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The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine, July 23, 1859: Page 8

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    Article THOUGHTS UPON IRON PLATES. ← Page 2 of 3 →
Page 8

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Thoughts Upon Iron Plates.

Avere AA-retches chained , AVIIO howled in very agony at the Avrong Avhich men as mad as they Avere doing , but of which they Avere un ] iaj ) pi ] y the victims . " For all these , " said the smiling- official , " there is a gleam of hope ; but I will shoAv your lordship one poor wretch who has been ju'ononnced hy the whole faculty incurable . " Entering a small room , they

saAv a man rocking before a fire Avhich he Avas Stirling up Avith remarkable assiduity . His hair Avas shaggy aud dishevelled , his forehead was wrinkled , his small blue eye emitted the moisture Avhich sorrow long endured infallibly distils , his beard Avas grizzled and grimed Avitli dirt , and his Avhole form Avas enveloped in rags . This wretch had formed a notion that he could make his tin kettle run about the room by virtue of the steam wliich it threAv off , and never . surely was such a mad notion conceiA'ed . He had had a fortune left

linn , but one so demented AA'as deemed by the IUAV incapable of taking care either of himself or property . He died , and AA'as buried , and the old tin kettle which he prized as the friend of his hallucination , Avas thrown on one side , Avhere it lay long neglected , until a more practical genius took up its casemade a model of itfurnished it with Avheelslevers

, , , , A'alves , and goA'ernors , and other regulating checks , until at last he succeeded in making it travel to the neighbouring village , next from city to city , next from kingdom to kingdom , and IIOAV from continent to continent . We do not knoAv

what became of the ori ginal kettle of Salomon cle Cans—if is not preserved in the Society of Arts ancl Manufactures neither does it adorn a glass case in any national museum . Perhaps it may have fallen in with decent company . We can only give our readers the clue furnished by Mr . Babbage in his Essay on Manufactures , AA'here he says , " The worn

out saucepans and timvaro of our kitchens , Avhen beyond the reach of the tinker ' s art , are not utterly Avorthtess . We sometimes meet carts loaded Avith old tin kettles , and iron coal scuttles , traversing our streets . These have not yet completed their useful course . The less corroded parts are cut into strips , punched with small holesand varnished

, with a coarse black varnish for the use of the trunkmaker , who protects the edges and angles of his boxes Avith them ; the remainder are conveyed to the manufacturing chemists in the outskirts of the toAvn , Avho employ them , m conjunction Avith pyroligneous acid . , in malting a black dye for the use of calico printers . "

The operations of man are , in their character at least , the counterpart of those of his Creator . They are on a smaller scale indeed , and bounded by limits Avliich do not apply to the silent course of nature , untrammelled by considerations of time or space as she is . Man works with an energy inferior in amount of force , but still with an object

intelligible , because definite , and this he pursues from failure to failure , until a ray , as it wore from an unknoAvn Avorld beams upon him , ancl that Avhich Avas wrong is made strai ght , ancl what Avas omitted is supplied . Man produces his results by what ho calls tho agency of motiVc forces . These he divides into five different kinds , namely , —the muscular of

power man , the muscular power of horses , the power or force of the Avind , the wei ght and moving force of Avatei- , the expansive force and rapid condensation of steam . To one or other of these every mechanical appliance is referable . In this country , hoivever , Ave have been accustomed to adopt horse power as the common standard of reference or as

, mechanicians call it , the dynamic unit . Our calculations are all based upon it ; and Avhefchcr AVC wish to ascertain the hydraulic force of a body of Avater , tho impetus of a machine propelled or moved by tho wind , or the velocity ancl power of the steam engine—Ave speak of all as of so many horse power . It may , thereforebe Avell to state in this lace

, p , that the medium poAver of the horse is estimated to lift about tAventy-tAvo pounds one foot hi gh in a minute . The Marquis of Worcester , whom we have mentioned , was imongst the first to dra w attention to the motive poAA'er of ,

steam . This nobleman died in 1 G 63 , nearly two centuries ago , aud the only work he left behind was entitled , " A Centurie of the Names ancl Scantlings of InA'entions . " This A'olume is exceedingly obscure ancl UOAV of little worth . There is , hoAvovor , a manuscript of his preserved in the British Museum , which Ave have been at some pains to inspect ,

and from Avhich AVC take tho following very graphic descrip tion of his first experiments with steam . "An admirable and most forcible AA'ay , " he says , " to drive up water by fire ; not by drawing or sucking it upward , for that must be as the philosophers call it , infra sphecram aclivilatis , which is but at such a distance . But this Avay hath no boundary , if

the vessels be onl y strong enough , for I have taken a piece of a Avhole cannon , whereof the end Avas burst , stopping and screAving up the broken end as also the touch-hole , and making a constant fire under it ; Avithin twenty-four hours it burst and made a great crack ; so that having found a Avay to make my vessels so that they are strengthened by the force

Avithin them , and the one to fill after the other , I have seen the Avater run like a constant fountain stream forty feet high —one vessel of water , rarified by fire , driving up fort y of cold Avater . And a man that tends the work has but to turn tAvo cocks , that one vessel of water being consumed , another begins to force ancl refill with cold Avaterand so

, successively , the fire being tended and kept constant—which the self-same person may abundantly perforin in the interim betAveen the turning of the said cocks , "—Harleian MSS . No . 2428 .

Close upon this invention folloAvecl others , some of Avhich Avere presented to the French king , others to the Royal Society ; and the reader will remark that the only use of these experiments in the minds of iDhilosojdiers of that clay was to lift a body of Avater , with a vieAv to relieA'e miners from the flooding of their mines , by Avhich their work Avas

often obstructed , and IiA'es Avere occasionally lost . For nearly seventy years the use of the steam engine remained the same , the inrprovements being confined to mere matters of detail . It AA'as not until 1736—and many AA'I IO haA'ebeen accustomed to connect steamboats Avith the nineteenth century and Dr . Lardner , Avho protested against them as dangerous to life ,

and impossible as Avell as intractable agencies , will be surprised to learn that at that early period a pamphlet AA'as published by one Jonathan Hull , in Avhich he described a machine of his invention , by which '' 'Vessels or ships could be carried out of or into any harbour , port , or river against wind , or tide , or in a calm . " This extraordinary jwnphlefc has come to light in consequence of the recent discussion respecting the claimants to the modern locomotive . The claim of Hull is UOAV generally admitted , but his invention

appears to have altogether failed in his time either for want of encouragement , or inefficiency of apparatus . Perhaps the nearest to the truth is , that Hull AA'as considered mad in his day , and AA'as treated accordingly . At about this period also , the uses to Avhich the steam-engine AA'as applied had become more numerous . It Avas IIOAV employed to raise

Avater to turn corn mills ; to raise coals up a shaft ; and to drive mills , generally , in that manner ; and at a later period in making gas . But it Avas IIOAV to undergo such improvement as that the whole surface of the kingdom should be changed by it , that every inhabitant of this island should be nearly affected by it in every relationshipand

, that the future of tho Avorld should bo encompassed in itft mighty folds , creating neAV sources of Avealth , opening out neAV vistas of inquiry , ancl reducing time ancl distance to such proportions that , considering tho results of individual effort , a man of common energy may be said to effect , in the ordinary span of a lifetimeboth for his country ancl his

, family , fourfold Avhat ho could have accomplished half a century ago . At that period tho transit of goods from Manchester or Liverpool to London could not be effected in less than a Aveek , IIOAV it can be accomplished in six hours .

“The Freemasons' Monthly Magazine: 1859-07-23, Page 8” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 23 June 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmr/issues/mmr_23071859/page/8/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
CAGLIOSTRO'S EGYPTIAN MASONRY. Article 1
AUTOBIOGRAPHY AND HALIEUTICS. -I. Article 4
THOUGHTS UPON IRON PLATES. Article 7
ANCIENT VIEWS OF FREEMASONRY.—I. Article 9
LEGALITY OF MASONIC MEETINGS. Article 9
CORRESPONDENCE. Article 10
DISSENSIONS IN THE CRAFT. Article 10
FREEMASONRY; ITS HISTORY AND PUBLICATIONS. Article 10
AMERICAN BRETHREN. Article 11
MASONIC MISSIONS. Article 11
THE MASONIC MIRROR. Article 12
PROVINCIAL. Article 13
KNIGHTS TEMPLAR. Article 17
ANCIENT AND ACCEPTED RITE. Article 17
SCOTLAND. Article 18
MASONIC FESTIVITIES. Article 19
THE WEEK. Article 19
PUBLIC AMUSEMENTS. Article 20
TO CORRESPONDENTS. Article 20
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Thoughts Upon Iron Plates.

Avere AA-retches chained , AVIIO howled in very agony at the Avrong Avhich men as mad as they Avere doing , but of which they Avere un ] iaj ) pi ] y the victims . " For all these , " said the smiling- official , " there is a gleam of hope ; but I will shoAv your lordship one poor wretch who has been ju'ononnced hy the whole faculty incurable . " Entering a small room , they

saAv a man rocking before a fire Avhich he Avas Stirling up Avith remarkable assiduity . His hair Avas shaggy aud dishevelled , his forehead was wrinkled , his small blue eye emitted the moisture Avhich sorrow long endured infallibly distils , his beard Avas grizzled and grimed Avitli dirt , and his Avhole form Avas enveloped in rags . This wretch had formed a notion that he could make his tin kettle run about the room by virtue of the steam wliich it threAv off , and never . surely was such a mad notion conceiA'ed . He had had a fortune left

linn , but one so demented AA'as deemed by the IUAV incapable of taking care either of himself or property . He died , and AA'as buried , and the old tin kettle which he prized as the friend of his hallucination , Avas thrown on one side , Avhere it lay long neglected , until a more practical genius took up its casemade a model of itfurnished it with Avheelslevers

, , , , A'alves , and goA'ernors , and other regulating checks , until at last he succeeded in making it travel to the neighbouring village , next from city to city , next from kingdom to kingdom , and IIOAV from continent to continent . We do not knoAv

what became of the ori ginal kettle of Salomon cle Cans—if is not preserved in the Society of Arts ancl Manufactures neither does it adorn a glass case in any national museum . Perhaps it may have fallen in with decent company . We can only give our readers the clue furnished by Mr . Babbage in his Essay on Manufactures , AA'here he says , " The worn

out saucepans and timvaro of our kitchens , Avhen beyond the reach of the tinker ' s art , are not utterly Avorthtess . We sometimes meet carts loaded Avith old tin kettles , and iron coal scuttles , traversing our streets . These have not yet completed their useful course . The less corroded parts are cut into strips , punched with small holesand varnished

, with a coarse black varnish for the use of the trunkmaker , who protects the edges and angles of his boxes Avith them ; the remainder are conveyed to the manufacturing chemists in the outskirts of the toAvn , Avho employ them , m conjunction Avith pyroligneous acid . , in malting a black dye for the use of calico printers . "

The operations of man are , in their character at least , the counterpart of those of his Creator . They are on a smaller scale indeed , and bounded by limits Avliich do not apply to the silent course of nature , untrammelled by considerations of time or space as she is . Man works with an energy inferior in amount of force , but still with an object

intelligible , because definite , and this he pursues from failure to failure , until a ray , as it wore from an unknoAvn Avorld beams upon him , ancl that Avhich Avas wrong is made strai ght , ancl what Avas omitted is supplied . Man produces his results by what ho calls tho agency of motiVc forces . These he divides into five different kinds , namely , —the muscular of

power man , the muscular power of horses , the power or force of the Avind , the wei ght and moving force of Avatei- , the expansive force and rapid condensation of steam . To one or other of these every mechanical appliance is referable . In this country , hoivever , Ave have been accustomed to adopt horse power as the common standard of reference or as

, mechanicians call it , the dynamic unit . Our calculations are all based upon it ; and Avhefchcr AVC wish to ascertain the hydraulic force of a body of Avater , tho impetus of a machine propelled or moved by tho wind , or the velocity ancl power of the steam engine—Ave speak of all as of so many horse power . It may , thereforebe Avell to state in this lace

, p , that the medium poAver of the horse is estimated to lift about tAventy-tAvo pounds one foot hi gh in a minute . The Marquis of Worcester , whom we have mentioned , was imongst the first to dra w attention to the motive poAA'er of ,

steam . This nobleman died in 1 G 63 , nearly two centuries ago , aud the only work he left behind was entitled , " A Centurie of the Names ancl Scantlings of InA'entions . " This A'olume is exceedingly obscure ancl UOAV of little worth . There is , hoAvovor , a manuscript of his preserved in the British Museum , which Ave have been at some pains to inspect ,

and from Avhich AVC take tho following very graphic descrip tion of his first experiments with steam . "An admirable and most forcible AA'ay , " he says , " to drive up water by fire ; not by drawing or sucking it upward , for that must be as the philosophers call it , infra sphecram aclivilatis , which is but at such a distance . But this Avay hath no boundary , if

the vessels be onl y strong enough , for I have taken a piece of a Avhole cannon , whereof the end Avas burst , stopping and screAving up the broken end as also the touch-hole , and making a constant fire under it ; Avithin twenty-four hours it burst and made a great crack ; so that having found a Avay to make my vessels so that they are strengthened by the force

Avithin them , and the one to fill after the other , I have seen the Avater run like a constant fountain stream forty feet high —one vessel of water , rarified by fire , driving up fort y of cold Avater . And a man that tends the work has but to turn tAvo cocks , that one vessel of water being consumed , another begins to force ancl refill with cold Avaterand so

, successively , the fire being tended and kept constant—which the self-same person may abundantly perforin in the interim betAveen the turning of the said cocks , "—Harleian MSS . No . 2428 .

Close upon this invention folloAvecl others , some of Avhich Avere presented to the French king , others to the Royal Society ; and the reader will remark that the only use of these experiments in the minds of iDhilosojdiers of that clay was to lift a body of Avater , with a vieAv to relieA'e miners from the flooding of their mines , by Avhich their work Avas

often obstructed , and IiA'es Avere occasionally lost . For nearly seventy years the use of the steam engine remained the same , the inrprovements being confined to mere matters of detail . It AA'as not until 1736—and many AA'I IO haA'ebeen accustomed to connect steamboats Avith the nineteenth century and Dr . Lardner , Avho protested against them as dangerous to life ,

and impossible as Avell as intractable agencies , will be surprised to learn that at that early period a pamphlet AA'as published by one Jonathan Hull , in Avhich he described a machine of his invention , by which '' 'Vessels or ships could be carried out of or into any harbour , port , or river against wind , or tide , or in a calm . " This extraordinary jwnphlefc has come to light in consequence of the recent discussion respecting the claimants to the modern locomotive . The claim of Hull is UOAV generally admitted , but his invention

appears to have altogether failed in his time either for want of encouragement , or inefficiency of apparatus . Perhaps the nearest to the truth is , that Hull AA'as considered mad in his day , and AA'as treated accordingly . At about this period also , the uses to Avhich the steam-engine AA'as applied had become more numerous . It Avas IIOAV employed to raise

Avater to turn corn mills ; to raise coals up a shaft ; and to drive mills , generally , in that manner ; and at a later period in making gas . But it Avas IIOAV to undergo such improvement as that the whole surface of the kingdom should be changed by it , that every inhabitant of this island should be nearly affected by it in every relationshipand

, that the future of tho Avorld should bo encompassed in itft mighty folds , creating neAV sources of Avealth , opening out neAV vistas of inquiry , ancl reducing time ancl distance to such proportions that , considering tho results of individual effort , a man of common energy may be said to effect , in the ordinary span of a lifetimeboth for his country ancl his

, family , fourfold Avhat ho could have accomplished half a century ago . At that period tho transit of goods from Manchester or Liverpool to London could not be effected in less than a Aveek , IIOAV it can be accomplished in six hours .

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