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    The Bridge-Builders

    by Rudyard Kipling
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    Page 1 of 27
    The least that Findlayson, of the Public Works Department, expected was
    a C.I.E.; he dreamed of a C.S.I. Indeed, his friends told him that
    he deserved more. For three years he had endured heat and cold,
    disappointment, discomfort, danger, and disease, with responsibility
    almost to top-heavy for one pair of shoulders; and day by day, through
    that time, the great Kashi Bridge over the Ganges had grown under his
    charge. Now, in less than three months, if all went well, his Excellency
    the Viceroy would open the bridge in state, an archbishop would bless
    it, and the first trainload of soldiers would come over it, and there
    would be speeches.

    Findlayson, C. E., sat in his trolley on a construction line that ran
    along one of the main revetments--the huge stone-faced banks that flared
    away north and south for three miles on either side of the river and
    permitted himself to think of the end. With its approaches, his work was
    one mile and three-quarters in length; a lattice-girder bridge, trussed
    with the Findlayson truss standing on seven-and-twenty brick piers. Each
    one of those piers was twenty-four feet in diameter, capped with red
    Agra stone and sunk eighty feet below the shifting sand of the Ganges'
    bed. Above them was a railway-line fifteen feet broad; above that,
    again, a cart-road of eighteen feet, flanked with footpaths. At either

    end rose towers, of red brick, loopholed for musketry and pierced for
    big guns, and the ramp of the road was being pushed forward to their
    haunches. The raw earth-ends were crawling and alive with hundreds upon
    hundreds of tiny asses climbing out of the yawning borrow-pit below with
    sackfuls of stuff; and the hot afternoon air was filled with the
    noise of hooves, the rattle of the drivers' sticks, and the swish and
    roll-down of the dirt. The river was very low, and on the dazzling
    white sand between the three centre piers stood squat cribs of
    railway-sleepers, filled within and daubed without with mud, to support
    the last of the girders as those were riveted up. In the little deep
    water left by the drought, an overhead crane travelled to and fro
    along its spile-pier, jerking sections of iron into place, snorting and
    backing and grunting as an elephant grunts in the timberyard. Riveters
    by the hundred swarmed about the lattice side-work and the iron roof of
    the railway line hung from invisible staging under the bellies of the
    girders, clustered round the throats of the piers, and rode on the
    overhang of the footpath-stanchions; their fire-pots and the spurts of
    flame that answered each hammer-stroke showing no more than pale
    yellow in the sun's glare. East and west and north and south the
    construction-trains rattled and shrieked up and down the embankments,
    the piled trucks of
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    Page 1 of 27
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