登陆注册
20071600000057

第57章 CHAPTER XVI. SOME FAMOUS FRENCH AERONAUTS.(3)

He records an original ballooning exploit, organised at Algiers, which one might have supposed would have caused a great sensation, and to which he himself had called public attention in the local journals. The brothers Braguet were to make an ascent from the Mustapha Plain in a small fire balloon heated with burning straw, and this risky performance was successfully carried out by the enterprising aeronauts. But, to the onlooker, the most striking feature of the proceeding was the fact that while the Europeans present regarded the spectacle with curiosity and pleasure, the native Mussulmans did not appear to take the slightest interest in it; "And this," remarked de Fonvielle, "was not the first time that ignorant and fanatic people have been noted as manifesting complete indifference to balloon ascents. After the taking of Cairo, when General Buonaparte wished to produce an effect upon the inhabitants, he not only made them a speech, but supplemented it with the ascent of a fire balloon. The attempt was a complete failure, for the French alone looked up to the clouds to see what became of the balloon."

In the summer of 1867 an attempt was made to revive the long extinct Aeronautic Company of France, established by De Guyton.

The undertaking was worked with considerable energy. Some forty or fifty active recruits were pressed into the service, a suitable captive balloon was obtained, thousands of spectators came to watch the evolutions; and many were found to pay the handsome fee of 100 francs for a short excursion in the air.

For all this, the effort was entirely abortive, and the ballooning corps, as such, dropped out of existence.

A little while after this de Fonvielle, on a visit to England, had a most pathetic interview with the veteran Charles Green, who was living in comfortable retirement at Upper Holloway.

The grand old man pointed to a well-filled portfolio in the corner of his room, in which, he said, were accounts of all his travels, that would require a lifetime to peruse and put in order. Green then took his visitor to the end of the narrow court, and, opening the door of an outhouse, showed him the old Nassau balloon. "Here is my car," he said, touching it with a kind of solemn respect, "which, like its old pilot, now reposes quietly after a long and active career. Here is the guide rope which I imagined in former years, and which has been found very useful to aeronauts.... Now my life has past and my time has gone by.... Though my hair is white and my body too weak to help you, I can still give you my advice, and you have my hearty wishes for your future."

It was but shortly after this, on March 26, 1870, that Charles Green passed away in the 85th year of his age.

De Fonvielle's colleague, M. Gaston Tissandier, was on one occasion accidentally brought to visit the resting place of the earliest among aeronauts, whose tragic death occurred while Charles Green himself was yet a boy. In a stormy and hazardous descent Tissandier, under the guidance of M. Duruof, landed with difficulty on the sea coast of France, when one of the first to render help was a lightkeeper of the Griz-nez lighthouse, who gave the information that on the other side of the hills, a few hundred yards from the spot where they had landed, was the tomb of Pilatre de Rozier, whose tragical death has been recorded in an early chapter. A visit to the actual locality the next day revealed the fact that a humble stone still marked the spot.

Certain scientific facts and memoranda collected by the talented French aeronaut whom we are following are too interesting to be omitted. In the same journey to which we have just referred the voyagers, when nearly over Calais, were witnesses from their commanding standpoint of a very striking phenomenon of mirage. Looking in the direction of England, the far coast line was hidden by an immense veil of leaden-coloured cloud, and, following this cloud wall upward to detect where it terminated, the travellers saw above it a greenish layer like that of the surface of the sea, on which was detected a little black point suggesting a walnut shell. Fixing their eyes on this black spot, they presently discerned it to be a ship sailing upside down upon an aerial ocean. Soon after, a steamer blowing smoke, and then other vessels, added themselves to the illusory spectacle.

Another wonder detected, equally striking though less uncommon, was of an acoustical nature, the locality this time being over Paris. The height of the balloon at this moment was not great, and, moreover, was diminishing as it settled down. Suddenly there broke in upon the voyagers a sound as of a confused kind of murmur. It was not unlike the distant breaking of waves against a sandy coast, and scarcely less monotonous. It was the noise of Paris that reached them, as soon as they sank to within 2,600 feet of the ground, but it disappeared at once when they threw out just sufficient ballast to rise above that altitude.

It might appear to many that so strange and sudden a shutting out of a vast sound occurring abruptly in the free upper air must have been more imaginary than real, yet the phenomenon is almost precisely similar to one coming within the experience the writer, and vouched for by his son and daughter, as also by Mr. Percival Spencer, all of whom were joint observers at the time, the main point of difference in the two cases being the fact that the "region of silence" was recorded by the French observers as occurring at a somewhat lower level. In both cases there is little doubt that the phenomenon can be referred to a stratum of disturbed or non-homogeneous air, which may have been very far spread, and which is capable of acting as a most opaque sound barrier.

Attention has often been called in these pages to the fact that the action of the sun on an inflated balloon, even when the solar rays may be partially obscured and only operative for a few passing moments, is to give sudden and great buoyancy to the balloon. An admirable opportunity for fairly estimating the dynamic effect of the sun's rays on a silk globe, whose fabric was half translucent, was offered to the French aeronauts when their balloon was spread on the grass under repair, and for this purpose inflated with the circumambient air by means of a simple rotatory fan. The sun coming out, the interior of the globe quickly became suffocating, and it was found that, while the external temperature recorded 77 degrees, that of the interior was in excess of 91 degrees.

同类推荐
  • 佛说本相倚致经

    佛说本相倚致经

    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。
  • 胎息精微论

    胎息精微论

    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。
  • 群居解颐

    群居解颐

    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。
  • 六艺纲目

    六艺纲目

    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。
  • 求辅

    求辅

    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。
热门推荐
  • 风起瓦罗兰

    风起瓦罗兰

    没有主角,自己看多了英雄联盟的背景资料突然就想写一下,当然只是小说,跟背景资料里面还是有不少出入,希望有一天官方出一个完整的游戏背景资料,突然感觉游戏玩出了文学的意思,23333333
  • 社长的契约女友

    社长的契约女友

    想不到一纸契约,居然把完全不着边的两个人紧紧地联系在了一起。这辈子休想用这张废纸来拴住我的一切!!!
  • 甲午战争:120周年祭

    甲午战争:120周年祭

    在本书中,悲壮惨烈的中日甲午战争,让我们看到了血的教训和代价!从而明白了一场战争的成败对一个民族、对一个国家、对于一个时代,对于一代国民甚至是几代人的影响,都是十分深刻的、深远的和长期性的!因此,这部书主要是写给当今的政治家、军事家和战略家们看的,同时,也是写给我们当今的国人和今后有可能再次面临爆发中日战争的后人们看的。
  • 身份心理学

    身份心理学

    以心理学、营销学的观点解析身份和影响力的内在逻辑。吸引高层次人群的人际关系法则。越是好的越多人抢,越多人抢就越是好的,你明白这种不成逻辑的逻辑背后的心理秘密吗?场面大了,会吓跑人群中的绝大部分;场面小了,有实力的人又看不上。你明白这个“面子”问题背后的心理秘密吗?形象代表人的本质,影响力就是一种生产力,你了解这种名与实之间互相转化背后的心理秘密吗?外表漂亮者比不漂亮者更为成功,你知道这种视觉效应背后的心理秘密吗?
  • 都市邪修传

    都市邪修传

    一张稍微帅气的脸颊,数个轮回的等待,这一世的崛起,是否是一切终将结束的开头……
  • 剑逆神皇

    剑逆神皇

    星空浩瀚,宇宙苍茫。昆仑界存在于这茫茫宇宙中不知千万年。天地灵气在这片广袤的大陆汇聚,滋养着这片神奇的土地。时光荏苒,岁月沧桑。神的逍遥,仙的飘逸在昆仑界成为亘古不变的传说。大漠孤烟、长河落日、惊涛拍岸、白雪纷纷。大陆中到处是神奇壮观的风景。雕楼画栋的城池,神秘莫测的宗门,芸芸众生膜拜着神皇,追寻着飘渺的永恒······
  • 主掌轮回

    主掌轮回

    轮回,修无上真身,筑九幽黄泉,享功德之圣,风流于狐石之中。
  • 裁决王剑

    裁决王剑

    在无尽的虚空中,一把通体漆黑的长剑被白色锁链紧紧禁锢,不知过了多久。他与她的相遇:“终于等到了!”“参见吾王,谢王之救赎,与王契约,化王之利器,为王裁决一切敌人,王存吾存,王在吾在,王死吾灭”一位天才的崛起,一位天才的陨落,充满传奇的故事。书友群:139204915
  • 公主殿下的仆人

    公主殿下的仆人

    唐羽意外被绑架后,意外走上一条修真路,又意外捡到一只小白狗,哪里知道是被封印的异世界公主殿下,来自异世界的公主企图征服地球,笑看唐羽如何拯救地球。感谢阅文书评团提供书评支持!
  • 文娱终结者

    文娱终结者

    他用“小李飞刀,例无虚发”对垒“华山论剑,东西南北”;他用“莫欺少年穷”反抗“三十年河东三十年河西”;他用“我要这铁棒有何用”诠释“不要死,也不要孤独的活”;他用……他生活的世界有这么一群神奇的人,这群神奇的人持才傲物,总有无穷的才华,来写书写歌写诗词,来拍电视拍电影搞综艺,来创造属于他们的文娱世界。但,这是平行世界,是他生活的世界。他用,不,他说:“我要以其人之道,还治其人之身。”言必行,行必果,当时只道是寻常,他叫周寻常。