登陆注册
37941500000097

第97章 CHAPTER XXVII. THE POSSIBILITIES OF BALLOONS IN WA

Nothing could be more evident than that the balloon was travelling rapidly with a lower wind, while the storm was being borne equally rapidly on an upper and diametrically opposite current. It proved one of the most severe thunderstorms remembered in the country. It brooded for five hours over Devizes, a few miles ahead. A homestead on our right was struck and burned to the ground, while on our left two soldiers were killed on Salisbury Plain. The sky immediately overhead was, of course, hidden by the large globe of the balloon, but around and beneath us the storm seemed to gather in a blue grey mist, which quickly broadened and deepened till, almost before we could realise it, we found ourselves in the very heart of the storm, the lightning playing all around us, and the sharp hail stinging our faces.

The countrymen below described the balloon as apparently enveloped by the lightning, but with ourselves, though the flashes were incessant, and on all sides, the reverberations of the thunder were not remarkable, being rather brief explosions in which they resembled the thunder claps not infrequently described by travellers on mountain heights.

The balloon was now descending from a double cause: the weight of moisture suddenly accurnulated on its surface, and the very obvious downrush of cold air that accompanied the storm of pelting hail. With a very limited store of ballast, it seemed impossible to make a further ascent, nor was this desirable.

The signalling experiments on which we were intent could not be carried on in such weather. The only course was to descend, and though this was not at once practicable, owing to Savernake Forest being beneath us, we effected a safe landing in the first available clearing.

As has been mentioned, Mr. Glaisher and other observers have recorded several remarkable instances of opposite wind currents being met with at moderate altitudes. None, however, can have been more noteworthy or surprising than the following experience Of the writer on Whit Monday of 1899. The ascent was under an overcast sky, from the Crystal Palace at 3 p.m., at which hour a cold drizzle was settling in with a moderate breeze from the east. Thus, starting from the usual filling ground near the north tower, the balloon sailed over the body of the Palace, and thence over the suburbs towards the west till lost in the mist. We then ascended through 1,500 feet of dense, wetting cloud, and, emerging in bright sunshine, continued to drift for two hours at an average altitude of some 3,000 feet; 1,000 feet below us was the ill-defined, ever changing upper surface of the dense cloud floor, and it was no longer possible to determine our course, which we therefore assumed to have remained unchanged. At length, however, as a measure of prudence, we determined to descend through the clouds sufficiently to learn something of our whereabouts, which we reasonably expected to be somewhere in Surrey or Berks. On emerging, however, below the cloud, the first object that loomed out of the mist irnmediately below us was a cargo vessel, in the rigging of which our trail rope was entangling itself. Only by degrees the fact dawned upon us that we were in the estuary of the Thames, and beating up towards London once again with an cast wind. Thus it became evident that at the higher level, unknown to ourselves, we had been headed back on our course, for two hours, by a wind diametrically opposed to that blowing on the ground.

Two recent developments of the hot-air war balloon suggest great possibilities in the near future. One takes the form of a small captive, carrying aloft a photographic camera directed and operated electrically from the ground. The other is a self-contained passenger balloon of large dimensions, carrying in complete safety a special petroleum burner of great power.

These new and important departures are mainly due to the mechanical genius of Mr. J. N. Maskelyne, who has patented and perfected them in conjunction with the writer.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 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!
  • 黑龙王座

    黑龙王座

    这是一个重生在盘龙宇宙的故事,在鸿蒙开辟四大规则神界后,主角成为冥界第一批生命,黑龙。最早研究传送阵的存在,第一个开辟位面的存在,获得意志威能奖励次数最多的存在,被众神尊为黑龙王座。
  • 豪门情缘:女王姗姗来迟

    豪门情缘:女王姗姗来迟

    她可爱、她妩媚、她知性、她高冷,变化多样的她是百变女郎。她为身边的人而变,她为喜欢她的人而变,她为命运而变。可无论怎么变,她都不忘初心,她还是那个心地善良的敢作敢当的美丽女子。她在成为大明星的路上饱受非议,也成为舆论的焦点。有多少人爱,就有多少人恨。她是国民女神,她是大众情人。粉丝们爱她爱得无可救药,土豪们把她捧上了天,最终她将神豪变为自己的男宠。她本是千金小姐,却沦为平民之女。她回归豪门不久,家族却遭遇大难。她凭着自己的努力,最终建立起属于自己的娱乐王朝。她就是王姗姗,华夏大地上新时代的女性代表,她只为自己代言,她只为华丽的人生而舞,她只为美好的生活而唱,她只为心中的梦想而演绎出最完美的自己
  • 地球消失记——大地母亲的叹息

    地球消失记——大地母亲的叹息

    本书讲述了目前土地资源遭到破坏、土壤污染严重的状况,相关的知识和技术,以及保护土地资源的重要性,重点培养青少年对环保的认识和对土地资源的珍视。
  • 阳明天下:王阳明传

    阳明天下:王阳明传

    他在祖母的天神之梦中“从天而降”。《论语》中“知及之,仁不能守之”,让他从此得名王守仁。平顺的人生中,他掀开了不凡的命运。在他眼中,科举并非第一要紧事,天下最要紧之事是要做圣贤之人。他敢于触怒奸臣,被贬龙场,却悟出了全新的真谛。疾病半生,用出神的兵法,以文人之身,巡抚赣南,屡次平定边疆匪患。他一生倡导“知行合一”,将心学发扬到极致。各地学子涌入他的门下,又将万物与心的和谐带到了世界各地。“此心光明,亦复何言”,是他在世上留下的最后警句。从此圣贤的领域有了他的一席之地,他将短暂的人生活成了一场辉煌的传奇,永远绽放在大明朝的史册。
  • 道网恢恢

    道网恢恢

    大千世界,天道为基,大道为网。谁又能超脱逍遥?
  • 火葬场的人偶

    火葬场的人偶

    木制的人偶、空洞的双眼、扭曲的灵魂、夜夜的扯吼……这一切究竟从何来?
  • 启元至尊

    启元至尊

    在这个女尊男卑的时代,宋启元身边上百美女环绕,却选择了修炼童子功。四剑为梁,八艺为柱,理想不是广开后宫,纵情花丛,而是携道侣,率众美,打破旧规则,重建新秩序。
  • 我靠吃就能无敌

    我靠吃就能无敌

    李然穿越到超凡世界,并获得一个“吃货系统”,吃就能变强! 你吃了大米饭,积分+1。你吃了牛肉,积分+3。你吃了一级妖兽竹叶蟒,积分+50。你喝了百年血灵茶,积分+100。……是否消耗积分领悟“罗烟步”?是否消耗积分提高“境界”?李然两眼放光:是!是!是!……灵气复苏?妖兽肆虐?文明入侵?这个世界很危险?李然一脸不在乎的在一旁大口吃肉。 某天才:李然,你怎么还不修炼?“不好意思,修炼是什么?能吃吗?”食物即力量,我靠吃就能无敌!
  • 秦王逸史

    秦王逸史

    秦王李世民是唐代一位著名的开国皇帝。本辑所收《秦王传奇》及《混唐后传》两部历史演义,生动集中地敷演了唐代开国前后的一些传奇故事。