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the age of invention-第2部分
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nguages and is still in circulation today。
Franklin kept a shop in connection with his printing office; where he sold a strange variety of goods: legal blanks; ink; pens; paper; books; maps; pictures; chocolate; coffee; cheese; codfish; soap; linseed oil; broadcloth; Godfrey's cordial; tea; spectacles; rattlesnake root; lottery tickets; and stovesto mention only a few of the many articles he advertised。 Deborah Read; who became his wife in 1730; looked after his house; tended shop; folded and stitched pamphlets; bought rags; and helped him to live economically。 〃We kept no idle servants; 〃 says Franklin; 〃our table was plain and simple; our furniture of the cheapest。 For instance; my breakfast was a long time bread and milk (no tea); and I ate it out of a twopenny earthen porringer with a pewter spoon。〃
With all this frugality; Franklin was not a miser; he abhorred the waste of money; not the proper use。 His wealth increased rapidly。 〃I experienced too;〃 he says; 〃the truth of the observation; 'THAT AFTER GETTING THE FIRST HUNDRED POUND; IT IS MORE EASY TO GET THE SECOND; money itself being of a prolific nature。〃 He gave much unpaid public service and subscribed generously to public purposes; yet he was able; at the early age of forty…two; to turn over his printing office to one of his journeymen; and to retire from active business; intending to devote himself thereafter to such public employment as should come his way; to philosophical or scientific studies; and to amusements。
From boyhood Franklin had been interested in natural phenomena。 His 〃Journal of a Voyage from London to Philadelphia〃; written at sea as he returned from his first stay in London; shows unusual powers of exact observation for a youth of twenty。 Many of the questions he propounded to the Junto had a scientific bearing。 He made an original and important invention in 1749; the 〃Pennsylvania fireplace;〃 which; under the name of the Franklin stove; is in common use to this day; and which brought to the ill…made houses of the time increased comfort and a great saving of fuel。 But it brought Franklin no pecuniary reward; for he never deigned to patent any of his inventions。
His active; inquiring mind played upon hundreds of questions in a dozen different branches of science。 He studied smoky chimneys; he invented bifocal spectacles; he studied the effect of oil upon ruffled water; he identified the 〃dry bellyache〃 as lead poisoning; he preached ventilation in the days when windows were closed tight at night; and upon the sick at all times; he investigated fertilizers in agriculture。 Many of his suggestions have since borne fruit; and his observations show that he foresaw some of the great developments of the nineteenth century。
His fame in science rests chiefly upon his discoveries in electricity。 On a visit to Boston in 1746 he saw some electrical experiments and at once became deeply interested。 Peter Collinson of London; a Fellow of the Royal Society; who had made several gifts to the Philadelphia Library; sent over some of the crude electrical apparatus of the day; which Franklin used; as well as some contrivances he had purchased in Boston。 He says in a letter to Collinson: 〃For my own part; I never was before engaged in any study that so engrossed my attention and my time as this has lately done。〃
Franklin's letters to Collinson tell of his first experiments and speculations as to the nature of electricity。 Experiments made by a little group of friends showed the effect of pointed bodies in drawing off electricity。 He decided that electricity was not the result of friction; but that the mysterious force was diffused through most substances; and that nature is always alert to restore its equilibrium。 He developed the theory of positive and negative electricity; or plus and minus electrification。 The same letter tells of some of the tricks which the little group of experimenters were accustomed to play upon their wondering neighbors。 They set alcohol on fire; relighted candles just blown out; produced mimic flashes of lightning; gave shocks on touching or kissing; and caused an artificial spider to move mysteriously。
Franklin carried on experiments with the Leyden jar; made an electrical battery; killed a fowl and roasted it upon a spit turned by electricity; sent a current through water and found it still able to ignite alcohol; ignited gunpowder; and charged glasses of wine so that the drinkers received shocks。 More important; perhaps; he began to develop the theory of the identity of lightning and electricity; and the possibility of protecting buildings by iron rods。 By means of an iron rod he brought down electricity into his house; where he studied its effect upon bells and concluded that clouds were generally negatively electrified。 In June; 1752; he performed the famous experiment with the kite; drawing down electricity from the clouds and charging a Leyden jar from the key at the end of the string。
Franklin's letters to Collinson were read before the Royal Society but were unnoticed。 Collinson gathered them together; and they were published in a pamphlet which attracted wide attention。 Translated into French; they created great excitement; and Franklin's conclusions were generally accepted by the scientific men of Europe。 The Royal Society; tardily awakened; elected Franklin a member and in 1753 awarded him the Copley medal with a complimentary address。*
* It may be useful to mention some of the scientific facts and mechanical principles which were known to Europeans at this time。 More than one learned essay has been written to prove the mechanical indebtedness of the modern world to the ancient; particularly to the works of those mechanically minded Greeks: Archimedes; Aristotle; Ctesibius; and Hero of Alexandria。 The Greeks employed the lever; the tackle; and the crane; the force…pump; and the suction…pump。 They had discovered that steam could be mechanically applied; though they never made any practical use of steam。 In common with other ancients they knew the principle of the mariner's compass。 The Egyptians had the water…wheel and the rudimentary blast…furnace。 The pendulum clock appears to have been an invention of the Middle Ages。 The art of printing from movable type; beginning with Gutenberg about 1450; helped to further the Renaissance。 The improved mariner's compass enabled Columbus to find the New world; gunpowder made possible its conquest。 The compound microscope and the first practical telescope came from the spectacle makers of Middelburg; Holland; the former about 1590 and the latter about 1608。 Harvey; an English physician; had discovered the circulation of the blood in 1628; and Newton; an English mathematician; the law of gravitation in 1685。
If Franklin's desire to continue his scientific researches had been gratified; it is possible that he might have discovered some of the secrets for which the world waited until Edison and his contemporaries revealed them more than a century later。 Franklin's scientific reputation has grown with the years; and some of his views seem in perfect accord with the latest developments in electricity。 But he was not to be permitted to continue his experiments。 He had shown his ability to manage men and was to be called to a wider field。
Franklin's influence among his fellow citizens in Philadelphia was very great。 Always ostensibly keeping himself in the background and working through others; never contradicting; but carrying his point by shrewd questions which showed the folly of the contrary position; he continued to set on foot and carry out movements for the public good。 He established the first circulating library in Philadelphia; and one of the first in the country; and an academy which grew into the University of Pennsylvania。 He was instrumental in the foundation of a hospital。 〃I am often ask'd by those to whom I propose subscribing;〃 said one of the doctors who had made fruitless attempts to raise money for the hospital; 〃Have you consulted Franklin upon this business?〃 Other public matters in which the busy printer was engaged were the paving and cleaning of the streets; better street lighting; the organization of a police force and of a fire company。 A pamphlet which he published; 〃Plain Truth〃; showing the helplessness of the colony against the French and Indians; led to the organization of a volunteer militia; and funds were raised for arms by a lottery。 Franklin himself was elected colonel of the Philadelphia regiment; 〃but considering myself unfit; I declined the station and recommended Mr。 Lawrence; a fine person and man of influence; who was accordingly appointed。〃 In spite of his militarism; Franklin retained the position which he held as Clerk of the Assembly; though the majority of the members were Quakers opposed to war on principle。
The American Philosophical Society owes its origin to Franklin。 It was formally organized on his motion in 1743; but the society has accepted the organization of the Junto in 1727 as the actual date of its birth。 From the beginning the society has had among its members many leading men of scientific attainments or tastes; not only of Philadelphia; but of the world。 In 1769 the original society was consolidated with anothe
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