登陆注册
19316500000059

第59章

The boy student was also a keen man of business, and his pursuit of knowledge in the evening did not sap his enterprises of the day. He soon acquired a virtual monopoly for the sale of newspapers on the line, and employed four boy assistants. His annual profits amounted to about 500 dollars, which were a substantial aid to his parents. To increase the sale of his papers, he telegraphed the headings of the war news to the stations in advance of the trains, and placarded them to tempt the passengers. Ere long he conceived the plan of publishing a newspaper of his own. Having bought a quantity of old type at the office of the DETROIT FREE PRESS, he installed it in a spingless car, or 'caboose' of the train meant for a smoking-room, but too uninviting to be much used by the passengers. Here he set the type, and printed a smallsheet about a foot square by pressing it with his hand. The GRAND TRUNK HERALD, as he called it, was a weekly organ, price three cents, containing a variety of local news, and gossip of the line. It was probably the only journal ever published on a railway train; at all events with a boy for editor and staff, printer and 'devil,' publisher and hawker. Mr. Robert Stephenson, then building the tubular bridge at Montreal, was taken with the venture, and ordered an extra edition for his own use. The London TIMES correspondent also noticed the paper as a curiosity of journalism.

This was a foretaste of notoriety.

Unluckily, however, the boy did not keep his scientific and literary work apart, and the smoking-car was transformed into a laboratory as well as a printing house.

Having procured a copy of Fresenius' QUALITIVE ANALYSIS and some old chemical gear; he proceeded to improve his leisure by making experiments. One day, through an extra jolt of the car, a bottle of phosphorus broke on the floor, and the car took fire. The incensed conductor of the train, after boxing his ears, evicted him with all his chattels.

Finding an asylum in the basement of his father's house (where he took the precaution to label all his bottles 'poison'), he began the publication of a new and better journal, entitled the PAUL PRY. It boasted of several contributors and a list of regular subscribers. One of these (Mr. J.H.B.), while smarting under what he considered a malicious libel, met the editor one day on the brink of the St. Clair, and taking the law into his own hands, soused him in the river. The editor avenged his insulted dignity by excluding the subscriber's name from the pages of the PAUL PRY.

Youthful genius is apt to prove unlucky, and another story (we hope they are all true, though we cannot vouch for them), is told of his partiality for riding with the engine-driver on the locomotive. After he had gained an insight into the working of the locomotive he would run the train himself; but on one occasion he pumped so much water into the boiler that it was shot from the funnel, and deluged the engine with soot. By using his eyes and haunting the machine shops he was able to construct a model of a locomotive.

But his employment of the telegraph seems to have diverted his thoughts in that direction, and with the help of a book on the telegraph he erected a makeshift line between his new laboratory and the house of James Ward, one of his boy helpers. The conductor was run on trees, and insulated with bottles, and the apparatus was home-made, but it seems to have been of some use. Mr. James D. Reid, author of THE TELEGRAPH INAMERICA, would have us believe that an attempt was made to utilise the electricity obtained by rubbing a cat connected up in lieu of a battery;but the spirit of Artemus Ward is by no means dead in the United States, and the anecdote may be taken with a grain of salt. Such an experiment was at all events predestined to an ignominious failure.

An act of heroism was the turning-point in his career. One day, at the risk of his life, he saved the child of the station-master at Mount Clemens, near Port Huron, from being run over by an approaching train, and the grateful father, Mr. J. A. Mackenzie, learning of his interest in the telegraph, offered to teach him the art of sending and receiving messages. After his daily service was over, Edison returned to Mount Clemens on a luggage train and received his lesson.

At the end of five months, while only sixteen years of age, he forsook the trains, and accepted an offer of twenty-five dollars a month, with extra pay for overtime, as operator in the telegraph office at Port Huron, a small installation in a jewelry store. He worked hard to acquire more skill; and after six months, finding his extra pay withheld, he obtained an engagement as night operator at Stratford, in Canada. To keep him awake the operator was required to report the word 'six,' an office call, every half-hour to the manager of the circuit.

Edison fulfilled the regulation by inventing a simple device which transmitted the required signals. It consisted of a wheel with the characters cut on the rim, and connected with the circuit in such a way that the night watchman, by turning the wheel, could transmit the signals while Edison slept or studied.

His employment at Stratford came to a grievous end. One night he received a service message ordering a certain train to stop, and before showing it to the conductor he, perhaps for greater certainty, repeated it back again. When he rushed out of the office to deliver it the train was gone, and a collision seemed inevitable; but, fortunately, the opposing trains met on a straight portion of the track, and the accident was avoided. The superintendent of the railway threatened to prosecute Edison, who was thoroughly frightened, and returned home without his baggage.

同类推荐
  • 华严原人论合解

    华严原人论合解

    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。
  • Cambridge Pieces

    Cambridge Pieces

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说法身经

    佛说法身经

    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。
  • 峡中行

    峡中行

    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。
  • 无量义经

    无量义经

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 惑世国师

    惑世国师

    世有“北有拂景既倾城,南谓九卿可惑世”一说。男生女相,妖媚惑主,喜好男风,手段狠戾世间男儿皆不耻;上知天文,下知地理,造福百姓,运筹帷幄千古一卦知天下。这是大祁国师墨九卿。却无人知,这祸国殃民的一朝国师,竟是女儿身!皇帝宠信,奸臣算计,政局诡谲,身份成谜。且看她一异世孤魂如何在这如画江山翻手为云,覆手为雨。
  • 花开半世之木马情缘

    花开半世之木马情缘

    花开半世,昔人已变。薰衣草之约,他还记得吗?
  • 几道游

    几道游

    天地尽灭,宇宙尽消!万道为我所用,我的掌间便是一个苍穹,我的指尖便是一个世界!待我万道沉浮,举世无敌之时,成仙之路不可证,那么我赵轩便逆天成道,追寻几道之游……
  • 我从穿越来从穿越去

    我从穿越来从穿越去

    爆笑奇缘,腹黑导师,靠,这世界不公平,明明是一个乖乖女,最后竟变得如此强悍,Σ(°△°|||)︴汗颜,看懵懂少女如何变成女汉纸……“小棱,我把我珍藏了23年的清白都给你了。”某男可怜的说。“靠就你清白值钱,老娘还不稀罕。”还珍藏。站在门口的侍卫说:“王妃和王爷,木得救了!”久病又复发了
  • 星辰巫主

    星辰巫主

    同样的世界,不一样的文明,不是科技文明,也不是魔法世界...而今巫法鼎盛,万般皆下品,唯巫独尊。
  • 离与散

    离与散

    我以为只要顺从命运的安排;跟上时间的尾巴便能握紧你的双手,不忘你的音容;可惜最后的最后的我剩下的只有离散。
  • 回归爱情公寓

    回归爱情公寓

    有一种成长叫单细胞宅男展博,有一种变化叫优雅千金宛瑜。有一种彪悍叫双面御姐一菲,有一种自恋叫新好男人小贤。有一种花心叫风流雅痞子乔,有一种可爱叫多情腐女美嘉。有一种幽默叫优质型男关谷,有一种痴迷叫百变戏痴悠悠。有一种失落叫平民律师张伟,有一种美丽叫窈窕丽人羽墨。
  • 武神偷天

    武神偷天

    【我若予取,天亦可盗!】一把飞轮可斩日月星辰,一面青境可囊世间万物,挥手间翻天地覆。神魔三界,群雄并起,万族林立,诸神争霸,搅动风云天地变。一个落魄盗神转生,一切从这里开始……
  • 小疯残月

    小疯残月

    身在异世,却误入了鬼谷外门,学得一身“废物”本事,在异世安身立命。
  • 私家甜宠:腹黑总裁欺上来

    私家甜宠:腹黑总裁欺上来

    “总裁,你的隐私被我当成了头条泄露了出去!”某女一脸惊恐,眸子里却满是狡黠。“没事,记得给我报酬就好了!”某男一脸腹黑。“什么报酬?”某女故作不知。“嘿嘿,你懂得!”某男邪邪一笑。