登陆注册
37941500000021

第21章 CHAPTER VI. CHARLES GREEN AND THE NASSAU BALLOON.(

The balloon, which had gradually been dropping out of favour, had now been virtually laid aside, and, to all appearance, might have continued so, when, as if by chance concurrence of events, there arrived both the hour and the man to restore it to the world, and to invest it with a new practicability and importance. The coronation of George the Fourth was at hand, and this became a befitting occasion for the rare genius mentioned at the end of the last chapter, and now in his thirty-sixth year, to put in practice a new method of balloon management and inflation, the entire credit of which must be accorded to him alone.

From its very introduction and inception the gas balloon, an expensive and fragile structure in itself, had proved at all times exceedingly costly in actual use. Indeed, we find that at the date at which we have now arrived the estimate for filling a balloon of 70,000 cubic feet--no extraordinary capacity--with hydrogen gas was about L250. When, then, to this great outlay was added the difficulty and delay of producing a sufficient supply by what was at best a clumsy process, as also the positive failure and consequent disappointment which not infrequently ensued, it is easy to understand how through many years balloon ascents, no longer a novelty, had begun to be regarded with distrust, and the profession of a balloonist was doomed to become unremunerative.

A ******r and cheaper mode of inflation was not only a desideratum, but an absolute necessity. The full truth of this may be gathered from the fact that we find there were not seldom instances where two or three days of continuous and anxious labour were expended in generating and passing hydrogen into a balloon, through the fabric of which the subtle gas would escape almost as fast as it was produced.

It was at this juncture, then, that Charles Green conceived the happy idea of substituting for hydrogen gas the ordinary household gas, which at this time was to be found ready to hand and in sufficient quantity in all towns of any consequence; and by the day of the coronation all was in readiness for a public exhibition of this method of inflation, which was carried out with complete success, though not altogether without unrehearsed and amusing incident, as must be told.

The day, July 18, was one of summer heat, and Green at the conclusion of his preparations, fatigued with anxious labour and oppressed by the crowding of the populace, took refuge within the car of his balloon, which was by that time already inflated, and only awaiting the gun signal that was to announce the moment for its departure. To allow of his gaining the refreshment of somewhat purer air he begged his friends who were holding the car of his balloon in restraint to keep it suspended at a few feet from the earth, while he rested himself within, and, this being done, it would appear that he fell into a doze, from which he did not awake till he found that the balloon, which had slipped from his friends' hold, was already high above the crowd and requiring his prompt attention. This was, however, by no means an untoward accident, and Green's triumph was complete. By this one venture alone the success of the new method was entirely assured. The cost of the inflation had been reduced ten-fold, the labour and uncertainty a hundred-fold, and, over and above all, the confidence of the public was restored. It is little wonder, then, that in the years that now follow we find the balloon returning to all the favour it had enjoyed in its palmiest days. But Green proved himself something more than a practical balloonist of the first rank. He brought to the aid of his profession ideas which were matured by due thought and scientifically sound. It is true he still clung for a while to the antiquated notion that mechanical means could, with advantage, be used to cause a balloon to ascend or descend, or to alter its direction in a tranquil atmosphere. But he saw clearly that the true method of navigating a balloon should be by a study of upper currents, and this he was able to put to practical proof on a memorable occasion, and in a striking manner, as we shall presently relate.

He learned the lesson early in his career while acquiring facts and experience, unassisted, in a number of solitary voyages made from different parts of the country. Among these he is careful to record an occasion when, ****** a day-light ascent from Boston, Lincolnshire, he maintained a lofty course, which promised to take him direct to Grantham; but, presently descending to a lower level, and his balloon diverging at an angle of some 45 degrees, he now headed for Newark. This experience he stored away.

A month later we find him ****** a night voyage from Vauxhall Gardens, destined to be the scene of many memorable ascents in the near future; and on this occasion he gave proof of his capability as a close and intelligent observer. It was a July night, near 11 p.m., moonless and cloudy, yet the earth was visible, and under these circumstances his ****** narrative becomes of scientific value. He accurately distinguished the reflective properties of the face of the diversified country he traversed. Over Battersea and Wandsworth--this was in 1826--there were white sheets spread over the land, which proved to be corn crops ready for the sickle. Where crops were not the ground was darker, with, here and there, objects absolutely black--in other words, trees and houses. Then he mentions the river in a memorandum, which reads strangely to the aeronaut who has made the same night voyage in these latter days. The stream was crossed in places with rows of lamps apparently resting on the water. These were the lighted bridges; but, here and there, were dark planks, and these too were bridges--at Battersea and Putney--but without a light upon them!

同类推荐
  • URSULA

    URSULA

    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。
  • 辩中边论述记

    辩中边论述记

    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。
  • 天朝田亩制度

    天朝田亩制度

    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。
  • 筠谷诗

    筠谷诗

    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。
  • 天道偶测

    天道偶测

    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
  • 好口才从孩子抓起

    好口才从孩子抓起

    本书从平台设施、硬件设施、软件设施三个角度,对少年儿童应该掌握的语言技巧进行了详尽的阐述。
  • 总裁的千亿盛宠

    总裁的千亿盛宠

    她在冰冷的手术室里备受折磨,门外的婆婆说,必须顺产,失去了第一个孩子的她仓皇失措的回家,撞见闺蜜和丈夫的奸情,此后她处处被陷害,又有神秘人暗中保护他,终于……她见到了大boss的尊荣--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 玄灵之灵动九天

    玄灵之灵动九天

    这里只是茫茫宇宙中无数大陆中的一个----这里有着实力强大能移山倒海的武者,有着能引发天地之威的阵法师,也有着生活在低层的狩猎者......这些人有贵有贱,但他们都有这一个一样的梦想----站在这大陆的巅峰,俯视这天下苍生!且看一少年怎样走上这巅峰之路!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 一叶言心

    一叶言心

    一个是家喻户晓的大明星,一个是不温不火的二线演员,一次话剧救场,让本无交集的他们相遇,她说遇到他是这一辈子最幸福的事情,他说能和她在一起是几世攒来的福气,关于他们相爱,相知,共同走出阴霾的温暖故事悄然拉开帷幕。
  • 一只大雁往南飞

    一只大雁往南飞

    本文通过回忆的方式,把故事的男女主角之间的分分合合,爱于恨的转化,各种经历等…记叙了普通人的一辈子所经历过的种种艰辛,活着真的不容易啊!
  • 《热血征途》

    《热血征途》

    时光荏苒,青春逝去。仅以此书来奠基我们年少时的轻狂、叛逆。
  • 忆相情深

    忆相情深

    她是一名富家千金,因叛逆性格在a市独自生活,用新的名字过着自己的高中生活。他百万帝国的少东家,与她又有什么故事呢????
  • 感化复仇公主

    感化复仇公主

    是我明明爱你,爱你至深至死……却抵不过你对我的残忍!"你别动他……他也是你的孩子……求你不要碰他!"秦沐语对着隐匿在黑暗中的男人,绝望地嘶声喊道。上官皓浅笑,走近她牢牢扣住她的肩膀,膝盖猛力狠狠顶撞上她微微隆起的小腹!一声凄厉的惨叫,划破夜空。他的唇缓缓靠近她的耳:"是不是我的,从来都没关系……可只要是你秦沐语的,那就都去死吧!";*;她想起18岁那一年,她走入秦氏大楼,接受一场从天而降的宠爱。
  • 高冷校草,丫头好美

    高冷校草,丫头好美

    高中爱情是美好也是纯洁的,我们的思想那么单纯。莎士比亚说过,相爱的人分手后不能做朋友,因为彼此伤害过。也不能做敌人,因为彼此深爱过。但是到了夏月桐这里就不同了。单纯的她,面对爱情,那么执着,那么迷茫。分手后问“你恨他吗?说要给你幸福的男子。”夏月桐两列清泪慢慢滑落说“我会微笑,微笑,深爱。微笑,然后深爱。”最终还是没有得到最爱的人,在她一切生命中开过的花一一凋零。她终于相信,面对变化无穷的季节,谁能一览无余……曾经的爱情那么好,你为什么不懂珍惜——夏月桐我那么爱你,却不得不把你从我身边推开。如果再一次选择,我不会再放开你的手。——安谨涵新人新作√,不喜勿喷√。