登陆注册
14731600000062

第62章

At their expense a large electrical factory was established under his direction at Newark, New Jersey, where he was free to work out his ideas and manufacture his apparatus. Now that he was emancipated from drudgery, and fairly started on the walk which Nature had intended for him, he rejoiced in the prolific freedom of his mind, which literally teemed with projects. His brain was no longer a prey to itself from the 'local action,' or waste energy of restrained ideas and revolving thoughts. [The term 'local action' is applied by electricians to the waste which goes on in a voltaic battery, although its current is not flowing in the outer circuit and doing useful work.] If anything, he attempted too much. Patents were taken out by the score, and at one time there were no less than forty-five distinct inventions in progress.

The Commissioner of Patents described him as 'the young man who kept the path to the Patent Office hot with his footsteps.'

His capacity for labouring without rest is very remarkable. On one occasion, after improving his Gold and Stock Quotation Printer, an order for the new instruments, to the extent of 30,000 dollars, arrived at the factory. The model had acted well, but the first instruments made after it proved a failure. Edison thereupon retired to the upper floor of the factory with some of his best workmen, and intimated that they must all remain there until the defect was put right. After sixty hours of continuous toil, the fault was remedied, and Edison went to bed, where he slept for thirty-six hours.

Mr. Johnson, one of his assistants, informs us that for ten years he worked on an average eighteen hours a day, and that he has been known to continue an experiment for three months day and night, with the exception of a nap from six o'clock to nine of the morning. In the throes of invention, and under the inspiration of his ideas, he is apt to make no distinction between day and night, until he arrives at a result which he considers to be satisfactory one way or the other. His meals are brought to him in the laboratory, and hastily eaten, although his dwelling is quite near. Long watchfulness and labour seem to heighten the activity of his mind, which under its 'second wind,' so to speak, becomes preternaturally keen and suggestive. He likes best to work at night in the silence and solitude of his laboratory when the noise of the benches or the rumble of the engines is stilled, and all the world about him is asleep.

Fortunately, he can work without stimulants, and, when the strain is over, rest without narcotics; otherwise his exhausted constitution, sound as it is, would probably break down. Still, he appears to be ageing before his time, and some of his assistants, not so well endowed with vitality, have, we believe, overtaxed their strength in trying to keep up with him.

At this period he devised his electric pen, an ingenious device for making copies of a document. It consists essentially of a needle, rapidly jogged up and down by means of an electro-magnet actuated by an intermittent current of electricity. The writing is traced with the needle, which perforates another sheet of paper underneath, thus forming a stencil-plate, which when placed on a clean paper, and evenly inked with a rolling brush, reproduces the original writing.

In 1873 Edison was married to Miss Mary Stillwell, of Newark, one of his employees. His eldest child, Mary Estelle, was playfully surnamed 'Dot,' and his second, Thomas Alva, jun., 'Dash,' after the signals of the Morse code. Mrs. Edison died several years ago.

While seeking to improve the method of duplex working introduced by Mr.

Steams, Edison invented the quadruplex, by which four messages are simultaneously sent through one wire, two from each end. Brought out in association with Mr. Prescott, it was adopted by the Western Union Telegraph Company, and, later, by the British Post Office. The President of the Western Union reported that it had saved the Company 500,000 dollars a year in the construction of new lines. Edison also improved the Bain chemical telegraph, until it attained an incredible speed. Bain had left it capable of recording 200 words a minute; but Edison, by dint of searching a pile of books ordered from New York, Paris, and London, making copious notes, and trying innumerable experiments, while eating at his desk and sleeping in his chair, ultimately prepared a solution which enabled it to register over 1000words a minute. It was exhibited at the Philadelphia Centenial Exhibition in 1876, where it astonished Sir William Thomson.

In 1876, Edison sold his factory at Newark, and retired to Menlo Park, a sequestered spot near Metuchin, on the Pennsylvania Railroad, and about twenty-four miles from New York. Here on some rising ground he built a wooden tenement, two stories high, and furnished it as a workshop and laboratory. His own residence and the cottages of his servants completed the little colony.

The basement of the main building was occupied by his office, a choice library, a cabinet replete with instruments of precision, and a large airy workshop, provided with lathes and steam power, where his workmen shaped his ideas into wood and metal.

The books lying about, the designs and placards on the walls, the draught-board on the table, gave it the appearance of a mechanics' club-room. The free and lightsome behaviour of the men, the humming at the benches, recalled some school of handicraft. There were no rigid hours, no grinding toil under the jealous eye of the overseer. The spirit of competition and commercial rivalry was absent. It was not a question of wringing as much work as possible out of the men in the shortest time and at the lowest price. Moreover, they were not mere mechanical drudges--they were interested in their jobs, which demanded thought as well as skill.

同类推荐
  • 白苏斋类集

    白苏斋类集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 大乘造像功德经

    大乘造像功德经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 绘芳录

    绘芳录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 上阳子金丹大要图

    上阳子金丹大要图

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 痴人福

    痴人福

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 道店

    道店

    天下熙熙,皆为利来;天下攘攘,皆为利往。为了一个梦想,开一家店,守一方世界。
  • 富家公子混校园

    富家公子混校园

    一个如同流氓样的家伙,爱出点儿风头,学校呆着呆着就呆成了校园皇帝。这般闯着闯着闯进了娱乐圈。自身有点小实力,那是被当兵的父亲逼出来的,最大的优点是,天不怕地不怕。最理想的生活是刺激,刺激,再刺激。胆敢指着校长老师鼻子大骂一通的牛人,从不遵守娱乐圈的潜规则,于是,这样的人物自然不平凡,他的一生也不凡了。
  • 四大冷酷公主PK四大冷酷王子

    四大冷酷公主PK四大冷酷王子

    她,她,她还有她在那个年纪,爸爸的小三闯入,带着私生女,杀了妈妈,于是她们决定复仇,可是又在仇恨中遇到了他们,最终经历了风与浪,她们还能在一起吗?事实上,最后还是背叛,她们再也不相信爱情,她们的女儿,能否找到真正的爱情呢?
  • 管理就是搞定人

    管理就是搞定人

    成功的企业为什么成功,失败的企业为什么失败,不单是有人才,更重要的是要搞定人才!管理者的最高境界就是搞定人。 搞定人不是整人,而是让下属心服口服,只有这样,才能发挥下属的最大潜能。要让下属心服,需要依靠的是行之有效的管理方法,而不是手中的权力。优秀的管理者,往往可以通过对员工表达关心、信任、理解和支持,赢得员工的忠心;通过感情投资、物质奖励、金钱匹配、满足员工自我实现的心理需求,从而激发出他们的潜能,使自己领导的企业团队变得更加强大。本书理论结合实践,给你一套实用的打造精英团队与提高自身管理水平的方法。“大道理”不如“实战方法”,“操作步聚”胜过“宏观理念”!
  • 八荒血域

    八荒血域

    龙泉镇走出了一个身世并不简单的孤儿,遇见一个一见钟情的女子,遇见一个断臂的师傅,然后便走向了一条不归路。什么天道圣兵,大荒镇魔碑,八荒血域,一个个秘密,一个个被封印的邪魔被层出不穷神秘势力解封,该死的,究竟需要多久?需要多长?化凡尘出天南,战青龙海,乱中州,灭西域,荡气回肠,到头来世界崩碎,众神仍然陨落在虚空……究竟是宿命还是轮回,八荒血域,跳跃性很大,慎重点击。
  • 总裁的甜心萌妻

    总裁的甜心萌妻

    她,被后母逼得走投无路的南家三小姐。他,商界上叱咤风云的凨祁集团凤大总裁。“凤君慕,我要做你的女人。”琢磨不透的妖孽男人,冷着眼看着站到自己面前的女人,微微勾唇。“小美人,我可不是牛郎,如果饥渴的话该去桂兰坊。”他痞笑般的附在她耳畔,声音魅惑清华,却冷的彻骨心寒。她似是早已预料到一般,无谓的勾唇,转身拿起餐桌上泛着亮光的小刀。“你还真狠得下心。”他看着那明晃晃的刀锋落下时,眸光一暗。“如果我不狠心,这游戏还怎么继续下去呢。”她不为所动的扬了扬嘴角,真像索魂的罗刹女。两个性子极其冷漠狠情的人,本以为再无交集,却在那后来有了衔接。凤君慕,我们的开始是不是注定是错误?
  • 云笈七签

    云笈七签

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说妙吉祥瑜伽大教金刚陪啰嚩轮观想成就仪轨经

    佛说妙吉祥瑜伽大教金刚陪啰嚩轮观想成就仪轨经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 竹离

    竹离

    生活若只是宿命,人这一生,究竟是为了什么?仗剑江湖,求仙问道,斩妖除魔,得红颜知己,创千秋门派。最终还不是归隐山林,逍遥于天外。既然如此,为何要大费周折回到起点?宝剑神功,谁人不为之疯狂?但我只是个竹山少年,正邪之争,恩怨情仇,尔虞我诈,与我何干!若时间可以倒流,历史可以改变,我只愿过着闲云野鹤的日子,但是,一切从我拿起竹离的那一刻起,再也无法回头了………………
  • 傲剑人生

    傲剑人生

    沈家少年:沈剑晨在乱世间寻求大道,但是迷茫,背叛却让少年一次又一次的停步思考。。。。何为顶峰何为侠者。。。