industrial biography-第4章
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wealth; and they were ready almost to fall down and worship their new
tools; esteeming the axe as a deity; offering sacrifices to the saw;
and holding the knife in especial veneration。
In the infancy of all nations the same difficulties must have been
experienced for want of tools; before the arts of smelting and
working in metals had become known; and it is not improbable that the
Phoenician navigators who first frequented our coasts found the same
avidity for bronze and iron existing among the poor woad…stained
Britons who flocked down to the shore to see their ships and exchange
food and skins with them; that Captain Cook discovered more than two
thousand years later among the natives of Otaheite and New Zealand。
For; the tools and weapons found in ancient burying…places in all
parts of Britain clearly show that these islands also have passed
through the epoch of stone and flint。
There was recently exhibited at the Crystal Palace a collection of
ancient European weapons and implements placed alongside a similar
collection of articles brought from the South Seas; and they were in
most respects so much alike that it was difficult to believe that
they did not belong to the same race and period; instead of being the
implements of races sundered by half the globe; and living at periods
more than two thousand years apart。 Nearly every weapon in the one
collection had its counterpart in the other;the mauls or celts of
stone; the spearheads of flint or jasper; the arrowheads of flint or
bone; and the saws of jagged stone; showing how human ingenuity;
under like circumstances; had resorted to like expedients。 It would
also appear that the ancient tribes in these islands; like the New
Zealanders; used fire to hollow out their larger boats; several
specimens of this kind of vessel having recently been dug up in the
valleys of the Witham and the Clyde; some of the latter from under
the very streets of modern Glasgow。*
'footnote。。。
〃Mr。John Buchanan; a zealous antiquary; writing in 1855; informs us
that in the course of the eight years preceding that date; no less
than seventeen canoes had been dug out of this estuarine silt 'of the
valley of the Clyde'; and that he had personally inspected a large
number of them before they were exhumed。 Five of them lay buried in
silt under the streets of Glasgow; one in a vertical position with
the prow uppermost; as if it had sunk in a storm。。。。 Almost every one
of these ancient boats was formed out of a single oak…stem; hollowed
out by blunt tools; probably stone axes; aided by the action of fire;
a few were cut beautifully smooth; evidently with metallic tools。
Hence a gradation could be traced from a pattern of extreme rudeness
to one showing great mechanical ingenuity。。。。 In one of the canoes a
beautifully polished celt or axe of greenstone was found; in the
bottom of another a plug of cork; which; as Mr。 Geikie remarks;
'could only have come from the latitudes of Spain; Southern France;
or Italy。'〃 Sir C。 LYELL; Antiquity of Man; 48…9。
。。。'
Their smaller boats; or coracles; were made of osiers interwoven;
covered with hides; and rigged with leathern sails and thong tackle。
It will readily be imagined that anything like civilization; as at
present understood; must have been next to impossible under such
circumstances。 〃Miserable indeed;〃 says Carlyle; 〃was the condition
of the aboriginal savage; glaring fiercely from under his fleece of
hair; which with the beard reached down to his loins; and hung round
them like a matted cloak; the rest of his body sheeted in its thick
natural fell。 He loitered in the sunny glades of the forest; living
on wild fruits; or; as the ancient Caledonians; squatted himself in
morasses; lurking for his bestial or human prey; without implements;
without arms; save the ball of heavy flint; to which; that his sole
possession and defence might not be lost; he had attached a long cord
of plaited thongs; thereby recovering as well as hurling it with
deadly; unerring skill。〃
The injunction given to man to 〃replenish the earth and subdue it〃
could not possibly be fulfilled with implements of stone。 To fell a
tree with a flint hatchet would occupy the labour of a month; and to
clear a small patch of ground for purposes of culture would require
the combined efforts of a tribe。 For the same reason; dwellings could
not be erected; and without dwellings domestic tranquillity;
security; culture; and refinement; especially in a rude climate; were
all but impossible。 Mr。 Emerson well observes; that 〃the effect of a
house is immense on human tranquillity; power; and refinement。 A man
in a cave or a campa nomaddies with no more estate than the wolf
or the horse leaves。 But so simple a labour as a house being
achieved; his chief enemies are kept at bay。 He is safe from the
teeth of wild animals; from frost; sunstroke; and weather; and fine
faculties begin to yield their fine harvest。 Inventions and arts are
born; manners; and social beauty and delight。〃 But to build a house
which should serve for shelter; for safety; and for comfortin a
word; as a home for the family; which is the nucleus of
societybetter tools than those of stone were absolutely
indispensable。
Hence most of the early European tribes were nomadic: first hunters;
wandering about from place to place like the American Indians; after
the game; then shepherds; following the herds of animals which they
had learnt to tame; from one grazing…ground to another; living upon
their milk and flesh; and clothing themselves in their skins held
together by leathern thongs。 It was only when implements of metal had
been invented that it was possible to practise the art of agriculture
with any considerable success。 Then tribes would cease from their
wanderings; and begin to form settlements; homesteads; villages; and
towns。 An old Scandinavian legend thus curiously illustrates this
last period: There was a giantess whose daughter one day saw a
husbandman ploughing in the field。 She ran and picked him up with her
finger and thumb; put him and his plough and oxen into her apron; and
carried them to her mother; saying; 〃Mother; what sort of beetle is
this that I have found wriggling in the sand? 〃 But the mother said;
〃Put it away; my child; we must begone out of this land; for these
people will dwell in it。〃
M。 Worsaae of Copenhagen; who has been followed by other antiquaries;
has even gone so far as to divide the natural history of civilization
into three epochs; according to the character of the tools used in
each。 The first was the Stone period; in which the implements chiefly
used were sticks; bones; stones; and flints。 The next was the Bronze
period; distinguished by the introduction and general use of a metal
composed of copper and tin; requiring a comparatively low degree of
temperature to smelt it; and render it capable of being fashioned
into weapons; tools; and implements; to make which; however;
indicated a great advance in experience; sagacity; and skill in the
manipulation of metals。 With tools of bronze; to which considerable
hardness could be given; trees were felled; stones hewn; houses and
ships built; and agriculture practised with comparative facility。
Last of all came the Iron period; when the art of smelting and
working that most difficult but widely diffused of the minerals was
discovered; from which point the progress made in all the arts of
life has been of the most remarkable character。
Although Mr。 Wright rejects this classification as empirical; because
the periods are not capable of being clearly defined; and all the
three kinds of implements are found to have been in use at or about
the same time;*
'footnote。。。
THOMAS WRIGHT; F。S。A。; The Celt; The Roman; and The Saxon;
ed。 1861。
。。。'
there is; nevertheless; reason to believe that it is; on the whole;
well founded。 It is doubtless true that imp