Friday, 19 August 2016

Flamsteed : Suppressed Preface to the Historia Cœlestis Britannica




I had been acquainted with Mr. I.N. ever since the year 1674. had given him the diameters of the planets observed by me at Derby in the years 1671. 72 & 73 as also the greatest elongations of Jupiter's satellites of both which he made use in his Principia & since I came to London, the line of the great Comet of the year 1680 & 81. affirming that the Comet which was seen in November before was the same with that I observed {the} following December which he would not then grant, but contended earnestly that they were two different ones, as appears by a couple of very long letters of his to me, dated ffeb. 28, 1680-1, & Aprill 16, 1681 in which opinion he persisted till Sept 1685 when in a letter dated the 19 of that moneth, he writes 'I have not yet computed the orbit of a Comet, but am now going about it & takeing that of 1680 into fresh consideration it seems very probable that those of November & December were the same comet.' this is what he before contended against with some virulency but he had no <75> mind to remember it, & at that time I took no great notice of it, till I found when his Principia were published in year 1687. & therein a draught of the comet's orbit, he was pleased to acknowledge that I had disputed that the Comets seen in November & December were one & the same & that I had given him the line of its Way not much different from his parabolicall one there described, whereas himself had disputed against their being one, & consequently against that one describing any parabolical line as he now asserted & will appear by his owne forementioned letters to me. ffrom this time till the yeare 1695, we corresponded civilly. especially the yeares 1694 & 95 when on his repeated requests I imparted to him about 150 places of the Moon deduced from observations made with the Arch & compared with my own tables fitted to Mr Horrocks his Theory but covenanted at the same time that he should not impart them to any body without my leave for I told him & he knew it very well that I had made use of an old Catalogue of the fixed stars, made to the begining of the year 1686, from Observations taken with the Sextant that I was busy now with a better & more convenient Instrument; & that as soon as I had got the New Catalogue I intended perfected all those places of the moon should be calculated over again & imparted to him but the hopes he had of makeing that Theory his own, & the Glory of restoring the Moones Motions, would not suffer him to stay so long for.

It was not a full year after but I was told that he had perfected the Lunar Theory. & Dr. Gregory gave out that there was no need of further Observations; for his Numbers would answer all my Observations within two or three minutes, or lesse. I had covenanted with him to have his emendations first imparted to me, because I imparted to him the observations from which they were derived. but his promise was overlookt or forgot, at last it came to my hands I found the Solar Numbers were the same I had freely given him. & the Lunar but little altered save that he had added a parcell of very small æquations which whether the heavens would bear or not was onely to be found by compareing of his Numbers with good Observations I therefore made New lunar Tables exactly agreeable to his sentiment but when I compared the Moones places calculated from them, with her places deduced from the Observations, I found {illeg} that those Numbers which were said to agree with the Observations within <76> two 3 minutes would very seldome come so neare, but often differed 8. 9. or 10 minutes which I did not admire it then at all being very sensible that the persons who so loudly on all occasions cried up his performances in amending the Lunar Theory & Tables did it to oblige his friendship, who had then a great Interest in a Great Courtier, and considering also that {they} were persons of very ordinary skill in that parte of Mathematicks which is concerned with the heavens & lunar Theorys.

But Mr. Newton was not displeased with their flatterys nor ever that I could hear of endeavoured to correct them. We conversed civilly as oft as we met accidentally and he failed not (as if he were a great Master of my methods), allwayes to aske how the Catalogue went on to which I alwayes gave him sincere answers telling him how far I had proceeded & that I wanted more hands both to carry on the Observations & calculations that were necessary but this I could not get him to take notice of. In the mean time some freind of mine (that was frequently in company with me & saw how the work went on with such assistance as I hired & payd my selfe & was informed what the charge would be of printing the Observations of 30 yeares & engraveing the Maps of the Constellations I had prepared) acquainted Prince George of Denmarke with my performances Mr Newton lived near the Court I, allwayes at a distance. he was then President of the Royal Society & had a Great Courtier for his friend & one who was frequently at his Office required at Court & attending on the Prince so that he could not but hear of the Princes Inclinations to make me easier in my work nor could Mr. Newton fayle to be informed of it so on the 11th of Aprill 1704 he came down to Greenwich, visited me on my request stayd & dined with me, at his first comeing he desired to see what I had ready for the presse I shewed him the books of Observations togeather with so much of the Catalogue as was then finished. which was about one halfe & a fayre copy of it. And with it the Maps of the Constellations drawn both by My Amanuensis {illeg} & Van Somer, which haveing lookt over carefully he desired me to let him have the recommending of them to the prince, I was surprised at this proposition I had formerly tried his temper and allways found him insidious, ambitious & excessively covetous of praise & impatient of contradiction. I had taken notice of some faults in the 4th book of his principia which instead of thanking me for, he resented ill yet was <77> presumtuous of his Interest that he sometimes dared to ask why I did not hold my tongue. I considered that if I granted what he desired I should put my selfe wholly into his power & be at his Mercy who might spoyle all that came into his hands or put me to unnecessary trouble & vexation about my owne labors & all the while pretend that he did it to amend faults. where none were but what were unavoydable, or easily to be corrected & therefore excusable. I had further irritated him by not concealeing some Truths that are since published in print & notoriously knowne: & therefore civilly refused what hee desired but still he told me he would recommend them to the Prince, & parted with me in the evening with a short expression of very good advice, [1] which it would have been very happy for him if he had followed himself t'has been the Rule of my life from my Infancy tho I doe not know that it ever has been of his.

But I heard no more of his Recommendations. on the contrary. his flatterers & such small Mathematicians about London as hoped to get themselves esteemed very skillfull men by Crying up his book began to ask why I did not print as if I were obliged to publish my workes just when they pleased tho they understood no more of my workes than they did of his book which they so much cryed up. To obviate this Clamor I examined all my books of Observations & took an account what Number of folio pages they might fill when printed & found it Much greater than I expected; whereupon I drew my Estimate into a short paper wherein I both shewed what the Number of pages were but also in what order the press was to worke them off & Cheifly urged that the Mapps of the Constellation shoud be first of all set upon that being carried on apart they might be finisht by that time the Observations were printed off: Van Somer, an excellent designer who had drawn about a dozen figures for me was then alive & ready to goe on with the rest. my Amanuensis had not yet left me & might have been hired againe to continue in my {service} Mr Hodgsons help might also have been purchased Some of my acquaintance falln into a suspition that my labors answered not what might reasonably be expected from me, That I might cure them of their Mis-prehensions which had been impressed upon by the false & malitious suggestions of some few busy arrogant & self <78> designing people, I gave a copy or two of this Estimat to an acquaintance of myne desiring him to shew it to those of my freinds who had been possest with these unjust suspitions. At one of the Meetings of the R.S., some of them were present he got my paper handed to one of them who sate at a distance (for then their meetings were throngd with company however thin they are at present) who opening the paper & finding the contents, delivered it to the Secretary who read it, at the Board. this convinc't the Members present that I had been unjustly aspersed & it was moved that the printeing of the Whole should be recommended to Prince George by the Society:

Accordingly a Committy was appointed, who with Mr. Newton waited on the Prince. But, who they were when they wated on him & how they made their recommendation, I was never Informed nor did they vouchsafe to consult me about it or take me along with them. all that I can tell of is that the Estimate was wrote in November 1704 the Prince chosen into the Society November 30, a letter from the Prince's Secretary, Mr. George Clarke directing Mr. Roberts, Sir C. Wren, Dr. Gregory & Dr. Arbuthnot, with Mr. N. to inspect my papers dated Dec. 11, 1704, which they did & somtime after gave in their report of the charge of prepareing & printing the observations & Catalogues mentioned in the Estimate, about 863ld

< insertion from f 78v > 
ldsd
283 Rheme of paper for 400 copies at 20sh. per Rhem28300
Composition & press-Worke for 300 sheets at 20sh. per sheet30000
Charges of an Amanuensis for copying comparing correcting and exammining the papers10000
to compute the Planets' places, for 2 Calculators18000
-------------
in all863ld00
< text from p 78 resumes > 

But the last particular of the charge (180ld for the two calculators) was not mentioned in it but added in a note under it for what reason those know best who drew it up.

Nor the charge of designeing & engraveing about 50 plates of the Constellations: tho this was likely to be the heaviest parte of the Charge, & the Observations could not be understood without them. I had further proposed them to be the first taken care of & begun. I had them all drawn; & 12 of them anew designed by a skillfull workeman by me. These were the most sumptuous part of the worke and had it not been for them I had had no or little need to crave the Prince's help to print, why they were neglected, Sir Isaac Newton best knows. betwixt March 22 1704-5 & aprill 21, 1705 Mr Newton was knighted by the Queen at Cambridge.

Hereby I was plainly convinced that Sir I.N. was no freind to {my} worke. & every step hee tooke afterwards proved planely that whatever he pretended his designe was either to gaine the honor of all my paines to himselfe, to make me come under him as Dr Arbuthnot some time after expresst it, or to spoyle or sinke it, which it was my chiefe concern & businesse, if possible to prevent. I therefore printed my Estimat & gave it to my friends < insertion from f 78v > that they might see what my workes were & how I thought it best to proceed in printing them.

< text from p 78 resumes > 

To skreen himselfe from the just imputions & blame that would probably follow such disingenuous & ungratefull practises he made use of these gentlemen to whom he had got the Inspection of my books of Observations ordered by the Prince, & called <79> them the Prince's Referees. Of these, Sir Ch: Wren was then about 70 yeares of Age & tho he was a skillful person, yet being full of other business he was sure to have him who lived in his neighbourhood, to consent to all his orders, & subscribe them. Mr Roberts was an easy, good natured man but knew little of the businesse. Mr Aston had been fellow of the same Trinity colledge in Cambridge at the same time with him. knew nothing of the businesse, lived in the Court, had been my freind & Guest at the Observatory, was too much a Courtier to withstand any one that had a Noble patrone in the Ministry, and therefore was tooke into the Number of the Referrees sometimes for speciall purposes, Dr Gregory tho he published a peice of Astronomy knew but very little of that part of it that was cultivated here. nor was Dr Arbuthnot skilld in it but being one of the Princes physitians, he was taken in to Sir Isaac Newton's purposes. he saw what was designed & testified to me by some expressions, that he approved not such procedings. promised once to assist me in a particular affaire. and, tho he met with obstructions, performed it handsomly:

With these persons Sir Isaac Newton began to act his parte, & carry on his designes. I dealt honestly & openly with him as will appear by the Copys of some letters I wrote to him upon severall occasions; haveing no other designe but to have my works handsomely printed & as soone as possible for the Prince was very infirm but I soon perceived that he designed onely to hinder the work by delays or spoyle or sinke it. or force me to comply with his humour & flatter him & Cry him up as Dr. Gregory & Dr. Halley did. I was forced therefore to act with more Caution then I had done hitherto that I might give him no cause of pretensions to stop the progresse of the Work

To forward which I used my best diligence & honest endeavours. I hired one & employed him to copy specimens of the severall partes of the Work: 1°. the observations of the fixed stars made with the sextant : 2°. of the Moone made with the same Instrument: 3o. of observations made with the Murall Arch: 4o. of the New Catalogue which I sent him with a list that gave an account of them, dated Jan. 5, 170mathML formula; but could not get them printed of till March 22 following. In the mean time, Sir IN appointed a meeting of his referrees, March 5 following. Mr Churchill was not there but Sir Isack with Dr Arbuthnot, Dr Gregory & Mr Aston dined at Churchills <80> & a forthnight after Mr Aston told me of it (for I dined not with them) & that all things he thought were then agreed but paper. Now I understood that Mr Churchill was to be the undertaker. he had beene recommended for the purpose by one that I tooke to be my freind without my knowledge for I did not conceive wee had any need of one, & so did some of the Gentlemen of the Royal Society: but Sir Isaac Newton was resolved to make friends at my Cost for, as he ordered the matter the Undertaker was here to reap the sole Advantage of all my Labors & great expenses & he was so confident of it, that when I intimated it to him he answered boldly The Prince would reward me for them.

However there was no recedeing: for then Sir I.Ns cryers-up would have clamored that I hindered the Printing of my owne Works my selfe: to avoyd that Imputation I was silent. tho I complained oft to some freinds in private but never did any thing whereby it might appear I allowed him

At this meeting on the 5th of March the Specimens of the Undertakers printing were produced but found to be ill done I got others done very well & paid the Printers myselfe.

June the 11 following Dr Gregory & my selfe with Mr Churchill, dined at Sir Isaac Newtons where they agreed to give Mr. Churchill 1lb 14s. per sheet. They signed the Agreement but I would not, tho they urged me much. I desired to be excused: for it was now plane to me that he designed not the good of the Impression or my Advantage but to make him a freind of a great Name: by obliging a person I never had any Acquaintance with & enriching him at my Cost. The point being over I was in hopes that the presse should have been set to work Immediately: for I had about 50 Sheets of Observations made with the Sextant, redy copied, & the rest of that sort would easily be finished before these could be printed off. but I found my selfe deceived: we were as far of from printing as if no such bargain had been made.

At Midsummer following I payd my Amanuensis & Calculators a quarters pay my selfe; & Sir Is. to encourage me to doe it, talked often of drawing the Princes money, but, when I waited on him July the 4th following & told him that I must goe into Surry to reap my harvest (as I usually did every year about this time), he put me of again, before I could say any thing to him of it, by telling me that Dr Arbuthnots daughter was ill & that the Dr could doe nothing till her recovery, that it was not fit we should begin to print till we had receaved his Royal Highness's monys & that it would be soon enough at my return. I had put 12 sheets, ready for the presse, into his hands a week before, He thought to work me to his ends by putting me to extraordinary charges in maintaining & paying an Amanuensis & calculators at my own charges. But, I resolved to bear this expense patiently, & defeat his designes.

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After this I caused my Amanuensis & Calculators to goe on diligently with their worke & carried on the Observations for compleating the Catalogue & others according as I had opportunitys but Nn became dayly more perverse & sought by severall vexatious pretences to discourage me & weary me if possible. I paid My Calculators & Amanuensis 3 quarters without any present prospect of being any wayes reimbursed but yet I had hopes, if once the press began to work they would not find any new tricks or pretences to delay repayeing me but herein too I found my self mistaken those that have begun to do ill things never blush to do worse & worse to secure themselves. Sir N had still more to doe, & was ready at coyning new excuses & pretexts to cover his disingenuous & malitious practices I had none but very honest & honorable designes in my mind I met his cunning forecasts with sincere & honest answers & thereby frustrated not a few of his malitious designs.

finding that I persisted unwearied in my purposes he demanded to have my first Night Notes put into his hands that hee might compare them with my Copy. These were wrote in 4to Volumes & from them were commonly transcribed correctly into large folios next morning from which the Copies were taken. I knew that he would be mistaken & that they would not serve his designe about the winter of feb. 170mathML formula they were put into his hands: ffeb 23 1705-6. Mr. Hodgson acquainted me that Sir Is: had showed him 3 or 4 pages of errata that were committed in transcribeing as he supposed & a Table made by Dr Gregory for turning the Revolves of the Screw into degrees, ′ & ″ wherein he wisely had supposed the revolve everywhere equall & equable: I smiled at this & promised to send them my own Tables for that purpose & shewed them their mistakes & that there were no materiall errors committed: this was some small mortification to them: but they had learnt not to be ashamed.

Tho I had refused to handle any of the Princes money but what was to repay my proper disbursements, & Sir IN had granted that then it was not necessary I should sign any agreements with the Referees yet now he became very positive for Articles he had sayd to some of his Confidants that he would hamper me with Articles: it had come to my ears & therefore on his Urging me I drew up some for the Undertaker to signe. as that he should print onely 400 Copies. that he should have no interest in the Originall, &c. but these were not to his purpose. I would not Court him; to bring about his <82> low designes he makes Articles himselfe in which some things of mine were inserted & in them he covenants the Undertaker should print 5 sheets a week & for reprinting of faulty sheets. & that I should have 125lb paid me when ten sheets were printed of. these were read to me once. & I was required to signe them immediately else the worke was at a stand. no time would be allowed to consider of them. or mend any thing I thought amisse in them I was then near 140lb out of pocket all my Copy was ready for the presse, or soon would be. If I refused the worke would be broke of imediately. & the fault would be thrown upon mee. for Sir I.N. lived in the Neighbourhood of the Court I at 6 miles distance. he had his close freind the Lord Halifax to support him ther with the Princes Physitian I had nothing but my sincerity & Gods blessing to depend upon. Trusting on these alone I signed them not doubting but now the press would begin.[2]

But herein I soone found my self deceaved This would not satisfie: I would not yet cry up Sir Is. as others did to bring me to that basenesse now he has gotten my books of night notes he wants a Copy of so much of the Catalogue as I had gone through with to be trusted into his hands he therfore demanded it I answered that it was not then perfected that I believed it would conteine a good Number more than I had yet observed and rectified. that the stars allready in it were about 1500 but probably I should make them 2500. that these were the result of all my labors in which haveing spent above 2000lb of my owne money above my Allowances it would neither be prudent nor safe to trust a Copy of them out of my owne keeping he answered that I might then put them into his hands sealed up. whereby I understood that they were to be so kept by him till I had finished the whole. & was ready to print it. I considered also that this half of my Catalogue would be of no advantage to him & consented; I therefore deliverd the copy of so much of the Catalogue as was finished into Mr. Hodgsons hands, with orders to seal it up in Sir C Wrens presence & deliver it to Sir Isaac Newton when 10 sheets were printed, & 125lb (which would then be payable by the Articles) should be paid me; this was April 8th, 1706: but this direction I waived afterwards: & it was put into his hands the week after without receaving a farthing for the board or pay of my Amanuensis, or Calculators. for honest Sir Is: N. would (to use his owne words) have all things in his own power, to spoyle or sink them. that he might force me to second his designes, & applaud him which no honest man would not nor could doe. &, God be thanked. I lay under no necessity of doeing.

<83> 

This business being over a week after meeting me in London he told me he would now draw 800lb of the Princes money: but sayd nothing of payeing me what I had disburst however we must now put the Worke into the press for after such unreasonable concessions on my part his pretences for further delay were all taken away & he had no excuse for further delayes.

April 4, being in London, I was told all the errors which he by mistake thought he had found in my Copy were quitted & that the first sheets would goe to the presse this week

April the 19. I waited upon him again he told me gravely that the Prince having subscribed a great summe to the Emperors loan the mony could not be receaved, but that he had taken up monys for Mr Churchill, this was to provoke me but he failed of his designe. whatever I had hitherto expended I was content to adventure a little more. Mr Churchill was put upon me had never been at any expense, must have monys put into his hands beforehand to buy paper & pay the printer. Whereby he was sure to have him at his command & tho it was covenanted that hee should print but 400 Copyes might take as many as he pleased: for I never heard nor found that he had given any bond or security for his faire dealeing however it was highly reasonable he should

But this was not all the printer being to be paid by the Undertaker and not by me, was likely to be careless of his worke. which I urged but to no purpose

It was May 16 ere the first Sheet was printed of; & June the 3rd ere we got a second; & the 3d on the 7 of June so here was a whole moneth since the first was wrought of & not two sheets yet printed in the roome of 20 that by the Articles ought to have been printed in a moneths time. I complained boldly of the dilatorinesse but in vain all the Answer I got was from Sir Is:s own mouth, that wee must proceed slowly at first, & make more dispatch after.

This was one of the fruites of our haveing an Undertaker & leaveing the printer to be paid by him who neglected the Historia Cœlestis if they had but a sorry pamphlet to print

Wee had got two Alphabets that is about 46 sheets out of the presse by Christmas 1706. & the whole (5 E) or 97, before Dec 21. 1707: that is 97 sheets. in about 89 weeks in which had they printed 5 sheets per week, according to their Articles, all the observations made . <82v> all the observations made with the Murall Arch from 1689 to 1706 might have been easily printed, as well as those made with Sextant

<84> 

In the mean time Sir Is. N. sometimes stopt the presse without assigneing a reason for it or any occasion given by me but upon my complaint at the first & afterward without any sollicitation of mine at all, let it goe on again I hapned once to visit the press when he was there & took the opportunity to show him how ill the Compositor had placed the types of the figures & how much awry to the lines to which they belonged. Sh Kkk, pag 224 he put his head a little nearer to the paper, but not near enough to see the fault for he is very short sighted & Makeing a sleighting motion with his hand said Methinks they are well enough; this encouraged the Printer in his carelessnesse, the sheet was printed of & the fault not mended; & caused me to be more watchfull over the printer for now it was plane to me that the Referee as he called himselfe was not displeasd with the faults he committed & the Undertaker never concerned himselfe about them he was sure of certein gaines by the paper & presse work & somethinge More probably than we were aware of

The printeing of the sextant observations being finished I expected the presse should have gone on after Christmas with the Volume of Observations made with the Murall Arch which were double the Number of the Other. but, Sir I.N. had put a full stop to the presse tho hee knew very well that the Copy was ready fayre transcribed on 175 sheets : what excuse he made for it I know not; for none of his confidents would acquaint me [but upon complaineing of his behaviour I had an Order subscribed by himselfe & four more of his Referrees sent me whereby he endeavored to throw the fault of himself on me. twas dated July 13. 1708. on the 18th of the same month I wrote a letter to Sir Ch: Wren concerneing it which after the order I shall here insert whereby it will appear that {illeg} he onely hindred the worke {illeg} whilest I forwarded it all I could & had got the 2d Volume ready to follow it to the Press … I never receaved any answer to this letter In the meane time I had complayned to one of the Referees, who was often at Court & waited frequently on the Prince, of my ill usage that care was taken of the Undertaker & printer but that none was taken to reimburse me what it had cost me in the entertainment & pay of three calculators & in transcribeing of the Copy for the presse which came to more than 173ld. tho I accounted nothing for my own & servants attendant on the press. he was ashamed of it promised it should be redressed & I am apt to thinke procured a meeting to be appointed on the 20th of March following which was Notified to me. & I was then desired to bring with me what I had more by me ready for the presse.

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The presse had now stood three moneth by Sir I.N. onely procurement for to keep all things wholly in his own power he had brought in an Undertaker who was useless to the businesse & served onely to spoyle the Worke or worse, & a printer whom I beleive he paid. I am sure he never consulted me about the payment of either tho there was sufficient cause all the Articles that related to them haveing been broken, but by this management hee had them wholly at his devotion, On the day appointed March the 20. 1707-8 I tooke up with me to London all the Observations here made betwixt September 1689 & December 1705, fairely copyed in 175 sheets of large paper: Six sheets were of the planets' places calculated from the Observations made with the Sextant, which ought to have been printed next after the said Observations as also a faire copy of the places of the stars in the Eclipticall & as many of the Southerne constellations as I had then rectified. The referees viewd them & Sir Is. N. after some time withdrew & calleing Dr Arbuthnot out to him produced the following paper which the other referrees as I remember signed. he would not deliver it to mee but gratiously permitted me to take a copy of it, which I have here inserted.

London, March 20, 1707-8

It is agreed between Sir Isaac Newton & Mr. John Flamsteed,

1st. That the 2d Volume of the Astronomical Observations, with the figures of the first Volume, shall be presently delivered into Sir Isaac Newtons hands

2d. That the Catalogue of the fixed Stars, here present, shall likewise be delivered into Sir Isaac Newton's hands.

3d. That the catalogue of the fixed stars, now in Sir Isaac Newton's hands, shall be delivered to Mr. Flamsteed in order to have the magnitudes inserted, & to be returned with the Magnitudes after Sixteen days.

4t. That upon the Redelivery of that Catalogue, Sir I.N. shall pay to Mr. Flamsteed, one Hundred & twenty-five pounds on the Prince's account.

5t. That upon the delivery of the Catalogue of the Fixed Stars, as far as it can be completed at this time, Mr Flamsteed shall have the rest of the Money Stipulated betwixt him & the Referrees: he Undertaking to Correct the Press, & appointing Correctors who live in Town, that the Work may not be retarded. Memorandum, That at the Same time the 2d Volume of Observations (with the figures mentioned here) was delivered into Sir Issac Newtons Hands together with a Corrected Copy of the Eclipticall Constellations & all the Southern of the Catalogue but that I Covenanted that the said 2d copy should be returned to Me to be again Revised & delivered to the Press, as the Printers should work it off; & the Copy of the Eclipticall Constellations returned me, as soon as I should return the Copy now in Sir Isa Newton's hands, with the Magnitudes Inserted.

There were present at the Meeting at the Castle Tavern, in Pater Noster Row March 20 1707/8 Mr Roberts, Sir Isa Newton, Dr Arbuthnot, DrGregory, Mr Churchill, Mr James Hodgson myself & Isaac Wolferman.

The Conditions on which I was to deliver this 2d Volume & the Catalogue were very hard & unjust for the observations contained {there}in were most of them made with the New Murall Arch which I had built at my own cost & lay me in above 120ld out of my own pocket, my other Instruments were all my own too & my Assistants were paid and maintained at my own charge. I had layd out moreover above 173ld in carrying on the works of which I had given a bill both to Sir. I.N. & severall of the referrees. I considered that if I should not consent to this order, Sir Is. N. would say that I had hindered the printing of my own works my selfe which would serve to justify a report, spread by his partisans very industriously that I was averse to the publishing of them. whereas I had  <86> allways endeavored to carry them on as advantageously as I could & he had done all he could to hinder me in order to make me comply with them & cry him up at the same rate they did further I saw that if I did not lay hold of this opportunity, I could not hope to be reimburst any part of the 173l. I had spent in prepareing the copy for the press, & performed my part of the agreement in the time agreed. but the 125 was not paid me till above 2 moneths after & then I was still above 48ld out of purse for which I had nothing but 3 copyes one that I gave Mr. Sharp & another in which I have corrected the faults of the press with my own hand & a 3d not complete.

I was now in hope that the Presse would begin againe to work with the 2d Volume: but when after 3 or 4 moneth delay I found that for all my Instances, there was not the least step made towards it I complained of this behaviour of Sir I.N. both payeing me short of what I had disburst & of his keeping the 175 sheet of copy for the 2d Volume in his hands. this I beleive was as intended carried to him whereupon to throw all the fault upon me, 8 moneth after he had stopt the presse, hee sent me the following Order dated July 13 1708:

At a meeting of the gentlemen to whom his Royal Highness the Prince hath referred the care of printing Mr Flamsteed's astronomical papers,

It was agreed that the press should go on without further delay: & that if Mr Flamsteed do not take care that the press be well corrected, & go on with the dispatch, another Corrector be employed.

WhitehallJuly 13, 1708F. ROBERTS
CHR. WREN
Vera CopiaIS. NEWTON
D. GREGORY
IS. NEWTONFRAN. ASHTON



To prevent the designed effect of this malitious order or agreement, I wrote a letter to Sir Christopher Wren who I believed hated such practises & sent it him in a few dayes after I declined writing to Sir I N. because he might suppress it. & I doubted not but Sir Cristopher would impart it both to him & the other Referees

I tooke a copy of it myselfe, to show my acquaintance friends & some gentlemen that had an opinion of Sir I N before & could not thinke he could be guilty of such collusion as this order & my letter proved upon him. the Copy follows:

The Observatory, Monday, July 19, 1708

SIR,

The Copy of the Agreement made by the Gentlemen Referrees on Tuesday last, reflecting upon me as if by my dilatoriness I had obstructed the progress of the Press, I find myself obliged, that I may clear myself of so unjust an insinuation, with Your Leave to Acquaint you.

That tho I had got 50 Sheets of the first Volume ready copied for the Press on May the 2d 1705, yett upon severall pretences, the printing was Obstructed; and it was May 1706, before the first Sheet was printed off

That tho by the Agreement, the Undertaker was to print off five Sheets a Week, yett it was from May 1706 to October 1707 before we could gett 100 Sheets, comprehending the Observations of the first Volume, wrought of; that is near 75 weeks, So that taking altogether, the Printer dispatched not a Sheet and a halfe per Week.

Tho I did all I could to hasten and expedite the Work, as will appear by the Copies of my letters to Mr Churchill, Mr Mathews & Mr. Hodgson, that I have by me: I offerd to discharge the expense of the Pennypost Letters that brought the Proofs; if the post brought them in the Evening, I returned them next Morning: if in the Morning, they were sent back that evening after, without fayle; except once, on May the 1. 1706, when the great Eclipse of the Sun hapning, company hindered me from correcting & returning that proof till the Morning following & no longer.

The greatest dispatch, was made, both this year 1706 & the following 1707, in Autumn; when I was Absent in Surrey, yett that was less than the 5 Sheets per Week and then the Work was allways worst done.

At my Return after the last Years Harvest, I found a whole Sheet had been Omitted by the Printer, who had either lost or mislayd it: I copied it immediately from my Manuscripts, & sent it to him, with directions to print it, & reprint the next. I caused also Sir Isaac Newton to be acquainted with it: & informed both Sir Isaac and the Printer that I had about halfe a dozen Sheets more, comprehending the Planetts places derived from the Observations made with the Sextant, contain'd in this Volume, to be added to it; but this was not taken notice of, The 6 sheets were not call'd for; and the Press has stood still ever since

March 12th last I received a letter from Mr Roberts, Your Self, and Sir I Newton desiring me to meet them in London on the 20th & bring with me what Papers I had ready for the Press. I Attended them with the 2d Volume containing the Observations made betwixt Sept. 1689 and 1705 compleat in about 175 sheets of Paper, I exhibited also at the same time the aforementioned six Sheets that were to be added to the first Volume; desired that the dropt Sheet might be printed & the next following reprinted, or at least the two first Pages of it, which I thought had been Accorded. The 2d Volume by Agreement was put into the Referrees' Hands. I desired the Press, after the first Volume was compleat, might go on with it. At this meeting also I had 125 lib ordered to be paid me in part of above 170 lib it had Cost me in repayeing & entertaining three Calculators & Copiers whom I had dismisst for want of it at Midsummer 1706. Sir Isaac Newton required that I should insert the Magnitudes of the fixed Stars into a Copy of so much of the Catalogue, as I had gone through with, that I had deposited in his hands; which was done for him, and part of a 3d more perfect copy left in his hands as a gage for returning it.

At this Meeting the Undertaker Urged to have a Corrector appointed in London; this I lookt upon only as a Contrivance to throw the delays of the press, caused partly by his own and his Printers Neglect, upon me: & therefore having Answered it then, as I have done in this Paper, to the Satisfaction, as I thought, of the Referrees present, I took no further Notice of it.

Since You now know that the Printer has had the dropt Sheet in his hands full Nine Months; that he may have six Sheets more whenever the Referrees please; that they have also 175 Sheets of the second Volume in their hands; that I never delayed Correcting and returning the proof Sheets as usually; I hope you are satisfied I have not been guilty of any dilatoriness or Neglect, & that you will not suffer me to be supposed or insinuated to have been guilty of any

But if Sir Isaac Newton insists upon proceeding to print the Catalogue imediately before the 2d Volume. I cannot at present consent to it: for, since the Press has Stopt, I have set my Self to compleat it; and having gotten two payr of hands to help me, have perfected some Constellations, that were not compleat before: I have begun the most difficult, and am going into the Country, as I use allways to do at this time of the Year, to look after my Occasions; there, I hope to perfect a good part of what remains, and the whole in a few Months after my Return. Now You will say your Self, were it your own Case, 'tis not fitt to sett to printing the Catalogue before it be as compleat as I can render it at present, I must say further, that 'tis altogether improper to print it before the Observations of the 2d volume: because 'tis almost wholly derived from them. The Observations of the Planetts in this are much more Numerous than in the first and I will add, much Exacter, & if any One be of another Opinion, for want of experience I shall bring such Proofs of it, as no Equall and Candid Person shall ever reject.

As for Correcting the Press, I am altogether unwilling that the last Sheet shall be printed off in the remaining Volume, till I have seen them my Self, but the Catalogue is of that Importance that I shall never consent that any Page of it should be printed off till I have fully corrected and received from the Press a Proof without faults. I am not only willing but desirous that the Press should proceed to finish the first Volume of Observations, I have spoke to Mr Hodgson to take Care of correcting the 2d Proofs, and with him I shall leave the six sheets to be Added; which when they are wrought off, Sir Isaac Newton has 175 sheets of the 2d Volume in his hands, that the Press may proceed with whilest I am Compleating the Catalogue, So there need be no stop on my Account as there never was, nor hereafter shall be, God spareing me Life & Health & prospering, as I firmly believe he will, my Sincere Endeavours.

I think to send a copy of this letter to Mr Roberts & doubt not but you will imparte the contents of it to Sr Isaack Newton

I am with all due respect Sir for all your favours

JOHN FLAMSTEED, M.R.

Then this letter was delivered & imparted to Sir I N as I desired it should be. yet I never receaved any answer to it, but the presse was stopt, & no more talke of it this year: In the latter end of which the Prince of Denmarke died, on Oct 28th, 1708 in whom the Observatory lost one that would have been a great & Noble patron, had hee not been prevented by one of his Physitians who was influenced & gouverned by Sir I.N.

Being now not disturbed by him any more at present, I set my selfe to carry on such observations as I wanted & made good advances in it adding many stars to some constellations that I had gone threw before.

But when I least expected it I was afresh disturbed by another peice of Sir Is. N. ingenuitys: after the Princes death, the old Ministry was changed a New one intro <87> duced. his patrone was well with the cheif of them the Queen's Physitian was in his interest, and the New Secretary of States. it was not enough that Sir I.N. had gotten my Observations made with the Murall Arch into his hands by surprise togeather with above halfe the Catalogue Whatever my expenses had been or paines in makeing it, so long as I would not leave my selfe and paines wholly at his disposall: and therefore he procures by the Meanes of the Physitian Minister & Secretary Saint John an Order constituting the President (Sir. I.N.) of the Royal Society the Vice President & whom else they should think fit of the said Society. the Visitors of the Observatory: tis dated Dec 12. 1710 & was sent me by the Office Messenger on the 14 with the Queens letter intimating it {illeg} Copys whereof I have here inserted.

To our trusty and well-beloved the President of our Royal Society for the time being.

ANNE REGINA

Trusty and well-beloved, we greet you well. Whereas we have been given to understand that it would contribute very much to the improvement of Astronomy and Navigation, if we should appoint constant Visitors of our Royal Observatory at Greenwich, with sufficient powers for the due execution of that trust, We have therefore thought fit, in consideration of the great learning, experience and other necessary qualifications of our Royal Society, to constitute and appoint, as we do, by these presents, constitute and appoint you, the President, and in your absence the Vice-President of our Royal Society for the time being, together with such others of the Council as our said Royal Society shall think fit to join with you, to be constant Visitors of our said Royal Observatory at Greenwich: authorising and requiring you to demand of our Astronomer and Keeper of our said Observatory, for the time being, to deliver to you within six months after every year shall be elapsed, a true and fair copy of the annual observations he shall have made. And our further Will and Pleasure is that you do likewise, from time to time, order and direct our said Astronomer and Keeper of our said Royal Observatory to make such astronomical observations as you in your judgment shall think proper. And that you do survey and inspect our instruments in our said Observatory; and as often as you shall find any of them defective that you do inform the principal Officers of our Ordnance thereof; that so the said instrument may be either exchanged or repaired. And so we bid you farewell. Given at our Court of St. James's, the 12th day of December, 1710, in the ninth year of our reign. By Her Majesty's command,

H. ST. JOHN

SIR,                    WhitehallDecember 12, 1710

Her majesty commands me to acquaint you that she has thought fit, for the improvement of astronomy and navigation, to appoint the President, and in his absence the Vice-President of the Royal Society for the time being, together with such other as the Council of the said Society shall think fit to join with them, to be constant Visitors of the Royal Observatory. And for the better enabling you to make the necessary observations for these ends, directions are likewise given for repairing, erecting, or changing Her Majesty's instruments in the said Observatory, as well as for purchasing those that belong to you.

The Queen does not doubt but you will readily comply with the instructions the said Visitors shall think to give you. However I am commanded to signify Her Majesty's pleasure to you that you do deliver to them, within six months after every year shall be expired, a fair and true copy of the annual observations you shall have made: and you do also make such astronomical observations as the said Visitors in their judgment shall at any time think to direct you. I am, Sir, your most humble Servant, 

H. ST. JOHN

The next morning after I receaved this, I waited on Mister Secretary Saint John & told him that I was injured and should be hindred by this new constitution of Visitors. that I wanted no new Instruments & that if I did the Visitors were not skillful enough to contrive them. that for my repairs of the Observatory the Office of the Ordinance had hitherto taken care of them & would now as soone as the weather should be fit, that the Instruments & clocks in the house were all my owne that I had hitherto repayred them all at my own charge that I had expended above 2000lmore than my appointments in instruments & assistants & that it would be very unjust to goe about to deprive mee both of the honor & benefit of my own labor & expenses & confer them on those who had done nothing but obstruct & hinder me all they Could & wanted to boast of their Merits in preserving my labors because they had Nothing of their own worth the publick view. Mr Secretary seemd Not to regard what I said, but answered me haughtily The Queen would be obeyd The Lord Rochester the Queen Unkle, liveing near the Secretary's office I also waited upon him & shewed him what tricks & disingenuous usage were put upon me by Sir. I.N. & tho I found no immediate advantage by it, yet I am apt to beleive it was of use to me afterwards.

Sir. I.N. valued himselfe very much upon the suggestion that it  would contribute very much to the improvement of Astronomy & Navigation if there were constant Visitors appointed of the Observatory, &c & one of the principall of the Councell of the Royal Society could not forbear to speake of it to me in publick company: whereas the contrary is evident from what hapned to the Noble Tycho, who had no Visitors of his Observatory <88> appointed over him during the Reign of his patron King ffrederic the 2 & when some persons were appointed in the following reigne of King Christian, they were such as were very unfit for that purpose, much lesse skillful than himselfe, & made use of purposely to asperse him onely, to make him uneasy & withdraw. that the Courtiers might get his appointments (which were 2000 dollars a year allowd him from the Tresury, a ffee in Norway, worth 1000 dollars per year more, & the prebend of Roschild, of 1000 more) into the kings hand againe which they did & soon, by him, were conferd on Templars. My appointments, tho very small in comparison of his, were also designed by Sir I N for other persons that would be dependent on him; & this expedient of Visitors was to performe strange things. but the good providence of God so ordered it that I received but little damage by it. & he got little but shame & disgrace for his ingratitude to me in disturbing me in my businesse which he was bound by his Oath to assist me in, as President of the Royal Society & as cheife (as he had made himself) of the Princes Referrees, or indeed the all of them

But now that he got another pretence of authority to make me sensible of it a report was spread that a letter was comeing to me from the Royal Society this was in the beginning of Dec 1710 & was occasiond I beleive, by their knowing of Mr. Secretary Saint John's letter that was brought to my hands on the 14. I heard nothing of any letter from them if they then designed any, I beleive on better thoughts it was layd by. but in March following I was surprised when it was privately told me that my Catalogue (which I was then workeing upon to compleat it as far as I then could) was in the presse: but more with a letter of Dr. Arbuthnot dated the 14 of March 1711, wherein he very confidently required of me the Copy of the stars places of 6 Constellations, viz. of Draco, Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Cepheus, Cassiopea, & Hercules: That had not been delivered into Sir I N hand when he got the rest into his possession by tricks & pretences. This I beleive was one of the boldest thinges that ever was attempted none that had lesse dexterity & boldness & Art then the Doctor would have had the confidence to have mentiond such a demand. I had made my instruments and mainteined my assistants at my own charge, without complaint of it so long as I could be quiet & undisturbed by the small people that cried him up. I had put a Copy of that parte of my Catalogue which was in order into his hands, to be preserved in case of my mortality & to prevent it from being lost by accidents, & to let him see that I could goe on with it as soon as I had determined the Right ascensions & distances from the Pole of other stars in other constellations. I gave him also copys of them; never designeing or intending that he or any but my self should publish them; nor indeed could anyone else. for More observations were still wanteing to compleate  <89> it. & I was addeing or correcting something in it every day: some letters passed betwixt me & the Doctor Arbuthnot wherein he still urged me to give them the Copys of the constellations onely, wanteing, as he thought, to compleate my Catalogue: which I allways answered civilly with such just excuses as are before suggested. desireing still that I might see him either at the Observatory or in London, where at last he met me on March the 29, & when I enquired of him whether the Catalogue were printed or no, he assured me, not a sheet of it was printed I answered him not, for I was sure it was, because he then offered (in the hearing of M Hodgson & another gentleman I had taken with me to be a witnesse of our Conversation & discourse) to pay me 10l for every press fault I should find in it. & within 4 days after a freind sent me the constellations of  fairely printed & a day or 2 after that of . So that I was now convinced that the presse was at worke & that the Doctor had told me what he knew was not true. I learnt at the same time (what had been intimated before) that Dr. Hally tooke care of the presse & pretended that he had found many faults in my Catalogue, shewed some sheets of it publickly in Child's Coffeehouse at St. Paul's. & boasted what paines he had been at in correcting them.

I had told Dr. Arbuthnot in one of my letters[3] that one of Dr. Hallys best freinds & the wisest of them had sayd of him that the onely way to have my businesse spoyled effectually was to trust it to his management Now the truth of this expression was proved for I found not onely the names of the starrs in my Catalogue altered, but the numbers also in many places changed and others put in their roomes that were sometimes 15 minutes false. & therefore it was very effectually spoyled

And by boasting of these corrections, as he cald them he would insinuate to the World that they were more obliged to him for his paines in correcting than they Were to me for above 30 yeares spent in composeing it. the Cost of makeing Instruments & hireing assistants at my owne charge, for by altering the names (to make them agree with his own faulty hemisphere) he had made himself in some sort, but a very bad one, a proprietor in that Catalogue he printed, without my name to it, or ever consulting me about it: which I would never consent to, as they well knew by my letter to Sir Ch: Wren which had been imparted to Sir I N & Halley was not ignorant of.

On June 23, 1711, he delivered to My niece, Mrs Hodgson, a fayre copy of all the sheets of the Catalogue but without any preface to it. when I examined it I found more faults in it & greater than I imagined the lazy tho Impudent Editor either could, or durst have committed he had taken no care to put those into their proper order which I had left digested to his hands; because I had not yet got situation to complete the constellations to which they belonged: particularly the stars of Hevelius his new constellations with Hercules Cassiopea & the two beares, in some places hee had altered the stars right ascentions <90> & distances from the pole & made them false which were true before & in the Constellation of Draco there was not above 6 or 8 stars that he had not corrupted besides, I had added above 30 stars to this Constellation as many to Hercules & so many on others, that the total number of them in my Own Catalogue would be near 400 more than ther were in those papers I had intrusted Sir I N. with to preserve in case of accidents: & which he had betrayed into Hallys hands when he had been told of his qualifications before. Therefore finding no other remedy, I resolved to reprint it at my own charge. I procured a couple of expert calculators Mr Ab. Ryley & Mr. Crosthwait corrected his faults & blunders got the places of the stars lately observed calculated by both of them for greater certainty made a new Copy in which the ancient names were restored Hevelius his Constellations inserted amongst the rest in their proper places, & in the order I first designed. But paper was exceding scarce & dear, because of the War with France not yet over which delayed the printing my intended edition corrected & enlarged.

In the meane time Sir I.N. summons me to meet him at the house of the Royal Society in Crane Court October 26 1711 where I found him with Dr Sloane Dr Mead & one more that I knew not but I believe was his or their Clark at the time. he cald these three, with himselfe a Committee & told me they had sent for me to know what repayres I wanted, or Instruments. I told him that the Office of the Ordnance took care of my repayres that it was now too late in the year to set about them but that as soon as the Spring came I should have that done which was necessary, & as for my Instruments they were all my own either given me by Sir Jonas Moor, or made by myselfe at my own charge, & always repayred at my own expense & further that I would not suffer any one to concern themselves about repayring of my owne instruments, in which & necessary assistance I had spent above 2000lb.

The impetuous gentleman hereupon said, As good have no Observatory as No Instruments & soon, conceiveing that I apprehended his design & obviated it by my Answers, broke out into a passion & used me as I was never used before in my life: I gave no answers; but onely desired him to be calmer, & moderate his passions, thankd him for the many honorable names he gave me & told him God had blest my endeavours hitherto, that his Wisdom was beyond the Wisdom of men & that I committed my all to him. Dr Mead seconded him unprovokt in his ill language but DrSloane held his peace I thankt him for his civility permitted him to help me down stairs, & at the door met Hally who had not been far of all the time & I believe had heard Sir I.N. shew his best guests, It would be too long to give an account of it all, there is a longer in my old book of Letters, pag 104. 105 A where those that come after me will find it: I pray God forgive him I do.

I doe not remember that I ever saw the observations of mine printed at the same press with my corrupted Catalogue till 3 yeares after when <91> when there were 300 Copies of the printed edition of the observations given me (as they were designed) by King George the whole were Intended for me by the Prince George of Denmark but I was forced to be content with this part of them & took them with thanks; I found them as much corrupted as the Catalogue but if God spares me life I hope to present the World with a perfect edition of them the editor haveing transcribed onely the observations of the planets & made a sorry & fallacious excuse for his omitting the observations of all the fixed stars that were not employed for finding of the planets' places.

On the 18 of June 1712 the Impudent editor with his wife, son & daughters attending him & a neighbouring Clergiman in his company came hither. I sayd little to him he offered to burne his Catalogue (so hee called his corrupted & spoyled copy of mine, of which I had now a correct & enlarged edition in the presse & the 2d sheet printing of) if I would print mine. I am apt to think he knew it was so & was endeavoring to prevent it; but to render his design ineffectual I said little to him of it: so he went away not much wiser than he came.

August 1, 1712, Sir I.N. came himself, accompanied with his Editor Dr Thorp Mr Machin, Mr Rowley & Mr Hodgson who had given me notice of their comeing beforehand. I had provided Mr Clark & Mr Ryley to attend our Conversation & accompany them to View house & my Instruments, being a little lame myself with the Gout they had a view of what they pleased except my Library. I gave them a glass of wine. Sir Isaack promised to return me a Greek Ptolemy he had borrowed of me & 4 Volumes in 4o of the first night notes, which he had kept in his hands now about six yeares to no other purpose but to show his Authority & good Nature & returned not till more than four yeares after, when I had commenced a suite against him for them.

This businesse being over, & Sir I.N. finding that his Visitation had not the effect he promised to himselfe, hee tooke care to let mee know, by the Secretarys letter as soon as the yeare 1711 was expired that the Royal Society (my Visitors) expected the copy of the observations of that year I returned an answer to him that they should have them in the time prescribed by the Order. & accordingly caused my Amanuensis, Jos. Crosthwaite to transcribe & leave them at their house in Crane court some dayes before midsummer 1712. I expected that they should have sent me a receipt for them: but Civil & just Sir I.N. esteemed it too great a favour for me. I did the same for the year following on a second letter, from the Secretary of the Royal Society & the next year 1713-1714 I found them both printed, abridged, & so spoyled by the Editor of my Catalogue that I would no longer owne them, for mine the most materiall observations were omitted, & the rest so managed that it seemed to me he had designed to spoyle them; out of Spight, he had inserted some that were imperfect, & given the Right Ascentions & distances of the Planets from the pole, deduced from the Observations but not their longitudes & latitudes this was too much drudgery for his acuteness{illeg}and who was used to procure what he published as his owe at easyer rates.

<92> 

Apr 19 1717 After the same manner he got My observations of the yeare 1713 into his hands abridged, spoyled, and printed them in his Transactions for the year 1715 Numb 344. But the Queens deceasing before they could lay any claime to the next yeares, & their authority ceaseing I declined answering their further demands for tho their Authority ceased, yet their confidence did not; & the Editor who now was one of their Secretarys sent Me a bold letter to demand them, as if he had never done me any injury; which I layd by me & kept thereby that yeares from being spoyled. how unfaithfull he was in his copy I hope the skillful may see ere long for my Amanuensis J. Cr is now Copying the Volume of Observations that Sir IN. got by surprize into his hands, has nearly finished it. & I hope I may live through the blessing of God to see it published with the Observations of 12 following yeares, but if his good providence shall not continue my life so long I trust my executors will doe it according to the directions of my Will.

The last sheet of my corrected & enlarged Catalogue was printed of, Dec 5 1712 after which I designed to have had the presse to proceed with the Observations from which it was derived made with the Murall Arch but what ever Instances I made to Sir Is. Newton to have the Copy I had trusted into his hands in order to be printed I could not prevayle with him to returne it. So I set my self to continue my Observations at such times as were fit for them, & to calculate the planets places from such observations as I had made with it & to correct the tables of the planets motions In which I blesse God for it though I had not the success I expected yet I had such as gave me light & will be of use to those that come after me & may serve to perfect our knowledg of the heavens wherein the height of Wisdom is shewn of our creator if after me there shall be any found that will prosecute these studies with the same sedulity patience & sincere love of Truth that I have now for above these five & fifty years.

August 1 1714. King George succeeded to the Crown of Great Brittain. Soon after a Noble peer died who dureing his life, had supported Sir I.N. the Officers at Court were changed the new Lord Chamberlin knew me well and one that was frequently employed by him, wrote to me that through his meanes I might get the printed Copy of my Observations that had been designed for me by the Prince Georg of Denmark, into my hands with little trouble the Lord Chamberline haveing by his Office the Care of his Librarys. I thankt God for so good an opportunity my friend with the Duke of Bolton did his best but after all we find that Lords of the Treasury had the power of disposeing of them. Mr Walpole was first commissioner: Mr Methuen unaskt became my freind Mr Newport (now Lord Torrington) I had been acquainted with long since I caused a petition wherein my case was truely represented to them to be drawn up & delivered. Whereupon 300 Copys were orderd to be delivered to me <93> by the Undertaker Mr Churchill who by his Articles was bound to print but 400 I brougt them down to Greenwich and finding both Hallys corrupted edition of my Catalogue, & abridgment of my observations no lesse spoyled by him I seperated them from my Observations & some few dayes after I made a Sacrifice of them to heavenly Truth as I should doe of all the rest of my Editors paines of the like Nature if the Author of Truth should hereafter put them into My power that none of them but what he has given away & sent into forreign Countries may remaine to shew the ingratitude of two of my Countrymen who had been obliged by me more on particular Occasions than any other Mathematicall acquaintance, & who had used me Worse then ever the Noble Tycho was used in Denmark. & I should have felt the effects of their Malice & envy more had not the good providence of Almighty God prevented them.

Whilest I was solliciting this affair in the Exchequer Sir I.N. was passeing his accounts ther. concerneing the disbursement of the princes monys. he would never own to me what the prince allowed for that charge of printing. least he should quit any part of that power he pretended & he would gladly have me have thought him to have had. I have heard that the Prince designed 1200 pound for the printing Dr. Keile told me 2500 Which I am apt to beleive is true the other 1300 being not less than the Engraveing of the Maps of the Constellations & other figures will Cost but here I learnt that Sir I.N accounts specyfied 150l given to Dr. Hally for the paines he had been at in correcting, as he calls it, & publishing my Catalogue & to one of his servants for assisting him in his calculateing the places of the stars, 30l. so that Sir I.N. had wasted 180 in spoyling of it besides he told me that he had given 20l more to the poore ffrench man that drew {&} engraved the flattering figures for the frontispieces of Capitalls {up}on his complaint that the first agreement was too hard a {b}argain. So that here was 200l of the Princes mony {th}rown away onely to shew his liberality unnecessarily {whi}ch evidently proves his ignorance of the businesse for, {th}e catalogue was very correct, before his Editor {correc}ted it & the designer or engraver of the frontispiece & Capi{tals} knew no doubt how to make a bargaine for his paines {Th}e Editor & his calculator were both Indigent {and he} found this way of releiving them without any expense {to} himselfe, & makeing them open their mouths wide in crying him {up for his} liberality as they had done before for his skill in what he is {no master} of: whilest my amanuensis J: Crosthwait was at more paines in {correcting} their faults & calculateing the places of 400 stars {more} than were in my first copy, without any allowance {more} than the yearly Wages I gave him.

Having thus gotten my owne printed yearly observations & Catalogue into my own hands <37> I caused some of the Observations of MrGascoigne & Mr Crabtree made in Yorkshire & Lancashire in the yeares 1638. 39. 40. 41. 42, togeather with my owne made at Derbyshire betwixt the yeares 1669 & 1675, which I have mentioned in My Estimate, as those that were to comprise a part of my first Volume of Observations, to be printed in Latin, togeather with a smal Table for turneing the partes measured, by the Micrometer either in the longer or the lesser tube into minutes & seconds of a degree. I also sent to Sir I.N. to returne me the 175 sheets trusted into his hands {on} March 20. 1708-9, to be printed but finding he delayed to restore or even flatly denied to do it, I set my amanuensis to copy them, in order to have them printed that they might be published togeather with the Catalogue in their proper order which I had first proposed in my said Estimate & which I endeavored allways to preserve: whilest Sir I.N. as pertinaciously contended to obstruct & break that he might thereby force me to some mean submission to procure his consent. tho the Worke was nothing of it his, he had concerned himselfe with the Prince G. of Denmark without my consent in the Edition & was so bold as by his Creatures to intimate to me what he wanted: but this Cunning failed him the sheets will be copied in a short time. & I hope if God spares me health one year more, I may see them all printed & fit to be published.









I had been acquainted with \Mr. I.N./ ever since ye year 1674. had given him the diameters of ye planets observed by me at Derby in ye years 1671. 72 & 73 at Derby as also ye greatest elongations of Jupiter's satellites \of both which he made use in his Principia/ & since I came to London, ye line of the great Comet of ye year 1680 & 81. affirming that the Comet which was seen in November before was the same wth yt I observed {the} following December which he would not then grant, but contended earnestly that they were two different ones, as appears by a couple of very long letters of his to me, dated ffeb. 28, 1680-1, & Aprill 16, 1681 in w\h/ich opinion he persisted till Sept 1685 when in a letter dated ye19th of that moneth, he writes 'I have not yet computed the way \orbit/ of a Comet, but am now geoing {sic} about it & takeing that of 1680 into fresh consideration it seems very probable yt those of November & December were ye same comet.' this is what \he/ before contended against \wth some virulency/ but he had no <75> mind to remember it, & at that time I took no great notice of it, till I found when his Principa {sic} were published in yr 1687. & therein a draught of the comet's orbit, he was pleased to acknowledge yt I had contended \disputed/ that the Comets seen in November & December were one & the same & that I had given him ye line of its Way not much different from his parabolicall one their {sic} described, whereas himself had disputed against their being one, & consequently against that one describing any pbolical line as he now asserted & will appear by his owne forementioned letters to me. ffrom this time till ye yeare 1695, we corresponded civilly. especially about ye yeares 1694 & 95 when on his repeated requests I imparted to him about 150 places of the Moon deduced from observations made with ye Murall Arch & compared with my own tables fitted to Mr Horrocks his Theory but covenanted at the same time that he should not impart them to any body without my leave for I told him & he knew it very well yt I had made use of an old Catalogue of the fixed stars, made to the begining of the year 1686, from Observations taken with ye Sextant that I was busy now with a better & more convenient Instrumt; & that as soon as I had got ye New Catalogue I intended pfected all those places of ye moon should be calculated over again \& imparted to him/ but the hopes he had of makeing that Theory his own, & the Glory of restoring ye Moones Motions, would not suffer him to stay so long for.

It was not a full year after but I was told that he had pfected ye Lunar Theory. & Dr. Gregory gave out that there was no need of further Observations; for his Numbers would answer all my Observations within two or three minutes, or lesse. I had covenanted with him to have his emendations \first/ imparted to me, because I imparted to him the observations from which they were derived. but his promise was overlookt or forgot, at last it came to my hands I found ye Solar Numbers were the same I had freely given him. & the Lunar but little altered save {sic} that he had added a parcell of very small æquations which whether ye heavens would bear or not was onely to be found by compareing of his Numbers with good Observations I therefore made New lunar Tables \exactly/ agreeable to his sentiment but when I compared the Moones places calculated from them, with her places deduced from ye Observations, I found {illeg} that those Numbers which were sd to agree with yeObservations within <76> two 3 minutes would very seldome come so neare, but often differed 8. 9. or 10 minutes which I did not admire it then at all being very sensible that the psons which who so loudly on all occasions cried up his pformances in amending ye Lunar Theory & Tables did it to oblige his friendship, who had then a great Interest in a Great Courtier, and \considering also/ that {they} were psons of very ordinary skill in that pte of Mathematicks which is concerned wth the heavens & lunar Theorys.

But Mr. Newton was not displeased with their flatterys nor ever yt I could hear of endeavoured to correct them. We conversed civilly as oft as we met accidentally but and he failed not (as if he were a great Master of my methods), allwayes to aske how the Catalogue went on to which I alwayes gave him sincer {sic} answers telling him how far I had proceeded & that I wanted more hands both to carry on ye Observations & calculations yt were necessary but this I could not get him to take notice of. In the mean time some freind of mine (yt was frequently in company with me & saw how ye work went on with such assistance as I hired & payd my selfe & was though informed what the charge would be of printing the Observations of 30 yeares & engraveing ye Maps of the Constellations I had prepared) acquainted Prince George of Denmarke with my pformances Mr Newton lived near ye Court I, allwayes at a distance. he was then Pr. of ye R.S. & had a Great Courtier for his friend & one who was frequently at his Office required at Court & attending on the Prince so that he could not but hear of the Princes Inclinations to make me easier in my work nor could Mr. N. fayle to be informed of it so on ye 11th of Aprill 1704 he came down to Greenwich, visited me on my request stayd & dined with me, at his first comeing he desired to see what I had ready for ye presse I shewed him the books of Observations togeather with so much of the Catalogue as was then finished. which was about one halfe & a fayre copy of it. And with it ye Maps of yeConstellations drawn both by My Amanuensis {illeg} & Van Somer, which haveing lookt over carefully he desired me to let him have the recommending of them to ye prince, I was surprised at this proposition I had formerly tried his temper and allways found him insidious, ambitious \& excessively/ covetous of praise & impatient of contradiction. I had taken notice of some faults in ye 4th book of his principia which instead of thanking me for, he resented ill yet was <77> presumtuous of his Interest that he sometimes dared to ask why I did not hold my tongue. I considered that if I granted what he desired I should put my selfe wholly into his power & be at his Mercy who might spoyle all that came into his hands or put me to unnecessary trouble & vexation about my owne labors & all the while pretend that he did it to amend faults. where none were but what were unavoydable, or easily to be corrected & therefore excusable. I had further irri\ta/ted him by not concealeing some Truths that are since published \in print/ & notoriously knowne: & therefore civilly refused what hee desired but still he told me he would recommend them to ye Prince, & parted with me in ye evening with a short expression of very good advice, [1] which it would have been very happy for him if he had followed himself t'has been ye Rule of my life from my Infancy tho I doe not know yt it ever has been of his.

But I heard no more of his Recommendations. on the contrary. his flatterers & such small Mathematien {sic} about London as hoped to get themselves esteemed very skillfull men by Crying up his book began to Inquire \ask/ why I did not print as if I were obliged to publish my workes just when they pleased tho they understood no more \of my workes/ \than they did of/ his book which they so much cryed up. whilst they understood very little of it To obviate this Clamor I examined all my books of Observations & took an account what Number of folio pages they might fill \when printed/ & found it Much greater yn I expected; whereupon I drew my Estimate into a short paper wherein I both shewed what the Number of pages were but also in what order ye press was to worke them off & Cheifly urged yt ye Mapps of the Constellation shoud be first of all set upon that being carried on apart they might be finisht by that time the Observations were printed off: Van Somer, an excellent designer who had drawn about a dozen figures for me was then alive & ready to goe on with the rest. my Amanuensis {illeg} had not yet left me & might have been hired againe to continue in my {service} Mr Hodgsons help might also have been purchased Some of my acquaintance falln into a suspition that my labors answered not what might reasonably be expected from me, That I might cure them of their Mis-prehensions which had been impressed upon by the false & malitious suggestions of some few busy arrogant & self <78> designing people, I gave a copy or two of this Estimat to an acquaintance of myne desiring him to shew it to those of my freinds who had been possest with these unjust suspitions. At one of the Meetings of ye R.S., some of them were present he got my paper handed to one of them who sate at a distance (for then their meetings were throngd with company however thin they are at present) who opening ye paper & finding ye contents, delivered it to the Secreatary {sic} who read it, at ye Board. this convinc't ye Members present that I had been unjustly aspersed & it was moved that ye printeing of the Whole should be recommended to Prince George by ye Society:

Accordingly a Committy was appointed, who with Mr. Newton waited on ye Prince. But, who they were when they wated on him & how they made their recommendation, I was never Informed nor did they vouchsafe to consult me about it or take me along with them. all that I can tell of is yt ye Estimate was wrote in November in Novembr 1704 ye Prince chosen into ye Society No: 30, a letter from ye Prince's Secretary, \Mr. George Clarke/ directing Mr. Roberts, Sr C. Wren, Dr. Gregory & Dr. Arbuthnot, with Mr. N. to inspect my papers dated Dec. 11, 1704, which they did & somtime after gave in their report of ye charge of \prepareing &/ printing ye observations & Catalogues mentioned in ye Estimate, about 863ldviz.

< insertion from f 78v > 
ldsd
283 Rheme of paper for 400 copies at 20sh. per Rhem28300
Composition & press-Worke for 300 sheets at 20sh. p sheet30000
Charges of an Amanuensis for copying comparing correcting and exammining ye papers10000
to compute ye Planets' places, for 2 Calculators18000
-------------
in all863ld00
< text from p 78 resumes > 

But \ye/ last pticular of ye charge (180ld for ye two calculators) was not mentioned in it but added in a note under it for what reason those know best who drew it up.

Nor the charge of designeing & engraveing ye about 50 plates of ye Constellations: tho this was likely to be the heaviest pte of ye Charge, & the Observations could not be understood without them. I had further proposed ym to be ye first taken care of & begun. I had them all drawn; & 12 of them anew designed by a skillfull workeman by me. These were ye most sumptuous pt of ye worke and had it not been for them I had had no \or little/ need to crave the Prince's help to print, why they were neglected, S.I.N. best knows. \betwixt March 22 1704-5 & aprill 21, 1705 M N was knighted by ye Q at Cambridge./

Hereby I was plainly convinced that Sr I.N. was no freind to {my} worke. & every step hee tooke afterwards proved planely that whatever he pretended his designe was either to gaine the honor of all my paines to himselfe, to make me come under him as Dr Arbuthnot some time after expresst it, or to spoyle or sinke it, which it was my chiefe concern & businesse, if possible to prevent. \I therefore printed my Estimat & gave it to my friends/ < insertion from f 78v > yt they might see what my workes were & how I thought it best to proceed in printing them.

< text from p 78 resumes > 

To skreen himselfe from ye just imputions & blame that would probably \follow/ such disingenuous & ungratefull practises he made use of these gentlemen to whom he had got the Inspection of my books of Observations ordered by the Prince, & called <79> them the Prince's Referees. Of these, Sr Ch: Wren was then about 70 yeares of Age & tho he was a skillful pson, yet being full of other business he was sure to have him who lived in his neighbourhood, to consent to all his orders, & subscribe ym. Mr Roberts was an easy, good natured man but knew little of the businesse. Mr Aston had been fellow of ye same \Trinity/ colledge in Cambridge at ye same time with him. knew nothing of the businesse, lived in ye Court, had been my freind & Guest at ye Observatory, was too much a Courtier to withstand any one yt had a Noble patrone in yeMinistry, and therefore was tooke into ye Number of the Referrees sometimes for speciall purposes, Dr Gregory tho he published a peice of Astronomy knew but very \little/ of yt part of it that was cultivated here. nor was Dr Arbuthnot skilld in it but being one of the Princes physitians, he was taken in to serve S.I.N. purposes. he saw what was designed & testified to me by some expressions, that he approved not S.I.N. \such/ procedings. promised once to assist me in a pticular affaire. and, tho he met with obstructions, pformed it handsomly:

With these psons S.I.N. began to act his pte, & carry on his designes. I dealt honestly & openly wth him as will appear by ye Copys of some letters I wrote to him upon severall occasions; haveing no other designe but to have my works handsomely printed & as soone as possible for yePrince was very infirm but I soon pceived yt he designed onely to hinder ye work by delays or spoyle or sinke it. or force me to comply with his humour & flatter him & Cry him up as Dr. G. & Dr. H. did. I was forced therefore to act wth more Caution then I had done hitherto that I might give him no cause of pretensions to stop ye progresse of ye Work

To forward which I used my best diligence & honest endeavours. I hired {illeg} \one/ & employed him to copy specimens of the worke severall ptes of ye Work: 1°. the observations \of ye fixed stars/ made with ye sextant with ye M: 2°. of ye Moone made with {sic} ye same Instrument: 3o. of observations made wth ye Murall Arch: 4o. of ye New Catalogue which I sent him with a list yt gave an account of them, dated Jan. 5, 170mathML formula; but could not get them printed of till March 22 following. In ye mean time, Sr IN appointed a meeting of his referrees, March 5 following. MrChurchill was not there but Sr Isack with Dr Arbuthnot, Dr Gregory & Mr Aston dined at Churchills <80> & a forthnight after Mr Aston told me of it (for I dined not with them) & that \all/ things he thought were then agreed but paper. Now I understood yt Mr Churchill was to be the undertaker. he had beene recommended for ye purpose by one yt I tooke to be my freind without my knowledge for I did not conceive wee had any need of one, & so did some of ye Gentlemen of ye \R/ Society: but S.I.N. was resolved to make friend {sic} at my Cost for, as he ordered yematter the Undertaker was here to reap ye sole Advantage of all my Labors & great expenses & he was so confident of it, that when I intimated it to him he answered boldly The Prince would reward me for them.

However there was no recedeing: for then Sr I.Ns \cryers-up/ would have clamored that I hindered ye Printing of my owne Works my selfe: to avoyd that Imputation I was silent. tho I complained of {sic} to some freinds in private but never did any thing whereby it might appear I allowed him

At this meeting on ye 5th of March ye Specimens of the Undertakers printing were produced but found to be ill done I got others done very well & pd ye Printers myselfe.

June ye 11 following Dr Gregory & my selfe wth Mr Churchill, dined at S.I.Ns where they agreed to give Mr. Churchill 1lb 14s. p sheet. They signed ye Agreemt but I did \would/ not, tho they urged me much. I desired to be excused: for it was now plane to me yt he designed not the good of the Impression or my Advantage but to make him a freind of a great Name: by obliging a person I never had any Acquaintance with & enriching him at my Cost. The point being over I was in hopes that ye presse should have been set to work Immediately: but Sr I. thought that either I was not humble enough: there was for I had about 50 Sheets of Observations made with ye Sextant, redy copied, & ye rest of that sort would easily be finished before these could be printed off. but I found my selfe deceived: we were as far of from printing as if no such bargain had been made.

At Midsummer folloing {sic} I payd my Amanuensis & Calculators a quarters pay my selfe; & Sr Is. to encourage me to doe it, talked often of drawing ye Princes money, but, when I waited \on him/ July ye 4th following & told him yt I must goe into Surry to reap my harvest (as I usually did every year about this time), he put me of again, before I could say any thing to him of it, by telling me yt Dr Arbuthnots |daughter was ill &|yt the Dr could doe nothing till her recovery, that it was not fit we should begin to print till we had receaved his R.H.'s monys & that it would be soon enough at my return. I had put 12 sheets, ready for ye presse, into his hands a week before, He thought to work me to his ends by putting me to extraordinary charges in mainteing {sic} & paying an Amanuensis & {illeg} calculators myself \at my own charges/. But, I resolved to bear this expense patiently, & defeat his designes.

<81> 

After this I caused my Amanuensis & Calculators to goe on diligently with their worke & carried on ye Observations for compleating the Catalogue & others according as I had opportunitys but Nn became dayly more perverse & sought by severall vexatious pretences to discourage me & weary me if possible. I paid My Calculators & Amanuensis 3 quarters without any present prospect of being any wayes reimbursed but yet I had hopes, if once the press began to work they would not find any new tricks or pretences to delay repayeing me but herein too I found my self mistaken those that have begun to do ill things never blush to do worse & worse to secure themselves. Sr N had still more to doe, & was ready at coyning new excuses & pretexts to cover his disingenuous & malitious practices I had none but very honest & honorable designes in my mind I met his cunning forecasts with sincere & honest answers & thereby frustrated not a few of his malitious designs.

finding yt I psisted unwearied in my purposes he demanded to have my first Night Notes put into his hands that hee might compare them with my Copy. These were wrote in 4to Volumes & from them were commonly transcribed correctly into large folios next morning from which the Copies were taken. I knew that he would be mistaken & that they would not serve his designe about Xmas 1705 \about ye winter of feb. 170mathML formula/they were put into his hands: ffeb 23 1705-6. Mr. Hodgson acquainted me that Sr Is: had showed him 3 or 4 pages of errata yt were committed in transcribeing as he supposed & a Table made by Dr Gregory for turning ye Revolves of ye Screw into degrees, ′ & ″ wherein he wisely had supposed ye revolve everywhere equall & equable: I smiled at this & promised to send them my own Tables for that purpose & shewed them their mistakes & that there were no materiall errors committed: this was some small mortification to them: but they had learnt not to be ashamed.

Tho I had refused to handle any of the Princes money but what was to repay my proper disbursmts, & Sr IN had granted yt yn it was not necessary I should sign any agreemts wth ye Referres {sic} yet now he became very positive for Articles he had sayd to some of his Confidants that he would hamper me with Articles: it had come to my ears & therefore on his Urging me I drew up some for the Undertaker to signe. as that he should print onely 400 Copies. that he should have no interest in the Originall, &c. but these were not to his his purpose. I would not Court him; to bring about his <82> low designes he makes Articles himselfe in which some things of mine were \inserted/ & in them he covenants yeUndertaker should print 5 sheets \a week/ & for reprinting of faulty sheets. & that I should have 125lb paid me when ten sheets were printed of. these were read to me once. & I was required to signe them immediately else the worke was at a stand. no time would be allowed to consider of them. or mend any thing I thought amisse in them I was then near 140lb out of pocket all my Copy was ready for ye presse, or soon would \be/. If I refused the worke would be broke of imediately. & ye fault would be thrown upon mee. for Sr I.N. lived in ye Neighbourhood of the Court I at 6 miles distance. \he/ had his close freind ye Lord H to support him ther with ye Princes Physitian I had nothing but my sincerity & Gods blessing to depend upon. Trusting on these alone I signed them not doubting but now ye press would begin.[2]

But herein I soone found my self deceaved This would not satisfie: I would not yet cry up Sr Is. as others did to bring me to that basenesse now he has gotten my books of night notes he wants a Copy of so much of the Catalogue as I had gone throug {sic} with to be trusted into his hands he therfore demanded it I answered that it was not then pfected that believed {sic} it would conteine a good Number more yn I had yet observed and rectified. yt ye stars allready in it were about 1500 but probably I should make ym 2500. that these were ye result of all my labors in which haveing spent above 2000lb of my owne money above my Allowances it would neither be prudent nor safe to trust a Copy of them out of my owne keeping he answered that I might then put them into his hands sealed up. whereby I understood yt they were to be so kept by him till I had finished ye whole. & was ready to print it. but I considered also yt this half of my Catalogue would be of no advantage to him & consented; I therefore deliverd ye copy of so much of the Catalogue as was finished into Mr. Hodgsons hands, with orders to seal it up in Sir C Wrens presence & deliver it to S.I.N. when 10 sheets were printed, & 125lb (which would then be payable by ye Articles) should be paid me; this was April 8th, 1706: seven days: but this direction I waived afterwards: & it was put into his hands ye week afterwards without receaving a farthing for ye board or pay of my Amanuensis, or Calculators. for honest Sr Is: N. would (to use his owne words) have all things in his own power, to spoyle or sink them. \yt he might force me to second his designes, & applaud him which no honest man would not \nor/ could doe. &, God be thanked. I lay under no necessity of doeing./

<83> 

This business being over a week after meeting me in London he told me he {sic} would now draw 800lb of ye Princes money: but sayd nothing of payeing me what I had disburst however we must now put ye Worke into ye press for after such unreasonable concessions on my part his pretences for further delay were all taken away \&/ he had no excuse for further delayes.

April 4, being in London, I was told that all ye errors which he by mistake thought he had found in my Copy were quitted & yt ye first sheets would goe to the presse this week

April ye 19. I waited upon him again he told me gravely that ye Prince having subscribed a great summe to ye Emperors loan ye mony could not be receaved, but that that {sic} he had taken up monys for Mr Churchill, this was to provoke me but he failed of his designe. whatever I had hitherto expended I was content to adventure a little more. Mr Churchill was put upon me had never been at any expense, must have monys put into his hands before\hand/ to buy paper & pay ye printer. Whereby he was sure to have him at his command & tho it was covenanted that hee should print but 400 Copyes might take as many as pleased {sic}: for I never heard nor found that he had given any bond or security for his faire dealeing however it was highly reasonable he should

But this was not all the printer being to be paid by the Undertaker and not by me, was \likely to be/ careless of his worke. which I urged but to no purpose

It was May 16 ere ye first Sheet was printed of; & June ye 3rd ere we got a second; & ye 3d on ye 7 of June so here was a whole moneth since ye first was wrought of & not two sheets yet printed in ye roome of 20 that by the Articles ought to have been printed in a moneths time. I complained boldly of ye dilatorinesse but in vain all ye Answer I got was from Sr Is:s own mouth, yt wee must proceed slowly at first, & make more dispatch after.

This was one of the fruites of or haveing an Undertaker & leaveing the printer to be paid by him who neglected ye Historia Cœlestis if they had but a sorry pamplet {sic} to print

Wee had got two Alphabets yt is about 46 sheets out of the presse by Christmas 1706. & the whole (5 E) or 97, bef Dec 21. 1707: yt is 97 sheets. in about 89 weeks in which had they printed 5 sheets per week, according to their Articles, all the observations made with the murall Arch as well as made with ye sextant from 1689 to 1706 might easily have been printed<82v> all the observations made with the Murall Arch from 1689 to 1706 might have been \easily/ printed, as well as those made with Sextant

<84>

In ye mean time Sr Is. N. sometimes stopt the presse without assigneing a reason for it or any occasion given by me but upon my complaint at the first & afterward without any sollicitation of mine at all, let it goe on again \I hapned/ once to visit ye press when he was there & took yeopportunity to show him how ill the Compositor had placed ye types \of ye figs/ & how much awry to the lines to which they belonged. \Sh Kkk, pag 224/ he put his head a little nearer to the paper, |but near enough to ye fault (for he is very short sighted)| \but not near enough to see ye fault for he is very short sighted/ & Makeing a sleighting motion with his hand said Methinks they are well enough; this encouraged the Printer in his carelessnesse, the sheet was printed of & the fault not mended; & caused me to \be/ more watchfull over ye printer for now it was plane to me ytye Referee as he called himselfe was not displeasd with ye faults he committed & ye Undertaker never concerned himselfe about them he was sure of certein gaines by ye paper & presse work & somethinge More probably than we were aware of

The printeing was \of ye sextant observations being finished/ I expected ye presse should have gone on after Christmas with the Volume of Observations made with the Murall Arch which were double ye Number of the Other. but, Sr I.N. had put a full stop to ye presse tho hee knew very well that the Copy was ready fayre transcribed on 175 sheets of {sic}: what excuse he made for it I know not; for none of his confidents would acquaint me [but upon complaineing of his behaviour I had an Order subscribed by himselfe & four more of his Referrees sent me whereby he endeavored to throw ye fa\u/lt of himself on me. twas dated July 13. 1708. on ye 18th of the same month I wrote a letter to Sr Ch: Wren concerneing \it/ which after the order I shall here inserted whereby it will appear yt {illeg} he hin \onely/ hindred ye worke {illeg} whilest I forwarded it all I could & had got the 2d Volume ready to follow it \to ye Press/ … I never receaved any answer to this letter In ye meane time I had complayned to one of the Referees, who was often at Court & waited frequently on the Prince, of my ill usage that care was taken of yeUndertaker & printer but that none was taken to reimburse me what it had cost me in ye enterteinmt & pay of three calculators & in transcribeing of ye Copy for ye presse which came to more than 173ld. tho I accounted nothing for my own & servants attendant on the press. he was ashamed of it promised it should be redressed & I am apt to thinke procured a meeting to be appointed on the 20th of March following which was Notified to me. & I was then desired to bring with me what I had more by me ready for ye presse.

<85> 

The presse had now stood three moneth by Sr I.N. onely procurement for to keep all things wholly in his own power he had brought in an Undertaker who was useless to the businesse & served onely to spoyle ye Worke or worse, & a printer whom I beleive he paid. I am sure he never consulted me about ye payment of either tho there was sufficient cause all the Articles that related to them haveing been broken, but by this management hee had them wholly at his devotion, On the day appointed March the 20. 1707-8 I tooke up with me to London all the Observations here made betwixt Septembr 1689 & December 1705, fairely copyed in 175 sheets of large paper: Six sheets were of ye planets' places calculated from ye Observations made with the Sextant, which \ought/ to have been printed next after ye said Observations as also a faire copy of the places of the stars in the Eclipticall & as many of ye Southerne constellations as I had then rectified. The referees viewd them & SrIs. N. after some time withdrew & calleing Dr Arbuthnot out to him produced the following \paper/ which the other referrees as I remember signed. he would not deliver it to mee but gratiously permitted \me/ to take a copy of it, which I have here inserted.

London, March 20, 1707-8

It is agreed between Sir Isaac Newton & Mr. John Flamsteed,

1st. That the 2d Volume of the Astronomical Observations, with the figures of the first Volume, shall be presently delivered into Sir Isaac Newtons hands

2d. That the Catalogue of the fixed Stars, here present, shall likewise be delivered into Sir Isaac Newton's hands.

3d. That the catalogue of the fixed stars, now in Sir Isaac Newton's hands, shall be delivered to Mr. Flamsteed in order to have the magnitudes inserted, & to be returned with the Magnitudes after Sixteen days.

4t. That upon the Redelivery of that Catalogue, Sir I.N. shall pay to Mr. Flamsteed, one Hundred & twenty-five pounds on the Prince's account.

5t. That upon the delivery of the Catalogue of the Fixed Stars, as far as it can be completed at this time, Mr Flamsteed shall have ye rest of yeMoney Stipulated betwixt him & the Referrees: he Undertaking to Correct the Press, & appointing Correctors who live in Town, that the Work may not be retarded. Memorandum, That at the Same time ye 2d Volume of Observations (with the figures mentioned here) was delivered into Sr Issac Newtons Hands together with a Corrected Copy of ye Eclipticall Constellations & all the Southern of ye Catalogue but that I Covenanted yt ye sd 2d copy should be returned to Me to be again Revised & delivered to ye Press, as the Printers should work it off; & yeCopy of the Eclipticall Constellations returned me, as soon as I should return the Copy now in Sr Isa Newton's hands, with the Magnitudes Inserted.

There were present at ye Meeting at ye Castle Tavern, in Pater Noster Row March 20 1707/8 Mr Roberts, Sr Isa Newton, Dr Arbuthnot, DrGregory, Mr Churchill, Mr James Hodgson myself & Isaac Wolferman.

The Conditions on which I was to deliver this 2d Volume & ye Catalogue were very hard & unjust for ye observations contained {there}in were most of them made with ye New Murall Arch which I had built at my own cost & lay me in above 120ld out of my own pocket, my other Instruments were all my own too & my Assistants were paid and maintained at my own charge. I had \layd out/ moreover above 173ld in carrying on ye works of which I had given a bill both to Sr. I.N. & severall of ye referrees. I considered yt if I should not consent to this order, S. Is. N. yt {sic} I had hindered ye printing of my own works my selfe which would serve to justify a report, spread by his his {sic} partisans very industriously that I was averse to ye publishing of them. whereas I had  <86> allways endeavored to carry them all \on/ as advantageously as I could & he had done all he could \to/ hinder me in order to make me comply with them & cry him up at the same rate they did further I saw yt if I did not lay hold of this opportunity, I could not hope to be reimburst any part of ye 173l. I had spent in prepareing ye copy for the press, & pformed my part of the agreemt in ye time agreed. but ye Mar 125 was not paid me till above 2 moneths after & then I was still above 48ld out of purse for which I had nothing but 3 copyes one yt I gave Mr. Sharp & another in which I have corrected ye faults of the press with my own hand & a 3d not complete.

I was now in hope yt ye Presse would begin againe to work with ye 2d Volume: but when after 3 or 4 moneth delay I found that for all my Instances, there was not the least step made towards it I complained of this behaviour of Sr I.N. both payeing me short of what I had disburst & of his keeping ye 175 sheet of copy for ye 2d Volume in his hands. this I beleive was as intended carried to him whereupon to throw all the fault upon me, 8 moneth after he had stopt the presse, hee sent \me/ the following Order dated July 13 1708:

At a meeting of the gentlemen to whom his Royal Highness the Prince hath referred the care of printing Mr Flamsteed's astronomical papers,

It was agreed that the press should go on without further delay: & that if Mr Flamsteed do not take care that the press be well corrected, & go on with the dispatch, another Corrector be employed.

WhitehallJuly 13, 1708F. ROBERTS
CHR. WREN
Vera CopiaIS. NEWTON
D. GREGORY
IS. NEWTONFRAN. ASHTON



To prevent ye designed effect of this malitious order or agreement, I wrote a letter to Sr Christophr Wren who I believed hated such practises & sent it him in a few dayes after I declined writing to Sr I N. because he might suppress it. & I doubted not but Sr Cristopher would impart it both to him & the other Referees

I tooke a copy of it myselfe, to show my acquaintance friends & some gentlemen yt had an opinion \of Sr I N/ before & could not thinke he could be guilty of such collusion as this order & my letter proved upon him. the Copy follows:

The Observatory, Monday, July 19, 1708

SIR,

The Copy of the Agreemt made by the Gentlemen Referrees on Tuesday last, reflecting upon me as if by my dilatoriness I had obstructed the progress of the Press, I find myself obliged, that I may clear myself of so unjust an insinuation, with Your Leave to Acquaint you.

That tho I had got 50 Sheets of the first Volume ready copied for the Press on May ye 2d 1705, yett upon severall pretences, the printing was Obstructed; and it was May 1706, before the first Sheet was printed off

That tho by the Agreemt, the Undertaker was to print off five Sheets a Week, yett it was from May 1706 to October 1707 before we could gett 100 Sheets, comprehending the Observations of the first Volume, wrought of; that is near 75 weeks, So that taking altogether, the Printer dispatched not a Sheet and a halfe per Week.

Tho I did all I could to hasten and expedite the Work, as will appear by the Copies of my letters to Mr Churchill, Mr Mathews & Mr. Hodgson, that I have by me: I offerd to discharge the expense of the Pennypost Letters that brought the Proofs; if the post brought them in the Evening, I returned them next Morning: if in the Morning, they were sent back that evening after, without fayle; except once, on May ye 1. 1706, when the great Eclipse of the Sun hapning, company hindered me from correcting & returning that proof till the Morning following & no longer.

The greatest dispatch, was made, both this year 1706 & the following 1707, in Autumn; when I was Absent in Surrey, yett that was less than the 5 Sheets per Week and then the Work was allways worst done.

At my Return after ye last Years Harvest, I found a whole Sheet had been Omitted by the Printer, who had either lost or mislayd it: I copied it immediately from my Manuscripts, & sent it to him, with directions to print it, & reprint ye next. I caused also Sr Isaac Newton to be acquainted with it: & informed both Sr Isaac and ye Printer that I had about halfe a dozen Sheets more, comprehending the Planetts places derived from the Observations made with the Sextant, contain'd in this Volume, to be added to it; but this was not taken notice of, The 6 sheets were not call'd for; and the Press has stood still ever since

March 12th last I received a letter from Mr Roberts, Your Self, and Sr I Newton desiring me to meet them in London on ye 20th & bring with me what Papers I had ready for the Press. I Attended them with the 2d Volume containing ye Observations made betwixt Sept. 1689 and 1705 compleat in about 175 sheets of Paper, I exhibited also at the same time the aforementioned six Sheets that were to be added to the first Volume; desired that the dropt Sheet might be printed & the next following reprinted, or at least the two first Pages of it, which I thought had been Accorded. The 2d Volume by Agreemt was put into the Referrees' Hands. I desired the Press, after the first Volume was compleat, might go on with it. At this meeting also I had 125 lib ordered to be paid me in part of above 170 lib it had Cost me in repayeing & entertaining three Calculators & Copiers whom I had dismisst for want of it at Midsummer 1706. Sir Isaac Newton required that I should insert the Magnitudes of the fixed Stars into a Copy of so much of the Catalogue, as I had gone through with, that I had deposited in his hands; which was done for him, and part of a 3d more perfect copy left in his hands as a gage for returning it.

At this Meeting the Undertaker Urged to have a Corrector appointed in London; this I lookt upon only as a Contrivance to throw the delays of the press, caused partly by his own and his Printers Neglect, upon me: & therefore having Answered it then, as I have done in this Paper, to the Satisfaction, as I thought, of the Referrees present, I took no further Notice of it.

Since You now know that the Printer has had the dropt Sheet in his hands full Nine Months; that he may have six Sheets more whenever the Referrees please; that they have also 175 Sheets of ye second Volume in their hands; that I never delayed Correcting and returning the proof Sheets as usually; I hope you are satisfied I have not been guilty of any dilatoriness or Neglect, & that you will not suffer me to be supposed or insinuated to have been guilty of any

But if Sr Isaac Newton insists upon proceeding to print the Catalogue imediately before the 2d Volume. I cannot at present consent to it: for, since the Press has Stopt, I have set my Self to compleat it; and having gotten two payr of hands to help me, have perfected some Constellations, that were not compleat before: I have begun the most difficult, and am going into the Country, as I use allways to do at this time of the Year, to look after my Occasions; there, I hope to perfect a good part of what remains, and the whole in a few Months after my Return. Now You will say your Self, were it your own Case, 'tis not fitt to sett to printing the Catalogue before it be as compleat as I can render it at present, I must say further, that 'tis altogether improper to print it before the Observations of the 2d volume: because 'tis almost wholly derived from them. The Observations of the Planetts \in this/ are much more Numerous than in the first and I will add, much Exacter, & if any One be of another Opinion, for want of experience I shall bring such Proofs of it, as no Equall and Candid Person shall ever reject.

As for Correcting the Press, I am altogether unwilling that the last Sheet shall be printed off in the remaining Volume, till I have seen them my Self, but the Catalogue is of that Importance that I shall never consent that any Page of it should be printed off till I have fully corrected and received from the Press a Proof without faults. I am not only willing but desirous that the Press should proceed to finish the first Volume of Observations, I have spoke to Mr Hodgson to take Care of correcting the 2d Proofs, and with him I shall leave the six sheets to be Added; which when they are wrought off, Sr Isaac Newton has 175 sheets of the 2d Volume in his hands, that the Press may proceed with whilest I am Compleating the Catalogue, So there need be no stop on my Account as there never was, nor hereafter shall be, God spareing me Life & Health & prospering, as I firmly believe he will, my Sincere Endeavours.

I think to send a copy of this letter to Mr Roberts & doubt not but you will imparte the contents of it to Sr Isaack Newton

I am with all due respect Sr for all your favours

JOHN FLAMSTEED, M.R.

Then this letter was delivered & imparted to Sr I N as I desired it should be. yet I never receaved any answer to it, but the presse was stopt, & no more talke of it this year: In ye latter end of which the P. of Denmarke died, on Oct 28th, 16|7|08 in whom ye Observatory lost one yt would have been a great & Noble patron, had hee not been prevented by one of his Physitians who was influenced & gouverned by Sir I.N.

Being now not disturbed by him any more at present, I set my selfe to carry on such observations as I wanted & made good advances in it adding many stars to some constellations yt I had gone threw before.

But when I least expected it I was afresh disturbed by another peice of Sr Is. N. ingenuitys: after ye Princes death, ye old Ministry was changed a New one intro <87> duced. his patrone was well with ye cheif of them the Qs Physitian and was \in his/ interest, and ye New Secretary of States. it was not enough that Sr I.N. had gotten my Observations made \with/ ye Murall Arch into his hands by surprise togeather with above halfe the Catalogue Whatever my expenses had been or paines in makeing it, so long as I would not leave my selfe and paines wholly at his disposall: and therefore he procures by ye Meanes of ye Physitian Minister & Secretary St. John an Order constituting the Presidnt (Sr. I.N.) of the R.S. the Vice President & whom else they should think fit of the sd Society. the Visitors of the Observatory: &|tis| dated Dec 12. 1710 & was sent me by the Office Messenger on ye 14 with the Queens letter intimating it {illeg} Copys whereof I have here inserted.

To our trusty and well-beloved the President of our Royal Society for the time being.

ANNE R.

Trusty and well-beloved, we greet you well. Whereas we have been given to understand that it would contribute very much to the improvement of Astronomy and Navigation, if we should appoint constant Visitors of our Royal Observatory at Greenwich, with sufficient powers for the due execution of that trust, We have therefore thought fit, in consideration of the great learning, experience and other necessary qualifications of our Royal Society, to constitute and appoint, as we do, by these presents, constitute and appoint you, the President, and in your absence the Vice-President of our Royal Society for the time being, together with such others of the Council as our said Royal Society shall think fit to join with you, to be constant Visitors of our said Royal Observatory at Greenwich: authorising and requiring you to demand of our Astronomer and Keeper of our said Observatory, for the time being, to deliver to you within six months after every year shall be elapsed, a true and fair copy of the annual observations he shall have made. And our further Will and Pleasure is that you do likewise, from time to time, order and direct our said Astronomer and Keeper of our said Royal Observatory to make such astronomical observations as you in your judgment shall think proper. And that you do survey and inspect our instruments in our said Observatory; and as often as you shall find any of them defective that you do inform the principal Officers of our Ordnance thereof; that so the said instrument may be either exchanged or repaired. And so we bid you farewell. Given at our Court of St. James's, the 12th day of December, 1710, in the ninth year of our reign. By Her Majesty's command,

H. ST. JOHN

SIR,                    WhitehallDecember 12, 1710

Her majesty commands me to acquaint you that she has thought fit, for the improvement of astronomy and navigation, to appoint the President, and in his absence the Vice-President of the Royal Society for the time being, together with such other as the Council of the said Society shall think fit to join with them, to be constant Visitors of the Royal Observatory. And for the better enabling you to make the necessary observations for these ends, directions are likewise given for repairing, erecting, or changing Her Majesty's instruments in the said Observatory, as well as for purchasing those that belong to you.

The Queen does not doubt but you will readily comply with the instructions the said Visitors shall think to give you. However I am commanded to signify Her Majesty's pleasure to you that you do deliver to them, within six months after every year shall be expired, a fair and true copy of the annual observations you shall have made: and you do also make such astronomical observations as the said Visitors in their judgment shall at any time think to direct you. I am, Sir, your most humble Servant, 

H. ST. JOHN

The next morning after I receaved this, I waited on M Secretary St John & told him that I was injured and should be hindred by this new constitution of Visitors. that I wanted no new Instruments & that if I did the Visitors were not skillful enough to contrive ym. that for my repairs of the Observatory ye Office of ye Ordinance had hitherto taken care of them & would now as soone as the weather should be fit, that the Instrumts & clocks in ye house were all my owne that I had hitherto repayred them all at my own charge that I had expended above 2000l more yn my appointmts in instrumts & assistants & yt it would be very unjust to goe about to deprive mee both of the honor & benefit of my own labor & expenses & confer them on those who had done nothing but obstruct & hinder me all they Could & wanted to boast of their Merits in preserving my labors because they had Nothing of their own worth the publick view. Mr Secretary seemd Not to regard what I said, but answered me haughtily The Queen would be obeyd The Lord Rochester ye Queen Unkle, liveing near the Secretary's office I also waited upon him & shewed him what tricks & disingenuous usage were put upon me by Sr. I.N. & tho I found no immediate advantage by it, yet I am apt to beleive it was of use to me afterwards.

Sr. I.N. valued himselfe very much upon ye suggestion that it had been usuall would contribute very much to the improvemt of Astronomy & Navigation if there were constant Visitors appointed of ye Observatory, &c & one of ye principall of ye Councell of ye RS could not forbear to speake of it to me in publick company: whereas the contrary is evident from what hapned to ye Noble Tycho, who had no Visitors of his Observatory <88> appointed over him during the Reign of his patron King ffrederic ye 2 & when some persons were appointed in the following reigne of King Christian, they were such as were very unfit for that purpose, much lesse skillful yn himselfe, & made use \of purposely to asperse him/ onely, to make him \uneasy &/ withdraw. that the Courtiers might get his appointments (which were 2000 dollars a year allowd him from yeTresury, a ffee in Norway, worth 1000 dollars p year more, & ye prebend of Roschild, of 1000 more) into ye kings hand againe \which they did/& soon, by him, \were/ conferd on Templars. My appointmts, tho very small in comparison of his, were also designed by Sr I N for other persons yt would be dependent on him; & this expedient of Visitors was to pforme strange things. but the good providence of God so ordered it that I received but \little/ damage by it. & he got little but shame & disgrace for his ingratitude to me in disturbing me in my businesse which he was bound \by his Oath/ to assist me in, as Pr. of ye R S. & as cheife (as he had made himself) of ye Princes Referrees, or indeed ye all of them

But now \yt/ he got another pretence of authority to make me sensible of it a report was spread that a letter was comeing to me from ye R.S. this was in ye beginning of Dec 1710 & was occasiond I beleive, by their knowing of Mr. Sec. St John's letter that was brought to my hands on ye14. I heard nothing of any letter from ym if they then designed any, I beleive on better thoughts it was layd by. but in March folloing {sic} I was surprised when it was privately told me yt my Catalogue (which I was then workeing upon to compleat it as far as I then could) was in yepresse: but more with a letter of Dr. Arb: dated ye 14 of March 1711, w\h/erein he very confidently required of me the Copy of the stars places of 6 Constellations, viz. of Draco, Ursa Major, Ursa Minor, Cepheus, Cassiopea, & Hercules: That had not been delivered into Sr I N hand when he got the rest into his possession by tricks & pretences. This I beleive was one of the boldest thinges yt ever was attempted none yt \had/ lesse dexterity & boldness & Art then ye Dr. would have have had the confidence to have mentiond such a demand. I had made my instrumts and mainteined my assistants at my own charge, without complaint of \it/ so long as I could be quiet & undisturbed by ye small people yt cried him up. I had put \a Copy of/ that pte of my Catalogue which was in order into his hands, to be preserved in case of my mortality & to prevent it from being lost by accidents, \&/ to let him see yt I could goe on wth it as soon as I had determined ye Right ascensions & distances from ye Pole of other stars in other constellations. I gave him also copys of them; never designeing or intending yt he or any but my self should publish them; nor indeed could anyone else. for More observations were still wanteing to compleate  <89> it. & I was adding to it {sic} addeing or correcting something in it every day: some letters passed betwixt me & the Dr. Arb: wherein he still urged me to give them the Copys of the constellations \onely,/ wanteing, as he thought, to compleate my Catalogue: which I allways answered civilly with such just excuses as are before suggested. desireing still that I might see him either at ye Observatory or in London, where at last he met me on March ye 29, & when I enquired of him whether ye Catalogue were printed or no, he assured me, not a sheet of it was printed I answered him not not {sic}, for I was sure it was, because he then offered (in the hearing of M Hodgson & another gentleman I had taken with me to be a witnesse of or Conversation & discourse) to pay me 10l for every press fault I should find in it. & within 4 days after a freind sent me ye constellations of  &  fairely printed & a day or 2 after yt of . So yt I was now convinced yt the presse was at worke & that ye Dr. had told me what he knew was not true. I learnt at ye same time (what had been intimated before) yt Mr.|Dr.| Hally tooke care of ye presse \&/ pretended that he had found many faults in my Catalogue, shewed some sheets of it publickly in \Child's/ Coffeehouse at St. Paul's. & boasted what paines he had been at in correcting them.

I had told Dr. Arbuthnot in one of my letters[3] that one of Dr. Hallys best freinds & ye wisest of them had sayd of him that the onely way to have my businesse spoyled effectually was to trust it to his managemt Now the truth of this expression was proved for I found not onely yenames of the starrs in my Catalogue altered, but the numbers also in many places changed and others put in their roomes yt were sometimes 15 minutes false. \& therefore it was very effectually spoyled/

And by boasting of these corrections, as he cald them he would insinuate to the World yt they were more obliged to him for his paines in correcting yn they Were to me for above above 30 yeares spent in composeing it. ye Cost of makeing Instruments & hireing assistants at my owne charge, for by altering ye names (to make ym agree with his own faulty hemisphere) he had mad {sic} himself in some sort, but a very bad one, a proprietor in that Catalogue he printed, without my name to it, or ever consulting me about it: which I would never consento {sic}, as they well knew by my letter to Sr Ch: Wren which had been imparted to Sr. I N & Halley was not ignorant of.

On June 23, 1715|1711|, he delivered to My niece, Mrs Hodgson, a fayre copy of all the sheets of the Catalogue but without any preface to it. the when I examined it I found more faults in it & greater than I imagined ye lazy tho Impudent Editor either either {sic} could, or durst have committed he had taken no care to put those into their proper order which I had left digested to his hands; because I had not yet got situation to complete ye constellations to which they belonged: pticularly ye stars of Hevelius his new constellations with Hercules Cassiopea & ye two beares, in some places hee had altered ye stars right ascentions <90> & distances from ye pole & made them false which were true before & in ye Constellation of Draco there was not above 6 or 8 stars yt he had not corrupted besides, I had added above 30 stars to this Constellation as many to Hercules & so many on others, yt ye total number of them in my Own Catalogue would be near 400 more yn ther were in those papers I had intrusted Sr: I N. with to preserve in case of accidents: & which he had betrayed into Hallys hands when he had been told of of {sic} his qualifications before. Therefore finding no other remedy, I resolved to reprint it at my own charge. I procured a couple of expert calculators \Mr Ab. Ryley & Mr. Crosthwait/ corrected his faults & blunders got the places of the stars lately observed calculated by both of them for greater certainty made a new Copy in which the ancient names were restored Hevelius his Constellations inserted amongst the rest in thei {sic} proper places, & in the order I first designed. \But paper was exceding scarce & dear, because of ye War with France not yet over which delayed \ye printing/my intended edition \corrected & enlarged.//

In ye meane time Sr I.N. summons me to meet him at ye house of ye Royal Society in Crane Court Octobr 26 \1711/ where I found him with DrSloane Dr Mead & one more that I knew not but I believe was his or their Clark at ye time. he cald these three, with himselfe a Committee & told me they had sent for me to know what repayres I wanted, or Instrumts. I told him that ye Office of ye Ordnance took care of my repayres that ye office of ye that it was now too late in ye year to set about them but that as soon as ye Spring came I should have that done which was necessary, & as for my Instrumts they were all my own either given me by Sr Jonas Moor, or made by myselfe at my own charge, & always repayred at my own expense & further yt I would not suffer any one to concernen {sic} themselves about repayring of my owne instruments, in which & necessary assistance I had spent above 2000lb.

The impetuous gentleman hereupon said, As good have no Observatory as No Instruments & soon, conceiveing that I apprehended his design & obviated it by my Answers, broke out into a passion & used me as I was never used before in my life: I gave no answers; but onely desired him to be calmer, & moderate his passions, thankd him for the many honorable names he gave me & told him God had blest my endeavours hitherto, that his Wisdom was beyond the Wisdom of men & yt I committed my all to him. Dr Mead seconded him unprovokt in his ill language but DrSloane held his peace I thankt him for his civility pmitted him to help me down stairs, & at ye door met Hally who had not been far of all the time & I believe had heard Sr I.N. shew his best guests, \It would be/ too long to give an account of it all, there is a longer in my old book of Letters, pag 104. 105 A \where those yt come after me will find it: I pray God forgive him I do./

I doe not remember yt I ever saw the observations of mine printed at ye same press wth my corrupted Catalogue \till/ 3 yeares after when <91> when there were 300 Copies of ye printed edition of the observations given me (as they were designed) by King George the whole were Intended for me by the Prince G: of Denmark but I was forced to be content with this part of them & took them with thanks; I found them as much corrupted as the Catalogue but if God spares me life I hope to present ye World with a perfect edition of them the editor haveing transcribed onely the observations of the planets & made a sorry & fallacious excuse for his omitting ye observations of all the fixed \stars/ ytwere not employed for finding of ye planets' places.

On ye 18 of June \1712/ ye Impudent \editor/ with his wife, son & daughters attending him & a neighbouring Clergiman in his company \came hither/. I sayd little to him he offered to burne his Catalogue (so hee called his corrupted & spoyled copy of mine, of which I had now a correct & enlarged edition in ye presse & ye 2d sheet printing of) if I would print mine. I am apt to think he knew it was so & was endeavoring to prevent it; but to render his design ineffectual \I/ said little to him of it: so he went away not much wiser yn he came.

August 1, \1712/, Sr I.N. came himself, accompanied with his Editor Dr Thorp Mr Machin, Mr Rowley & Mr Hodgson who had given me notice of their comeing beforehand. I had provided Mr Clark & Mr Ryley to attend or Conversation & accompany them to View house & my Instrumts, being a little lame myself wth ye Gout they had a view of what they pleased except my Library. I gave ym a glass of wine. Sr Isaack promised to return me a Greek Ptolemy \he had borrowed/ of me & 4 Volumes in 4o of ye first night notes, which he had kept in his hands now about six yeares to no other purpose but to show his Authority & good Nature & returned not till more yn four yeares after, when I had commenced a suite against him for them.

This businesse being over, & Sr I.N. finding yt his Visitation had not ye effect he promised to himselfe, hee tooke care to let mee know, by yeSecretarys letter as soon as the yeare 1711 was expired yt ye R.S. (my Visitors) expected ye copy of ye observations of yt year I returned an answer to him that they should have ym in ye time prescribed by ye Order. & accordingly caused my Amanuensis, Jos. Crosthwaite to transcribe & leave them at their house in Crane court some dayes before midsummer \1712/. I expected that they should have sent me a receipt for them: but Civil & just Sr I.N. esteemed it too great a favour for me. I did ye same for ye year following on a second letter, from the Secretary of yeR.S. & the next year following \1713-1714/ I found them \both/ printed, abridged, & so spoyled by the Editor of my Catalogue that I would no longer owne them, for \mine/ ye most materiall observations were omitted, & the rest so managed that it seemed to me he had designed to spoyle them; out of Spight, he had inserted \some that were/ impfect, & given ye Right Ascentions & distances of ye Panets {sic} from ye pole, deduced from ye Observations but not their longitudes & latitudes this was too much labour \drudgery/ for his acuteness \{illeg}\and/ who was used to procure what he published as his owe at easyer rates./

<92>

\Apr 19 1717/ After ye same manner he got My observations of ye yeare 1713 into his \hands/ abridged, spoyled, and printed them in his Transactions for the year 1715 Numb 344. But the Queens deceasing before they could lay any claime to the next yeares, & their authority ceaseing I declined answering their further demands for tho their Authority ceased, yet their confidence did not; & the Editor who now was one of their Secretarys sent Me a bold letter to demand ym, as if he had never done me any injury; which I layd by me & kept theirby {sic} that yeares from being spoyled. how unfaithfull he was in his copy I hope the skillful may see ere long for my Aman. \J. Cr/ is now Copying yeVolume of Observations yt Sr IN. got by surprize into his hands, has nearly finished it. & I hope I may live through ye blessing of God to see it published with ye Observations of 12 following yeares, but if his good providence shall not continue my life so long I hope \trust/ my executors will doe it according to the directions of my Will.

The last sheet of my corrected & enlarged Catalogue was printed of, Dec 5 1712 after which I designed to have had the presse to proceed with ye Observations from which it was derived made with ye Murall Arch but what ever Instances I made to Sr Is. Newton to have the Copy I had trusted into his hands in order to be printed I could not prevayle with him to returne it. So I set my self to continue my Observations at such times as were fit for them, & to calculate the planets places from such observations as I had made with it & to correct ye tables of ye planets motions In which I blesse God for it though I had not the success I expected yet I had such as gave me light & will be of use to those that come after me & may serve to pfect our knowledg of the heavens wherein ye height of Wisdom is shewn of our creator if \after me/ there shall be \any/found that will prosecute these studies with ye same sedulity patience & sincere love of Truth yt I have now for above thes {sic} five & fifty years.

August 1 1714. King George succeeded to ye Crown of Great Brittain. Soon after a Noble peer died who dureing his life, had supported Sr I.N. the Officers at Court were changed the new Lord Chamberlin knew me well and one yt was frequently employed by him, wrote to me that through his meanes I might get ye printed Copy of my Observations yt had been designed for me by ye Prince Georg of Denmark, into my hands wth little trouble the Lord Chamberline haveing by his Office the Care of his Librarys. I thankt God for so good an opportunity my friend wth ye D of Bolton did his best but after all we find yt Lords of ye Treasury had the power of disposeing of them. Mr Walpole was first commissioner: Mr Methuen unaskt became my freind Mr Newport (now Lord Torrington) I been {sic} acquainted with long since I caused a Memoriall {sic} petition wherein my case was truely represented to them to be drawn up & delivered. Whereupon 300 Copys were orderd to be delivered to me <93> by ye Undertaker Mr Churchill who by his Articles was bound to print but 400 I brougt them down to Greenwich and finding both Hallys corrupted edition of my Catalogue, & abridgmt of my observations no lesse spoyled by him I seperated them from my Observations & some few dayes after I made a Sacrifice of them to heavenly Truth as I should doe of all the rest of my Editors paines of the like Nature if ye Author of Truth should hereafter put them into My power yt none of them but what he has given away & sent into forreign Countries may remaine to shew the ingratitude of two of my Countrymen who had been obliged by me more on pticular Occasions yn any other Mathematicall acquaintance, & who had used me Worse then ever the Noble Tycho was used in Denmark. & I should have felt the effects of their Malice & envy more had not the good providence of Almighty God prevented them.

Whilest I was solliciting this affair in ye Exchequer Sr I.N. was passeing his accounts ther. concerneing ye disbursemt of ye princes monys. he would never own to me what the prince allowed for yt charge of printing. least he should quit any pt of that power he pretended & he would gladly have me have thought him to have had. I have heard yt ye Prince designed 1200 pound for ye printing Dr. Keile told me 2500 Which I am apt to beleive is true the other 1300 being not less yn ye Engraveing of the Maps of the Constellations & other figures will Cost but here I learnt that Sr I.N accounts specyfied 150l given to my Editor Dr. Hally for the paines he had been at in correcting, as he calls it, & publishing my Catalogue & to Mr. Machin |one of his servants| for assisting him in his calculateing ye places of ye stars, 30l. so yt Sr I.N. had wasted 180 in spoyling of \it/ besides he told me that he had given 20l more to ye poore ffrench man that drew {&} engraved ye \flattering/ figures for yefrontispieces of Capitalls {up}on his complaint yt ye first agreement was too hard a {b}argain. So that here was 200l of the Princes mony {th}rown away onely to shew his liberality unnecessarily {whi}ch evidently proves his ignorance of the businesse for, {th}e catalogue was very correct, before his Editor {correc}ted it & the designer or engraver of ye frontispiece & Capi{tals} knew no doubt how to make a bargaine for his paines {Th}e Editor & his drudge calculator were both Indigent {and he} found this way of releiving them without any expense {to}himselfe, & makeing them open their mouths wide in crying him {up for his} liberality as they had done before for his skill in what he is {no master} of: whilest my amanuensis \J: Crosthwait/ was at more paines in {correcting} their faults & calculateing ye places of 400 stars {more} ynwere in my first copy, without any allowance {more} yn the \yearly/ Wages I gave him.

Having thus gotten my owne printed \yearly/ observations \& Catale/ into my own hands <37> I caused \some {sic}/ ye Observations of MrGascoigne & Mr Crabtree made in Yorkshire & Lancashire in ye yeares 1638. 39. 40. 41. 42, togeather with my owne made at Derbyshire betwixt the yeares 1669 & 1675, which I have mentioned in My Estimate, as those yt were to comprise a part of my first Volume of Observations, to be printed in Latin, togeather with a smal Table for turneing ye ptes measured, by the Micrometer either in ye longer or yelesser tube into minutes & seconds of a degree. I also sent to Sr I.N. to returne me ye 175 sheets trusted into his hands {on} March 20. 1708-9, to be printed but finding he delayed to restore or even flatly denied to do it, I set my {illeg} \amanuensis/ to copy them, in order to have them printed that they might be published togeather with the Catalogue in their proper order which I had first proposed in my said Estimate & which I endeavored allways to prserve: whilest Sr I.N. as pertinaciously contended to obstruct & break that he might thereby force me to some mean submission to procure his consent. tho ye Worke was nothing of it his, he had concerned himselfe with ye Prince G. of Denmark without and my consent in ye Edition & was so bold as by his Creatures to intimate \to me/ what he wanted: but this Cunning failed him ye sheets will be copied in a short time. & I hope if God spares me health one year more, I may see them all printed & fit to be published.

Thursday, 18 August 2016

You Know Who

"I'll be watching you - with my Third Eye"



“Watson describes You Know Who as a mind without a heart, which is hard to play. 
Hard to become. 
So what I have done is invent an inner life”.

“Some actors fear if they play Sherlock Holmes for a very long run the character will steal their soul, leave no corner for the original inhabitant”




  "Yes, I have been using myself up rather too freely. I have been a little pressed of late. Have you any objection to my closing your shutters?"




    It is with a heavy heart that I take up my pen to write these the last words in which I shall ever record the singular gifts by which my friend Mr. Sherlock Holmes was distinguished...

Lemon Lyman

And I believe I'll use capital, lowercase, or Sanskrit, right up until the moment the font police cuff me and read me Miranda!



The Rules : 
Don't post in the wrong place.
 Stay on topic, people. 
Don't use capital letters. 
I don't have time to tell you twice.

Josh: 
Seems to be a very unusual social structure. 
For instance, there is leader who seems to pride herself on her organizational skills and a certain amount of discipline.

Donna: 
Right. 
That's what's called a Control Freak.

Josh: 
Well, she does seems to do an awful lot of scolding. "You've posted in the wrong place. Stay on topic people. Don't use capital letters. I don't have time to tell you twice," when clearly, she does have time to tell us twice. 



"mijorty, You got it wrong. It's understandable, but you got it wrong. On most TV staffs, stories are pitched, broken and outlined by a group, then assigned to the various writers on the staff, then polished by the show runner. That's not the way it works here. I write the scripts with the enormous help of a staff that provides research and kicks ideas around with me as well. It's like a new play being written every week. They work really hard and do a great job and they're all going to write their own scripts one day, so by way of a gratuity, I give them each a Story by credit on a rotating basis. That credit comes with money.

That said, they're paid as if they were writing scripts (and some of them have producer titles as well--simply based on what they were getting at their last job.) We're under a tremendous budget crunch here. I know it seems, with the success of the show, like we should have all the money in the world, but it doesn't work like that. People were let go in all departments; grips, gaffers, props, hair and make-up, set dressing, post-production ... And the cases of a few writers (whom I'm very fond of) their contracts called for them to get bumps which would have been very difficult to justify given their job descriptions. Their contracts also give us the option to not pick up their option, which Tommy, John and I didn't want to do given their loyal service to the show and our personal friendships with them. So we asked them if they'd be willing to stay on at their current salaries, supplemented by the money they'd get from story credits. In no way a violation of the Writers' Guild contract, in spirit or otherwise. John, I assure you, would never do that.

The two who left are both gainfully employed on other shows. In fact there was a bidding war over their services. Those who stayed seem very happy they did.

All of this was explained by any number of people to Bernie Weinraub at the New York Times. Bernie Weinraub, it would seem, is very casual about the truth.

Finally, on a vain and selfish note: In the first season, I was doing both The West Wing and Sports Night at the same time and I wanted to try seeing if The West Wing could run like a normal TV show. I gave a staffer named Rick Cleveland a script assignment. He wrote a script called "A White House Christmas" wherein the First Lady's cat trips a Secret Service alarm. I can't much else except mention was made of a business card found in an old coat of Toby's that he'd donated to Good Will. I threw out Rick's script and wrote "In Excelces Deo." Because Rick had worked for months on his, I gave him, rather than a Story by credit, a co-written by credit and put his name ahead of mine. For my script, he received a Humanitas nomination, an Emmy Award and a Writers' Guild Award. Every Emmy nominee gets a letter from Don Mischer, the producer of the telecast, very clearly saying that only one person is allowed to speak when accepting. After that person is done, the orchestra will play you off. Rick could'ce done the St. Crispin's Day speech that night for I cared. It wasn't my call.

This, too, was explained to Bernie.

At the end of the first season, Rick was fired. Not by me and for economic reasons. It was by John Wells and it was for lack of performance. He was then hired by Gideon's Crossing, where he was fired by Paul Attanassio for the same reason. - Aaron "Benjamin" Sorkin

Posted at mightybigtv.com Forum
by Aaron "Benjamin" Sorkin
June 26, 2001



Hey, Gang. Rick Cleveland here. First off, for anyone who's interested, my draft of the script -- I wrote three -- is available in the WGA archive. I'm pretty sure anyone who stops by can read it -- if not I'd be glad to make it available. It's called "A White House Christmas." Benjamin got that much right. The "A" story is mine -- not just the idea -- all the way down to the name of the homeless Korean War veteran, Walter Huffnagel. Even Toby's visit to his brother, although I didn't make him retarded -- Aaron did. Other stuff is also mine -- the new millennium stuff in the teaser, as well as the stuff about CJ's secret service nickname -- which was my wife's idea, yes. Aaron's a great writer, and he did a great job rewriting the script -- but he didn't write it alone. And he didn't "give" me a Written by credit -- and what galled me on Emmy night wasn't that he didn't let me speak -- it was that he ignored me completely. For the record, the writing credit on the script was indeed arbitrated by the WGA -- they decided my work warranted a Co-Writer credit on the teleplay. Also, for the record, every script written the show's first year by staff members was automatically submitted for arbitration -- at the request of John Wells -- as a measure of protection for us -- to keep Aaron from poaching or cannibalizing scripts to the point where he wouldn't have to give credit where credit was/is due. As for being fired for lack of performance, that's also not true -- at least as far as I know. The fact that Aaron, John and Tommy submitted the script that I co-wrote for Emmy, Humanitas and WGA Award consideration validates my contribution to the show -- at least I'd like to think it does. Also, I didn't get fired off "Gideon's Crossing." In closing, I'm very proud to inform you all that I'm currently working on "Six Feet Under." It's a great show, you should check it out. - Rick Cleveland 

Posted at mightybigtv.com Forum
by Rick Cleveland
July 6, 2001





Boy, I'd kinda like to end this. So Rick? If you're out there...?

I and everyone else appreciate the contribution you made to the episode. It was crucial. I was dead wrong to imply otherwise. I deeply regret not having thanked you that night. It was nothing more than nerves. As for your not being allowed to speak, I'm sorry about that too and I wish you'd been able to, but that wasn't my call, it was the decision of Don Mischer. I thanked those involved with the pilot (really not just the pilot, but the production of the series in general) because I wasn't just the co-writer of that episode, I was also the creator and executive producer of the series, and I had no way of knowing if we'd be back up there again that night.

You wrote what I felt was an unduly nasty piece in the Writers' Guild magazine, and after I read it, I called you and I apologized. I then made arrangements for you not only to speak when accepting the Writers' Guild Award, but for you to have the entire stage to yourself that night.

The whole unfortunate incident was dragged out once again when Bernie Weinraub wrote his piece in the New York Times. I reacted too quickly to what I felt was an egregiously unfair characterization of the way writers are treated on The West Wing. Further, I'm remarkably and stupidly naive about the internet, and never imagined my response to a poster would be picked up by Slate or anyone else. The episode we did together remains one of the proudest moments of this series and of my career. I enjoyed every day of the year we worked together.

Six Feet Under is a wonderful show, I'm sure you're proud of it. I wish you nothing less than what you deserve: Health, Happiness and another Emmy.

Aaron Sorkin

Posted at mightybigtv.com Forum
by Aaron "Benjamin" Sorkin
July 8, 2001



Aaron,

Thank you for being such a mensch about putting what I hope will be a dignified end to this mess. The year I spent working with you on the show -- and on our episode -- remains one of the proudest experiences of my career as well. And just so you know, I never spoke with Weinraub or anyone else at the Times, nor would I have felt the need to. I hope you guys sweep the Emmy Awards once again this year. And best of luck with the third season...

Best wishes,
Rick C. - Rick Cleveland

Posted at mightybigtv.com Forum
by Rick Cleveland
July 8, 2001 





I reacted too quickly. I was simply responding to this person [on the Internet], not thinking that there were more than a dozen people in the room. I tried to talk about the situation. I then went a step too far." He paused. "It's not a guilty conscience. I know how this must look." - Aaron Sorkin 

"Will 'West Wing' Go Up in Smoke?"
by Sharon Waxman
July 20, 2001
Washington Post

"He said awful things about me," says [Rick] Cleveland, now a writer/supervising producer on HBO's Six Feet Under. "I was deeply hurt. Deeply. Here is a guy with $15 million and I am a guy with zero million."

Sorkin admits that he made a mistake by posting his thoughts on the Internet. "I should have counted to 100" before logging on, he says. "I realize that doesn't matter how angry I am about all this; I made a guy I like feel very bad. I'd gone below the the belt in assessing his work. So I thought if I post an apology maybe he will see it. And in my naïveté about the Internet I thought around 12 people would see [all of] this."

"State of Disunion"
by Mary Murphy
August 11, 2001


TV Guide (American edition)



"See, I think these are good people, by and large, but they've come under the thumb of a dictatorial ruler. 
So, as with a small, Central American country, my role is to incite the people to topple her."

Wednesday, 17 August 2016

Listen to Bro. Steve : The DC Sniper



" He claimed that he was in the immigrant "import-export business," according to his cousin Charlene Anderson. "He said he helped people who were in trouble get in and out of the country. He was so well dressed, kind of like he had been put up on a shelf," she told NEWSWEEK. But when John, who had changed his last name to Muhammad, showed up a few months later, late last summer, he was dirty and hungry, and his posturing had veered into dangerous delusion.

Summoning Anderson into the kitchen, he closed the door and unzipped a long green duffel bag. Inside the bag was a case, and inside the case was a rifle. Muhammad explained that he was working for a secret Special Forces group to recover missing C-4 explosives stolen from a military base by drug smugglers. "



 " When Muhammad took her aside and--pretending to be a Special Forces commando--showed her his rifle, he opened a box of bullets and asked if she knew where he could get more. Anderson, A POLICE OFFICER, wondered, "Doesn't the military give them to him?

She went to work early the next morning. Muhammad slept until early afternoon. "I thought he's supposed to be down here working on this secret mission and he's in bed asleep all day," she recalled. "I feel like he was trying to reach out to me... but I know that I won't ever see him again, unless they're shipping him home in a box to be buried."


DESCENT INTO EVIL
He Was A Soldier, A Muslim Convert, And A Man Who Had Failed In Love And Business, Who Clung Tightly To A Teenager Not His Son. The Story Of A Journey Into Darkness And Murder--And The Investigation That Brought A Killing Spree To An End.
BY MARK HOSENBALL ON 11/4/02 AT 12:00 AM

John Williams had been a talkative little showoff when he was growing up. His grandfather, who raised him after his mother died and his father disappeared, nicknamed him "Governor." He was still strutting when he went to visit his family in Baton Rouge, La., about nine months ago, with a man he said he was helping travel back to Jamaica in tow. He claimed that he was in the immigrant "import-export business," according to his cousin Charlene Anderson. "He said he helped people who were in trouble get in and out of the country. He was so well dressed, kind of like he had been put up on a shelf," she told NEWSWEEK. But when John, who had changed his last name to Muhammad, showed up a few months later, late last summer, he was dirty and hungry, and his posturing had veered into dangerous delusion. Summoning Anderson into the kitchen, he closed the door and unzipped a long green duffel bag. Inside the bag was a case, and inside the case was a rifle. Muhammad explained that he was working for a secret Special Forces group to recover missing C-4 explosives stolen from a military base by drug smugglers. Muhammad was accompanied by a teenage boy named Lee. "Lee's not my son," Muhammad explained. "He's on the special team with me. He was hired to blend in with the juveniles on the street. See that boy? He's highly trained." She asked why he didn't work through local law enforcement. "He told me he couldn't do that because nobody knew they existed," she says. Cousin Charlene wasn't sure what to believe. "I thought it was very strange. It really spooked me."

If authorities are right, by the time Muhammad and his young sidekick were done last week, many millions of people had been traumatized by their grotesque playacting. The two pretenders left a blood-soaked trail as they wandered from Washington state to Alabama to metropolitan Washington, D.C. They left little catch-me-if-you-can clues and odd allusions to Jamaican music and folklore. They methodically shot people of all ages, genders and races, and they made outrageous demands for money. But it was never very clear what they were really up to, aside from trying to get attention.

That they got. Before moving in for the arrest last week, the Feds and the police prepared for pitched battle. Local police SWAT teams, the FBI's elite Hostage Rescue Team and other state and federal paramilitary units strapped on their body armor and shouldered their automatic weapons. For more than two hours, at a McDonald's parking lot near the highway rest stop where the snipers' car had been spotted, the assault was elaborately staged and mounted. Finally, at about 3 a.m., as choppers roared overhead and searchlights glared, the black ninjas leapt into action and encountered the enemy... peacefully dozing. One official said the sniper suspects barely stirred as police smashed through the windows of the car and screamed at the men to surrender. "They practically slept through the takedown," the official said.

Maybe they were just worn out by shooting people (13 over 21 days, plus two more in Alabama in late September; 11 died). Maybe they hadn't heard the news reports that the Feds were closing in. Whatever the case, few law-enforcement officials expected such a docile ending to a ghastly siege that had terrorized metropolitan Washington and transfixed the media. The suspects, John Allen Muhammad, 41, and John Lee Malvo, 17, were penniless drifters. They were not stumblebums. Muhammad, though an insubordinate soldier, had been a skilled marksman in the Army. He had transformed his aged Chevy Caprice into a kind of Rube Goldberg killing machine by cutting a hole in the trunk to help create a hidden sniper's perch. He had trained his young friend Malvo, whom he reportedly called "Sniper," to shoot a human being from a hundred yards or so. Police believe that the two men took turns and theorized that Muhammad took the more difficult head shots, while Malvo aimed for the victim's torso.

But demonic geniuses they were not. As the death toll mounted and the talking heads blathered, an ever more menacing picture of the sniper had seized the public imagination. He was the Scarlet Pimpernel with an assault weapon, clever, taunting, elusive, ghosting about in a white van that seemed to magically melt through massive dragnets. Not just the cable-TV criminologists but also the government's own experts were fooled. Until the last couple of days, most top officials at the state-local-federal joint command center in Rockville, Md., thought they were looking for an "intelligent, well-organized white male," one veteran federal investigator told NEWSWEEK.

Someone capable of randomly picking off pretty much anyone who walked into his gun sights, day after day, must be in the thrall of some frothing-at-the-mouth psychosis--if not the Devil, certainly his disciples. Right? Some top federal officials had suspected that the snipers were Qaeda assassins. Muhammad may have conceivably been a sympathizer or a self-recruited terrorist. A convert to Islam who claimed to have provided security for Louis Farrakhan during the 1995 Million Man March on Washington, Muhammad had been heard by neighbors praising the 9-11 hijackers for their efficiency. But his motives, as well as the nature of his relationship with the teenage Malvo, remain murky. His anger at his ex-wife over a particularly ugly child-custody battle appears to have enraged him more than any political or religious obsession. He is a chilling figure, but mostly because he seems to have shown that almost any sore loser with a store-bought gun and a sniper scope can paralyze the nation's capital. Imagine what a few well-trained teams could do.

The made-for-TV plot line appeared to pit the dogged Montgomery County, Md., police chief, Charles A. Moose, in an almost personal test of wills with the mysterious sniper. After grimacing and glowering through his daily press briefings, Chief Moose finally permitted himself to smile last Thursday, as he reeled off the names of all the different state, local and federal agency officials who shared in the glory of the capture. But the Feds and locals soon started squabbling over the honor (and headlines) of prosecuting Muhammad and Malvo. Federal prosecutors interrupted a potentially promising interrogation by local officials in order to move the suspects to a federal court--where the two men were assigned lawyers and clammed up. Informed sources tell NEWSWEEK that the search for the snipers was chaotic and sometimes floundering, that various cliques among the more than a dozen different jurisdictions or law- enforcement agencies handling the case often failed to communicate with each other, sometimes even when they were in the same room.

The missed chances during the three-week investigation are hard to fathom even for those not directly affected, but probably unforgivable to the families of the victims. While investigators searched for the mythical white van, Muhammad's blue Caprice had repeated encounters with police. On Oct. 3, two hours before the snipers shot a 72-year-old man standing on a curb and just eight hours after completing a rampage that claimed five victims, D.C. police pulled over the Caprice on a minor traffic violation--and let him go. Early on Oct. 8, the day after he shot a 13-year-old outside his middle school, Muhammad was found asleep in his car by Baltimore police. The patrolmen told him to move on. And on Oct. 21, the day before the snipers claimed their final victim, a bus driver, Fairfax, Va., police caught Muhammad running a red light. The Washington Post reported last week that Muhammad's battered Caprice attracted enough suspicion over the past month that "on at least 10 different occasions," the authorities ran its license plate through the national police database. Finding nothing, the police let the car, and its drivers, go on their way.

The snipers wanted to talk to the police. But the police kept hanging up. It's not that investigators didn't wish to open a dialogue. Chief Moose's emotional outburst at the press for leaking the first clues left by the sniper--the tarot card and the empty .223 shell casing after the school shooting on Oct. 7--was intentionally exaggerated, according to an informed source. Moose was trying to signal the snipers that he really did want to open a private channel. But when the snipers tried to call the FBI tip line or the local police, they couldn't get anyone to pay attention. Overwhelmed by the volume of calls (more than 100,000) and inadequately prepared to spot the snipers' secret code, the phone operators dismissed the callers as cranks.

It was the snipers' frustration over what they called, in a letter tacked to a tree, "the incompetence of your force" that may have finally led Muhammad and Malvo to play into the hands of Chief Moose's team. The endgame of the investigation, reconstructed by NEWSWEEK, was a wild coast-to-coast race to connect the dots and find the killers before they struck again--or slipped away for good. Like most police investigations, its success owed more to luck and the clumsiness of the culprits than brilliant criminal profiling or dazzling forensics. Ultimately, authorities believe, the snipers were done in by their egos, their insistence on gaining attention and notoriety. The first real break in the case may have come when Muhammad and Malvo couldn't resist bragging about their past exploits.

I. TANGLED LIVES

It is hard to know just how John Muhammad might have crossed over from being a run-of-the-mill loser, an overbearing father who conned and intimidated his ex-wives, to become a homicidal Svengali who led a teenage accomplice into mass murder. But it's possible to trace a continuum into ever more hostile, devious and menacing behavior.

Criminal psychiatrists automatically look for severe child abuse or neglect in the case of serial killers. John Williams (he legally changed his name to Muhammad in 2001) grew up without parents. His mother died of cancer when he was 3, and his father seems to have been mostly absent. He was raised by his elderly grandfather and an aunt in a poor neighborhood in East Baton Rouge. But he was a gregarious, happy-go-lucky kid, according to his cousin Charlene. He was part of a brood of youngsters who spent their time climbing trees and digging for crayfish in a nearby canal (and, according to another cousin, breaking into houses for the fun of it).

He had a streak of arrogance and a temper. Enlisting in the National Guard, he was twice court-martialed, once for disobeying an order, the second time for striking a noncommissioned officer. He moved from woman to woman, having one son by a girlfriend and a second son by his first wife. When he moved out with another woman and his marriage broke up in 1985, the divorce was bitter. He tried to stay in his son's life in an occasional but peculiarly heavy-handed way, ordering his ex-wife not to feed their son certain types of food.

He found some kind of order and meaning by becoming a Muslim and joining the U.S. Army. Squared away, physically fit, with a crushing handshake, he was superficially an adequate soldier, serving as a mechanic in a combat engineering brigade. His sergeant, however, says he was "trouble from day one. You'd give him an order and you'd get a certain glare," retired Sgt. Kip Berentson told NEWSWEEK. "He loved being in charge and he had a warped sense of humor." Williams's unit was sent to Operation Desert Storm to clear mines and bulldoze holes in enemy lines. A few nights before the invasion of Iraq, Sergeant Berentson awoke in the early hours to find his tent, with 16 sleeping men inside, on fire. Someone had tossed in a thermite grenade. Berentson, who was fed up with Williams's insubordination, immediately suspected Williams and told the Army's Criminal Investigative Division. Berentson says he last saw Williams being led away in handcuffs. Williams's military records make no mention of the incident; indeed, they suggest Williams had a distinguished gulf-war stint. But Berentson always kept Williams's name and dog-tag number in his wallet. He says he was not surprised to see Williams's face on television. "He was," he added, "a damn good shooter."

Williams, who now called himself Muhammad, left the Army in February 1994. He had trouble coping with civilian life. Manipulative and a bit of a scam artist, he tried various business schemes that fell apart. In Tacoma, Wash., he started a martial-arts school with a man named Felix Strozier under the grand name "Strozier & Muhammad Team of Champions Ltd." Muhammad boasted that he had been in the Special Forces in the Army, which was untrue. When the business collapsed, Muhammad owed Strozier $500, which, according to Strozier, he never repaid. Muhammad's family car-repair business also failed, along with his second marriage.

Muhammad was "extremely verbally abusive" to his wife, Mildred, according to Isa Nichols, a business consultant who worked with Muhammad and his wife. "He shoved her," Nichols said. In her divorce papers, Mildred described Muhammad as a "very irrational man" who regularly threatened to tap her phones and "destroy" her. In March 2000, Muhammad took their three children--and vanished.

He took the kids to Antigua. He told his landlady that he hated the Internet and added, oddly, that he didn't like water's touching his skin. He boasted to an acquaintance that he was a crack shot--that he could kill a man from half a mile away. He tried to raise his children as strict Muslims, but he was unable to support them. By the summer of 2001, he was back in Washington state.

Mildred was so distraught after Muhammad stole their children that she wound up in the hospital suffering from anemia and malnutrition. Nichols took pity and helped her get them back. She gave the authorities Muhammad's license-plate number. The child-welfare authorities found the kids living at a homeless shelter with their father in Bellingham, Wash. The children were taken away and returned to Mildred. Muhammad was furious and humiliated. In February 2002, someone shot and killed 21-year-old Keenya Cook. Cook lived with her aunt Isa Nichols. She had just opened the door when she was shot in the face. The crime was unsolved at the time, but police are investigating whether the bullet was meant for Nichols and fired by a vengeful Muhammad.

Muhammad found, or created, a new son. He apparently first met young John Lee Malvo in Antigua, where the boy was living with his mother. Malvo was a grave young man who responded to Muhammad's self-improvement program, jogging in the mornings, working out, following the dietary rules of Islam. It is not clear exactly how Malvo ended up in Washington state with Muhammad, but his mother, who was living in Florida, bitterly objected and went looking for the boy. She went to the police, who found him staying with Muhammad at the homeless shelter. Police reunited the mother and son, but then she disappeared again. Malvo stayed with Muhammad. The two were seen playing chess together at Stuart's Coffee Shop downtown. Malvo called Muhammad "Dad" and appeared deferential, saying "Yes sir, no sir" in public. The two did not mix with the other regulars, and Muhammad kept a large, military-issue duffel bag by his side at all times, even in the bathroom. Muhammad made a mild pass at the guitar player, Hannah Parks, telling her he was a music agent. He backed off when she asked for his card. She thought he was a "friendly, weird guy. But not dangerous."

Muhammad did ask what she thought about "the whole 9-11 thing," but he was guarded about his own beliefs, Parks told NEWSWEEK. He was less cautious with Harjeet Singh, a buddy who worked out with Muhammad and Malvo at the local YMCA. "They said 9-11 was very good," Singh told NEWSWEEK. "They said it should have been done a long time ago." Muhammad marveled at the damage a relatively small number of terrorists could do, Singh says. "They said 19 people did what a whole army couldn't have done."

According to Singh, Muhammad and Malvo contemplated their own acts of terrorism. "They hate police," said Singh. He claims that Muhammad showed him designs for a silencer that could be attached to a rifle. "They said they were going to shoot a police officer. Then the other police officers and firemen and the mayor would get together for a funeral." Singh told NEWSWEEK that the two men planned to bomb the funeral. "They just wanted to spread fear. They wanted to kill people," said Singh.

Singh said that he was too afraid of Muhammad to go to the police. But when Singh was arrested for domestic violence in June, Singh claims he told the police as well as the FBI about Muhammad's plot. FBI officials confirmed that they had learned of the story about Muhammad and referred it to the ATF (which investigates weapons and explosives crimes). It is not clear what the Feds did with the information, though local police officials are now telling reporters that Singh may be embellishing his story.

Maybe so, but given the carnage allegedly wreaked later by Muhammad and Malvo, perhaps not by much. By June 2002, Muhammad and Malvo had left Washington state and begun to drift eastward. They showed up in Baton Rouge at the end of July, dirty and haggard. Some of Muhammad's cousins thought young Malvo seemed fearful and withdrawn. Looking back, Charlene Anderson can see red flags. When Muhammad took her aside and--pretending to be a Special Forces commando--showed her his rifle, he opened a box of bullets and asked if she knew where he could get more. Anderson, a police officer, wondered, "Doesn't the military give them to him?" She went to work early the next morning. Muhammad slept until early afternoon. "I thought he's supposed to be down here working on this secret mission and he's in bed asleep all day," she recalled. "I feel like he was trying to reach out to me... but I know that I won't ever see him again, unless they're shipping him home in a box to be buried."

Muhammad and Malvo drifted east and north, allegedly ambushing the pair at the Montgomery, Ala., liquor store (Muhammad was apparently the shooter). In New Jersey, Muhammad bought and fitted out his sniper mobile. Before he allegedly began killing, he may have gone to see his three children, who live with Mildred, just outside Washington in Clinton, Md. A neighbor walking his dogs claims to have had a brief conversation with Muhammad. (Mildred is in seclusion.) Did something happen there that drove him over the edge? Did he somehow transfer his rage on the citizenry of greater metropolitan Washington?

II. THE ENDGAME

The call came in to Chief Moose's office at the Montgomery County Police Department on Friday, Oct. 18, two weeks and 11 victims into the sniper nightmare. A public-information officer answered. According to a law-enforcement source, the angry caller said something like, "Do you know who you're dealing with? Don't mess with me." The caller told the Montgomery police to check out a murder-robbery at a liquor store "in Montgomery." Law-enforcement sources offer conflicting accounts about whether the caller specifically said, "Montgomery, Alabama," or just "Montgomery." In retrospect, it is clear that the snipers were showing off. They were pointing police to the shooting of two women at a state liquor store in Montgomery, Ala., on Sept. 21. Ambushed, one woman was shot in the back, the other in the back of the neck. (One died.) The shooter, police now believe, was John Muhammad. The link to the Montgomery, Ala., shooting would prove to be crucial. At the time, however, the hint from the angry caller did not really capture the attention of the sniper task force. The public-information officer who took the call didn't realize he was talking to the sniper. A second call from the same man an hour later was abruptly cut off; apparently, the caller had run out of change at a pay phone.

The investigators were inundated. After a shooting, calls were coming in at the rate of 1,000 an hour. The task-force leaders and their troops--several thousand men and women, some drafted from other government agencies to man the phones 24 hours a day--were exhausted and staggering under the weight of hopes raised and dashed. Top officials muttered about the irresponsibility of the press. They were angry that reporters had let slip that the Pentagon had provided spy planes to track the snipers. "It's a chess move we would rather have made in the dark," one police official said. In the large, cluttered office space in Rockville, Md., that served as a bullpen for all the different investigative agencies, bleary-eyed investigators tracked down tips, mostly nutty or useless, but some that seemed promising and led nowhere.

There was, for instance, the Dentist. He had been fingered by a caller to the tip line, who phoned police to say that he knew of an odd and angry dentist who loved guns. The dentist's home was in what police called "the red zone," the area in Montgomery County where the profilers thought the sniper probably lived. The first time police visited the dentist's house, they heard the double click of a shotgun's being cocked. The next day a victim was gunned down in Fredericksburg, Va., 45 minutes away from the dentist's office. Federal agents returned and found the dentist--with a high-powered rifle, capable of shooting .223 ammunition, in his trunk. Peering through the dentist's office window, they observed a map of the region, with the locations of all the sniper attacks marked with colored pins. The cops got a warrant to seize the gun--but the ballistics didn't match the sniper's bullets. The dentist's alibi was "rock solid," said a frustrated gumshoe.

Then there was the Good Ole Boy. He was another gun-crazed white man with suspicious habits. The police put him under surveillance. One night in the middle of the siege, he was observed shooting pool and drinking beer with his buddies until 2 a.m. "Not serial-killer behavior," the cops concluded.

That week, while detectives futilely chased white vans and trucks by the thousand, the sniper had seemed to go quiet. Then on Saturday night, Oct. 19, he struck again, shooting a traveler as he left the Ponderosa Steak House in Ashland, Va. Alerted by an anonymous call (now believed to be Muhammad), the police found a three-page letter. It was sealed in a sandwich bag, tacked to a tree behind the restaurant. "For you, Mr. Police," it read. "Call --me God." The words matched those written on a tarot card discovered by investigators after the Oct. 7 shooting of the schoolboy. The letter continued, "We have tried to contact you to start a negotiation" and listed a half-dozen attempts to call police or FBI tip lines that were rebuffed as "a hoax or joke." If the authorities wanted to stop the killings, the letter warned, they would place $10 million in the account of a Visa bank card. The letter provided a PIN and an account number for a card that turned out to be stolen. Police were told to stand ready to take a call at a pay phone near the Ponderosa at 6 a.m. that Sunday. The sniper gave the cops until 9 a.m. Monday to deposit the money. The letter writers warned of more "body bags," and added, "P.S., your children are not safe anywhere at any time."

On the sniper's list of foiled attempts to contact the authorities, one in particular stood out. It said, simply, "Priest at Ashland." (Investigators theorize that the shooter called a priest not for forgiveness but to find a go-between.) Around noontime, after Sunday mass, the FBI visited St. Ann's Catholic Church in Ashland. The pastor, Msgr. William Sullivan, told the investigators that he had indeed received a call from a man who reportedly introduced himself, "I am God." According to the priest, the caller complained that the woman at the Home Depot (FBI cyber analyst Linda Franklin, 47, slain on Oct. 14) would not have died if police had not ignored his calls. It took two visits from the FBI to surface the key detail. The caller had instructed the priest to write down a message for police to "look into Montgomery, Alabama." The caller wanted the police to know about the slaying at the liquor store. The call was garbled; the priest had thought he was talking to a crank. But this time round, the reference to Montgomery seized the attention of investigators. "That call did it," said one top law-enforcement official. After two and a half weeks of flailing and false leads, the trail was about to grow warm.

At about 9 that Sunday, Montgomery, Ala., Police Chief John Wilson was just settling down for an evening of football on TV. He had watched the Atlanta Falcons game with a friend and polished off a steak dinner and a glass of wine. The call came from his chief of detectives, Maj. Pat Downing. "You're not going to believe this," said Downing. A detective from the sniper task force in Montgomery County, Md., had called. He told his Alabama counterpart that the sniper task force had received a phone call from a man who claimed to be the sniper. Faced with skepticism, the angry caller had reportedly said, "I know something about a murder-robbery at an ABC liquor store in Montgomery, Alabama, near Ann Street."

Wilson and Downing were surprised. They knew all about the Sept. 21 slaying. A Montgomery cop had chased the killer on foot for a quarter of a mile before he got away (a blue car had pulled out and suddenly cut off the policeman). The case was languishing, unsolved. Could the missing Alabama killer turn out to be the Washington sniper? "It sounded so farfetched and too good to be true," says Wilson. Nonetheless, the Montgomery police turned over a stack of evidence from the shooting to the local FBI office. On Monday afternoon, a Montgomery-based FBI --agent, Margaret Faulkner, flew to Washington with the package.

The most important piece in the pile, it turned out, was the fingerprints pulled off a copy of a gun magazine, an ArmaLite catalog, apparently dropped near the scene of the liquor-store killing. No match had been found in state records. But the fingerprints had never been entered into the federal database (Alabama does not belong to the service that provides it). On Monday night, task-force investigators searched for a match--and found one. The fingerprints belonged to one Lee Malvo, a juvenile who was facing illegal immigration charges in the small town of Bellingham, Wash. He had been reported to the INS after police were called in to deal with a dispute involving the boy's mother and another man. That man's name, it appeared, was John Muhammad. Investigators finally had a name; in fact, two names.

The task force was finally beginning to get somewhere. But there was no eureka moment, say investigators. News of the fingerprint match was not widely shared, and many investigators learned of the breakthrough only from water-cooler gossip. Communication between locals and Feds and rival agencies like the ATF and FBI was erratic. If anything, the gumshoes seemed to be stumbling in the dark. The missed phone calls from the sniper (which the press had found out about) were an embarrassment, however understandable under the stressed circumstances. Because they wanted to be meticulous about handling and preserving evidence, ever so carefully fingerprinting and tagging the plastic sandwich bag tacked to the tree and its contents, investigators had not read the sniper's letter until Sunday morning--after the 6 a.m. time set in the letter for the phone call from the sniper. That is why Chief Moose abruptly went before the cameras on Sunday night to deliver a cryptic message: "To the person who left us a message at the Ponderosa last night, you gave us a telephone number. We do want to talk to you. Call us at the number you provided."

On Monday morning, the shooter called police again. But when the cops traced the call to a phone booth in Richmond, Va., they caught the wrong men: two illegal immigrants who just happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. One was driving a white van. A beleaguered Chief Moose was forced to deliver more mysterious messages: "We are going to respond to a message that we have received. We will respond later. We are preparing that response at this time," the chief announced. Later that afternoon, he begged the callers to try again. "The audio was unclear," he said, "and we want to get it right."

The snipers delivered their response at 5:57 the next morning, Tuesday, Oct. 22. A Montgomery County bus driver was fatally shot as he stood in the vehicle's lit, open doorway, taking a break before beginning his morning run. In the woods, investigators found another letter--again insisting that money be deposited in the bankcard account and threatening the lives of children. (Once again, the investigators read the letter too late to take a scheduled phone call from the snipers.) The snipers demanded that the authorities respond not just with money but also by repeating what appeared to be a cheeky taunt: "We have caught the sniper like a duck in a noose." The duck reference is from a folk tale in which a boastful rabbit tries to catch a duck in a noose--only to have the duck fly away, dragging the rabbit, then dropping him inside a tree stump, where the rabbit is trapped.

To the average TV viewer, the investigators were beginning to look like cornered rabbits. But behind the scenes, the FBI thought they might have found a clever ruse to catch the killers. The Feds deposited $100,000 in the bank-card account, NEWSWEEK has learned. The card had been stolen from a woman in Arizona, so the bureau had to go to the bank and ask it to reopen the account and increase the daily withdrawal limit to $1,000. As it turned out, the trap was not sprung because the pair never got the chance to use the card. By Wednesday, the noose was beginning to tighten around the duck's neck in a chokehold that would permit no escape.

In Washington state, the feds were learning some very interesting information about 17-year-old John Lee Malvo and his older friend John Muhammad, 41. The two, who lived together for a time at a homeless shelter, seemed to have a curious bond. Muhammad referred to Malvo as his "stepson," but he was not. At one point, the gumshoes learned, the duo had stayed in Tacoma with Robert Edward Holmes, an old Army buddy of Muhammad's. Holmes told investigators that Muhammad had appeared in the spring of 2002 toting an AR-15, a semiautomatic assault rifle that shoots a .223 round. The gun had a telescopic sight, and Muhammad concealed it in an aluminum case. "Can you imagine the damage you could do if you could shoot with a silencer?" Muhammad had exclaimed, according to Holmes. Neighbors had heard shooting with a high-powered rifle in the backyard. On Wednesday morning, federal investigators began combing the yard with a metal detector, looking for shell casings.

Back at task-force headquarters, the sniper investigation was turning up a lead that was at once embarrassing and promising. The Feds ran a check on Muhammad's license and found, to their astonishment, that he had been discovered by Baltimore police asleep in his car on the night of Oct. 8, about a half-hour's drive from the scene of the shooting the day before at Tasker Middle School in Bowie, Md. The Baltimore cops had run a check on the car--a blue 1990 Chevy Caprice--and found nothing amiss. Muhammad had been allowed to go about his business.

Moving quickly now, police traced the registration on the car to Camden, N.J. It turned out that Muhammad had bought the battered clunker with roughly 150,000 miles on it for $250 from the Sure Shot Auto Shop in Camden. (The car's last use: as an undercover vehicle by the cops.) Last week federal agents arrested Nathaniel Osbourne, 26, in Flint, Mich. Osbourne was listed as co-owner of the car with Muhammad. Held as a material witness, he is not a suspect in the shootings, but an FBI spokesman said, "We believe he has valuable information about the sniper case."

Remarkably, law-enforcement sources tell NEWSWEEK, some investigators continued to cling to the belief that the sniper or snipers were driving a white van or truck. Like the talking heads on TV, they had convinced themselves that the snipers must be white men driving a white truck. They had trouble accepting that they should have been looking for two black men driving a blue car. They were fixated on cars fleeing the scene. It does not seem to have really occurred to them that the shooters would hang around--as they almost surely did. As it turned out, a witness had reported seeing a Caprice driving slowly with its lights off near the scene of the Oct. 3 shooting in northeast D.C. But in the dark, the witness remembered the car's color as burgundy, not blue, and the lead was lost in the chatter over white vehicles. A witness outside the Fredericksburg, Va., Michaels craft store, scene of a shooting on Oct. 4, reported a "dark-colored vehicle with New Jersey tags" leaving the scene. A woman calling the tip line on Oct. 7 said she had spotted a black man crouching beneath the dashboard in a dark Chevy Caprice. The woman was struck by the intensity of the man's stare. The agent on the tip line brushed her off. "We're looking for a white truck," she said.

Finally, by Wednesday night, Muhammad and Malvo were at the "top of the list" of suspects, Montgomery County Executive Douglas Duncan told NEWSWEEK. "Wednesday, it kept going back and forth," he said. Doubts remained. The investigators had been burned by false leads before. "I expected calls on at least three other days telling me 'We got him'--and they turned out not to be the ones," said Duncan. There was still the question of how to run down the suspects. SWAT and HRT teams were looking through cheap hotels. D.C. cops were patrolling with the Caprice's New Jersey license-plate number written on Post-It notes stuck on their dashboards. The investigators hotly debated whether to release the suspects' photographs. Some feared that would only tip them off and make them flee. Or worse, provoke them to strike again. Others feared the suspects would be found first by vigilantes. "The concern was that, God forbid, it's not the people [the real snipers] and someone takes matters into their own hands," said Duncan.

The debate raged until almost midnight, when Moose finally emerged to tell reporters that police were on the lookout for Muhammad and Malvo. The investigators did not release the description of the blue 1990 Chevy Caprice or its New Jersey license-plate number, NDA21Z. But reporters with police scanners had already heard the identifying information being relayed to patrol officers in their cruisers.

It was that fortuitous leak that led to the snipers' arrest. At a rest stop off I-70, near the Pennsylvania border, a truckdriver, Ronald Lantz, was listening to his favorite program, "Truckin' Bozo Radio Show," out of WLW-AM in Cincinnati, when he heard the host broadcast a description of the blue Caprice. Lantz looked out his window, and there it was. He immediately called 911. It was 12:54 a.m. At just about the same time, the rest-stop custodian, Larry Blank, was hunkered down in a white van with another man who had spotted the blue Caprice. They, too, dialed 911. After the first police arrived, Lantz and another trucker blocked the rest-stop exits until the SWAT teams came storming in, some two hours later.

Top officials on the sniper task force could hardly believe that the ordeal was over. When he awoke Thursday morning, the first question that popped into County Executive Duncan's head was: "Has anyone gotten shot?" By evening, the state and local law-enforcement chiefs and top federal officials jammed into Chief Moose's office. No one wanted to declare victory until the ATF had made a match between the gun found in the car--a Bushmaster XM-15--and the bullet fragments extracted from 11 of the sniper's victims. They waited and waited, until ATF Special Agent Joe Riehl finally walked into Moose's office at about 8 p.m. and shut the door. Outside, lower-level investigators listened anxiously for some sign. There was silence. Then, at last, the sound of clapping. Moose emerged, looking stern as usual. Duncan teased him, "Can you smile now?" The chief looked up and a huge grin spread across his face.

The suspects were whisked away to an "undisclosed location" and placed in separate interrogation rooms. When prosecutors stepped out for a moment and left Malvo alone, he tried to escape. He somehow broke the table leg to which he had been handcuffed and started climbing up through the ceiling tiles. Pulled back down, he soiled himself, and had to be given a new prisoner's jumpsuit.

The spirit of good cheer on the sniper task force lasted less than a day. By Friday, state and federal prosecutors were bitterly vying for the chance to prosecute Muhammad and Malvo. A meeting between the various agencies and jurisdictions broke down in acrimony. When FBI agents were called on their cell phones and ordered to take the suspects from the interrogation room, task-force cops and prosecutors exploded in anger. Malvo had sat in stony silence, but Muhammad was beginning to answer a few questions. Hoping that he would warm up and begin to spill, agents and officials crowded around closed-circuit monitors to watch the questioning. The Feds insisted that the suspects had to be taken before a federal magistrate and formally charged with a federal crime--or risk having the case thrown out for an illegal arrest. But local officials blamed Thomas Dibiagio, the U.S. Attorney in Baltimore, for hogging the limelight and ruining any chance of getting the suspects to talk before they were silenced by defense lawyers. "We may never know why they [Muhammad and Malvo] did what they did because of what Dibiagio did," said an angry local official. Montgomery County State's Attorney Douglas Gansler went ahead and charged the two men with six counts of murder in Maryland. Virginia officials also say they are eager to try the men for murder, and the authorities in Montgomery, Ala., also filed homicide charges. It is unclear how the legal wrangling will sort itself out. If the Feds charge Muhammad with extortion that results in murder (the demand for $10 million, or else), he could get the death penalty. He could also be executed under state law if the Maryland governor, as expected, goes along. Minors generally escape capital punishment, though not in Virginia, and under some circumstance Malvo could be "certified" as an adult.

The trials are sure to be media circuses. The cable-TV experts will come back out to psychoanalyze the defendants, to make some sense out of what they did in the month of October 2002. The prosecutors will try to make Muhammad coldly sane. "He may be talking nonsense, but that doesn't mean he's delusional," says one prosecutor involved in the investigation. Psychiatrist Dorothy Otnow Lewis, a professor at New York University School of Medicine and one of the few talking heads to get it right during the long sniper siege, cautions against expecting clear-cut or rational answers. "You have to suspend logic," she says, when asked questions like why a Muslim killer would turn to a Roman Catholic priest. "We don't know what his underlying fantasy was."

We do know what his overlying reality may have been. It stretched far beyond the corpses and crime scenes and well beyond the Beltway. With one rifle, an old car and a teenage disciple, authorities believe, he brought terror to the nation's capital. For almost three weeks, he kept schoolchildren in a state of "lockdown," a term normally associated with prisons. He forced high-school homecoming games to be played on undisclosed secure military bases. He made children run when they got off the school bus--not to the playground, but for cover. He caused thousands of sad conversations between parents and their children, who were painfully learning to adapt to an age in which everyone, old and young, feels less safe than before.

The Esoteric Nation of Islam