Section 4
The latent energy of coal and the
power of steam waited long on the verge of discovery,
before they began to influence human lives.
There were no doubt many such devices
as Hero’s toys devised and forgotten, time after
time, in courts and palaces, but it needed that coal
should be mined and burning with plenty of iron at
hand before it dawned upon men that here was something
more than a curiosity. And it is to be remarked
that the first recorded suggestion for the use of steam
was in war; there is an Elizabethan pamphlet in which
it is proposed to fire shot out of corked iron bottles
full of heated water. The mining of coal for
fuel, the smelting of iron upon a larger scale than
men had ever done before, the steam pumping engine,
the steam-engine and the steam-boat, followed one
another in an order that had a kind of logical necessity.
It is the most interesting and instructive chapter
in the history of the human intelligence, the history
of steam from its beginning as a fact in human consciousness
to the perfection of the great turbine engines that
preceded the utilisation of intra-molecular power.
Nearly every human being must have seen steam, seen
it incuriously for many thousands of years; the women
in particular were always heating water, boiling it,
seeing it boil away, seeing the lids of vessels dance
with its fury; millions of people at different times
must have watched steam pitching rocks out of volcanoes
like cricket balls and blowing pumice into foam, and
yet you may search the whole human record through,
letters, books, inscriptions, pictures, for any glimmer
of a realisation that here was force, here was strength
to borrow and use…. Then suddenly man woke
up to it, the railways spread like a network over
the globe, the ever enlarging iron steamships began
their staggering fight against wind and wave.
Steam was the first-comer in the new
powers, it was the beginning of the Age of Energy
that was to close the long history of the Warring States.
But for a long time men did not realise
the importance of this novelty. They would not
recognise, they were not able to recognise that anything
fundamental had happened to their immemorial necessities.
They called the steam-engine the ‘iron horse’
and pretended that they had made the most partial
of substitutions. Steam machinery and factory
production were visibly revolutionising the conditions
of industrial production, population was streaming
steadily in from the country-side and concentrating
in hitherto unthought-of masses about a few city centres,
food was coming to them over enormous distances upon
a scale that made the one sole precedent, the corn
ships of imperial Rome, a petty incident; and a huge
migration of peoples between Europe and Western Asia
and America was in Progress, and—nobody
seems to have realised that something new had come
into human life, a strange swirl different altogether
from any previous circling and mutation, a swirl like
the swirl when at last the lock gates begin to open
after a long phase of accumulating water and eddying
inactivity….
The sober Englishman at the close
of the nineteenth century could sit at his breakfast-table,
decide between tea from Ceylon or coffee from Brazil,
devour an egg from France with some Danish ham, or
eat a New Zealand chop, wind up his breakfast with
a West Indian banana, glance at the latest telegrams
from all the world, scrutinise the prices current
of his geographically distributed investments in South
Africa, Japan, and Egypt, and tell the two children
he had begotten (in the place of his father’s
eight) that he thought the world changed very little.
They must play cricket, keep their hair cut, go to
the old school he had gone to, shirk the lessons he
had shirked, learn a few scraps of Horace and Virgil
and Homer for the confusion of cads, and all would
be well with them….