登陆注册
5201900000017

第17章

Then came the commission which changed the course of Fulton's life.His work had attracted the notice of Viscount Courtenay, later Earl of Devon, and he was invited to Devonshire to paint that nobleman's portrait.Here he met Francis, third Duke of Bridgewater, the father of the English canal system, and his hardly less famous engineer, James Brindley, and also Earl Stanhope, a restless, inquiring spirit.Fulton the mechanic presently began to dominate Fulton the artist.He studied canals, invented a means of sawing marble in the quarries, improved the wheel for spinning flax, invented a machine for making rope, and a method of raising canal boats by inclined planes instead of locks.What money he made from these inventions we do not know, but somewhat later (1796) he speaks hopefully of an improvement in tanning.This same year he published a pamphlet entitled "ATreatise on the Improvement of Canal Navigation", copies of which were sent to Napoleon and President Washington.

Fulton went to France in 1797.To earn money he painted several portraits and a panorama of the Burning of Moscow.This panorama, covering the walls of a circular hall built especially for it, became very popular, and Fulton painted another.In Paris he formed a warm friendship with that singular American, Joel Barlow, soldier, poet, speculator, and diplomatist, and his wife, and for seven years lived in their house.

The long and complicated story of Fulton's sudden interest in torpedoes and submarine boats, his dealings with the Directory and Napoleon and with the British Admiralty does not belong here.

His experiments and his negotiations with the two Governments occupied the greater part of his time for the years between 1797and 1806.His expressed purpose was to make an engine of war so terrible that war would automatically be abolished.The world, however, was not ready for diving boats and torpedoes, nor yet for the end of war, and his efforts had no tangible results.** The submarine was the invention of David Bushnell, a Connecticut Yankee, whose "American Turtle" blew up at least one British vessel in the War of Independence and created much consternation among the King's ships in American waters.

During all the years after 1793, at least, and perhaps earlier, the idea of the steamboat had seldom been out of his mind, but lack of funds and the greater urgency, as he thought, of the submarine prevented him from working seriously upon it.In 1801, however, Robert R.Livingston came to France as American Minister.Livingston had already made some unsuccessful experiments with the steamboat in the United States, and, in 1798, had received the monopoly of steam navigation on the waters of New York for twenty years, provided that he produced a vessel within twelve months able to steam four miles an hour.This grant had, of course, been forfeited, but might be renewed, Livingston thought.

Fulton and Livingston met, probably at Barlow's house, and, in 1802, drew up an agreement to construct a steamboat to ply between New York and Albany.Livingston agreed to advance five hundred dollars for experimentation in Europe.In this same year Fulton built a model and tested different means of propulsion, giving "the preference to a wheel on each side of the model."*The boat was built on the Seine, but proved too frail for the borrowed engine.A second boat was tried in August, 1803, and moved, though at a disappointingly slow rate of speed.

* Fulton to Barlow, quoted in Sutcliffe, "Robert Fulton and the Clermont", p.124.

Just at this time Fulton wrote ordering an engine from Boulton and Watt to be transported to America.The order was at first refused, as it was then the shortsighted policy of the British Government to maintain a monopoly of mechanical contrivances.

Permission to export was given the next year, however, and the engine was shipped in 1805.It lay for some time in the New York Customs House.Meanwhile Fulton had studied the Watt engine on Symington's steamboat, the Charlotte Dundas, on the Forth and Clyde Canal, and Livingston had been granted a renewal of his monopoly of the waters of New York.

Fulton arrived at New York in 1806 and began the construction of the Clermont, so named after Livingston's estate on the Hudson.

The building was done on the East River.The boat excited the jeers of passersby, who called it "Fulton's Folly." On Monday, August 17, 1807, the memorable first voyage was begun.Carrying a party of invited guests, the Clermont steamed off at one o'clock.

Past the towns and villages along the Hudson, the boat moved steadily, black smoke rolling from her stack.Pine wood was the fuel.During the night, the sparks pouring from her funnel, the clanking of her machinery, and the splashing of the paddles frightened the animals in the woods and the occupants of the scattered houses along the banks.At one o'clock Tuesday the boat arrived at Clermont, 110 miles from New York.After spending the night at Clermont, the voyage was resumed on Wednesday.Albany, forty miles away, was reached in eight hours, making a record of 150 miles in thirty-two hours.Returning to New York, the distance was covered in thirty hours.The steamboat was a success.

The boat was then laid up for two weeks while the cabins were boarded in, a roof built over the engine, and coverings placed over the paddle-wheels to catch the spray--all under Fulton's eye.Then the Clermont began regular trips to Albany, carrying sometimes a hundred passengers, making the round trip every four days, and continued until floating ice marked the end of navigation for the winter.

同类推荐
  • 梁公九谏

    梁公九谏

    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。
  • 净土全书

    净土全书

    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。
  • 金刚顶经瑜伽文殊师利菩萨法一品

    金刚顶经瑜伽文殊师利菩萨法一品

    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。
  • 大梵天王问佛决疑经

    大梵天王问佛决疑经

    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。
  • 十二礼赞阿弥陀佛文

    十二礼赞阿弥陀佛文

    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
  • 你给我的爱像尘埃

    你给我的爱像尘埃

    因为遇见的人是你,我才想要奋不顾身地爱一场。所以,不管夫妻也好,子女也罢,都要好好珍惜这一世的缘分。等到某一天缘分散尽的时候,不会抱憾终身,不会痛哭流涕。深爱过,就是圆满。
  • 彼岸花开之恋人

    彼岸花开之恋人

    这是一个神奇而又现实的世界。这是一连串唯美而动人的故事。它包含了人事间各种各样的事件。打开它,看完它,你可能会留恋,可能会寻找到自己的梦……
  • 比丘尼传

    比丘尼传

    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。
  • 笑了

    笑了

    叶勐,河北省作协会员。作品见于《人民文学》《芙蓉》等期刊。小说《老正是条狗》入选《2005年短篇小说年选》。《亡命之徒》电影改编。《塞车》被译成英文。《为什么要把小说写得这么好》获2008年度河北十佳优秀作品奖。现为河北省文学院签约作家。
  • 我的律师老公

    我的律师老公

    外表女神内在屌丝的女汉子,外形冷酷内在纯情的大律师,欢喜冤家天生一对!换了个身体就不认识初恋情人?!重生她也是本质不变,你不爱我,还想去爱谁!优雅淡漠大律师,面对陌生大美女的强势来袭,心底里守着的初恋情人还能存在多久?纯爱浪漫的追爱之路,看大律师和迷糊女的搞笑爱恋!
  • 婚从天降:靳少的合约新娘

    婚从天降:靳少的合约新娘

    她好心救了个男人回家,哪想对方竟恩将仇报,设计她签下一年婚契。“靳乔衍,你无耻!”靳乔衍一笑:“我还有更无耻的,你要不要试试?”翟思思缩到床角:“你别乱来,我们只是假结婚……”男人一把将她抓进怀里:“不知道有个词你听过没。”翟思思疑惑:“什么?”丹凤眼一抬,薄唇勾起:“假戏真做。”传说靳大少高冷禁欲不近女色,嫁过去后她才知道,传说从来都是骗人了!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 重生之星际美食日记

    重生之星际美食日记

    周繁锦一位现代的疯狂的美食家,同时也是一位拥有可以和五星级大厨媲美的厨师。因为一场偶然的意外,她穿越到了多年后的星际时代,当一位美食家来到了一个只能靠营养剂维持身体所需能量的时代,那后果只有一个,那就是把美食这种人类最伟大的发明发扬光大。
  • 爱你是我唯一的温暖

    爱你是我唯一的温暖

    爱你,是我此生唯一的执迷不悟……她曾是他手心里的宝。结婚三年,恩爱如初。她以为,他们会一直这样幸福下去。可一夕之间,他像忽然变了一个人,对她冷漠,暴戾,甚至绝情。最后,不惜亲自将她推上手术台,一尸两命。可谁知道,原来这场背叛背后的原因竟是这样……
  • 棉尾兔豁耳朵

    棉尾兔豁耳朵

    小小个头、身体柔弱的棉尾兔母子生活的田野里到处充满了凶猛可怖的敌人,有咬掉豁耳朵左耳一大块皮的毒蛇、凶猛的猎狗和红尾鹰等。为了让棉尾兔豁耳朵能在田野里顺顺利利地长大,妈妈倾尽全部,教会它各种各样的本领和技巧,经过不断努力地练习,豁耳朵成长为一只出色的棉尾兔,既能诱骗猎狗,也能灵活变通的除掉另一只大野兔。可在一次狡猾狐狸的突袭中,妈妈为了保护豁耳朵而遇到了致命的危险……
  • 逃婚王妃当盟主

    逃婚王妃当盟主

    十年前武林盟主澹台家族惨遭灭门,如今盟主令血玉重现江湖,正邪两派皇室外族虎视眈眈,娇俏王妃摇身一变,盟主之争一触即发,殊不知更大的惊天阴谋却正在悄然上演!神秘宫主、霸世冷王、风流楼主、漠西鬼王、东岛仙君——待白发苍苍容颜迟暮,又有谁可以携手共看繁华落尽!