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industrial biography-第68部分

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years since Mr。 Roberts added a useful companion to the Jacquard

punching machine; in his combined self…acting machine for shearing

iron and punching both webs of angle or T iron simultaneously to any

required pitch; though this machine; like others which have proceeded

from his fertile brain; is ahead even of this fast…manufacturing age;

and has not yet come into general use; but is certain to do so before

many years have elapsed。



These inventions were surely enough for one man to have accomplished;

but we have not yet done。  The mere enumeration of his other

inventions would occupy several pages。  We shall merely allude to a

few of them。  One was his Turret Clock; for which he obtained the

medal at the Great Exhibition of 1851。  Another was his Prize

Electro…Magnet of 1845。  When this subject was first mentioned to him;

he said he did not know anything of the theory or practice of

electro…magnetism; but he would try and find out。  The result of his

trying was that he won the prize for the most powerful

electro…magnet:  one is placed in the museum at Peel Park; Manchester;

and another with the Scottish Society of Arts; Edinburgh。  In 1846 he

perfected an American invention for making cigars by machinery;

enabling a boy; working one of his cigar…engines; to make as many as

5000 in a day。  In 1852 he patented improvements in the construction;

propelling; and equipment of steamships; which have; we believe; been

adopted to a certain extent by the Admiralty; and a few years later;

in 1855; we find him presenting the Secretary of War with plans of

elongated rifle projectiles to be used in smooth…bore ordnance with a

view to utilize the old…pattern gun。  His head; like many inventors of

the time; being full of the mechanics of war; he went so far as to

wait upon Louis Napoleon; and laid before him a plan by which

Sebastopol was to be blown down。  In short; upon whatever subject he

turned his mind; he left the impress of his inventive faculty。  If it

was imperfect; he improved it; if incapable of improvement; and

impracticable; he invented something entirely new; superseding it

altogether。  But with all his inventive genius; in the exercise of

which Mr。 Roberts has so largely added to the productive power of the

country; we regret to say that he is not gifted with the commercial

faculty。  He has helped others in their difficulties; but forgotten

himself。  Many have profited by his inventions; without even

acknowledging the obligations which they owed to him。  They have used

his brains and copied his tools; and the 〃sucked orange〃 is all but

forgotten。  There may have been a want of worldly wisdom on his part;

but it is lamentable to think that one of the most prolific and

useful inventors of his time should in his old age be left to fight

with poverty。



Mr。 Whitworth is another of the first…class tool…makers of Manchester

who has turned to excellent account his training in the workshops of

Maudslay and Clement。  He has carried fully out the system of

uniformity in Screw Threads which they initiated; and he has still

further improved the mechanism of the planing machine; enabling it to

work both backwards and forwards by means of a screw and roller

motion。  His 〃Jim Crow Machine;〃 so called from its peculiar motion in

reversing itself and working both ways; is an extremely beautiful

tool; adapted alike for horizontal; vertical; or angular motions。  The

minute accuracy of Mr。 Whitworth's machines is not the least of their

merits; and nothing will satisfy him short of perfect truth。  At the

meeting of the Institute of Mechanical Engineers at Glasgow in 1856

he read a paper on the essential importance of possessing a true

plane as a standard of reference in mechanical constructions; and he

described elaborately the true method of securing it;namely; by

scraping; instead of by the ordinary process of grinding。  At the same

meeting he exhibited a machine of his invention by which he stated

that a difference of the millionth part of an inch in length could at

once be detected。  He also there urged his favourite idea of

uniformity; and proper gradations of size of parts; in all the

various branches of the mechanical arts; as a chief means towards

economy of productiona principle; as he showed; capable of very

extensive application。  To show the progress of tools and machinery in

his own time; Mr。 Whitworth cited the fact that thirty years since

the cost of labour for making a surface of cast…iron trueone of the

most important operations in mechanicsby chipping and filing by the

hand; was 12s。 a square foot; whereas it is now done by the planing

machine at a cost for labour of less than a penny。  Then in machinery;

pieces of 74 reed printing…cotton cloth of 29 yards each could not be

produced at less cost than 30s。 6d。 per piece; whereas the same

description is now sold for 3s。 9d。  Mr。 Whitworth has been among the

most effective workers in this field of improvement; his tools taking

the first place in point of speed; accuracy; and finish of work; in

which respects they challenge competition with the world。  Mr。

Whitworth has of late years been applying himself with his accustomed

ardour to the development of the powers of rifled guns and

projectiles;a branch of mechanical science in which he confessedly

holds a foremost place; and in perfecting which he is still occupied。





CHAPTER XV。



JAMES NASMYTH。



        〃By Hammer and Hand

         All Arts doth stand。〃

                        Hammermen's Motto。





The founder Of the Scotch family of Naesmyth is said to have derived

his name from the following circumstance。  In the course of the feuds

which raged for some time between the Scotch kings and their powerful

subjects the Earls of Douglas; a rencontre took place one day on the

outskirts of a Border village; when the king's adherents were

worsted。  One of them took refuge in the village smithy; where;

hastily disguising himself; and donning a spare leathern apron; he

pretended to be engaged in assisting the smith with his work; when a

party of the Douglas followers rushed in。  They glanced at the

pretended workman at the anvil; and observed him deliver a blow upon

it so unskilfully that the hammer…shaft broke in his hand。  On this

one of the Douglas men rushed at him; calling out; 〃Ye're nae smyth!〃

The assailed man seized his sword; which lay conveniently at hand;

and defended himself so vigorously that he shortly killed his

assailant; while the smith brained another with his hammer; and; a

party of the king's men having come to their help; the rest were

speedily overpowered。  The royal forces then rallied; and their

temporary defeat was converted into a victory。  The king bestowed a

grant of land on his follower 〃Nae Smyth;〃 who assumed for his arms a

sword between two hammers with broken shafts; and the motto 〃Non arte

sed Marte;〃 as if to disclaim the art of the Smith; in which he had

failed; and to emphasize the superiority of the warrior。  Such is said

to be the traditional origin of the family of Naesmyth of Posso in

Peeblesshire; who continue to bear the same name and arms。



It is remarkable that the inventor of the steam…hammer should have so

effectually contradicted the name he bears and reversed the motto of

his family; for so far from being 〃Nae Smyth;〃 he may not

inappropriately be designated the very Vulcan of the nineteenth

century。  His hammer is a tool of immense power and pliancy; but for

which we must have stopped short in many of those gigantic

engineering works which are among the marvels of the age we live in。

It possesses so much precision and delicacy that it will chip the end

of an egg resting in a glass on the anvil without breaking it; while

it delivers a blow of ten tons with such a force as to be felt

shaking the parish。  It is therefore with a high degree of

appropriateness that Mr。 Nasmyth has discarded the feckless hammer

with the broken shaft; and assumed for his emblem his own magnificent

steam…hammer; at the same time reversing the family motto; which he

has converted into 〃Non Marte sed Arte。〃



James Nasmyth belongs to a family whose genius in art has long been

recognised。  His father; Alexander Nasmyth of Edinburgh; was a

landscape…painter of great eminence; whose works are sometimes

confounded with those of his son Patrick; called the English Hobbema;

though his own merits are peculiar and distinctive。  The elder Nasmyth

was also an admirable portrait painter; as his head of Burnsthe

best ever painted of the poetbears ample witness。  His daughters;

the Misses Nasmyth; were highly skilled painters of landscape; and

their works are well known and much prized。  James; the youngest of

the family; inherits the same love of art; though his name is more

extensively known as a worker and inventor in iron。  He was born at

Edinburgh; on the 19th of August; 1808; and his attention was early


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