| PART II.  A VOYAGE TO BROBDINGNAG.
7. CHAPTER VII.
 (continued)To confirm what I have now said, and further to show the miserable
 effects of a confined education, I shall here insert a passage,
 which will hardly obtain belief.  In hopes to ingratiate myself
 further into his majesty's favour, I told him of "an invention,
 discovered between three and four hundred years ago, to make a
 certain powder, into a heap of which, the smallest spark of fire
 falling, would kindle the whole in a moment, although it were as
 big as a mountain, and make it all fly up in the air together, with
 a noise and agitation greater than thunder.  That a proper quantity
 of this powder rammed into a hollow tube of brass or iron,
 according to its bigness, would drive a ball of iron or lead, with
 such violence and speed, as nothing was able to sustain its force.
 That the largest balls thus discharged, would not only destroy
 whole ranks of an army at once, but batter the strongest walls to
 the ground, sink down ships, with a thousand men in each, to the
 bottom of the sea, and when linked together by a chain, would cut
 through masts and rigging, divide hundreds of bodies in the middle,
 and lay all waste before them.  That we often put this powder into
 large hollow balls of iron, and discharged them by an engine into
 some city we were besieging, which would rip up the pavements, tear
 the houses to pieces, burst and throw splinters on every side,
 dashing out the brains of all who came near.  That I knew the
 ingredients very well, which were cheap and common; I understood
 the manner of compounding them, and could direct his workmen how to
 make those tubes, of a size proportionable to all other things in
 his majesty's kingdom, and the largest need not be above a hundred
 feet long; twenty or thirty of which tubes, charged with the proper
 quantity of powder and balls, would batter down the walls of the
 strongest town in his dominions in a few hours, or destroy the
 whole metropolis, if ever it should pretend to dispute his absolute
 commands."  This I humbly offered to his majesty, as a small
 tribute of acknowledgment, in turn for so many marks that I had
 received, of his royal favour and protection. |