<h2><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P355"></SPAN></span><SPAN name="chapLVII"></SPAN>LVII<br/> THE DEVELOPMENT OF MATERIAL KNOWLEDGE</h2>
<p>Throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries and the opening years of
the nineteenth century, while these conflicts of the powers and princes were
going on in Europe, and the patchwork of the treaty of Westphalia (1648) was
changing kaleidoscopically into the patchwork of the treaty of Vienna (1815),
and while the sailing ship was spreading European influence throughout the
world, a steady growth of knowledge and a general clearing up of men’s
ideas about the world in which they lived was in progress in the European and
Europeanized world.</p>
<p>It went on disconnected from political life, and producing
throughout the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries no
striking immediate results in political life. Nor was it
affecting popular thought very profoundly during this period.
These reactions were to come later, and only in their full
force in the latter half of the nineteenth century. It was a
process that went on chiefly in a small world of prosperous
and independent-spirited people. Without what the English
call the “private gentleman,” the scientific
process could not have begun in Greece, and could not have
been renewed in Europe. The universities played a part but
not a leading part in the philosophical and scientific
thought of this period. Endowed learning is apt to be timid
and conservative learning, lacking in initiative and
resistent to innovation, unless it has the spur of contact
with independent minds.</p>
<p>We have already noted the formation of the Royal Society in
1662 and its work in realizing the dream of Bacon’s
<i>New Atlantis</i>. Throughout the eighteenth century there
was much clearing up of general ideas about matter and
motion, much mathematical advance, a systematic development
of the use of optical glass in microscope and telescope, a
renewed energy in classificatory natural <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P356"></SPAN></span>history, a
great revival of anatomical science. The science of
geology—foreshadowed by Aristotle and anticipated by
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519)—began its great task of
interpreting the Record of the Rocks.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-3561"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-3561.jpg" alt="EARLY ROLLING STOCK ON THE LIVERPOOL AND MANCHESTER RAILWAY IN THE FIRST DAYS OF THE RAILWAY" width-obs="550" height-obs="134" /> <p class="caption">
EARLY ROLLING STOCK ON THE LIVERPOOL AND MANCHESTER RAILWAY IN THE
FIRST DAYS OF THE RAILWAY</p>
</div>
<p>The progress of physical science reacted upon metallurgy.
Improved metallurgy, affording the possibility of a larger
and bolder handling of masses of metal and other materials,
reacted upon practical inventions. Machinery on a new scale
and in a new abundance appeared to revolutionize industry.</p>
<p>In 1804 Trevithick adapted the Watt engine to transport and
made the first locomotive. In 1825 the first railway,
between Stockton and Darlington, was opened, and
Stephenson’s “Rocket,” with a thirteen-ton
train, got up to a speed of forty-four miles per hour. From
1830 onward railways multiplied. By the middle of the
century a network of railways had spread all over Europe.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-3562"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-3562.jpg" alt="EARLY TRAVELLING ON THE LIVERPOOL AND MANCHESTER RAILWAY, 1833" width-obs="550" height-obs="134" /> <p class="caption">
EARLY TRAVELLING ON THE LIVERPOOL AND MANCHESTER RAILWAY, 1833</p>
</div>
<p>Here was a sudden change in what had long been a fixed
condition of human life, the maximum rate of land transport.
After the Russian disaster, Napoleon travelled from near
Vilna to Paris in 312 hours. This was a journey of about
1,400 miles. He was travelling with every conceivable
advantage, and he averaged <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P357"></SPAN></span>under 5 miles an hour. An
ordinary traveller could not have done this distance in twice
the time. These were about the same maximum rates of travel
as held good between Rome and Gaul in the first century
<small>A.D.</small> Then suddenly came this tremendous
change. The railways reduced this journey for any ordinary
traveller to less than forty-eight hours. That is to say,
they reduced the chief European distances to about a tenth of
what they had been. They made it possible to carry out
administrative work in areas ten times as great as any that
had hitherto been workable under one administration. The
full significance of that possibility in Europe still remains
to be realized. Europe is still netted in boundaries drawn
in the horse and road era. In America the effects were
immediate. To the United States of America, sprawling
westward, it meant the possibility of a continuous access to
Washington, however far the frontier travelled across the
continent. It meant unity, sustained on a scale that would
otherwise have been impossible.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-357"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-357.jpg" alt="THE STEAMBOAT: CLERMONT, 1807, U.S.A." width-obs="550" height-obs="369" /> <p class="caption">
THE STEAMBOAT: <i>CLERMONT</i>, 1807, U.S.A.</p>
</div>
<p>The steamboat was, if anything, a little ahead of the steam
engine in its earlier phases. There was a steamboat, the
<i>Charlotte Dundas</i>, on the Firth of Clyde Canal in 1802,
and in 1807 an American <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P358"></SPAN></span>named Fulton had a steamer, the
Clermont, with British-built engines, upon the Hudson River
above New York. The first steamship to put to sea was also
an American, the Phœnix, which went from New York
(Hoboken) to Philadelphia. So, too, was the first ship using
steam (she also had sails) to cross the Atlantic, the
Savannah (1819). All these were paddle-wheel boats and
paddle-wheel boats are not adapted to work in heavy seas.
The paddles smash too easily, and the boat is then disabled.
The screw steamship followed rather slowly. Many
difficulties had to be surmounted before the screw was a
practicable thing. Not until the middle of the century did
the tonnage of steamships upon the sea begin to overhaul that
of sailing ships. After that the evolution in sea transport
was rapid. For the first time men began to cross the seas
and oceans with some certainty as to the date of their
arrival. The transatlantic crossing, which had been an
uncertain adventure of several weeks—which might
stretch to months—was accelerated, until in 1910 it was
brought down, in the case of the fastest boats, to under five
days, with a practically notifiable hour of arrival.</p>
<p>Concurrently with the development of steam transport upon
land and sea a new and striking addition to the facilities of
human intercourse arose out of the investigations of Volta,
Galvani and Faraday into various electrical phenomena. The
electric telegraph came into existence in 1835. The first
underseas cable was laid in 1851 between France and England.
In a few years the telegraph system had spread over the
civilized world, and news which had hitherto travelled slowly
from point to point became practically simultaneous
throughout the earth.</p>
<p>These things, the steam railway and the electric telegraph,
were to the popular imagination of the middle nineteenth
century the most striking and revolutionary of inventions,
but they were only the most conspicuous and clumsy first
fruits of a far more extensive process. Technical knowledge
and skill were developing with an extraordinary rapidity, and
to an extraordinary extent measured by the progress of any
previous age. Far less conspicuous at first in everyday
life, but finally far more important, was the extension of
man’s power over various structural materials. Before
the middle of the eighteenth century iron was reduced from
its ores by <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P359"></SPAN></span>means of wood charcoal, was
handled in small pieces, and hammered and wrought into shape.
It was material for a craftsman. Quality and treatment were
enormously dependent upon the experience and sagacity of the
individual iron-worker. The largest masses of iron that
could be dealt with under those conditions amounted at most
(in the sixteenth century) to two or three tons. (There was
a very definite upward limit, therefore, to the size of
cannon.) The blast-furnace rose in the eighteenth century
and developed with the use of coke. Not before the
eighteenth century do we find rolled sheet iron (1728) and
rolled rods and bars (1783). Nasmyth’s steam hammer
came as late as 1838.</p>
<p>The ancient world, because of its metallurgical inferiority,
could not use steam. The steam engine, even the primitive
pumping engine, could not develop before sheet iron was
available. The early engines seem to the modern eye very
pitiful and clumsy bits of ironmongery, but they were the
utmost that the metallurgical science of the time could do.
As late as 1856 came the Bessemer process, and presently
(1864) the open-hearth process, in which steel and every sort
of iron could be melted, purified and cast in a manner and
upon a scale hitherto unheard of. To-day in the electric
furnace one may see tons of incandescent steel swirling about
like boiling milk in a saucepan. Nothing in the previous
practical advances of mankind is comparable in its
consequences to the complete mastery over enormous masses of
steel and iron and over their texture and quality which man
has now achieved. The railways and early engines of all
sorts were the mere first triumphs of the new metallurgical
methods. Presently came ships of iron and steel, vast
bridges, and a new way of building with steel upon a gigantic
scale. Men realized too late that they had planned their
railways with far too timid a gauge, that they could have
organized their travelling with far more steadiness and
comfort upon a much bigger scale.</p>
<p>Before the nineteenth century there were no ships in the
world much over 2,000 tons burthen; now there is nothing
wonderful about a 50,000-ton liner. There are people who
sneer at this kind of progress as being a progress in
“mere size,” but that sort of sneering merely
marks the intellectual limitations of those who indulge in
it. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P360"></SPAN></span>The
great ship or the steel-frame building is not, as they
imagine, a magnified version of the small ship or building of
the past; it is a thing different in kind, more lightly and
strongly built, of finer and stronger materials; instead of
being a thing of precedent and rule-of-thumb, it is a thing
of subtle and intricate calculation. In the old house or
ship, matter was dominant—the material and its needs
had to be slavishly obeyed; in the new, matter had been
captured, changed, coerced. Think of the coal and iron and
sand dragged out of the banks and pits, wrenched, wrought,
molten and cast, to be flung at last, a slender glittering
pinnacle of steel and glass, six hundred feet above the
crowded city!</p>
<p>We have given these particulars of the advance in man’s
knowledge of the metallurgy of steel and its results by way
of illustration. A parallel story could be told of the
metallurgy of copper and tin, and of a multitude of metals,
nickel and aluminium to name but two, unknown before the
nineteenth century dawned. It is in this great and growing
mastery over substances, over different sorts of glass, over
rocks and plasters and the like, over colours and textures,
that the main triumphs of the mechanical revolution have thus
far been achieved. Yet we are still in the stage of the
first fruits in the matter. We have the power, but we have
still to learn how to use our power. Many of the first
employments of these gifts of science have been vulgar,
tawdry, stupid or horrible. The artist and the adaptor have
still hardly begun to work with the endless variety of
substances now at their disposal.</p>
<p>Parallel with this extension of mechanical possibilities the
new science of electricity grew up. It was only in the
eighties of the nineteenth century that this body of enquiry
began to yield results to impress the vulgar mind. Then
suddenly came electric light and electric traction, and the
transmutation of forces, the possibility of sending power,
that could be changed into mechanical motion or light or heat
as one chose, along a copper wire, as water is sent along a
pipe, began to come through to the ideas of ordinary
people....</p>
<p>The British and French were at first the leading peoples in
this great proliferation of knowledge; but presently the
Germans, who had learnt humility under Napoleon, showed such
zeal and pertinacity in scientific enquiry as to overhaul
these leaders. British <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P361"></SPAN></span>science was largely the creation
of Englishmen and Scotchmen working outside the ordinary
centres of erudition.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-3611"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-3611.jpg" alt="EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SPINNING WHEEL" width-obs="300" height-obs="237" /> <p class="caption">
EIGHTEENTH CENTURY SPINNING WHEEL
<br/>
<small><i>In the Ipswich Museum</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-3612"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-3612.jpg" alt="MODEL OF ARKWRIGHT’S SPINNING JENNY, 1769" width-obs="500" height-obs="471" /> <p class="caption">
MODEL OF ARKWRIGHT’S SPINNING JENNY, 1769
<br/>
<small><i>From the specifications in the Patent Office</i></small></p>
</div>
<p>The universities of Britain were at this time in a state of
educational retrogression, largely given over to a pedantic
conning of the Latin and Greek classics. French education,
too, was dominated by the classical tradition of the Jesuit
schools, and consequently it was not difficult for the
Germans to organize a body of investigators, small indeed in
relation to the possibilities of the case, but large in
proportion to the little band of British and French inventors
and experimentalists. And though this work of research and
experiment was making Britain and France the most rich and
powerful countries in the world, it was not making scientific
and inventive men rich and <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P362"></SPAN></span>powerful. There is a necessary
unworldliness about a sincere scientific man; he is too
preoccupied with his research to plan and scheme how to make
money out of it. The economic exploitation of his
discoveries falls very easily and naturally, therefore, into
the hands of a more acquisitive type; and so we find that the
crops of rich men which every fresh phase of scientific and
technical progress has produced in Great Britain, though they
have not displayed quite the same passionate desire to insult
and kill the goose that laid the national golden eggs as the
scholastic and clerical professions, have been quite content
to let that profitable creature starve. Inventors and
discoverers came by nature, they thought, for cleverer people
to profit by.</p>
<p>In this matter the Germans were a little wiser. The German
“learned” did not display the same vehement
hatred of the new learning. They permitted its development.
The German business man and manufacturer again had not quite
the same contempt for the man of science as had his British
competitor. Knowledge, these Germans believed, might be a
cultivated crop, responsive to fertilizers. They did
concede, therefore, a certain amount of opportunity to the
scientific mind; their public expenditure on scientific work
was relatively greater, and this expenditure was abundantly
rewarded. By the latter half of the nineteenth century the
German scientific worker had made German a necessary language
for every science student who wished to keep abreast with the
latest work in his department, and in certain branches, and
particularly in chemistry, Germany acquired a very great
superiority over her western neighbours. The scientific
effort of the sixties and seventies in Germany began to tell
after the eighties, and the German gained steadily upon
Britain and France in technical and industrial prosperity.</p>
<p>A fresh phase in the history of invention opened when in the
eighties a new type of engine came into use, an engine in
which the expansive force of an explosive mixture replaced
the expansive force of steam. The light, highly efficient
engines that were thus made possible were applied to the
automobile, and developed at last to reach such a pitch of
lightness and efficiency as to render flight—<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P363"></SPAN></span>long known to
be possible—a practical achievement. A successful
flying machine—but not a machine large enough to take
up a human body—was made by Professor Langley of the
Smithsonian Institute of Washington as early as 1897. By
1909 the aeroplane was available for human locomotion. There
had seemed to be a pause in the increase of human speed with
the perfection of railways and automobile road traction, but
with the flying machine came fresh reductions in the
effective distance between one point of the earth’s
surface and another. In the eighteenth century the distance
from London to Edinburgh was an eight days’ journey; in
1918 the British Civil Air Transport Commission reported that
the journey from London to Melbourne, halfway round the
earth, would probably in a few years’ time be
accomplished in that same period of eight days.</p>
<div class="fig"> <SPAN name="img-363"></SPAN> <ANTIMG src="images/img-363.jpg" alt="AN EARLY WEAVING MACHINE" width-obs="600" height-obs="281" /> <p class="caption">
AN EARLY WEAVING MACHINE
<br/>
<small><i>From an engraving by W. Hincks in the British Museum</i>
</small></p>
</div>
<p>Too much stress must not be laid upon these striking
reductions in the time distances of one place from another.
They are merely one aspect of a much profounder and more
momentous enlargement of human possibility. The science of
agriculture and agricultural chemistry, for instance, made
quite parallel advances during the nineteenth century. Men
learnt so to fertilize the soil as to produce quadruple and
quintuple the crops got from the same area in the seventeenth
century. There was a still more extraordinary advance in
medical science; the average duration of life rose, the daily
efficiency increased, the waste of life through ill-health
diminished.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="P364"></SPAN></span>Now here
altogether we have such a change in human life as to
constitute a fresh phase of history. In a little more than a
century this mechanical revolution has been brought about.
In that time man made a stride in the material conditions of
his life vaster than he had done during the whole long
interval between the palæolithic stage and the age of
cultivation, or between the days of Pepi in Egypt and those
of George III. A new gigantic material framework for human
affairs has come into existence. Clearly it demands great
readjustments of our social, economical and political
methods. But these readjustments have necessarily waited
upon the development of the mechanical revolution, and they
are still only in their opening stage to-day.</p>
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