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India and Indian Engineering. / Three lectures delivered at the Royal Engineer Institute, Chatham, in July 1872 cover

India and Indian Engineering. / Three lectures delivered at the Royal Engineer Institute, Chatham, in July 1872

Chapter 18: FOOTNOTES:
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About This Book

The lectures offer an engineer’s overview of the subcontinent’s physical features, climate, and peoples, describe Anglo-Indian life, and explain government organization and the Public Works Department. They outline the duties, training, and probable career of engineer officers while surveying practical construction matters: building materials and methods, foundations, barracks, churches, bridges, roads, railways, irrigation and river works, and the role of the surveying and trigonometrical operations. Practical considerations such as wages, local plant limitations, water-raising machines, and regional variations in design and maintenance are discussed to guide those preparing for service there.

FOOTNOTES:

A I remember a native’s answer to a remark of mine, which shows that there are always two sides to a question, even a question of improvement. His Persian wheel, near to which my tent had been pitched, kept me awake all night with its abominable creaking, and I asked him in the morning why he didn’t use grease to stop the noise? He said, “I am accustomed to it, and if the creaking ceases I wake up; I know the wheel has stopped because the bullock-driver has gone to sleep, and I go out and beat him.”

B The Grand Trunk Road having been first metalled with kunkur when Lord William Bentinck was Governor-General, that distinguished nobleman was called by some facetious engineer, William the Kunkurer.

LONDON: PRINTED BY W. CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS