Friends admitted there found “the great Mr. Watt” simple, modest, careless of display—much as he had been as a boy—his voice low and kindly, with still its broad, homely Scottish accent. The world would have liked to draw him from his seclusion, to caress him, to make much of him. It offered him a baronetcy, but his simple tastes lay not at all in the direction of such honours, and he refused it.

In 1819, when he was eighty-three, the end came. “I feel,” said the great man with a calm in strange contrast to the fearfulness and timidity that had accompanied him through life, “I feel that I am now come to my last illness.” He passed away quietly and without suffering. They buried him in Handsworth Church—near to his partner, Boulton—and erected an imposing statue in Westminster Abbey, and beneath it Lord Brougham wrote his famous epitaph.

To us his life has much of pathos. Men have called him “the greatest inventor in all ages,” “the most extraordinary man that the world has ever seen,” but the long years of struggle and labour and waiting, the weakness of body and the oft depression of spirit, are to us not a little sad, specially when we remember how patiently he endured, how uncomplainingly he suffered, that we might profit, that he might, as Lord Brougham has it, “increase the power of man.”


Splendid Books for Boys.


By GORDON STABLES, M.D., R.N.

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