Founders - #201 Isambard Kingdom Brunel (James Dyson's Hero)
Episode Date: August 30, 2021What I learned from reading Isambard Kingdom Brunel: The Definitive Biography of The Engineer, Visionary, and Great Briton by L.T.C. Rolt.----Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Fou...nders by investing in a subscription to Founders Notes----1. His career was to him a tremendous adventure.2. I have always made it a rule, which I have found by some years experience a safe and profitable one, to have nothing to do with newspaper articles.3. It is consoling to be thus reminded that the lunatic fringe is a hardy perennial and not a phenomenon peculiar to our day and age.4. The livelihood of anybody relying upon their penmanship is generally precarious.5. One whose high spirits seemed quite impervious to cold and discomfort.6. The ready wit and the gaiety concealed a fire and a power which would drive him, undeterred by repeated disappointments, to achieve fame and fortune.7. The name of Isambard Brunel would not mean what it does today if he had not displayed the same characteristics of dogged persistence and an unlimited capacity for hard work which distinguish the self-taught engineers.8. A great man achieves eminence by his capacity to live more fully and intensely than his fellows and in so doing his faults as well as his virtues become the more obvious.9. It is not in freedom from faults but in the ability to transcend and master them that greatness lies.10. Isambard Brunel threw into the work all that unsparing energy which was to distinguish his whole life. For as much as thirty-six hours at a time he would not leave the tunnel, pausing only for a brief cat-nap.11. The Brunels were not men to sit down with folded hands and bewail their misfortune.12. Spurred on by Brunel's unconquerable determination, the work went forward.13. Iť's a gloomy perspective and yet bad as it is I cannot with all my efforts work myself up to be down hearted.14. Never Despair has always been my motto – we may succeed yet. Persevere.15. This time he was going to win, but it would be a great struggle.16. He never lost faith in himself.17. He determined then to make perfection of his work the supreme goal and from that resolve he never subsequently wavered.18. He knew that it would be so because, as any artist or craftsman must, he had alrcady conccived the completed work in his imagination19. For it was an inviolable rule of Brunel's that he would never, under any circumstances, accept an appointment which involved divided responsibility. In any work upon which he engaged there could be only one engineer and he must have the full responsibility for the work and for the conduct of his staff.20. Plain, gentlemanly language seems to have no effect upon you. I must try stronger language and stronger measures. You are a cursed, lazy, inattentive, apathetic vagabond, and if you continue to neglect my instructions, and to show such infernal laziness, I shall send you about your business. I have frequently told you, amongst other absurd, untidy habits, that that of making drawings on the back of others was inconvenient; by your cursed neglect of that you have again wasted more of my time than your whole life is worth.21. Experiment was the breath of life to Brunel and for him precedents only existed to be questioned.22. Brunel rejected precedent and proceeded from first principles.----Get access to the World’s Most Valuable Notebook for Founders by investing in a subscription to Founders Notes----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast ----Founders Notes gives you the ability to tap into the collective knowledge of history's greatest entrepreneurs on demand. Use it to supplement the decisions you make in your work. Get access to Founders Notes here. ----“I have listened to every episode released and look forward to every episode that comes out. The only criticism I would have is that after each podcast I usually want to buy the book because I am interested so my poor wallet suffers. ” — GarethBe like Gareth. Buy a book: All the books featured on Founders Podcast
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A century is a brief span, as a historian measures time.
Yet between 1760 and 1860, a small group of men transformed the face of England
and brought about an economic and social upheaval so vast
that the life of no single person in this country remained unaffected by it.
They set in motion a process of rapid, technical evolution that still continues.
Of this small group of men, whose lives had such prodigious consequences,
Inzambard Kingdom Brunel was perhaps the outstanding personality.
He has his statue in marble.
Every boy's railway book refers to him.
You may have seen his name engraved upon that great bridge.
We may know of him as the over-ambitious author of the broad gauge or of that premature giant
among ships, the great Eastern. Perhaps we only remember him by virtue of the evocative overtones
of that remarkable name. A name in which all the pride and self-confidence of an era
seems to ring out like a brazen challenge. What sort of man was this Brunel? That is the question
which this book tries to answer. Although I've always admired Brunel's work, my inquiry was
inspired by curiosity and not by hero worship. But the further I went, the clearer did it seem to me
that large though the achievement was, the man was larger still.
Brunel, in fact, was more than a great engineer.
He was an artist and a visionary,
a great man with a strangely magnetic personality
which uniquely distinguished him
even in that age of powerful individualism
in which he moved. To learn something about such a man, about his private thoughts, his hopes and
ambitions, and about the spirit which drove him, is to know about the sources from which the
greatest of all revolutions derived its dynamic strength. That was an excerpt from the book I'm
going to talk to you about today, which is Isambard Kingdom Brunel, the definitive biography of the
engineer, visionary, and Great Britain. And it was written all the way back in 1957 by LTC Rolt.
So before I jump back into the book, I just want to tell you where I got the idea
to read a biography on Brunel. Last week, I read, I reread the autobiography of James Dyson.
And James Dyson is extremely explicit in his autobiography.
He's like, listen, Isambard Brunel, King Brunel is my personal god.
He talks about all the ideas that he learned from studying the life and career of Brunel that he applied to his own career and that he would use the example of the persistence and doggedness and perseverance
of Brunel to inspire him not to give up in his own work. And so he credits Brunel with building
the foundation of, you know, Dyson's multi-billion dollar empire that he has now.
And so I just want to reread this part again
because I think it's so important.
It speaks to the power of biography
and learning from the great people that came before us.
And so this is Dyson talking about Brunel.
Isambard Kingdom Brunel was unable to think small
and nothing was a barrier to him.
The mere fact that something had never been done before
presented to Brunel no suggestion
that the doing of it was impossible.
He was fired by an inner strength and self-belief almost impossible to imagine in this feckless age.
So I'm actually going to pause right there before I finish this paragraph. This biography of Brunel
covers his entire career. Most of my highlights, as I go back and reread them, is about what Dyson
picked up here.
The fact that he was fired by an inner strength and self-belief almost impossible to imagine.
James says it's impossible to imagine this feckless age.
Remember, James is writing this book in the early 2000s.
Funny, the author LTC Rolt is writing this book in the 50s and thinks the same exact way.
There's a lot of paragraphs in the book where Rolt's like, they just don't make people like this anymore. So let's go back to this. He was fired by an inner strength and self-belief almost impossible to imagine in this feckless age. While I could never lay claim to
the genius of a man like that, I have tried to be as confident in my vision as he was.
And it's the most important, I think, sentence that Dyson ever writes about Brunel. And at times
in my life when I have encountered difficulty and self-doubt,
I have looked to his example to fire me on.
Skipping ahead a little bit, he says,
I have told myself when people try to make me modify my ideas
that the Great Western Railway could not have worked as anything
but the vision of a single man.
We're going to go into more of Brunel's obsession
with having complete control over every single project.
Pursued with dogged determination, that was nothing less than obsession.
Throughout my story, I will try to return to Brunel and to other designers and engineers to show how identifying with them
and seeing parallels with every stage of my own life enabled me to see my career as a whole and to know that it would all turn out the way it has.
Okay, so let's go back to the biography of Brunel.
The book starts out with this story.
This guy named Charles McFarlane, who's traveling with Brunel, doesn't know him.
They're traveling in the winter from France to England.
And so they have to cross the channel in a small boat.
They wind up being pulled in this horse-drawn carriage.
And I'm going to skip that entire story. I just want to pull out one sentence because I thought this was a fantastic
description of Brunel's personality. Again, most of my highlights is just going to focus not on
what he accomplished, but who he was as a person. And so McFarlane's talking about who is this guy
and his impression of a young Brunel. Brunel's in his early 20s at this point in his life, he said he was one whose high spirits seemed quite impervious to cold and discomfort.
So they wind up striking up a conversation.
They start to become friends on this little journey.
And Brunel invites McFarlane.
He's like, hey, I'm going to my dad's house.
Do you want to come with me?
Brunel's father is a famous engineer at this point. His name is Mark Brunel. He is, well, he was at this point in history, trying to build a
tunnel under the River Thames. And it just got closed. He's going to wind up having to spend
some time in debtor's prison, which James talks about in his autobiography, the fact that, you
know, as bad as his circumstances and his financial circumstances
were before he strikes success with his Dyson vacuum, you know, he's not in debtor's prison.
But this is McFarland having a conversation with Mark Brunel. He's expressing, you know, his
condolences for the fact that at this current time in history, the tunnel is shut down. They're not
going to continue to work. It's too dangerous. They ran out of money. A bunch of people died.
And I just want to pull out Mark Brunel's positive mental attitude here.
So it says, Mark Brunel scarcely needed consolation of this kind, for he had suffered many disappointments in his lifetime and was ever philosophical in adversity.
Courage, he was fond of saying. A man who can do something and keep a warm, sanguine heart will never starve.
And then we go back to another description from McFarlane of a young Isambard kingdom.
Brunel, he's going to use the word.
There's a lot of people that describe Brunel as gaiety, which is the state or quality of being lighthearted or cheerful. But that was his external face to the world.
Inside of him burned an intense fire.
He's got a fire in the belly. He wakes up every day with a burning desire to achieve mission success. And he was willing to sacrifice his entire life to this. And in the end, he had an
early death due to a large part because of his working habits. So let me go into that now.
McFarlane could never have guessed that the ready wit and gaiety concealed a fire and a power which would
drive him, undeterred by repeated disappointments, to achieve within a decade a degree of fame and
fortune such as his father had never enjoyed. The father lived to a peaceful old age. The son sacrificed his life to his great achievements.
More about his personality.
The name of Isambard Bruneau would not mean what it does today if he had not displayed the same characteristics of dogged persistence.
How many times in Dyson's autobiography did he use that phrase, dogged persistence?
He says it over and over again.
And again, I just want to remind you
that great quote from Steve Jobs, where he's like, listen, I'm convinced half of what separates
successful entrepreneurs from the unsuccessful is pure perseverance. Most people give up.
So let's go back to this. If you had not displayed the same characteristics of dogged persistence
and an unlimited capacity for hard work, which distinguished the self-taught engineer,
for he was more than a painstaking and ingenious craftsman he was also
an artist of remarkable versatility and vivid imagination but what most distinguished him was
the force which drove him this is that fire in the belly that i just referenced that burning desire
to achieve mission success his strength lay in the imaginative flair which could seize upon and
combine ideas in new ways.
He was acutely self-conscious.
Oh, I need to pause here.
So one of the benefits of reading such an old book is because this author,
he wrote a bunch of biographies of other engineers.
He was also a trained engineer as well.
But he had access, temporary access,
to Brunel's own writing and his personal diary,
which was under lock and key.
So we actually see the difference
between the strength
and outward appearance that he would put up for the rest of society and other people,
and then his own like doubts, self-doubts, which again, everybody has, you just don't see them.
And so that's one of the benefits of this book. He was acutely self-conscious, and the private man
was a character very different from that of the cold, proud, abundantly self-confident engineer whom he impersonated to such perfection on the public stage.
And in this sentence is fantastic.
It's also going to remind me of something that Jeff Bezos said.
I'll get there in a minute.
And really a reminder that to it serves a reminder to me as I'm reading this book and hopefully to you that life is an adventure.
And to some degree, it's a waste if we just survive and not treat it
as the adventure. It is a great man achieves eminence by his capacity to live more fully
and intensely than his fellows. And in doing so, his faults as well as his virtues become the more
obvious. So I double underlined to live more fully and intensely. There's a lot of sentences
and paragraphs
and references in this book
in the fact that Brunel treated life as a grand adventure.
A large part, almost all of his life,
he treated his work as a grand adventure.
I think that's a fantastic idea.
But the second part of the sentence where it says,
listen, if you're going to be doing this,
you're going to live more fully and intensely than most people.
People are going to obviously see
what you produce in the world, but they're
going to be aware of your faults, not just your virtues, but your faults are going to become
obvious. And so when I read that, there's a great quote that I saved from Jeff Bezos,
and he was extremely young the first time he said it. He's repeated this since then.
It's become almost like a Jeffism, these sayings that he repeats over and
over again that he has for multiple decades. But he says, if you never want to be criticized,
for goodness sake, don't do anything new. All right, so let's continue here. This is a great
first sentence in this paragraph. It is not in freedom from faults, but in the ability to
transcend and master them that greatness lies. The key to that mastery is self-knowledge. And in his early
years, young Brunel's entries in his private journal reveal his own awareness, so he's self-aware,
of his own weaknesses. He writes, and this is where he just knows, this is not very different
than Coco Chanel's mindset. You know, the fact that I'm not here to play. I'm here to make a
fortune. I'm here to be great. I'm here to be the best there ever was. He writes, my self
conceit and love of glory vie with each other, which part of me shall govern, which part of them
shall govern me. The latter, meaning his love of glory. Listen to this. He knows he's like,
I'm obsessed with going down in history right and it causes him this love
of glory and he's young when he's writing this for him to be so self-aware is a really rather
amazing now i'm looking back on it uh what it's going to cause me to do some really foolish things
things hopefully he changes later in his life the latter is so strong so it said let's let's put the
word in there my my love of glory is so strong that I often do the most silly, useless things to appear to advantage before those whom I care nothing about.
Okay, so I want to fast forward in the story.
He's still, or I guess I'm going backwards in the story.
He's still, he's a late teenager, I think, at this point in his life.
And his dad does something smart.
He sets up an apprenticeship for Isambard under a master craftsman. I don't know how to pronounce,
this guy's French. I don't know how to pronounce his last name. So I'm going to call him Louis,
but he's like one of the best watchmakers at the time. And he actually inspires like an entire,
like future generations of craftsmen that, that describe themselves as like studying,
studying under the tutelage of this guy.
They use his name as like their school.
So it says,
Bruno's education was completed by a period of apprenticeship under Louis,
who was a maker of watches and scientific instruments. This last move reflects the soundness of Mark, that's his dad, Mark's judgment.
He could not have found a finer or more critical nurse for his son's mechanical talents.
Louis was regarded as the supreme craftsman in his field.
The exacting standards of workmanship under which Brunel insisted throughout his lifetime
were undoubtedly formed at this time.
In 1822, when he was 16, he returned to England and began to work with his father.
So gifted was young Brunel, and such was the intelligence and enthusiasm which he brought to bear upon his father's projects that in spite of his youth, he rapidly became more of a trusted and able partner than an assistant.
He was thus able to play a major role when in 1824, Mark Brunel embarked upon his greatest adventure, the boring of a tunnel under the Thames.
Okay, so let's get to the working conditions as they're trying to dig this tunnel.
And the fact that so many people are getting sick is actually going to give Brunel an opportunity at a very young age to actually lead the project.
So he says, because the Thames at this period was a little more than an open sewer,
the stench at the working face was appalling.
Working under such conditions, it is not surprising that throughout the whole period of construction,
sickness claimed a much heavier toll than the accident. When the work began, William Armstrong
was the resident engineer under Mark, and Brunel, or Isambard, is the assistant to William Armstrong.
Mark is going to fall sick, so he can't work, says Mark was taken seriously ill.
A few weeks later, Armstrong broke down and resigned his post.
So with his dad sick and the person he was supposed to be assisting quitting,
that puts Isambard in the role of the engineer in charge.
So it says Isambard was in the role of the engineer in charge. So it says, Isambard was in the role of the engineer in charge,
took over at short notice,
the leading part in an engineering drama
which excited the wonder of Europe.
So this is one of the largest projects
on the continent at the time,
and as such is going to have,
obviously have a lot of people's attention.
I need to remind you,
Isambard is 20 years old at this point in his life.
The fact that he was barely 20 years of age occasioned little remark.
Yet today, when an education fetish prolongs childish irresponsibility far into adolescence,
it seems almost incredible that such an immense burden of responsibility should have been laid on such young shoulders.
Remember, he's writing these words in the 1950s, right?
So he says, an educational fetish prolongs childish irresponsibility far into adolescence.
A large part of this book that I mainly omitted from my highlights
is the fact that, you know, engineers valued practical knowledge,
knowledge through experimentation, knowledge through work.
They have quite a bit of negative things to say about, you know, theoretical people. valued practical knowledge, knowledge through experimentation, knowledge through work. They
have quite a bit of negative things to say about, you know, theoretical people. There's a lot of
like professors and stuff brought in to opine about like the feasibility of what the engineers
are engineers are building. And the theorists say, hey, it's impossible. And then yet in this book,
the engineers keep proving over and over again that it's not. But I think what Mark did with
his son here is the fact that he put in work at a fairly young age, even before he was 20. This is very similar
to the most recent example that comes to mind. I read those two books, that two-part series,
rather, on the Rothschilds. The Rothschilds believed in starting younger members of the
family in the business really early. They thought it was a huge mistake taking some of the prime years, you know, from 18 to 22, 18 to 23,
and not having them work. They thought apprenticeship and actually the act of doing
the work was more educational than just sitting in a classroom. So it obviously doesn't have to
be either or. I'm just bringing to your attention the fact that, hey, for a large part of human
history, we put a lot more responsibility on younger people than we do now. And they succeeded
and thrived
at an early age and we see that is the case with isabard says isabard threw himself into work
with all that unsparing energy which was distinguished his whole life his working
habits were insane for as much as 36 hours at a time he would not leave the tunnel pausing only
for a brief catnap i got to that part and. And when I read the, that book hard drive
on a young Bill Gates, this is exactly when he, I was, he would work. He wouldn't really pay
attention to time. Uh, he would do these, these like, uh, sprints where he would work 30, 36 hours
at a time, then crash for like 10 hours, 11 hours, get back up and do it all over again.
And in that book and a young Bill Gates repeats over and over again, his desire, he wanted to be known as hardcore.
That was something that drove him.
This is a description of both the father and the son.
The Brunels were not men to sit down with folded hands and bewail their misfortune.
And so that's the reaction to, you know,
almost everything that could go wrong went wrong on this project.
It reminded me of the takeaway from James Dyson's autobiography.
Like when you get knocked down, you know, you just say,
all right, then let's give it another go.
This also reminded me of the story of Thomas Eddinson.
He was like 64, 67, something like that.
His laboratory and factory in New Jersey caught fire.
They go grab him from his house.
He comes like, he's essentially just watching his life's work burn down and he's cracking jokes.
Um, and he's basically saying, okay. And they have, they have a quote in there. It says something to
the effect of, you know, even though I'm 67 years old or 64 years old, um, I'll start again tomorrow
or I'll start a new tomorrow. And when I took away from that, it's like, obviously, I don't want this fire to happen.
It's outside of my control.
It has happened.
All I can control is my reaction to this.
So I got to get up again tomorrow.
All right, let's give it another go tomorrow.
So there's going to be a giant accident in the tunnel.
It's going to shut down construction for years and years and years.
It almost kills Brunel.
And so this is about that accident.
But really, it's about Hissenbard's unusual response. And again, we get into the person of Brunel. And so this is about that accident, but really it's about Hissenbard's
unusual response. And again, we get into the person of Brunel. Although it was obvious that
Brunel was seriously ill and that his leg was giving him acute pain, he remained as usual,
quite undaunted and refused to leave. He was unable to walk. And so he laid on a mattress
from which he directed the diving operations. So what happened is you're
digging a tunnel under a river. Multiple times, this is going to be the worst time, but multiple
times the river decides to come through the tunnel. And so you have this huge mass of water
that winds up just destroying all the equipment down there. People drown. And this is the worst
time, the one that leads him to say, okay, we're going to shut this tunnel for a long time.
He was unable to walk. So he's on a mattress, refusing to leave.
And he almost dies from this. He's going to have months of recuperation after this.
From which he directed the diving operations and would not be taken home until he had learned
the extent of the cavity in the riverbed. And so as he's
recuperating later on, he writes in this journal, this hidden journal, how he felt.
And this is where we just see he's got a very unusual mindset to somebody you know that came very
very close to dying at a young age when he laid up he recalled his terrifying experience in the
tunnel and set it down for no one but his but his eye in the private journal which he always kept
under lock and key and which was not opened until after his death this account gives us the most
revealing glimpse we have of his strange nature
a nature in which the sense of drama was so strong that it could that it could become totally
absorbing and exclude all sense of personal danger or fear so a few highlights here for you from his
journal i have now been laid up quite useless for 14 weeks. I shan't forget that day.
So this is funny because the book is quite old and the way they write, it was actually extremely
difficult. Like, uh, I almost gave up a few times and I was like, what are you going to give up in
the middle of reading a biography of Brunel? Like you missed the main point, David, what's wrong
with you? But there is like a, uh, not a language barrier here, but I had to to translate a bunch of things and then i'd had to watch a bunch of other documentaries to make sure
i'm actually understanding what the authors try to tell me but just i shan't i shan't forget the
day i shan't forget that day very uh very near foolish that that day very near finished my
journey see what i mean it's like there's a weird way to say i almost died uh when the danger is
over it is rather amusing while so he's he's saying it's amusing i almost died. When the danger is over, it is rather amusing. So he's saying
it's amusing. I almost died, right? That's a very strange response. While it existed, so while I'm
in it, I can't say the feeling was at all uncomfortable. So he's saying while it was
happening, it wasn't uncomfortable. Now here's the weird thing. The contrary. In this instance,
it was an excitement. So the water comes rushing through.
He says, when we were obliged to run, I felt nothing in particular.
I was only thinking of the best way to get to get out.
He says, and then a few lines down.
I took it very much as a matter of course that I never expected we should get out.
So he's saying, I thought I was going to die there.
Eventually, he jumps up to like this arch
so the water is beneath him like this huge rushing flow of water and he says i stood still there
nearly for a minute i was anxious for he's going to name two other people that he was working with
he wanted to make like he wasn't worried about himself he was worried about the fact that two
of his friends might have died who i felt too sure had never risen from the fall and I thought were crushed under
the great stage. I kept calling them by name to encourage them to come up through the opening
where he's standing, right? While standing there, this is the crazy thing though, while standing
there, the effect was grand. And he italicized that. The roar of the rushing water in a confined
passage and by its velocity rushing past the opening was grand.
He uses that word again. Very grand. That's the third time he describes it using the word grand.
I cannot compare it to anything. The site and the whole affair was well worth the risk.
If I had been kept under another minute, meaning if I didn't escape
one minute later, I was to die. So there it is. That's an extreme mindset of Brunel. At the time
he wrote this, he still hoped to return to his post as an engineer in charge, but it was not to
be. The accident marked a turning point in his career. Seven years would pass before work on
the tunnel was resumed. And by then he would be much too fully occupied with
projects as yet undreamed of for him to play his old role again. The biggest project of that is
going to be the Great Western Railway. Okay, so now we get to his years of frustration.
So he is 22 years old. I'm going to read my note to you. So he's 22 years old. He starts to wonder
about his future. Completely normal.
The name of the chapter is The Years of Frustration and compares his low point where he's at in his life to his friend's high point.
But yet he refuses to be negative.
Brunel had still found time to sit by the fireside, wondering what the future held for him.
And this is where we go back to his diary, his journal.
What will become of me, he asks. And then then his dreams begin i will build a fleet of
ships and build a new london bridge i will build tunnels and at last be rich and have a house built
i will be the first engineer and an example for future ones so this is his you know he's he's
his entire thing was i'm going to go down in history as being someone that is great
so now we see that it goes
back and forth, this idea of terror, euphoria and terror that you and I always talk about,
that when you're doing something difficult, building a company, whatever it is, you only
have experienced two emotions, euphoria and terror. And so now he's going to talk about his friend,
Palmer has already built new London docks and thus has established his fortune, while I have
been engaged on the tunnel, which failed. And so he's kind of beating himself up. But at the end, already built new London docks and thus has established his fortune while I have been
engaged on the tunnel, which failed. And so he's kind of beating himself up. But at the end,
he does something extremely smart. It's a gloomy perspective. And yet, bad as it is,
I cannot, with all my efforts, work myself up to be downhearted. And he goes back and forth. Again,
it's not static. He's excited about his future plans. Then he goes back. He's like, I'm a failure.
Then he goes, OK, I'm excited again. And then sometimes he finds this like weird equilibrium
where he's like, okay, well, maybe I won't be good or great. I'll just be mediocre.
I suppose a sort of middle path will be the most likely one, a mediocre success,
an engineer sometimes employed and sometimes not. And so he's talking about the fact that the
tunnel is dead.
They're not going to do it right now. They don't know if they're going to do in the future
at this point. And this is where we see that he comes up with his motto that he uses for his
entire life. So I've seen this over and over again as I read these biographies. I think it's a really
good idea to have a life motto. Let me give you some examples. Teddy Roosevelt got his life motto from his dad. Get action, which is a great way to think about how Teddy lived his life. Shackleton, Ernest Shackleton, who I told you last week is the lock screen of my phone. His motto was by endurance we conquer. Stan Lee, the guy that invented Marvel, ever upward. And so Brunel's is going
to be never despair. The tunnel will never be finished now in my father's lifetime, I fear.
However, never despair has always been my motto. We may succeed yet, persevere. Remember,
this is a note to himself. The tunnel will never be finished now in my father's lifetime,
I fear. However, never despair has always been my motto.
We may succeed yet.
Persevere.
So now back to the author.
The next few years must decide whether he would become a mediocrity or the first engineer and an example for future ones.
So that's the path.
The best ever.
I'm just going to be mediocre, right?
Persevere.
He threw himself into the task of establishing his reputation as an engineer with his unusual and unsparing energy but many disappointments lay in store for him before the
ride of fortune suddenly turned and swept him to fame so then this chapter goes through all the
different things that he's trying that never work out and so really the note of myself is there's
going to be a lot of dead ends when you're trying something new and so he winds up doing this
experiment again he doesn't really work on one thing at a time either. I mean, when he does these major
projects, he will, like once he hits on something, he will, but he has a bunch of experiments usually
in the air. He, on and off, he'd been trying this experiment. I'm going to skip over what it is
and just really give you what he took away from it. Uh, he, he's experiment. He's talking about,
you know, I've been experimenting experimenting this thing for the last six
months how is that possible and then he says something really interesting here in his diet
his journal a 140th of the remainder of my life what a life the life of a dreamer i am always
building castles in the air what time i waste so he's saying i just wasted six months on something
it didn't work out that's 140th of the remainder my life. He winds up living to the age of 52.
But I think that idea of looking at how, what, like the time you're spending and how much in
compared to how much time you have left is a very powerful idea. So it just goes on years and years
of struggle. And again, we see the comparison. Comparison is the thief of joy. It's one of the
greatest quotes I've ever come across. And he's forced to compare where he's
at in life with the other engineers that are doing great things. And he's like, why am I not doing
great things yet? These were discouraging times for Brunel. And so I'm going to skip over the
names. While Telford was lauded for his great suspension bridge, while this guy was lauded for his great suspension bridge while this guy was lauded for the new london bridge
this other one uh starts a new railway um he's saying what what do i have to show an uncompleted
tunnel a useless gas engine two abortive dock schemes of little moment and a miserable dispute
over an observatory so it's gotta be extremely difficult it's like these people are out here
doing the things that i want to do they're succeeding and i'm just running into dead end after dead end after dead
end he had in fact as we shall see already laid the foundations of his first success but this was
not evident to him as of yet for the present he had to accept the crumbs let that were let fall
by more successful engineers and so that's the main lesson from Brunel, the fact that it's not that he's persevering and everything's fine.
It's like so many people presented with what's happened in his life
would just cave and give up and go home.
And so he does some, there's, I left myself on this page,
there's a bunch of smart moves by Brunel.
And then I want to tell you about this quote from the founder of Atari.
All right, so it says,
Brunel's character was that of
was of that finely tempered resilient quality which flexes under misfortune but never breaks
he could and undoubtedly did during these years of difficulty and repeated disappointments when
fate seemed implacably against him plumb into deaths of despondency of course so i love I love one of the most, again, I hope, I really
hope you bought the book and you read James Dyson's autobiography. It's fantastic. But he
talks about, he's like, listen, he's like, it's easy for me to say now I have one of the most
profitable companies. I own a hundred percent of it. I'm wildly successful. I get to do whatever I,
you know, I want to do. I'm making tons of money. I'm making other people, I'm building products
that make other people's lives better. But it's like like it's easy for me to tell you now not to give up.
But there were days when I crawled into my bed completely depressed, convinced I was never going
to succeed. And so we see a similar time in Brunel's life. The fact is that a lot of people
have those feelings. How are you going to respond? How did James Dyson respond? How did Brunel respond?
And the fact is, he's like, listen, I'm depressed. And he talks about it over and over again,
but I'm going to keep going forward. Yet he never lost faith in himself. Once one project on which
he had pinned his hopes had failed, he would rapidly recover from that blow, dismiss it from
his mind and concentrate upon the next with undiminished energy. I mean, really, what could
you do? You can't, what could you do?
You can't, what are you going to sit there and cry over spilled milk?
What is Bruno supposed to do?
It did not work out.
I wanted it to work out.
It didn't.
What am I going to do?
It's like, I can only control what my next move is.
So this is what I mean by smart moves by him.
He wound up hiding his feelings behind a bold front of self-confidence and enthusiasm, which impressed everyone he met and which, aside from his remarkable abilities,
contributed more than anything else to his ultimate success. So he's not going to let
anybody see him get it down, see him get down rather. When I read that, when I got to this
paragraph, it really did what popped my mind is what Nolan Bushnell, founder of Atari, mentor of
Steve Jobs, told a 19-year-old Steve Jobs. Remember, he hired Steve Jobs. He had the opportunity to have
Steve Jobs as an employee. And Steve tells him, or excuse me, Nolan tells him right before he found Apple.
He's like, listen, if you pretend to be completely in control, people will assume that you are.
And so we see when you read these biographies of Steve Jobs, he took that advice and ran with it.
And we see very similar to, you know it echoes what's happening
in brunel's the fact that in his diary he's like damn it i'm you know i'm depressed i don't
understand why my why things aren't working out for me but externally especially because he's got
to go and convince people to hire him for these projects right these are large physical infrastructure
projects at the very beginning of the industrial revolution it's not like he could do it by himself
like he's got to have this this this air air aura of self-confidence i guess is the way we put it uh he
pressed everyone he met with okay he says contributed more to anything to his ultimate success
um pride never drove him another smart move pride never drove him to make the fatal mistake of
refusing any commission as too humble and why would would he do that? Because Brunel treated every single experience of his life as a learning experience. So he's just racking up all
these experiences, these jobs, some are failing, some are small and they're succeeding. And that
he uses all the things that are exposed to as lessons. Think about what Charlie Munger said,
like you really should think of ideas as tools, right? And so as you go and you're reading,
you're having all these experiences, you're just just adding tools to your toolbox and then you just pull it out at
the right time and guess what if you have a tool that no longer works dispose it and grab a new
one i think that's a very like astute observation by by a grandpa charlie there thanks to those
acute powers of so he says um he never refused the commission as being too humble. Thanks to his acute powers of observation, everything he undertook contributed something of value to that store of experience, which was the secret of his versatility.
So that leads him to be able to design.
Not only when he does the Great Western Railway, he's got to build an entire.
It's one of the largest railways in the world at the time.
He's building everything from scratch, but he builds.
He winds up making a mistake on trying to improve other parts like the actual locomotives, which which wasn't a good idea.
But he's also building like the train stations and their grand artistic buildings.
He's having to go through rock. He he builds bridges. He builds tunnels. He builds ships.
He's just extremely
versatile and all the engineering um jobs that he takes and so now we get to this fortunate
opportunity as the author was saying hey you know he laid the foundation of success he didn't
understand that at that point in his time in in his life yet though right he had that that
opportunity had not revealed itself yet so he says this is just fantastic writing here by the author
it is impossible to read history or biography without being struck by the momentous consequences of trivial events.
We are constantly reminded that life is a great and unpredictable adventure to which we awake each
morning. See, this is what I love about reading these books. And one of the main takeaways I take
for myself is like, my life needs to be adventure. I do not just want to exist. And part of that is
learning. Like I look up and down my family tree and there's just so many people that just existed.
There's no passion.
There's no adventure.
There's no thrill of life.
They're born, they lived and they died.
And I don't want that for me.
And I think, again, reading these books is just constant reminder that life can be, it's
extremely, that quote by Marc Andreessen that I absolutely love.
Marc says, the world is a very malleable
place. If you know what you want and you go for it with maximum energy and drive and passion,
the world will often reconfigure itself around you much more quickly and easily than you would
think. Constant reminder, life is a grand adventure. It can be whatever you want it to be.
All right, so let's go back to this. It is impossible to read history or biography without being struck by the momentous consequences
of trivial events. We are constantly reminded that life is a great and unpredictable adventure
to which we awake each morning. How many people do you know that actually wake up with that mindset?
Probably not many. And if you have a lot of them around you, you're extremely fortunate.
That the most humdrum or apparently wasted day may afterwards
be seen in recollection to mark a significant turning point in our lives so it is with brunel
he had not been guilty of overindulgence immediately after his accident in the tunnel
had he not been guilty of overindulgence immediately after his accident in the tunnel
his future might have taken a different course and the great works with which his name will
always be associated might never
have been built so that means there's just too many distractions where he's trying to recover
his parents send him to clifton they advise him to go to this place at clifton this is where
unbeknownst to him uh they're about to they're about to have a a contest for engineers to submit
designs to what is going to wind up being the clifton
suspension bridge i advise you to to google that take a look at this bridge uh the design came from
brunel it was completed after he died though it is gorgeous and so this is going to be this
opportunity for him uh again he's there for me let me just read this why am i running over my
point all right so it says brunel spent his covalescence sketching
and climbing about the gorges
while the tall ships came and went with the tide.
So this is just where he happens to be.
It is easy to imagine his excitement
when he heard of the proposal to build a bridge,
or excuse me, to invite engineers
to submit designs to build a bridge.
Here indeed was a project after his own heart.
So he happens just to be studying this area.
He found it very beautiful.
He's doing drawings because he's just a very interested person in general.
And then later on, they said, hey, fellow engineers,
who wants to submit designs for this bridge?
So right place, right time, right?
It says Brunel decided that, and then we see one of the things about Brunel.
He's like, I want to build great things, but they want to build great things that are beautiful.
And again, that heavily influenced Dyson.
He talks about in his autobiography over and over again, the importance of the physical design of your product.
If you're making physical products, but you can get them, you can enhance their beauty by keeping the design close to the function of the actual, like in the case of Brunel, it's a bridge.
In the case of Dyson, it's a ball barrel or a vacuum cleaner.
So we see that here, Brunel decided that the site called for a suspension bridge and he lavished upon his competition designs infinite pains and exquisite draftsmanship.
So they became not merely engineering drawings, but works of art.
Then he's traveling all around this area, studying the bridges that came before him.
And why is he doing that?
Because then you learn things that you want to copy and things that you want to avoid.
In this way, Brunel learned what to emulate and what to improve and then what to avoid.
Same motivations that Brunel has in studying the bridge that we do have studying,
you know, the careers of people that came before us.
Here's the problem. The bridge. So it's the same the same theme that you see and that you saw in Dyson's life.
Life on the last podcast, you see in Brunel's life, one step forward, two steps back, two steps forward, one step back over and over again.
There's a bunch of riots that have nothing to do with Brunel. And so they wind up pushing back this, this, he, he wins, obviously the, he gets
in charge of this project. And as soon as they started trying to make progress, there's a bunch
of civil unrest and riots break, riots break out and they, they stop working on the bridge.
All thoughts of proceeding with the Clifton Bridge scheme were forgotten. The year of 1832
passed without any further, any further moves being made, and Brunel occupied himself with other concerns.
The summer of that year found him in a state of great despondency, at odds with himself, and much discouraged by his persistent lack of success.
We go to his journal.
I'm unhappy.
Exceedingly so.
Brunel took stock of his gloomy situation.
So many irons and none of them hot.
And this is another example of even though it looks bad, he doesn't know things that are developing behind the scenes that are going to change his fortune.
Unknown to him in the autumn of 1832, same year where they're not making any progress on this bridge, when his future had seemed so dark and unpromising,
four Bristol merchants had gathered to discuss the possibility
of building a railway from Bristol to London. And so this is going to be the Great Western Railway.
He talks about, so he's submitting a bid and we go back to his journal. Was this Brunel's
long-awaited opportunity? How will this end? He wrote in his diary that night. So he doesn't know
how it's going to end, but he doesn't lack the self-belief.
Already he did not doubt that he could secure the appointment.
What then of his rivals? This is how he described the competing bids.
Admittedly, they were not very formidable.
And that word formidable comes up over and over and over again.
Let's define it.
Inspiring respect, being impressively large, powerful, intense, or capable.
So he winds up obviously getting hired as the main engineer.
And this was fantastic.
He wasted no time.
So he gets told, okay, you got the job.
He goes to work right away.
Brunel wasted no time in getting down to work.
The great adventure, there's that word again, had begun.
The great adventure had begun. And this is where we see, like his love of an arduous schedule. Many people think led to,
you know, his early death. These were such hectic days that he had he had scarcely found time to
sleep for more than an odd hour or so. His days were spent traveling about and coaches are on
horseback, while by night he worked on his reports, estimates, and calculations.
And as if this was not enough,
there were other irons to be attended to.
So it's funny, he went from, you know,
just saying, I have a bunch of irons in the fire,
none of them are hot.
Once he gets hired to be the engineer
of the Great Western Railway,
this is going to be, you know, all eyes are on him.
His services are now in demand,
so he's doing surveys for other stuff.
He's working on docks and all these other things.
And so we get we see his his his schedule at this point. He's working 20 hours a day.
I don't even know how this is possible. And so in his there's a there's one phrase that's over and over again in his diary.
Up at five, up at five, up at five, up at five a.m. Such pressure of work taxed even Brunel's extraordinary powers of endurance to the utmost.
And he confessed to one of his most trusted assistants that between ourselves, it is harder work than I like,
and I am rarely much under 20 hours a day at it.
And so why is it so difficult? Because this is unprecedented.
And that's the thing about Brunel that I don't know if I'm explaining to you.
The stuff he attempts, no one has ever done these things on the size and scale that he has,
and that's what he's
going after. While others shook their heads and pronounced that a line from London to Bristol was
too long and overambitious, his was a mind that impatiently scorned such limitations. Already in
imagination, he had traveled far beyond Bristol and soon, very soon, he would span the Atlantic
to New York. So the the western railway it must be
as to its greatness upon that he was already determined and so they're saying you can't even
build like what are you doing you can't this is way too ambitious he took it one step further
when i'm done doing the great western railway railway i want to be able to sell a ticket so
you can go all the way to new york so you get to the end of the line and then you get one of these
giant ships
that I'm going to build.
So he takes something that people think
is already crazy ambitious and adds to it.
Let me finish this paragraph.
This time he was going to win,
but it would be a great struggle.
So let's go to the diary of somebody
that's working with him
and we get a description of how Brunel worked.
I believe that at this time
he scarcely ever went to bed, though I never remembered to have seen him tired or out of spirits.
He was a very constant smoker. He'd smoke cigars 24-7 and would nap in an armchair very frequently with a cigar in his mouth. his frequent practice to rouse me out of bed at 3 at 3 a.m when i would invariably find him up and
dressed and in such glee at the fun of having curtailed my slumbers by two or three hours more
than necessary no one would have supposed that during the night he had been pouring over plans
and estimates and engrossed in a serious in serious labors which to most men would have proved
destructive of their energies during the following day what what is
this guy on like what's the i guess the equivalent of what people would take now is like modafinil or
a bunch of adderall like what is what's the 18th hunt what is the equivalent 1800s like how is this
guy doing this but i never saw him otherwise uh then full of gaiety and apparently as ready for
work as though he had been sleeping through the night and so this is brunel. He's 29 years old. He's fired up.
And he just cannot believe how fast his life changed.
Brunel's meteoric success was due not only to his undoubted genius as an engineer and his unlimited capacity for hard work,
but also the magnetic power of his extraordinary personality.
Brunel could hardly bring himself to believe it. It seemed too good to be true.
So it talks about at this point he's been working. So he's been working on the railway for almost two years.
He was so busy that he stopped updating his diary, taking down his long neglected diary from the shelf.
He reopened it and wrote, what a blank in my journal.
And during the most eventful part of my life, when I last wrote in this book, I was just emerging from obscurity.
I had been toiling away
most unprofitably at numerous things. Unprofitably, at least at the moment. What a change. The railway
now is in progress. I am the engineer to the finest work in England, and I have a handsome
salary. It is like looking back upon a fearful past, but we have succeeded. So he's talking about
rereading his past entries. It's like looking back upon a fearful past, but we have succeeded. So he's talking about rereading his past entries.
It's like looking back upon a fearful pass, but we have succeeded.
A pretty considerable capital is likely to pass through my hands at this age of 29. I really can hardly believe it when I think of it.
In fact, I am now somebody.
Everything has prospered.
Everything at this moment is sunshine.
I don't like it.
It can't last this guy
bad weather must surely come let me see the storm in time to gather my sails so he's like two things
are going to be gonna be true of course it's gonna be difficult and he's obviously gonna have a lot
of struggles it takes the almost i think eight ten years to finish the railway uh but we see an
update in his diary this is a later, he's still doing well.
And really, this is just a fantastic, you know, what we're all striving for to feel the satisfaction
with our work, right? Work is going to be a huge part of your life, a third to half of your entire
life. I mean, half if you consider the time you're actually awake, you know, if you sleep eight hours
a day, you have 16 hours left you work
for eight you know obviously some people work a lot more even if you work for eight hours a day
it's half your life when i last wrote i was in high spirits it seems but and then this guy's
working essentially if he's awake if his eyes are open he's working he's insane uh when last i wrote
i was in high spirits it seems but dreading a reverse. I dread it still, yet everything has prospered since and is still going on well.
So he's talking about, you know, the fact that his services are in high demand.
And really, this is a fantastic sentence.
It just, you know, the satisfaction, working extremely hard for something.
The things you work the hardest for, obviously the things you derive the most satisfaction out of.
And he says, really, my business is something extraordinary.
So it talks about the fact that he got married,
but he's really just married to his work.
He does have kids, but it says,
my profession is after all my only fit wife.
The author says this is probably some of the truest words he ever spoke.
He determined then to make perfection of his work the supreme goal and from that resolve he never subsequently wavered and that really is
central to understanding the life of brunel like he has one thing in his life and he's willing to
sacrifice it's if you ever had to compete head to head with somebody like this like it's it's
nearly impossible because he does he'll sacrifice family he'll sacrifice health health he'll sacrifice everything and he does he winds up he's gonna have a stroke
towards the end of the book he has a stroke he's uh you know the last great project he worked on
is this gigantic ship that's like six times larger than anything else that ever existed in the world
and they're about to launch it and he has a stroke and then he dies you know a short time later uh
let's go back to where we are though he's still building uh the railway and again to remind you and they're about to launch it and he has a stroke and then he dies a short time later.
Let's go back to where we are, though. He's still building the railway.
And again, to remind you that all the things that Brunel is attempting, they're unprecedented.
He's not. Remember when Edwin Land, the founder of Polaroid, told us, like, don't build a Me Too product.
You should only do don't do anything that anyone else can do.
And that's how he guided his career. thing with what what brunel does uh it is hard for us today to appreciate the immensity of the task which confronted brunel in the construction
of the great western railway history holds no previous record of engineering adventure
upon so heroic a scale that's fantastic writing by the way when he had written before that he
was an engineer to the finest work in england he was making no idle boast. He knew that it would be so
because as any artist or craftsman must,
he had already conceived the completed work
in his imagination.
In the course of the survey,
so surveying the land
where he's building the railway, right?
In the course of the survey,
he had covered every yard of the way
and had seen with it the mind's eye
his iron road lying wide and true he's saying he he's
manifesting this he is seeing it with his mind's eye before it exists and some people think that's
you know that's it's like willy foo foo like nonsense you know all i can say is i've i've
this this idea this is important to visualization uh you, you go read Arnold Schwarzenegger talks about the over and over again. He sat up at night
and saw his life. He told himself over and over again, I'm already the greatest bodybuilder in
the world. I'm already making millions. I'm already going to be the greatest, uh, uh, highest
paid actor in Hollywood, you know, way before it happened, Bob Noyce, let's take a more specific
example. Bob Noyce, founder of Intel, fair child, semiconductor. If you name other entrepreneurs
in history, they're more successful than this guy.
There's not, that list is extremely small.
He talks about every night he would sit down for his entire life.
He started it because he was like, if I remember correctly, like a diver, like diving into pools.
And he would visualize, see himself the night before, the successful completion of his dives.
And then he carried that into his business career later on.
In sports, this works.
Kobe Bryant talked about, you know, well before he had that 81 point game, he talked about being a kid and visualizing just getting hot and hitting every shot.
And he talks about, he's like, in a dream, you know, you're not going to be like, oh, wait, you know, I brick that three.
I stopped at 50 points.
So he says, in my mind, I had scored over 100 points. you know you're not gonna be like oh wait you know oh i bricked that three i stopped at 50 points so
he says in my mind i had scored over 100 points i saw myself do it before i did it it sounds if you
take an isolation it does sound a little bit crazy but the mind is something we just don't understand
and it's extremely extremely powerful so here we have again brunel before this gigantic
unprecedented railway something that he's struggled through to do for
almost a decade before it exists he's like i saw it i traveled when it was just grass and gravel
and rock and i saw it and now now all i have to do is go through the motions to bring this dream
into reality it's extremely powerful i got goosebumps right now. To gather about him men who could satisfy his exacting standards
and match his tireless energy
was not easy.
And he was often disappointed.
And so let's go back to this idea
or let's not go back to it
because I just,
let's continue this idea of
this is an example of an employee
not living up to Brunel's standards, right?
And we've seen this over and over again.
When I read stuff like this, the one thing that's lodged in my mind because I've read like four or five books about David Ogilvie, This is an example of an employee not living up to Brunel's standards. And we've seen this over and over again.
When I read stuff like this, the one thing that's lodged in my mind, because I've read like four or five books about David Ogilvie.
He's a personal hero of mine, somebody I aspire to be like for sure.
Somebody I don't measure up to at all yet, but I hope to in my completed form.
And what he learned from, he was an Englishman in a French kitchen for a master chef. But this guy named Petard, I think is how you pronounce it.
And that's something that he learned over and over again.
It's like, listen, you cannot let mediocre people on your team at all.
This guy would wind up firing people because their pastries wouldn't rise high enough.
He was extreme.
Ogilvy learned from him.
He was a young man at the time, probably in his 20s when he was working for this guy.
One of the most respected chefs in Paris.
Like, okay, this is how like the customers what's interesting to me is
like that part is hidden from the customer right the customer is like wow this food's the greatest
this experience at this restaurant's amazing they don't see all the work behind the scenes that
ogilvy's getting to see right and it's just relentless dedication to extreme excellence
in fact i'm about to give you another bonus episode here in the next few days.
And I'm rereading this guy.
This guy did something smart.
It has to do with Buffett shareholder letters that are organized on topic and not by year.
And so that'll come out in a few days because I'm almost done reading.
But I'm glad I'm reading this at the same time as reading this book because Buffett talks about that he's like listen you got to cut the mediocre people like you can't have
mediocre people in management even if they're nice like you just can't uh very few people can
can run business as well there's a lot of you know mediocrity and bad decision making so
like you when you find like you have to have a good person in charge of the business whether
it's yourself whether it's somebody else so he's saying you have to have a good person in charge of the business, whether it's yourself, whether it's somebody else.
So he's saying you got to cut the mediocre people out. That's exactly what Ogilvy would say as well.
And so we see Brunel, you know, being kind of ruthless about this.
The assistant who made the mistake receives the following missive.
He must have felt he must have been left decidedly weak in the knee.
So this is now Brunel talking about somebody on the Great Western Railway that made a mistake. Plain gentlemanly language seems to have no effect
upon you. I must try stronger language and stronger measures. You are a cursed, lazy,
inattentive, apathetic vagabond. And if you continue to neglect my instructions and to show such infernal laziness,
I shall send you about your business. I have frequently told you, amongst other absurd,
untidy habits, that that of making drawings on the back of others was inconvenient.
By your cursed neglect of that, you have again wasted more of my time than your whole life is worth
in such a fashion did brunel forge and temper his human tools okay so moving on when you when you're
like learning about brunel you know he has this like huge battle over the size of these gauges
that are used in in the um in the construction ofways. I'm skipping over that all the part.
I'm going to give you the line that's important, okay?
Because they're talking about, hey, you know, like when you ask questions like, why is something
done this way?
Usually you keep going and you can follow it back to like the beginning of the industry.
And it's like, well, that's how this first guy did it.
So then everybody just copied, you know, for many, many years without asking why.
That was the case here.
This guy, you know, starts a standard gauge talks about the the size and everything else i'm skipping over
that it's just like hey this is what worked then then you know uh this other guy saw what this guy
did and he copied it uh there's no reason what for whatever it says really there's no reason other
than somebody did it before and all they say is they did so without pausing to consider the question on its merits.
So big, big takeaway from the life of Brunel's first principles thinking, which is not a new idea.
And, you know, everybody talks about it now.
It's literally written about in this book and they were doing it in the 1800s.
They're probably doing it before that as well.
On the contrary, experiment was the breath of life to Brunel.
And for him, precedence only existed to be questioned.
And it says Brunel rejected precedent and proceeded from first principles.
Remember, this is a term you're going to hear constantly nowadays, right?
It's a good idea.
I'm not obviously a good idea, but it's not a new idea.
That's the point.
Brunel rejected precedent and proceeded from first principles to design what he confidently believed would prove to be the perfect railway.
And so I just want to pull out one other point from this section, which was really fascinating.
So it says to his critics, you know, him questioning, like trying to be different and trying to question every single part of what he's doing.
His critics like this is ridiculous to his critics.
It appeared to be an example of a perverse striving for originality, for originality's sake.
So they're saying you're just trying to be original for original sake.
So Dyson, as we learned on the last podcast, Dyson takes this one step further.
He's like, no, you should be different for the sake of it.
And he's saying difference in the idea, difference in the product, difference in the way you're running the business, that you're only going to get these monopolistic profits by being different.
And sometimes, which was mind blowing, if you haven't gone back and listened to that podcast,
definitely do that and obviously read the book. But when he talks about it, it's like,
even if there's a better way, you should still do it differently. That is like,
not, that's not, I don't even know if out of all the books that I've read, I've ever come across
an idea like that. And that speaks to just Dyson's fundamental belief in difference for the sake of it.
And so, again, we're still building the Great Western Railway.
I want to pull out more from his diary because I think it's so interesting.
He's writing to a real friend so he can actually reveal himself.
Right. He's not going to tell like if you just bumped into him or if you worked for him.
He's not you're not going to penetrate his, you to penetrate the facade that he has, his external facade.
So he's writing to a real friend and he's revealing the agony and terror.
He's doing something that's never been done before.
It's one of the largest scales of human endeavor up to this point in history.
It's not supposed to be easy.
So he says, and he's very confused by it.
This is a very interesting metaphor here. Let's check this out. I can compare it to nothing but the sudden adoption
of a language that's familiar enough to the speaker, but unfortunately understood by nobody
but him. Every word has to be translated. And so it is with my work. One alteration has involved another,
and no one part can be copied from what others have done.
No one can fill up the details.
I have to do that all myself.
And invention is something like a spring of water.
Limited.
I fear sometimes, I fear I sometimes pump myself dry
and remain for an hour or two utterly stupid.
And yet even as difficult as it is, he has no regrets.
He wants to be doing this.
I have never regretted one instant the course I have taken.
And then a few pages later, just another great line.
His career was to him a tremendous adventure.
And so in addition to the problems with the fact
that it's difficult physical engineering, you have to battle the weather, the elements, the actual
earth fighting back to you. You have to motivate employees. He's also, there's all this like
politics involved because, you know, you're not going to do a large physical infrastructure
without competing governments and interests. I skipped over a lot of that part. Obviously,
you know, I might talk to you for an hour, hour and a half about these books, every single one before I sit down and talk to you.
I've spent 10, 15, 20 hours reading. So if you hear a podcast that piques your interest,
it's a good sign that you can learn a lot more by reading the books. It's impossible
to replicate the value you get just spending hour after hour after hour. You know, if you're reading a biography of somebody,
you're spending maybe 20 hours in their mind.
Okay, so let's go back to where we are in the story, though.
Fast forward a little bit, obviously past all the political stuff
and these fights and these lawsuits and everything else that's going on.
I want to talk about the actual work.
This is wild.
They're having to go through rock at this point.
But it says,
It was an immense undertaking.
And the more staggering when we remember that apart from the steam pumps, which kept the workings clear of water and the power of gunpowder, which was used to blast away the rock.
It was accomplished entirely by the strength of men and horses working by candlelight.
This one tunnel for two and check this out. This one tunnel. For two and a half years,
the work consumed a ton of gunpowder
and a ton of candles every week.
He's going through a ton of gunpowder
and a ton of candles every week for two and a half years
just for one part of the railway.
Eventually, he winds up completing this project. he was obsessed later on with the great eastern the one he the the giant ship that he is um that he was working on when he dies but this might be as
great as if you look at actually ones that were actually completed um because a lot of stuff had
to be completed by other people or after he died and everything uh this seems to me like i i i would be like this is
what i'd be most proud of i guess but let me summarize this here which had seemed uh the
railway had seemed uh to many so impossible of realization only eight years before was now a
magnificent reality so go back to that i saw the whole thing in my mind i just have to go through
the motions now to bring it to this this thing i saw my mind's eye. I see it laying there. I could touch it. It's iron. It is there. It is now. He took
that dream, that vision, and it is now physically real. Other people can now interact with this
thing that only took place in my mind. So there's an entire chapter called Brunel
Against Bureaucracy. I'm going to pull out a couple of things here. I'm going to read my note to you first.
He's against anything that inhibits building the ability to make unequivocal decisions.
Steve Jobs quote in the Joni Ive book, I got to grab that in a minute, about telling the team that this is the way I want it.
So the ability to have, again, companies are led by, they're not led by committees.
Great companies are led by formidable individuals that are capable of making unequivocal decisions. That is very clear if you
study the history of entrepreneurship. This is the way I want it. The decision is mine. I think if
you could talk, oh, I think if you could talk to these founders, so a lot of founders we're learning
from on the podcast, obviously they're dead. We can't talk to them anymore. We have to read their
words and that's the way we have conversations with them. I think if you could talk to these
founders, they'd say there's too much emphasis on consensus. That is
definitely what Brunel would say. Let me read this section. Then I'll grab the Joni Ive. I just
said his name incorrectly. Joni Ive. Oh, man. OK. Even in the age of individualism, Brunel's
public life was remarkable for his roundly expressed hatred of government officials and of any law, rule, or regulation which interfered with individual responsibility or initiative.
The innate caution of the civil service mentality, its inability to make unequivocal decisions or accept personal responsibility, represented the very opposite of all that Brunel stood for.
So that's good. Describe something, in this case a person, by describing their opposite.
The inability to make unequivocal decisions and the inability to accept personal responsibility was the very opposite of what Brunel stood for.
Okay, so there's a quote from this book on Johnny Ive,
and it's Founders No. 178 if you haven't listened to it.
And it's Steve Jobs coming back for Apple.
He's dealing with, you know, this is the way I want things done.
People are giving him a lot of pushback.
And so this is another illustration of what they're saying.
Like Brunel needed the ability to make unequivocal decisions.
Same thing Steve's running into here.
When we took it to the engineers,
they came up with 38 reasons they couldn't do it,
Jobs had called.
And I said, no, no, no, we're doing this.
And they said, well, why?
And I said, because I'm the CEO
and I think it can be done.
And so that quote, what Jobs is saying there
is like, I'm the one responsible.
Like I, the one person in the company
that can make unequivocal decisions. It has to be done this way that that mindset is very similar to how brunel
approached his work in fact he would constantly threaten to resign when they say hey let's get
you an assistant engineer a resident engineer he's like i don't even understand those terms
i don't care that's how other projects are done i will resign if i have if i don't have complete
like complete authority and control and so this is an example of that.
The note of myself is I'm only doing this if I have full responsibility and control.
There's a response when they're saying, hey, we're going to hire some, you know, somebody to help you, like basically like a number two kind of person or maybe somebody you can share responsibility with.
He gives this whole like crazy response, just going to pull up full lines.
And this is now we i fast forward
away in the story we're almost at the end of his life this is he does a million different projects
right but this is the great eastern uh it's called they call it the great leviathan they
wind up changing the name to the great eastern um and i'll go into like how you know what let
me read that part to you first and then i'll give you so it says actually no let me read this part
let me not get confused so he's writing back to the the directors of this project because he's the lead
engineer the only engineer and he that he's like that's going to remain or i'm out of here the
fact is i have never embarked in any one thing to which i have so entirely devoted myself and to
which i've devoted so much time thought and labor on the six and on the success of which i have
staked so much reputation and to which I have
so largely committed myself.
So he's talking about this project.
And so therefore I cannot act under any supervision or form part of any system which recognizes
any other advisor than myself or any other source of information than mine or any other
question connected with the construction or mode of carrying out practically
this great project on which I've staked my character, nor could I continue to act if I
could be assumed for a moment that the work required to be looked at, that the work required
to be looked after anybody but myself. If any doubt ever arises on these points, I must cease to be responsible and cease to act.
So there we have Bruno being unequivocal that he will be the one making the unequivocal decisions.
And so they wind up right after they get the letter.
Like it served its purpose.
Like, okay, we'll leave you alone, buddy.
We'll withdraw the request then.
So let me go back in the story
a little bit this is the crazy again he only wants to do things that are unprecedented and this
reminds me of you know bezos jeff bezos telling us like it's better like you got one life to live
one career just it's better to be bold i'd rather be bold than timid it's like just be bold i mean
if you go back and read um bezos's shareholder letters which i have i did all the shareholder
letters on what?
Founders number 71 and then Invent and Wander.
They're reprinted in that book.
I think that's founders number 155, somewhere like that.
He uses the word bold all the time.
So it says, Brunel began to consider the idea of building a steamer large enough to carry her own fuel around the world.
He had the conception of a ship six times the size of anything that had ever existed.
And that it's going to hold that record for another almost 50 years.
And this is like the age of like a rapid advance.
How crazy it is, is an age of rapid advance advancement in Marine technology.
And to some degree,
you know,
it was kind of folly to attempt something like this,
but you don't,
I guess you don't know your limit until you go over it. Right.
So it's going to wind up holding the record for the larger ship.
There's a lot of struggle in the book. He's got to deal with, you know, it goes the company goes bankrupt.
I mean, the story of his whole career is just like, oh, OK, I'm going to try something unbelievably hard.
Wow. It's unbelievably difficult. And this is where, you know, he's he's at it day and night.
He's completely committed. is obviously uh not obviously but this is where he's going to wind up dying before
he sees a successful completion of it uh but they're about to launch at this point ready for
launching the whole weight over 12 000 tons never since time began had man attempted to move so
great a weight and there were many who shook their heads and pronounced such a feat impossible And so even launching the ship was just an unbelievable headache.
But I want to pull out one thing here that I thought was really, again, another unique unique idea because most people say if one thing's not working like you know just try a different
route and so bruno would also have like his his like okay something's not working i'll just do
more of it like check this out to him it was a simply it was simply a question of practicing
that doctrine which he had once preached this is what he says to stick
to the one point of attack however defended and if the forced first brought up is not sufficient
to bring 10 times as much but never to try back upon another in the hope of finding it easier
so again let me read that again because this is is like, he's got a, you know,
he's writing in the 1800s.
They spoke a little differently than we did.
To stick to the one point of attack, however defended,
and if the force first brought upon is not sufficient,
to bring ten times as much,
but never to try back upon another
in hope of finding it easier.
It's not working, just do more of it
and moving ahead we're almost to where he dies no left myself on to summarize what's happening
on the next few pages is complete dedication until death only focused on the successful
completion of the task and to hell with everything else from that moment when the semblance of his
great ship had first taken
shape under his pencil it seemed as if it had claimed its creator's body and soul it became
an all-consuming passion to which he dedicated himself utterly without regard for health for
fortune or for family slowly but surely it excluded every other concern from his mind.
He steeled himself to meet and confound betrayal, hostility, ridicule, and every kind of adversity in order to complete his task that no appeal of this kind could reach him.
To yield, even in the smallest degree, to such persuasions would now appear to him an admission of defeat and so that
i mean now towards the end of the book it became apparent as i started studying brunel like why
dyson because dyson's also a misfit and you know a crazy person just his absolute refusal to give up
um you know it's obviously not normal i can see now i could see all the way up until this point
why he would latch on to brunel he called him again a personal god that's what how dyson
described brunel a god he was a god to me right and you get to that one paragraph and it's just
like all right this is dyson dyson is seeing in brunel what he wants to reflect in himself he
steeled himself to meet and confound
betrayal. Dyson had to deal with that. Hostile, he had to deal with that. Ridicule and every kind
of adversity in order to complete his task that no appeal of this kind could reach him to yield
even in the smallest degree to such persuasions would now appear to him an admission of defeat.
And I guess my point I'm trying to make there it's like understanding now spending
hours studying brunel i have a even more fundamental understanding of of dyson um it
like enhances my understanding of his work of his life and career uh this is where i said or they
say he worked himself to death he also had like a kidney disease nephritis is what um like
complicated things he went having a stroke
so it says on the morning of monday september 5th the engineer boarded his great ship for the last
time at midday that deadly adversary whom he had kept at bay so obstinately overtook him and he was
suddenly seized by a stroke he was paralyzed but still conscious as he was carried down the ship
and to his home and so the ship's in the water.
He wanted to be on board because two days later,
September 5th, he has a stroke.
September 7th, they actually take the ship down the river.
And he was so confident that he had finally succeeded, right?
So the author makes the case and other people make the case
that he's going to die on September 15th,
so 10 days after stroke, right?
In that interim, that 10-day period,
he wanted to kind of will himself to stay alive
because he wanted to hear the successful,
like the first trip that the boat ever makes.
The part of it explodes.
I shouldn't laugh because it winds up killing him.
But once he hears the news, so I'm going to read this section.
This is where he dies.
But to give you the background before I read the section,
the ship is still salvageable, and it lasts, and he does these transatlantic ships,
you know, for many, I think many decades moving forward, if I'm not mistaken, after Brunel dies, but he never gets to, the main tragedy here is the last thing he hears
is that part of it exploded because there's pressure built up in one of the engines.
And, you know, a couple of people died that were on the boat.
So this is what they're going to reference here.
His body paralyzed.
Only the engineer's spirit still rallied around him, holding death at bay a while longer, but for one reason, to hear news of the success of his great ship.
He was so confident of a triumph which must
atone for every misfortune. Instead came the news of this disaster. This final stroke was too cruel
to be borne. The spirit broken at last, the light in his eyes went out, and as night fell, he died. It is only from the
words of friends, not intended for the public ear, that we can begin to understand the weight
of such a loss. The most moving tribute of all came from his friend Daniel, who in his diary wrote, On the 15th of September I lost my oldest and best friend.
By his death the greatest of England's engineers was lost. The man with the greatest originality
of thought and power of execution, bold in his plans but right. The commercial world
thought him extravagant, but although he was so, great things are not done by those who sit down and count the cost of every thought and every action. book. If you buy the book using the link that's in the show notes, you'll be supporting podcasts at the same time. Amazon sends me a small percentage of the sale when you do that.
That's 201 books down, 1,000 to go, and I'll talk to you again soon.