第 3 节
作者:铲除不公      更新:2021-03-08 19:38      字数:9320
  Invents the steam pile…driving machine
  Designs a new form of steam…engine
  Other inventions How he 〃Scotched〃 a strike
  Uses of strikes
  Retirement from business
  Skill as a draughtsman
  Curious speculations on antiquarian subjects
  Mr。 Nasmyth's wonderful discoveries in Astronomy
  described by Sir John Herschel
  CHAPTER XVI。
  WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN。
  Summary of progress in machine…tools
  William Fairbairn's early years
  His education
  Life in the Highlands
  Begins work at Kelso Bridge
  An apprentice at Percy Main Colliery; North Shields
  Diligent self…culture
  Voyage to London
  Adventures
  Prevented obtaining work by the Millwrights' Union
  Travels into the country; finds work; and returns to London
  His first order; to make a sausage…chopping machine
  Wanderschaft
  Makes nail…machinery for a Dublin employer
  Proceeds to Manchester; where he settles and marries
  Begins business
  His first job
  Partnership with Mr。 Lillie
  Employed by Messrs。 Adam Murray and Co。
  Employed by Messrs。 MacConnel and Kennedy
  Progress of the Cotton Trade
  Memoir of John Kennedy
  Mr。 Fairbairn introduces great improvements in the gearing; &c。
  of mill machinery
  Increasing business Improvements in water…wheels
  Experiments as to the law of traction of boats
  Begins building iron ships
  Experiments on the strength of wrought iron
  Britannia and Conway Tubular Bridges
  Reports on iron
  On boiler explosions
  Iron construction
  Extended use of iron
  Its importance in civilization
  Opinion of Mr。 Cobden
  Importance of modern machine…tools
  Conclusion
  INDUSTRIAL BIOGRAPHY。
  CHAPTER I。
  IRON AND CIVILIZATION。
  〃Iron is not only the soul of every other manufacture; but the main
  spring perhaps of civilized society。〃FRANCIS HORNER。
  〃Were the use of iron lost among us; we should in a few ages be
  unavoidably reduced to the wants and ignorance of the ancient savage
  Americans; so that he who first made known the use of that
  contemptible mineral may be truly styled the father of Arts and the
  author of Plenty。〃JOHN LOCKE。
  When Captain Cook and the early navigators first sailed into the
  South Seas on their voyages of discovery; one of the things that
  struck them with most surprise was the avidity which the natives
  displayed for iron。  〃Nothing would go down with our visitors;〃 says
  Cook; 〃but metal; and iron was their beloved article。〃  A nail would
  buy a good…sized pig; and on one occasion the navigator bought some
  four hundred pounds weight of fish for a few wretched knives
  improvised out of an old hoop。
  〃For iron tools;〃 says Captain Carteret; 〃we might have purchased
  everything upon the Freewill Islands that we could have brought away。
  A few pieces of old iron hoop presented to one of the natives threw
  him into an ecstasy little short of distraction。〃  At Otaheite the
  people were found generally well…behaved and honest; but they were
  not proof against the fascinations of iron。  Captain Cook says that
  one of them; after resisting all other temptations; 〃was at length
  ensnared by the charms of basket of nails。〃  Another lurked about for
  several days; watching the opportunity to steal a coal…rake。
  The navigators found they could pay their way from island to island
  merely with scraps of iron; which were as useful for the purpose as
  gold coins would have been in Europe。  The drain; however; being
  continuous; Captain Cook became alarmed at finding his currency
  almost exhausted; and he relates his joy on recovering an old anchor
  which the French Captain Bougainville had lost at Bolabola; on which
  he felt as an English banker would do after a severe run upon him for
  gold; when suddenly placed in possession of a fresh store of bullion。
  The avidity for iron displayed by these poor islanders will not be
  wondered at when we consider that whoever among them was so fortunate
  as to obtain possession of an old nail; immediately became a man of
  greater power than his fellows; and assumed the rank of a capitalist。
  〃An Otaheitan chief;〃 says Cook; 〃who had got two nails in his
  possession; received no small emolument by letting out the use of
  them to his neighbours for the purpose of boring holes when their own
  methods failed; or were thought too tedious。〃
  The native methods referred to by Cook were of a very clumsy sort;
  the principal tools of the Otaheitans being of wood; stone; and
  flint。  Their adzes and axes were of stone。  The gouge most commonly
  used by them was made out of the bone of the human forearm。  Their
  substitute for a knife was a shell; or a bit of flint or jasper。
  A shark's tooth; fixed to a piece of wood; served for an auger;
  a piece of coral for a file; and the skin of a sting…ray for a
  polisher。  Their saw was made of jagged fishes' teeth fixed on the
  convex edge of a piece of hard wood。  Their weapons were of a
  similarly rude description; their clubs and axes were headed with
  stone; and their lances and arrows were tipped with flint。  Fire was
  another agency employed by them; usually in boat…building。  Thus; the
  New Zealanders; whose tools were also of stone; wood; or bone; made
  their boats of the trunks of trees hollowed out by fire。
  The stone implements were fashioned; Captain Cook says; by rubbing
  one stone upon another until brought to the required shape; but;
  after all; they were found very inefficient for their purpose。  They
  soon became blunted and useless; and the laborious process of making
  new tools had to be begun again。  The delight of the islanders at
  being put in possession of a material which was capable of taking a
  comparatively sharp edge and keeping it; may therefore readily be
  imagined; and hence the remarkable incidents to which we have
  referred in the experience of the early voyagers。  In the minds of the
  natives; iron became the representative of power; efficiency; and
  wealth; and they were ready almost to fall down and worship their new
  tools; esteeming the axe as a deity; offering sacrifices to the saw;
  and holding the knife in especial veneration。
  In the infancy of all nations the same difficulties must have been
  experienced for want of tools; before the arts of smelting and
  working in metals had become known; and it is not improbable that the
  Phoenician navigators who first frequented our coasts found the same
  avidity for bronze and iron existing among the poor woad…stained
  Britons who flocked down to the shore to see their ships and exchange
  food and skins with them; that Captain Cook discovered more than two
  thousand years later among the natives of Otaheite and New Zealand。
  For; the tools and weapons found in ancient burying…places in all
  parts of Britain clearly show that these islands also have passed
  through the epoch of stone and flint。
  There was recently exhibited at the Crystal Palace a collection of
  ancient European weapons and implements placed alongside a similar
  collection of articles brought from the South Seas; and they were in
  most respects so much alike that it was difficult to believe that
  they did not belong to the same race and period; instead of being the
  implements of races sundered by half the globe; and living at periods
  more than two thousand years apart。  Nearly every weapon in the one
  collection had its counterpart in the other;the mauls or celts of
  stone; the spearheads of flint or jasper; the arrowheads of flint or
  bone; and the saws of jagged stone; showing how human ingenuity;
  under like circumstances; had resorted to like expedients。  It would
  also appear that the ancient tribes in these islands; like the New
  Zealanders; used fire to hollow out their larger boats; several
  specimens of this kind of vessel having recently been dug up in the
  valleys of the Witham and the Clyde; some of the latter from under
  the very streets of modern Glasgow。*
  'footnote。。。
  〃Mr。John Buchanan; a zealous antiquary; writing in 1855; informs us
  that in the course of the eight years preceding that date; no less
  than seventeen canoes had been dug out of this estuarine silt 'of the
  valley of the Clyde'; and that he had personally inspected a large
  number of them before they were exhumed。  Five of them lay buried in
  silt under the streets of Glasgow; one in a vertical position with
  the prow uppermost; as if it had sunk in a storm。。。。  Almost every one
  of these ancient boats was formed out of a single oak…stem; hollowed
  out by blunt tools; probably stone axes; aided by the action of fire;
  a few were cut beautifully smooth; evidently with metallic tools。
  Hence a gradation could be traced from a pattern of extreme rudeness
  to one showing great mechanical ingenuity。。。。  In one of the canoes a
  beautifully polished celt or axe of greenstone was found; in the
  bottom of another a plug of cork; which; as Mr。 Geikie remarks;
  'could only have come from the latitudes of Spain; Southern France;
  or Italy。'〃 Sir C。 LYELL; Antiquity of Man; 48…9。