Showing posts with label June 8. Show all posts
Showing posts with label June 8. Show all posts

Friday, June 8, 2012

Black Prince


Edward of Woodstock is remembered for his military victories at Crecy and Poitiers.  Scott remembered them.  The Black Prince died on June 8th, 1376. 

To the Memory of Edward the Black Prince

O for the voice of that wild horn,
On Fontarabian echoes borne,
The dying hero's call.
That told imperial Charlemagne
How Paynim sons of swarthy Spain
Had wrought his champion's fall.

Sad over earth and ocean sounding,
And England's distant cliffs astounding.
Such are the notes should say
How Britain's hope and France's fear,
Victor of Cressy and Poitier,
In Bourdeaux dying lay.

"Raise my faint head, my squires" he said,
"And let the casement be displayed.
That I may see once more
The splendor of the setting sun
Gleam on thy mirrored wave, Garonne,
And Blaye's empurpled shore."

"Like me, he sinks to Glory's sleep,
His fall the dews of evening steep,
As if in sorrow shed;
So soft shall fall the trickling tear.
When England's maids and matrons hear
Of their Black Edward dead.

"And though my sun of glory set,
Nor France nor England shall forget
The terror of my name;
And oft shall Britain's heroes rise.
New planets in these southern skies,
Through clouds of blood and flame."

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Smeaton's Tower

June 8 is a big day for lighthouse builders.  Last year's post celebrated Robert Stevenson's birth (June 8, 1724).  This year's remembrance is of John Smeaton, who was born forth-eight years later, to the day (1772).  Smeaton developed a way to employ lime in building below sea level, called hydraulic lime.  

To compare Smeaton's Eddystone with Stevenson's Bell Rock Lighthouse, the following comes from David Stevenson's "Life of Robert Stevenson, civil engineer":

" All knew the difficulties of the erection of the Eddystone Lighthouse, and the casualties to which that edifice had been liable ; and in comparing the two situations, it was generally remarked that the Eddystone was barely covered by the tide at high water, while the Bell Rock was barely uncovered at low water."

Sir Walter Scott paid a famous visit to Bell Rock Lighthouse in 1818.

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Robert Stevenson

Lighthouse builder, friend of Sir Walter Scott, and grandfather of author Robert Louis Stevenson, Robert Stevenson was born on June 8, 1772.  Stevenson's three sons followed him in the engineering trade.  The trip to the Northern Lights that Scott took with Stevenson (published in Scott's journal "Northern Lights or a Voyage in the Lighthouse Yacht to Nova Zembla and the Lord where in the summer of 1814") has been covered in a previous post on Bell Rock Lighthouse, which was designed by yesterday's subject, John Rennie.

The Museum of Scottish Lighthouses has a page on its website discussing the trip that Stevenson and Scott took together in 1814.  This page mentions that Scott may be responsible for persuading Stevenson that an old castle at Kinnaird Head should be preserved (http://www.lighthousemuseum.org.uk/index.html).