登陆注册
5560900000005

第5章 CHAPTER I OF PROGRESS AND THE SMALLWAYS FAMILY(4)

There had been talk of mono-rails for several years. But the real mischief began when Brennan sprang his gyroscopic mono-rail car upon the Royal Society. It was the leading sensation of the 1907 soirees; that celebrated demonstration-room was all too small for its exhibition. Brave soldiers leading Zionists, deserving novelists, noble ladies, congested the narrow passage and thrust distinguished elbows into ribs the world would not willingly let break, deeming themselves fortunate if they could see "just a little bit of the rail." Inaudible, but convincing, the great inventor expounded his discovery, and sent his obedient little model of the trains of the future up gradients, round curves, and across a sagging wire. Itran along its single rail, on its single wheels, simple and sufficient; it stopped, reversed stood still, balancing perfectly. It maintained its astounding equilibrium amidst a thunder of applause. The audience dispersed at last, discussing how far they would enjoy crossing an abyss on a wire cable. "Suppose the gyroscope stopped!" Few of them anticipated a tithe of what the Brennan mono-rail would do for their railway securities and the face of the world.

In a few, years they realised better. In a little while no one thought anything of crossing an abyss on a wire, and the mono-rail was superseding the tram-lines, railways: and indeed every form of track for mechanical locomotion. Where land was cheap the rail ran along the ground, where it was dear the rail lifted up on iron standards and passed overhead; its swift, convenient cars went everywhere and did everything that had once been done along made tracks upon the ground.

When old Smallways died, Tom could think of nothing more striking to say of him than that, "When he was a boy, there wasn't nothing higher than your chimbleys--there wasn't a wire nor a cable in the sky!"Old SmallWays went to his grave under an intricate network of wires and cables, for Bun Hill became not only a sort of minor centre of power distribution--the Home Counties Power Distribution Company set up transformers and a generating station close beside the old gas-works--but, also a junction on the suburban mono-rail system. Moreover, every tradesman in the place, and indeed nearly every house, had its own telephone.

The mono-rail cable standard became a striking fact in urban landscape, for the most part stout iron erections rather like tapering trestles, and painted a bright bluish green. One, it happened, bestrode Tom's house, which looked still more retiring and apologetic beneath its immensity; and another giant stood just inside the corner of his garden, which was still not built upon and unchanged, except for a couple of advertisement boards, one recommending a two-and-sixpenny watch, and one a nerve restorer. These, by the bye, were placed almost horizontally to catch the eye of the passing mono-rail passengers above, and so served admirably to roof over a tool-shed and a mushroom-shed for Tom. All day and all night the fast cars from Brighton and Hastings went murmuring by overhead long, broad, comfortable-looking cars, that were brightly lit after dusk. As they flew by at night, transient flares of light and a rumbling sound of passage, they kept up a perpetual summer lightning and thunderstorm in the street below.

Presently the English Channel was bridged--a series of great iron Eiffel Tower pillars carrying mono-rail cables at a height of a hundred and fifty feet above the water, except near the middle, where they rose higher to allow the passage of the London and Antwerp shipping and the Hamburg-America liners.

Then heavy motor-cars began to run about on only a couple of wheels, one behind the other, which for some reason upset Tom dreadfully, and made him gloomy for days after the first one passed the shop...

All this gyroscopic and mono-rail development naturally absorbed a vast amount of public attention, and there,was also a huge excitement consequent upon the amazing gold discoveries off the coast of Anglesea made by a submarine prospector, Miss Patricia Giddy. She had taken her degree in geology and mineralogy in the University of London, and while working upon the auriferous rocks of North Wales, after a brief holiday spent in agitating for women's suffrage, she had been struck by the possibility of these reefs cropping up again under the water. She had set herself to verify this supposition by the use of the submarine crawler invented by Doctor Alberto Cassini. By a happy mingling of reasoning and intuition peculiar to her sex she found gold at her first descent, and emerged after three hours' submersion with about two hundredweight of ore containing gold in the unparalleled quantity of seventeen ounces to the ton. But the whole story of her submarine mining, intensely interesting as it is, must be told at some other time; suffice it now to remark simply that it was during the consequent great rise of prices, confidence, and enterprise that the revival of interest in flying occurred.

It is curious how that revival began. It was like the coming of a breeze on a quiet day; nothing started it, it came. People began to talk of flying with an air of never having for one moment dropped the subject. Pictures of flying and flying machines returned to the newspapers; articles and allusions increased and multiplied in the serious magazines. People asked in mono-rail trains, "When are we going to fly?" A new crop of inventors sprang up in a night or so like fungi. The Aero Club announced the project of a great Flying Exhibition in a large area of ground that the removal of slums in Whitechapel had rendered available.

The advancing wave soon produced a sympathetic ripple in the Bun Hill establishment. Grubb routed out his flying-machine model again, tried it in the yard behind the shop, got a kind of flight out of it, and broke seventeen panes of glass and nine flower-pots in the greenhouse that occupied the next yard but one.

同类推荐
  • 诸法本无经

    诸法本无经

    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。
  • 力命

    力命

    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。
  • 佛说圣庄严陀罗尼经

    佛说圣庄严陀罗尼经

    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。
  • 国蓄

    国蓄

    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。
  • 水云集

    水云集

    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
  • 崛起从选秀开始

    崛起从选秀开始

    “叮!”恭喜主人,获得“洞察万物”技能,洞天察地,直指人心。“叮!”恭喜主人,“隐藏条件达成”激活隐藏技能——天命之子加成。欢迎小伙伴加入书友群:904704135。欢迎水群讨论剧情~
  • 不要跟着我

    不要跟着我

    她叫阿莲,抱着红皮球穿着黄色雨衣,在黑夜里孤独出现的小孩。她很早以前就死了。有个变态凶手杀死了她,把她的尸体扔在小河里。她是个寂寞又潮湿的鬼魂。直到有一天,她发现小河边的树林里有一群小孩子在拍广告,她偷偷跟在了小朋友们的后面,谁也没有察觉到她,广告上拍下了她快乐的身影。
  • 战九幽之帝临诸天

    战九幽之帝临诸天

    天极渊混战中,一道天降流火烧死了本可以打赢的沈行之。一朝醒来,重生在被自己坑害了千年之久的九幽。智多近妖又如何?欠了的终究是要还的。一切都重头再来又如何?我沈行之还从未怕过谁!
  • 无声战场

    无声战场

    “一脚在人间,一脚在鬼门关”是对他们的真实写照。在他们执行任务的时候没有任何人围观,也没有任何人指挥,更没有任何的后援。他们的每一次选择都是在生死边缘,生死就在剪刀的开合之间。这是一支特殊的队伍,有一个响亮的称号——扫雷排爆大队!
  • 重生之遇见先生

    重生之遇见先生

    上一世被爱人背叛的顾潇潇重生了还有了个神奇的空间,这一世她只想好好的改变自己完成自己的梦想和改变家人命运,万万没有想到遇到个颇有民国先生之风的古板老师。怎么办,好心动,追还是不追呢?
  • 元始天尊济度血湖真经

    元始天尊济度血湖真经

    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。
  • 给孩子讲点汉字故事

    给孩子讲点汉字故事

    妙趣横生——讲述美丽汉字背后鲜为人知的奇闻趣事;炼字佳句——读锦绣文章,品字字珠玑,悟写作精要;说文解字——挖掘方块汉字之博大精深的文化内涵;……本书充分挖掘汉字所蕴涵的文化信息,用一则则故事连缀起一个个知识,用一个个趣话解释一个个问题。父母不妨翻开此书,给孩子讲述关于汉字的故事,使他沉浸于汉字带来的美丽动人、博大精深的世界,在潜移默化中得到传统文化的滋养。《给孩子讲点汉字故事》涵盖汉字的缘起与变迁、构造与间架、谐音撷趣、汉字典故、炼字之妙、字谜艺术、成语故事等内容,以故事的形式娓娓讲述汉字史实及奇闻趣事。一则则妙趣横生的故事,让你忍俊不禁的同时,也了解到汉字的前世今生;一个个鲜为人知的奇闻趣事,带你去探索历史的同时,又让你品悟到汉字的瑰丽与神奇。
  • 沧海(上)

    沧海(上)

    这是著名画家刘海粟唯一的研究生简繁为刘海粟写的传记。该书不为尊者讳,不为长者讳,真实记录了简繁在刘海粟身边生活时候的所见所闻,记录了刘海粟的生平、艺术观点和性格特征。可以说,该书是用一种“说真话”的方式、将作者眼中的“真实”对读者和盘托出。该书曾出版过三卷本,也引起了一些争议,之后,作者做了删改修订,出版了两卷本。
  • 聚散一杯酒

    聚散一杯酒

    本书为“艺术经典”丛书之一种。郑重是著名的艺术家传记作家,在艺术界享有盛名。本书是郑重历年所写关于书画家人生故事和艺术成就的文章结集。郑重对现代中国书画名家进行了深入的研究,和许多画家是朋友。
  • 妙卡

    妙卡

    溪城北郊,一家名为『妙卡』的宠物咖啡厅,我们的故事,将从这里开始……