and complicated geology had
been finished, and Ramsay had been able to join up the boundary-lines of
his area with those of his colleagues on each side of him. And thus,
turning his face southwards, and paying a short visit of inspection to
Bristow in Dorsetshire, he was back in London before the end of
December, to begin the indoor labours of another winter.
As before, we may take a
few extracts from his diary of these winter months. The Geological
Society continued to offer its fortnightly meeting as a rallying-point
for the geologists in London. The Friday evening discourses of the Royal
Institution, and the receptions of its genial Secretary thereafter,
formed additional favourite gathering places. On the 1st March Murchison
gave the discourse, and Ramsay records that this veteran geologist ' was
quite nervous in the early part of his lecture, hesitating and leaving
his sentences unfinished. But as he warmed he improved, and by and by
got on very well A week later Edward Forbes occupied the same position,
and his appearance is thus chronicled in the diary : ' The place was
just about full. Forbes never appeared to such advantage. He lectured in
first-rate style, coolly and boldly. The subject was "The Distribution
of Fresh-water Fishes and Plants," which he treated certainly in a most
masterly manner, showing that it depended on recent geological
revolutions.' The next Friday is thus recorded: 'Royal Institution at
night. The Astronomer-Royal lectured to a crowded audience, Prince
Albert in the chair. Airy forgot himself, and lectured an hour and
three-quarters! The Prince fell asleep.' The following Friday it was
Ramsay's own turn to undergo the ordeal of addressing this critical and
sometimes somnolent assembly. His account of the evening is as follows:
I had half an hour's quietness in the little private room behind the
theatre. At nine I was introduced, the Duke of Northumberland in the
chair, the French Ambassador on his right, Mr. Hamilton on his left, and
in the front row were Lord Overstone, Sir John and Lady Herschel,
Wheatstone, Faraday, Murchison, etc. etc. It was literally a brilliant
audience, with many ladies. The place was full, and they listened with
great attention, occasionally quietly applauding, which gave me
encouragement. I felt I was doing it easily. The praise I got from
Herschel, Faraday, De la Beche, and others was almost too much to be
good for me.' Faraday ran up to him at the close, shook him by both
hands, and asked, ' Where did you learn to lecture?
The subject of this
discourse was ' The Geological Phenomena that have produced or modified
the Scenery of North Wales.' The most interesting feature in it,
considered with reference to the development of Ramsay's geological
opinions, was undoubtedly the prominence now assigned by him to glacial
action in connection with the landscapes of this country. This was the
first occasion, so far as we know, when he made public profession of his
belief in the former existence of glaciers in Wales, and gave at the
same time new and original proofs of their presence, particularly
instancing cases where mountain-lakes were still held back by ridges of
terminal moraine, and where large blocks of rock were perched on
ice-worn crags, where they must have been quietly deposited by the ice.
The annual festival of
the Geological Survey took place on the 16th January 1850, and is thus
recorded
'Anniversary Survey
dinner day. Sir Henry in the chair, Reeks vice. It passed off right
jollily; lots of original songs from Forbes, Jukes, Baily, Smyth,
Oldham, Hunt, Salter, and myself. I sang two.' One of his ditties was
entitled the 'Song of the Geologues of the Woods,' and the concluding
verse may be taken as a sample of its style :—
The Survey needs no
strangers
No scurvy council's bother;
We'll work with Daddy De La Beche,
And stick to one another;
With six-inch sections, maps, reports,
We yet shall see the day
When Carlisle Shall blandly smile,
And double all our pay,
And every man shall keep his wife when he doubles all our pay.
The last day of April
found Ramsay once more with Selwyn and Jukes at Merchlyn in North Wales.
There were still various unfinished parts of his area to revisit and
complete, likewise sundry lines regarding which he had to confer with
his colleagues. The progress of the work rendered it necessary that some
of the ground already surveyed should be gone over again in the light of
fresh evidence. And after the surveys were completed there remained the
laborious task of running horizontal sections across the area, including
the most rugged and mountainous ground. These occupations, together with
occasional visits of inspection, kept him busy in Wales until December—
a long spell of field-work, only interrupted by a brief visit to London,
the meeting of the British Association at Edinburgh, and an excursion to
Dublin for the purpose of seeing his friend Oldham married. The life he
led during those nine months is told in his diary and letters.
'4th May.—Out on the
hills with Selwyn as far as the cliffs under Carnedd Llewelyn, and down
by Melynllyn and Llyn dulyn. Got some good work done. Selwyn executed a
most perilous feat of cliff-climbing ; a slip and he would have been
slain.
'15th.—Out again by
Fawnog du and Carnedd Llewelyn. Its bald head was powdered with snow.
Yet the sun shone almost warmly, and having finished my work, I lay down
on a big stone on Cefn-yr-Arrig and gazed on the deep shadows of Yr Elen
and Ffynnon Caseg, the peaks of Carnedd Dafydd, and Y Glyder fawr, the
great flats of Anglesey, and the distant outlines of Man and Ireland;
and as I looked I felt my heart soften, and I arose a better man again.
Came home over Y Foel Fras, probably the last time I shall be on it.'
On the 18th of the same
month he wrote to Aveline asking if he could recollect how many years
the Survey had been at work in Glamorganshire, for, said he, ' in six
weeks or so all this North Wales will be done, and I want, if possible,
to compare times.'
On the 31st, in a letter
to Salter from Caernarvon, he writes, ' Selwyn and I are here putting a
final touch to all the difficulties and erst-seeming contradictions on
this side the Straits. Marry, it comes out smoothly, except in so far
that I fell on top o' the Rivals yesterday, and so bruised my right
shoulder that even writing is not a pleasant exercise for the arm. That
is the beginning, I fear; what say you? Is it not terrible to think that
now, when just finishing Wales, it is yet possible that I may this
summer be found at the base of a cliff, with a bloody crown and my heels
in the air?'
On the 6th June, while
still revising with Selwyn from Caernarvon, he writes thus to Aveline :
' One long fine day will do for us here now, and a day or two's drawing.
Then hey! for the sections. But first I purpose a run to Malvern for two
days, to put in some alluvium left out by Phillips, and without which we
can't publish that quarter sheet. I am a little bothered, but glad too,
as I never saw the Malvern section.
'Our work here fearfully
differs from Sir Henry's, and the worst of it is that he has, I think,
published his opinion in his Anniversary address. It is about certain
black slates which he puts under the Cambrian : they being, in fact, the
Lingula (Silurian) beds brought against it again by a fault. It will be
not a very agreeable job convincing him of this.'
The visit to Malvern and
a hurried journey to London took up only some ten days, and by the 22nd
June he was back once more at Llanberis to begin the arduous task of
running sections. This operation was conducted with a theodolite and
chain, the surveyor having the assistance of two men. The line of
section having been determined in such wise as to cross the most
instructive or important geological structures, and generally the
loftiest summits, was drawn upon the map, and the surveyor then
proceeded to measure on the ground the horizontal distances, and fix the
relative heights of the various points along the selected line. These
measurements were entered in a field-book, from which the section was
afterwards plotted on a scale, vertical and horizontal, of six inches to
a mile. When the outline of the ground had in this manner been correctly
drawn, the geological structure was inserted from the maps and
note-books, and, where needful, a final visit was made to the ground,
and minor details were adjusted on the section. These operations, it may
easily be believed, required both care and skill. They provided a
further means of checking the accuracy of the maps, and when
successfully completed, they furnished the surveyor with a valuable
additional store of materials for the preparation of the written
description of the geology of the district which he had mapped. How
Ramsay fared with his sections across the Snowdon area he must be
allowed to tell in his own words.
'25th June.—Out with my
men to begin section from the top of Snowdon to the sea. Dodged the
cliffs at the top, till from the Capel Curig road, attempting to make
them chain back a bit to Pen Wyddfa, one of them refused, and I got
exasperated, and discharged him on the spot. The fool was afraid to go
over ground that I had danced over to show him the way ten minutes
before. Home, annoyed at these Welsh blockheads.
'26th.—Got a new man and
began, leaving the cliff till I had tried them. Came across over Craig
du'r Arddu and found them more daring than myself; this will do.
'28th.—Out on the hills
in a strong joyous mood. Did a tremendous day's work, chaining right
along the face of the cliff from the top of Snowdon to the top of the
Capel Curig path, and astonishing the sightseers by the strange peaky,
cliffy places 1 planted myself on with my theodolite. Went to the top
after, and took the angles of all the lakes and principal hills round.
Home at seven. Went up Snowdon in an hour and a half, and down in an
hour.
'8th July.—Out early.
Carried on the section right down to the sea at Llanfair.'
The section-line that was
now being traced ran on the one side from the top of Snowdon parallel
with the Llanberis valley to the Menai Strait at Llanfair, whence it was
afterwards continued across Anglesey. On the other side it was prolonged
south-eastwards into the country mapped by Selwyn, and was carried by
him into Merionethshire, across Cynicht, Moel Wyn, and Aran Mowddwy, and
was continued by Aveline across Montgomerysh're. The plotting and
I final drawing of his
part of the section occupied Ramsay's time in wet weather at Llanberis.
The section, engraved by J. W. Lowry,3 is one
of the most striking in the whole series published by the Geological
Survey. The geological structure is portrayed by Ramsay and Selwyn with
a boldness and vigour, and at the same time with an artistic feeling,
which had hardly been equalled in geological section-drawing.
The meeting of the
British Association at Edinburgh offered a brief but pleasant break in
these labours, as will be gathered from the following jottings.
'1st August.—Murchison in
the chair of Section C. Old Jameson2 was there, and in the chair for a
while. He looked just like a baked mummy. I spoke twice. We had some
good papers ; Forbes's first-rate, and Mr. Bryce 3 read a good paper as
the mouthpiece of the Glasgow Natural History Society. What a rough,
strong, clever-looking man Hugh Miller4 is! My
mother was there with Jess, looking very happy and venerable.
'3rd.—This has been a
glorious day. Went down to Granton at seven and embarked on board the
Pharos steam-yacht, belonging to the Cominissioners of Northern Lights.
Dr. Robinson, Strickland, Dr. Johnston of Durham, Oldham, Allan.
M'William. Williamson, and many others there,—a most lively and amusing
part}'. We got into boats by and by at the Bell Rock [Lighthouse], and
fairly effected a landing. A wonderful sight that tower, rising direct
from the waters, so far away at sea! Then we went to the Isle of May and
the Bass Rock, where we landed and saw its wonderful covering of live
birds. There we picked up Lord Wrottesley1 and his daughter. Then to
Inchkeith, and so home. We breakfasted, lunched, dined, and had tea on
board, and gorgeous meals they were. Some splendid speeches were made,
and altogether it was quite an event in one's life. Strickland had a
gannet knocked down with a hammer, to take away with him. In the evening
to Robert Chambers's : a large assemblage.
'6th. —Breakfasted at
Chambers's. Sopwith very funny; he is witty. Opened the Section by
giving a very short abstract of my paper. Sedgwick and Murchison then
spoke of the labours of the Survey. I spent the rest of the day at the
Ethnographical Section. Latham spoke a splendid paper to the few
gentlemen round the table, Mrs. Latham and I frequently making the whole
audience. Went to the soiree in the Music Hall. When just over, Forbes
and I, to Sir David Brewster's great disgust, got up a dance in the
Assembly Rooms. We had nice little partners, but neither of us knew
their names.'
After the close of the
Association meethig he spent a few days in Glasgow with the old familiar
faces. One little touch may be quoted from his diary : ' hen the
parting. My mother came upstairs.'
"Come back as soon as you
can, for you'll not have to come often now," she said, and I was obliged
to break away and retire to my own room for a little.' By the 16th
August he was back once more at Llanberis, whence he transferred himself
to Bethesda, in order to get at various outlying pieces of ground around
Carnedd Dafydd that remained still incompletely surveyed.
De la Beche, who was
never happier than when he was able to report the completion of a large
number of square miles, began to be fidgety about the length of time
taken by the section-work in Wales, and the consequent diminution of the
area of ground surveyed. Ramsay complained to Aveline on the 27th August
that it was unfortunate to be carrying on this work 'against the grain
with the governor, for he would fain take us away and leave the thing
unfinished. I shall get away by the middle of September. You will not
get off so soon, I suppose. About a week ought to finish my mapping out
of doors. Two days indoors or three, some bad weather (as to-day), and a
diabolical section from Bettws over Pen Llithrig - y-Wrach, Carnedd
Llewelyn, and the sea—the thing is done."
'5th September.—Out by
Carnedd Dafydd, tracing in the drift. Got a good many wrinkles on the
subject. It must have been 2000 feet high at least. Came down on the
Carn Llafa side of Carnedd Dafydd and corrected these alternations by
means of the faults —a most troublesome bit of work. Home at half-past
six.
'11th.—Did a glorious
day's work with Howell1 up as far as Aber, getting all Jukes's ugly bits
of sandstone, etc., perfectly explained—a succession of domes cut off by
faults. Home at half-past seven—a long, long walk.
'12th.—Up by the coach to
Cwm Idwal. At the top we found a splendid haul of fossils, and 1 made a
grand discovery respecting the drift. [He here gives the section across
Llyn Idwal, afterwards published in Quart. Journ. Geol. Soc. vol. viii.
(1852), p. 375, showing the drift capping the summits above the lake and
a moraine forming the barrier of the water]. The moraines of these
valleys are subsequent to the drift, because, if previous, they would
have been smothered in it. But, as I before proved, the roches
moutonndes are previous to it, because they are covered by it up to
great heights. The drift on top of Cwm Idwal is 2500 feet high, and it
reaches probably a parallel height on Cwm Llafar, being thence connected
all the way with the drift of the sea-side.'
By the end of this month
he was at Dolgelli, helping Selwyn to put some finishing touches to the
mapping of the Cader Idris region. On the 12th October he was able to
make to Salter an important announcement touching the troublesome
regulation as to receipts for travelling charges. ' Henceforth and for
ever you take no more receipts for travelling expenses, and in place
thereof you must make out a travelling charges bill. I've got it all in
right order, and by a magnificent stroke of genius have got Sir Henry's
formal consent thereto.'
His colleague Oldham had
determined to resign the charge of the IrisB Geological Survey, and to
accept the direction of the Geological Survey of India.
Thomas Oldham
As a preliminary step he
arranged to be married, and asked Ramsay to support him on the wedding
day as groomsman. So the Welsh work was laid aside for a week, and
Ramsay for the first time went to Ireland. He says of his reception at
the house of the bridegroom that he was formally introduced to the
family, including ' Mr. Neptune Oldham, a big Newfoundland dog, who was
sitting on a chair at table, finally shaking hands with the dog, who
presented me with his paw in the most courteous manner. We all got at
home with each other at once.' One after another of his colleagues was
thus quitting the ranks of bachelorhood, and he could not help heaving a
sigh now and then, and wondering if his own time were ever to come.
Writing to Oldham a day or two after the marriage, these feelings
escaped in verse :—
Thomas hath found what he
desired,
The maid his heart did fix on;
He by an angel was inspired
When he popped to Miss Dixon.
Another bachelor hath
passed,
And I, for lack of gold, boys,
Ah, woe is me ! am falling fast
Into the vale of old, boys.
Oh, many a sheep's eye
have I thrown,
Have cast full many a lamb's eye,
But never yet have chanced on one
That cared to take a Rams-eye.
Would that the gods might
yet be kind,
Nor longer try their tricks on;
Then haply even I might find
Just something like Miss Dixon.
The fascination of
glacial geology was now at length beginning to influence Ramsay's
geological bent and to tinge all his views of Welsh scenery He had
practically finished the survey of the solid rocks. Their problems,
though by no means all solved, had at least been so far settled as to
allow of the preparation of maps and sections for the engraver. The
compilation of the descriptive memoir of the region would be a laborious
task, involving years of interrupted application, and many renewed
visits to the ground. But the glaciation of these Welsh mountains had
all the charm of novelty. Buckland, Darwin, and others had described
some of the proofs of former glaciers, but no one had yet attempted to
trace the story of the successive changes of geography and of climate
recorded in the various glacial deposits. We now find in Ramsay's
note-books and diaries frequent reference to the subject. While
stationed at Bethesda he made numerous observations and compiled many
notes relating to the ice-markings on the rocks, the distribution of the
drift, the grouping of perched blocks, and the position and heights of
moraines. He was in this way gradually accumulating materials for his
first essay on the glacial phenomena of this country which he
communicated a year later to the Geological Society.
There still remained a
portion of Anglesey to be surveyed before the maps of North Wales could
be regarded as complete and ready to be prepared for the engraver. De la
Beche had himself traced the lines across some parts of that county, and
other portions had been mapped by W. W. Smyth. Ramsay and Selwyn early
in November crossed into Anglesey with the object of filling in the
unfinished portions and completing the whole. The following letter from
De la Beche gave them his impressions of the structure of the ground
immediately after they had begun their work:—
London, 11th November
1850.
My dear Ramsay—Touching
the mica-slates, chlorite-slates, and other matters of the lower ground
in Anglesey, they are, of course, what they can be proved to be; and no
matter what they may be, let us get at the fact. Pray keep a bright
look-out for the conglomerates ; they are most valuable in such
investigations. You have probably examined that beneath so much of the
Cambrians as is to be seen on the banks of the Menai, near Bangor. The
conglomerates nearer Llanberis show clearly that the matter of the
Cambrians there is, in part at least, compounded of older detrita
rocks—kinds of quartz-rock being among them. If it be really right that
the Bangor beds are these said affairs brought up again, probably
similar pebbles will present themselves. Here, then, we have evidence of
detrital beds consolidated before so much of the Cambrians as such
conglomerates may form the base of.
I know not how you have
attacked the ground, but if I had been with you, which I very much
regret is not the case (there are, however, matters of more pressing
importance now under consideration here), I should have made you master
of the country at Holyhead Island, and have proceeded across country to
Amlwch, though not quite direct. Taking up the black shales
(graptolitic) based upon conglomerates of variable character, but
sometimes containing pieces as large as one's head, to these succeed a
parcel of trappean affairs— limestones beautifully laminated; above
these, shales and more arenaceous rocks, sometimes purplish, and so on
to the northern coast, where heavy conglomerates with some impure
limestones cover all. A better section is no doubt to be obtained on the
sea-coast by means of a boat, but such means of conveyance are now
(November) out of the question. The two sections confirm each other,
some beautiful granite veins and alterations near them requiring a
little caution.
At Amlwch the sections
are capital, on the coast especially; the Parys mine, a continuation of
the graptolitic slates. Near the place with an unpronounceable name, to
which I direct thee, there are some capital conglomerates. Pray look the
pebbles well over. Henslow called these Old Red; they are not so.
The upper purple beds
occupy a position very like similar beds in Ireland—the highest of the
series there known to us in Wicklow, Wexford, and Waterford. The date of
the granitic intrusions of Anglesey is clearly that of the Irish country
noticed—anterior to the deposit of the Old Red Sandstone. These upper
purple beds will interest you, not that there is anything in purple and
(their common associates) greenish beds ; they are found of all ages.
The upper purple beds in Ireland, the position of which is undoubted,
often remind one of the Cambrians of Bray Head and other places.
It seems to me, before
anything be written or published, it will be needful for you and self to
go over some of the main sections and points. This you will be the
better able to do after your present examinations.
I have not the maps with
me; indeed I am writing away from the Museum, and therefore cannot point
out more distinctly where 1 would wish you to look. There are some
capital cases of smashing on the coast from granitic intrusions beyond
(southward of) the range of the rocks holding the Parys mountain
mines—really good things ; so is the whole coast. I believe I have
walked or boated the whole in Anglesey. I should like a run with you in
Anglesey, and, please the small porcines, we will have one, whether the
lower rocks be Tertiaries turned topsy-turvy or superfine elders. I am
called to attend to other things.—Yours sincerely,
H. T. De la Beche.
It will be obvious from
this letter that the Director-General had recognised conglomerates at
the base of the Cambrian series of Anglesey, that he wished to keep an
open mind as to the relations and age of the rocks underlying these
conglomerates (which he seems to have been inclined to class as
pre-Cambrian), and that he had observed the presence of trappean or
volcanic intercalations among the older Palaeozoic formations of the
island. It was unfortunate that on all these points, where he was
undoubtedly right, his able lieutenant came to differ from him. Selwyn,
indeed, clearly detected the unconformability of the lowest Cambrian
strata upon an older series of schists. But on the maps as finally
published Ramsay's views prevailed. No pre-Cambrian rocks were there
shown. The crystalline schists were classed as ' altered Cambrian,' and
the existence of volcanic breccias and other proofs of volcanic action
were not recognised.
Apart from the geological
work, there is a peculiar interest in these few weeks of Survey doings
in Anglesey, for now, unconsciously, Ramsay was approaching one of the
momentous epochs of his life. During the day he and Selwyn traversed the
rocky northern coast of the island, charmed with ' the cliffy
foregrounds, the white breakers, the great misty plains of Anglesey, and
the snow-covered mountains rising beyond so still and grandly.' At night
they had the shelter of little inns, sometimes of the homeliest kind. In
the course of their traverses they received an invitation to make, for a
day or two, the rectory of Llanfairynghornwy their headquarters. The
following notes from his diary convey Ramsay's first impressions of this
hospitable household : ' The house is somewhat characteristic, being
full of all sorts of odds and ends, and not in the highest order, yet
everything telling that they are people who do not exclusively busy
themselves with externals. There is a character about the family. Mr.
Williams is one of the best specimens of a Welsh clergyman I have met,
polished and conversational, not at all deep, but very agreeable, and, I
should say, conscientious and hard-working. Mrs. Williams is a
remarkable woman. She was engaged [when the two geologists arrived]
enlarging a map of Palestine for the use of a school her daughter takes
care of. They all assist at wrecks, etc., and she has made a survey of
the Skerries, taking the angles with a prismatic compass. They
[afterwards] made me explain the glacial theory, and were, I think,
interested, especially Miss Louisa, who is certainly a very clever
girl.'
The geologists were asked
to come back and spend Christmas at the rectory. This pleasant visit is
thus referred to in a letter to William Ramsay, written from
Llanfairynghomwy on Christmas Day: ' We were detained at Bangor at work
till the last moment, and when done we threw ourselves into the rail,
and fled away here yesterday evening to eat a Christmas pie with our
jolly friends the Williamses, and eke a goose with apple sauce. Marry,
come up ; I'll stay a day or two and make myself merry when I am here,
for we've been working extra hard. They (the W'ms.) are bricks, and no
mistake. It is no ioke to enter into a contention with one of the young
ladies, Miss Louisa ; she is so witty that you might just as well cut
your eye-teeth before you begin.' From the very first he was greatly
interested in this bright, clever daughter of the house. In his diary he
makes frequent reference to her: ' Wit and a sense of the ludicrous is
her characteristic ; sense she has a good deal of, and warmheartedness
no end of.' 'Commenced the year (1851) dancing a polka in the hotel
ball-room, Chester. Trifling and merry enough, I believe, with the witty
Louisa for a partner; not ominous, I opine, of future partnership.'
Whether 'ominous' or not, the acquaintance developed into sincere
affection on both sides, and he found here at last the loving and
devoted woman who a year and a half afterwards was to become his wife.
But these pleasant dissipations, so fitly closing a long and arduous
season of field-work, soon came to an end; and by the 5th of January
Ramsay was once more at his post in the Survey Office in London.
The building in jermyn
Street was now rapidly approaching completion. The collections at
Craig's Court were being transferred to their new home. Already the
offices of the Survey had been removed.
There was, therefore, all
the bustle of preparation in the staff. Moreover, Sir Henry's great
scheme for the foundation of a school of applied science seemed now at
last almost certain to be carried out, and if so, it would involve
considerable change in the positions, duties, and emoluments of a number
of the officers of the establishment. Add to this that the Great
Exhibition of 1851, which would open in a few months, was the subject of
much consideration in several Government departments, and not least
among ihe officers of the Museum of Practical Geology. Occasionally a
minister would come to inspect progress. Prince Albert himself went
carefully over the building and its contents, and took much interest in
it. Among the official visits there was one which is thus narrated in
the diary. '6th March.—Lord and Lady John Russell and two children came
here to-day. He, cold and uninterested ; she, most charming and
intelligent. When I was introduced, he merely bowed coldly. Ditto to
all. Blewitt, the M.P. for Monmouth, he coldly bowed to. "Who would have
thought," said Blewitt, "that I've sat beside that man and supported him
for fourteen years ; he is a nice man to keep a party together ! " I had
a good deal of conversation with Lady Russell, and was much pleased with
her.'
The Anniversary gathering
of the Survey this winter was the most successful that had yet been
held. It is thus recorded: '18/// January 1851.—Busy at the Museum till
nearly half-past five. Then off for a short walk, and so to the Imperial
Hotel, Covent Garden, to the Annual dinner of the Royal Hammerers. And
oh, wasn't it a jolly dinner! We were : Sir Henry, Forbes, Captain
James, Captain Ibbetson, Smyth, Aveline, Bone, Baily, Bristow, Salter,
Reeks, Selwyn,
James Forbes, Playfair,
J. Arthur Phillips, Hunt Jukes, Oldham, and myself. Oldham sat on Sir
H.'s right, and I beside him. After dinner the mirth became fast and
continuous. One comical song followed another, all original. Forbes made
me roar with laughter, chanting something at me about—
'I'll lay my head on a
Bala Bala bed,
And wed a parson's daughter.
My songs were, one to the
tune of " Trab, Trab ," (trap-trap, rap-rap, map-map), and the other, "
O weel may the Survey speed," etc.' A verse or two of the second song,
which was headed ' 1841-1851,' may be quoted :—
I joined the chief in
Tenby Bay,
And shillings I caught nine,
'Twas three for breeks, and three for beer,
And shillings three to dine.
When first I left the
Land o' Cakes
And took to wearing breeches,
I little thocht that I should join
This corps o' De la Beche's.
There's Forbes's men that
work within,
And our field-working laddies,
Including Jukes, that shaved his chin
To please the Irish paddies.
When age has put our auld
pipes out,
By precept and harangue,
New lads will rise without a doubt,
Will gar the hammers bang.
The Anniversary dinner of
the Geological Society was this year chiefly memorable for one of the
most wonderful exhibitions of Sedgwick's oratory. ' At the dinner,' says
Ramsay, ' Forbes, Wilson, Aveline, Smyth, Sopwith, Captain James, Logan,
and a few more of us got together. Hopkins, the new President, was in
the chair. He was slow. Sedgwick made the great speech of the evening.
By turns he made us cry and roar with laughter, as he willed. His pathos
and his wit were equally admirable. Home at twelve.'
To the Geological Society
Ramsay communicated this winter his first paper on glacial phenomena.
For nearly three years he had been giving increased attention to this
subject. Not only had he met with many new illustrations of the history
of the glacial period, but his observations, now that his eyes were
opened to the existence and significance of the facts, led him to
perceive the meaning of many scattered surface-features in South Wales,
to which, at the time he was surveying in that region, he had paid
little heed. His paper was read on the 26th March 1851, and was
entitled, ' On the Sequence of Events during the Pleistocene Period as
evinced by the Superficial Accumulations and Surface-markings of North
Wales.' His comment on the meeting of the Society runs as follows : '
Read my paper at the Society. No man objected but Hopkins, who said
little, however, being President, and he only objected to one point, and
praised all the rest. Sir H. made a capital speech, and I think made an
impression on Hopkins on that very point that bothered him in my paper.
Murchison, Lyell, and the rest scarce ventured to criticise my views,
though they spoke well for the grasp and importance of the paper.'
A week after the reading
of this essay the following entry occurs in the diary. ' Went over my
Welsh glacier-maps at night. Walked up each valley with my mind's feet,
and took Logan with me. He said at the close that he thought I had
proved my case, but that before publication I bad better look at a few
points again.' Whether it was this advice of the veteran Canadian
geologist, or the criticism at the Society, or his own mature reflection
that determined him, he withheld the publication of the paper for more
than a year, and then issued it with a slightly altered title.1 The
chief point insisted on in the paper was the fact that the so-called
glacial period embraced two distinct glaciations : one widespread and
prior to the deposition of the Drift; the other local in valleys and
later than the Drift.
A subsequent meeting of
the Society is thus described : ' Murchison had a paper on the
Denudation and Drift of the Weald of Sussex. When the debating came,
Lyell first spoke indifferently, unable to overcome the difficulties,
but evidently feeling that Murchison's catastrophic solutions were the
greatest difficulties of all. Then followed Sharpe, who said that one
would suppose from M.'s reasoning that elephants were marine, instead of
terrestrial animals. Then came Mantell, who, in a most eloquent speech,
asked, if the great mammifers were annihilated by this catastrophe, how
is it that their bones are always found scattered and in fragments ?
Would not the ligaments and skin keep them at least so far together that
we would find the principal parts of the skeleton near? Then followed
Forbes on the same tack, then Dr. Fitton, asking for more facts and less
theory, and then myself, showing how little dependence was to be placed
on angularity or non-angularity of pebbles as a test of date. Every one
came hard down upon him. . . . He thought he was to be received with
praise, and every one opposed him.'
The Red Lions had a
curious experience this season, of which the diary contains the
subjoined account. ' At six went down with Forbes to the Red Lions at
Soyer's. It appeared that he had a great dinner to the Press, etc., of
all nations, and having made no provision for us, he dodged us into
dining with them in the great hall. His first request was that we should
dine at the same hour to save his cooks. There were all the Reds of
note, including Owen, Latham, Dr. Smith, etc. etc. He appointed the best
places at table for us, and made his people ply us with all sorts of
good dishes and wine. It was a splendid joke. In the garden was a huge
oven, in which half an ox was roasted. At a signal the covers were
removed, and it was wheeled on to great dishes on a hand-barrow. Twelve
cooks carried it, and a brass band marched before playing "The Roast
Beef of Old England," while all the guests came up behind laughing. The
Honourable Captain Fitzmaurice, Soyer had secured as principal
toast-giver and speech-maker. This man had indicted him [the great
French cook] as a nuisance, with his lights and bands o' nights. Soyer
called thrice, but the Captain would not see him; at length he somehow
forced himself into his presence, and lo! the gallant Captain now sat by
his side, and returned thanks for the Army and Navy. The whole thing was
so cleverly done that, save Latham, perhaps, all of us took it as a joke
and laughed prodigiously. Before dinner, when some of us looked a little
displeased, and Ibbetson and Henfrey remonstrated, Soyer looked round
for the meekest man, and seizing Van Voorst, " Come," said he, " let us
talk it over," and marched him away arm in arm.
'It was glorious to hear
Jules Jamin reply for the press, so rich was he in French gnmace. Forbes
I spirited up to reply for the Lions, which he did in a great row, but
with great humour."
In spite of the
multifarious London duties of this winter and spring, Ramsay contrived
to secure a few days in the field, inspecting some of the joint work of
Forbes and Bristow in the Isle of Wight and along the Dorsetshire coast.
Of this pleasant but brief Easter excursion he records as follows:—
'Easter Monday.—At the
railway-station met Lyell and Bristow. Forbes met us at Southampton, and
so, by way of Lymington and Yarmouth, we got to Freshwater Gate by
half-past six, and dined at half-past seven. I liked Lyell better; he
was often anecdotical, but principally geological all day. He laughed
tremendously when Bristow said his portmanteau was so heavy because it
contained De la Beche's new "Geological Observer." [The first edition of
this portly volume, not being divided into chapters, was a formidable
piece of reading, more especially as Sir Henry's style was not always of
the clearest. The book was sometimes irreverently called by outsiders
'The Jermyn Street Bible.' instruction, and so far from affecting the
big-wig, is not afraid to learn anything from any one. The notes he
takes are amazing; many a one he has had from me to-day. He is very
helpless in the field without people to point things out to him; quite
inexperienced and unable to see his way either physically or
geologically. He could not map a mile, but understands all when
explained, and speculates thereon well.' 'He wore spectacles half the
day, and looked ten years older [in consequence]. Logan says it is
vanity that prevents his always doing so. I think it is custom, and
perhaps his wife.']
' 25th April.—Spent the
whole day at Warbarrow. Forbes has certainly made a capital story of his
divisions of the Purbecks, which we must follow if possible. We saw a
splendid section all along the coast from thence to Kimeridge Bay, where
we got at five, and came back in the fly.
'We all like Lyell much.
He is anxious for instruction, and so far from affecting the big-wig, is
not afraid to learn anything from any one. The notes he takes are
amazing ; many a one he has had from me to-day. He is very helpless in
the field without people to point things out to him; quite inexperienced
and unable to see his way either physically or geologically. He could
not map a mile, but understands all when explained, and speculates
.thereon well. He wore spectacles half the day, and looked ten years
older [in consequence]. Logan says it is vanity that prevents his always
doing so. I think it is custom, and perhaps his wife. |