THE MAP THAT CHANGED THE WORLD
By Simon Winchester
With last year’s The Professor and the Madman, Simon Winchester
showed it was possible to make a bestseller out of the story of the creation of
the Oxford English Dictionary. In The Map That Changed the World he
returns with another true history of nineteenth century intellectual obsession:
William Smith’s drawing of the world’s first geological map.
Winchester makes a lot out of the fact that William Smith is not a household
name. He even begins his story with a description of Smith’s massive map of
the geology of England and Wales, completed in 1815, hidden behind some curtains
at Burlington House, where tourists pass by it every day unaware.
Winchester considers such neglect nothing short of shameful. Aside from being
a beautiful work in itself, Smith’s map had tremendous importance, symbolic
and real, for the development of geology, a science he is considered by many to
have virtually invented. It is also a "classic representation of the
ambition of its day" - a work "of almost unimaginably vast scope that
required great vision, energy, patience, and commitment to complete."
Finally, what Winchester describes as the signal difference that sets Smith’s
map apart from such projects as the OED or the Human Genome, is the fact that it
was entirely the work of just one man.
Being the self-educated son of a village blacksmith wasn’t a handicap for
someone intent on creating a new science. What was important was the opportunity
to make first hand observations. This was provided by the take off in the
English coal industry, which made landowners greedy to know what riches lay
beneath their fields, and necessitated, before the coming of the railway, the
digging of canals through vast swathes of countryside.
From his fieldwork Smith came to the conclusion that there was a regular
order to the stratification of minerals, and that these strata could be
classified by date through a consideration of the fossil remains to be found in
them. From there he could imagine a geological map of England and Wales.
Unfortunately, Smith’s triumph did not lead to immediate fame or fortune.
Shortly after the publication of his great map he found himself bankrupt and his
glory stolen by a group of aristocratic dilettantes who copied his map.
"Penury and plagiarism" were the two scourges of Smith’s life.
While certainly unfortunate, there is nothing particularly surprising about
Smith’s difficulties. Being the self-educated son of a village blacksmith was a handicap for gaining respectability in class-conscious English
society. And academic politics, such as they were in the nineteenth century,
were already very much part of the game. Another book of scholarly discovery
published just last year, The Keys of Egypt, describes the similar
difficulties faced by Smith’s contemporary Jean-Francois Champollion in
getting his key to the decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphics recognized.
But Winchester also protests too much on behalf of his hero. While a
remarkable achievement, Smith’s map hardly changed the world. It was the
product of an age of transforming scientific discoveries, not a cause. And it is
simply not true that Smith’s "personal labours for the good of all"
cost him his fortune. He ended up in debtor’s prison because, despite rising
to the top of a highly paid profession, he couldn’t manage his personal
finances, lived beyond his means, and made a number of disastrous investments.
Both the human and the scientific story are fascinating, which is important
because Winchester, when you get right down to it, is a total hack. The brush he
takes to history is so sweeping it is almost vulgar. The traditional
English village commons, for example, were not "insanity." They were
simply inconsistent with the development of a modern capitalist economy.
The writing complements the attitude. Everything is in the superlative, every
point charged with intensity and made dramatic with rhetorical repetitions. The
language seems to almost squeak with the strain, and the hectoring tone is not
helped by the lapses in style. Despite acknowledging the services of three
editors, two professional copy-editors, and an entire class of proofreaders,
there are far too many repetitive constructions and redundancies (like the claim
that Smith pursued geology "for its own sake alone").
The Map That Changed the World is still a good read, albeit limited by
some considerable gaps in Smith’s biography. "The horrors of his
imprisonment and the miseries of his marriage," we learn, "remain the
two great nonsubjects in William Smith’s recorded life." Such nonsubjects
that we can’t even say for sure whether they were horrors or miseries.
Winchester should be given credit for bringing an important chapter in the
history of science before the general reader. But his map of Smith’s life is
not without strata that remain unclassified.
Notes:
Review first published September 22, 2001.
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