The mind can not conceive what
man will do in the
Twentieth Century with his chained lightning.
Thomas
A. Edison
Some years ago, a law was passed out
in Ohio, making any man ineligible to act as a magistrate
who had not studied law and been duly admitted to
the bar. Men who had not studied law were deemed
lacking in the sense of justice. This law was
designed purely for one man Samuel M. Jones
of Toledo. Was ever a Jones so honored before?
In Athens, of old, a law was once
passed declaring that every man, either of whose parents
was an alien, was not a citizen and therefore ineligible
to hold office.
This law was aimed at the head of one man Themistocles.
“And so you are an alien?”
was the taunting remark flung at the mother of Themistocles.
And the Greek matron proudly answered,
“Yes, I am an alien but my son is
Themistocles.”
Down at Lilly Dale the other day,
a woman told me that she had talked with the mother
of Edison, and the spirit-voice had said: “It
is true I was a Canadian schoolteacher, and this at
a time when very few women taught, but I am the mother
of him you call Thomas A. Edison. I studied and
read and wrote and in degree I educated myself.
I had great ambition I thirsted to know,
to do, to become. But I was hampered and chained
in an uncongenial atmosphere. My body struggled
with its bonds, so that I grew weak, worried, sick,
and died, leaving my boy to struggle his way alone.
My only regret at death was the thought that I was
leaving my boy. I thought that through my marriage
I had killed my career sacrificed myself.
But my boy became heir to all my hunger for knowledge,
and he has accomplished what I dimly dreamed.
He has made plain what I only guessed. From my
position here I have whispered secrets to him that
only the freed spirits knew. I once thought my
life was a failure, but now I know that the word ‘failure’
is a term used only by foolish mortals. In the
universal sense there is no such thing as failure.”
Just here it seems to me that some
one once said that we get no mind without brain.
But we had here the brain of the medium, otherwise
this alleged message from the spirit realm would not
be ours. So we will not now tarry to discuss
psychic phenomena, but go on to other things.
But the woman from Lilly Dale said something, just
the same.
Edison was born at the little village
of Milan, Ohio, which lies six miles from Norwalk
on the road between Cleveland and Toledo.
On the breaking out of the Civil War
the boy was fourteen years old. His parents had
moved to Sarnia, Canada, and then across to Port Huron.
Young Edison used to ride up and down
from Detroit on the passenger-boats and sell newspapers.
His standing with the Detroit “Free Press,”
backed up by his good-cheer and readiness to help
the passengers with their babies and bundles, gave
him free passage on all railroads and steamboat-lines.
There was a public library at Detroit
where any one could read, but books could not be taken
away.
All Edison’s spare time was
spent at the library, which to him was a gold-mine.
All his mother’s books had been sold, stolen
or given away.
And ahoy there, all you folks who
have books! Do you not know what books are to
a child hungry for truth, that has no books?
Of course you do not!
Books to a boy like young Edison are
treasures-trove, in which is stored the learning of
all great and good and wise who have ever lived.
And the boy has to read, and read
for a decade, in order to find that books are not
much after all.
When Edison saw the inside of that
library and was told he could read any or all of the
books, he said, “If you please, Mister, I’ll
begin here.” And he tackled the first shelf,
mentally deciding that he would go through the books
ten feet at a time.
A little later he bought at an auction
fifty volumes of the “North American Review,”
and moving the books up to his home at Port Huron
proceeded to read them.
The war was on papers sold
for ten cents each and business was good.
Edison was making money and
saving it. He only plunged on books.
Over at Mount Clemens, at the Springs,
folks congregated, and there young Edison took weekly
trips selling papers.
On one such visit he rescued the little
son of the station-agent from in front of a moving
train. In gratitude, the man took the boy to his
house and told him he must make it his home while
in Mount Clemens; and then after supper the youngster
went down to the station; and what was more, the station-agent
took him in behind the ticket-window, where the telegraph-instrument
clicked off dots and dashes on a long strip of paper.
Edison looked on with open mouth.
“Would you like to become a telegraph-operator?”
asked the agent.
“Sure!” was the reply.
Already the boy had read up on the
subject in his library of the “North American
Review,” and he really knew the history of the
thing better than did the agent.
Edison was now a newsboy on the Grand
Trunk, and he arranged his route so as to spend every
other night at Mount Clemens.
In a few months he could handle the
key about as well as the station-agent.
About this time the ice had carried
out the telegraph-line between Port Huron and Sarnia.
The telegraph people were in sore straits. Edison
happened along and said to the local operator, “Come
out here, Bill, on this switch-engine and we’ll
fix things!” By short snorts of the whistle
for dots and long ones for dashes, they soon caught
the ear of the operator on the other side. He
answered back, “What t’ell is the matter
with you fellows?” And Edison and the other operator
roared with laughter, so that the engineer thought
their think-boxes needed re-babbitting.
And that scheme of telegraphy with
a steam-whistle was Edison’s first invention.
Instead of going to college Edison
started a newspaper a kind of amateur affair,
in which he himself wrote editorials, news-items and
advertisements this when he was seventeen
years old.
The best way to become a skilled writer
is to write; and if there is a better way to learn
than by doing, the world has not yet discovered it.
Also, if there is a finer advantage
for a youth who would be a financier than to have
a shiftless father, it has not been recorded.
When nineteen, Edison had two thousand
dollars in cash more money than his father
had ever seen at any one time.
The Grand Trunk folks found that their
ex-trainboy could operate, and so they called on him
to help them out, up and down the line. Then the
Western Union wanted extra good men, and young Edison
was given double pay to go to New Orleans, where there
was a pitiful dearth of operators, the Southern operators
being mostly dead, and Northern men not caring to
live in the South.
So Edison traveled North and South
and East and West, gathering gear. He had studied
the science of telegraphy closely enough to see that
it could be improved upon. One message at a time
for one wire was absurd why not two, or
four, and why not send messages both ways at once!
It was the general idea then that
electricity traveled: Edison knew better electricity
merely rendered the wire sensitive.
Edison was getting a reputation among
his associates. He had read everything, and when
his key was not busy, there was in his hand a copy
of Gibbon’s “Decline and Fall.”
He wrote a hand like copperplate and
could “take” as fast as the best could
send. And when it came to “sending,”
he had made the pride of Chicago cry quits.
The Western Union had need of a specially
good man at Albany while the Legislature was in session,
and Edison was sent there. He took the key and
never looked at the clock he cleaned up
the stuff. He sat glued to his chair for ten
hours, straight.
At one time, the line suddenly became
blocked between Albany and New York. The manager
was in distress, and after exhausting all known expedients
went to Edison. The lanky youth called up a friend
of his in Pittsburgh and ordered that New York give
the Pittsburgh man the Albany wire. “Feel
your way up the river until you find me,” were
the orders.
Edison started feeling his way down the river.
In twenty minutes he called to the
manager, “The break is two miles below Poughkeepsie I’ve
ordered the section-boss at Poughkeepsie to take a
repairer on his handcar and go and fix it!”
Of course, this plain telegraph-operator
had no right to order out a section-boss; but nevertheless
he did it. He shouldered responsibility like
Tom Potter of the C., B. & Q.
Not long after the Albany experience,
Edison was in New York, not looking for work as some
say, but nosing around Wall Street investigating the
“Laws Automatic Ticker.” The machine
he was looking at suddenly stopped, and this blocked
all the tickers on the line. An expert was sent
for, but he could not start it.
“I’ll fix it,” said
a tall, awkward volunteer, the same which was Edison.
History is not yet clear as to whether
Edison had not originally “fixed” it,
and Edison so far has not confessed.
And there being no one else to start
the machine, Edison was given a chance, and soon the
tickers were going again. This gave him an introduction
to the stock-ticker folks, and the Western Union people
he already knew.
This was in Eighteen Hundred Seventy,
and Edison was then twenty-three years old.
He studied out how stock-reporting
could be bettered and invented a plan which he duly
patented, and then laid his scheme before the Western
Union managers.
A stock company was formed, and young
Edison, aged twenty-four, was paid exactly forty thousand
dollars for his patent, and retained by the Company
as Electrical Adviser at three hundred dollars a month.
In Eighteen Hundred Seventy-four,
when he was twenty-seven, he had perfected his duplex
telegraph apparatus and had a factory turning out
telegraph-instruments and appliances at Newark, New
Jersey, where three hundred men were employed.
In Eighteen Hundred Seventy-six, the
year of the Centennial Exposition, Edison told the
Exposition Managers that if they would wait a year
or so he would light their show with electricity.
He moved to the then secluded spot
of Menlo Park to devote himself to experiments, spending
an even hundred thousand dollars in equipment as a
starter. Results followed fast, and soon we had
the incandescent lamp, trolley-car, electric pen and
many other inventions. It was on the night of
October the Twenty-third, Eighteen Hundred Seventy-nine,
that Edison first turned the current through an incandescent
burner and got the perfect light. He sat and
looked at the soft, mild, beautiful light and laughed
a joyous peal of laughter that was heard in the adjoining
rooms. “We’ve got it, boys!”
he cried, and the boys, a dozen of them, came tumbling
in. Arguments started as to how long it would
last. One said an hour. “Twenty-four
hours,” said Edison. They all vowed they
would watch it without sleep until the carbon film
was destroyed and the light went out. It lasted
just forty hours.
Around Edison grew up a group of great
workers proud to be called “Edison
Men” and some of these went out and
made for themselves names and fortunes.
Edison was born in Eighteen Hundred
Forty-seven. Consequently, at this writing he
is sixty-three years old. He is big and looks
awkward, because his dusty-gray clothes do not fit,
and he walks with a slight stoop. When he wants
clothes he telephones for them. His necktie is
worn by the right oblique, his iron-gray hair is combed
by the wind. On his cherubic face usually sits
a half-quizzical, pleased smile, that fades into a
look plaintive and very gentle. The face is that
of a man who has borne burdens and known sorrow, of
one who has overcome only after mighty effort.
I was going to say that Edison looks like a Roman Emperor,
but I recall that no Roman Emperor deserves to rank
with him not even Julius Cæsar! The
face is that of Napoleon at Saint Helena, unsubdued.
The predominant characteristics of
the man are his faith, hope, good-cheer and courage.
But at all times his humor is apt to be near the surface.
Had Edison been as keen a businessman
as Rockefeller, and kept his own in his own hands,
he would today be as rich as Rockefeller.
But Edison is worth, oh, say, two
million dollars, and that is all any man should be
worth it is all he needs. Yet there
are at least a hundred men in the world today, far
richer than Edison, who have made their fortunes wholly
and solely by appropriating his ideas.
Edison has trusted people, and some
of them have taken advantage of his great, big, generous,
boyish spirit to do him grievous wrong. But the
nearest I ever heard him come to making a complaint
was when he said to me, “Fra Elbertus, you never
wrote but one really true thing!”
“Well, what was that, Mr. Edison?”
“You said, ’There is one
thing worse than to be deceived by men, and that is
to distrust them.’ Now people say I have
been successful, and so I have, in degree, and it
has been through trusting men. There are a few
fellows who always know just what I am doing I
confide in them I explain things to them
just to straighten the matter out in my own mind.”
But of the men who have used Edison’s
money and ideas, who have made it a life business
to study his patents and then use them, evading the
law, not a word!
From Eighteen Hundred Seventy to Eighteen
Hundred Ninety, Edison secured over nine hundred patents,
or at the rate of one patent every ten days.
Very few indeed of these patents ever brought him any
direct return, and now his plan is to invent and keep
the matter a secret in his “family.”
“The value of an idea lies in
the using of it,” he said to me. “You
patent a thing and the other fellow starts even with
you. Keep it to yourself and you have the machinery
going before the other fellow is awake. Patents
may protect some things, and still others they only
advertise. Up in Buffalo you have a great lawyer
who says he can drive a coach and four through any
will that was ever made and I guess he can.
All good lawyers know how to break wills and contracts,
and there are now specialists who secure goodly fees
for busting patents. If you have an idea, go
ahead and invent a way to use it and keep your process
secret.”
The Edison factories at West Orange
cover a space of about thirty acres, all fenced in
with high pickets and barb-wire. Over two thousand
people are employed inside that fence. There are
guards at the gates, and the would-be visitor is challenged
as if he were an enemy. If you want to see any
particular person, you do not go in and see him he
comes to you and you sit in a place like the visitors’
dock at Sing-Sing.
With me it was different: I had
a note that made the gates swing wide. However,
one gatekeeper scrutinized the note and scrutinized
me, and then went back into a maze of buildings for
advice. When he came back, the General Manager
was with him and was reproving him. In a voice
full of defense the County Down watchman said:
“Ah, now, and how did I know but that it was
a forgery? And anyhow, I’d never let in
a man what looks like that, even if he had an order
from Bill Taft.”
The Edison factories, all enclosed
in the high fence and under guard, include four separate
and distinct corporations, each with its own set of
offices. Edison himself owns a controlling interest
in each corporation, and the rest of the stock is
owned by the managers or “family.”
With his few trusted helpers he is most liberal.
Not only do they draw goodly salaries, but they have
an interest in the profits that is no small matter.
The secrets of the place are protected
by having each workman stick right to one thing and
work in one room. No running around is allowed each
employee goes to a certain place and remains there
all day. To be found elsewhere is a misdemeanor,
and while spies at the Edison factory are not shot,
they have been known to disappear into space with
great velocity.
To make amends for the close restrictions
on workers, an extra wage is paid and the eight-hour
day prevails, so help is never wanting.
Ninety-nine workers out of a hundred
want their wages, and nothing else. Promotion,
advancement and education are things that never occur
to them. But for the few that have the stuff
in them, Edison is always on the lookout. His
place is really a college, for to know the man is an
education. He radiates good-cheer and his animation
is catching.
To a woman who wanted him to write
a motto for her son, Edison wrote, “Never look
at the clock!” The argument is plain get
the thing done.
And around the Edison laboratory there
is no use of looking at the clock, for none of them
runs. That is the classic joke of the place.
Years ago Edison expressed his contempt for the man
who watched the clock, and now every Christmas his
office family take up a collection and buy him a clock,
and present it with great ceremony. He replies
in a speech on the nebular hypothesis and all are
very happy. One year the present assumed the
form of an Ingersoll Dollar Watch, which the Wizard
showed to me with great pride. In the stockade
is a beautiful library building and here you see clocks
galore, some of which must have cost a thousand dollars
a piece, all silent. One clock had a neatly printed
card attached, “Don’t look at this clock it
has stopped.” And another, “You may
look at this clock, for you can’t stop it!”
It was already stopped.
One very elegant clock had a solid
block of wood where the works should have been, but
the face and golden hands were all complete.
However, one clock was running, with
a tick needlessly loud, but this clock had no hands.
The Edison Library is a gigantic affair,
with two balconies and bookstacks limitless.
The intent was to have a scientific
library right at hand that would compass the knowledge
of the world. The Laboratory is quite as complete,
for in it is every chemical substance known to man,
all labeled, classified and indexed. Seemingly,
Edison is the most careless, indifferent and slipshod
of men, but the real fact is that such a thorough
business general the world has seldom seen. If
he wants, say, the “Electrical Review”
for March, Eighteen Hundred Ninety-One, he hands a
boy a slip of paper and the book is in his hands in
five minutes. Edison of all men understands that
knowledge consists in having a clerk who can quickly
find the thing. In his hands the card-index has
reached perfection.
Edison has no private office, and
his desk in the great library has not had a letter
written on it since Eighteen Hundred Ninety-five.
“I hate to disturb the mice,” he said
as he pointed it out indifferently.
He arrives at the stockade early often
by seven o’clock, and makes his way direct to
the Laboratory, which stands in the center of the campus.
All around are high factory buildings, vibrating with
the suppressed roar and hum of industry.
In the Laboratory, Edison works, secure
and free from interruption unless he invites it.
Much of his time is spent in the Chemical Building,
a low, one-story structure, lighted from the top.
It has a cement floor and very simple furniture, the
shelves and tables being mostly of iron. “We
are always prepared for fires and explosions here,”
said Edison in half-apology for the barrenness of
the rooms.
The place is a maze of retorts, kettles,
tubes, siphons and tiny brass machinery. In the
midst of the mess stood two old-fashioned armchairs both
sacred to Edison. One he sits in, and the other
is for his feet, his books, pads and paper.
Here he sits and thinks, reads or
muses or tells stories or shuffles about with his
hands in his pockets. Edison is a man of infinite
leisure. He has the faculty of throwing details
upon others. At his elbow, shod in sneakers silent,
is always a stenographer. Then there is a bookkeeper
who does nothing but record the result of every experiment,
and these experiments are going on constantly, attended
to by half a dozen quiet and alert men, who work like
automatons. “I have tried a million schemes
that will not work I know everything that
is no good. I work by elimination,” says
Edison.
When hot on the trail of an idea he
may work here for three days and nights without going
home, and his wife is good enough and great enough
to leave him absolutely to himself. In a little
room in the corner of the Laboratory is a little iron
cot and three gray army blankets. He can sleep
at any time, and half an hour’s rest will enable
him to go on. When he can’t quite catch
the idea, he closes up his brain-cells for ten minutes
and sleeps, then up and after it again.
Mrs. Edison occasionally sends meals
down for the Wizard when he is on the trail of a thought
and does not want to take time to go home.
One day the dinner arrived when Edison
was just putting salt on the tail of an idea.
There was no time to eat, but it occurred to the inventor
that if he would just quit thinking for ten minutes
and sleep, he could awaken with enough brain-power
to throw the lariat successfully. So he just
leaned back, put his feet in the other chair and went
to sleep.
The General Manager came in and saw
the dinner on the table and Edison sleeping, so he
just sat down and began to eat the dinner. He
ate it all, and tiptoed out.
Edison slept twenty minutes, awoke,
looked at the empty dishes, pulled down his vest,
took out his regular after-dinner cigar, lighted it
and smoked away in sweet satisfaction, fully believing
that he had had his dinner; and even after the General
Manager had come in and offered to bet him a dollar
he hadn’t, he was still of the same mind.
This spirit of sly joking fills the
place, set afloat by the master himself. Edison
dearly loves a joke, and will quit work any time to
hear one. It is the five minutes’ sleep
and the good laugh that keep his brain from becoming
a hotbox he gets his rest!
“When do you take your vacation,
Mr. Edison?” a lady asked him.
“Election night every November,”
was the reply. And this is literally true, for
on that night there is a special wire run into the
Orange Clubhouse, and Edison takes the key and sits
there until daylight taking the returns, writing them
out carefully in that copperplate Western Union hand.
He is as careful about his handwriting now as if he
were writing out train-orders.
“If I wanted to live a hundred
years I would use neither tobacco nor coffee,”
said Edison as we sat at lunch. “But you
see I’d rather get a little really good work
done than live long and do nothing to speak of.
And so I spur what I am pleased to call my mind, at
times with coffee and a good cigar just
pass the matches, thank you! Some day some fellow
will invent a way of concentrating and storing up
sunshine to use instead of this old, absurd Prometheus
scheme of fire. I’ll do the trick myself
if some one else doesn’t get at it. Why,
that is all there is about my work in electricity you
know, I never claimed to have invented electricity that
is a campaign lie nail it!”
“Sunshine is spread out thin
and so is electricity. Perhaps they are the same,
but we will take that up later. Now the trick
was, you see, to concentrate the juice and liberate
it as you needed it. The old-fashioned way inaugurated
by Jove, of letting it off in a clap of thunder, is
dangerous, disconcerting and wasteful. It doesn’t
fetch up anywhere. My task was to subdivide the
current and use it in a great number of little lights,
and to do this I had to store it. And we haven’t
really found out how to store it yet and let it off
real easy-like and cheap. Why, we have just begun
to commence to get ready to find out about electricity.
This scheme of combustion to get power makes me sick
to think of it is so wasteful. It
is just the old, foolish Prometheus idea, and the father
of Prometheus was a baboon.”
“When we learn how to store
electricity, we will cease being apes ourselves; until
then we are tailless orangutáns. You see,
we should utilize natural forces and thus get all
of our power. Sunshine is a form of energy, and
the winds and the tides are manifestations of energy.”
“Do we use them? Oh, no!
We burn up wood and coal, as renters burn up the front
fence for fuel. We live like squatters, not as
if we owned the property.
“There must surely come a time
when heat and power will be stored in unlimited quantities
in every community, all gathered by natural forces.
Electricity ought to be as cheap as oxygen, for it
can not be destroyed.
“Now, I am not sure but that
my new storage-battery is the thing. I’d
tell you about that, but I don’t want to bore
you. Of course, I know that nothing is more interesting
to the public than a good lie. You see, I have
been a newspaperman myself used to run a
newspaper in fact, Veritas and Old
Subscriber once took exception to one of my editorials
and threw me into the Detroit River that
is where I got my little deafness what’s
that? No, I did not say my deftness I
got that in another way. But about lies, you
have heard that one about my smoking big, black cigars!
Well, the story is that the boys in the office used
to steal my cigars, and so I got a cigarmaker to make
me up a box that looked just like my favorite brand,
only I had ’em filled with hemp, horsehair and
a touch of asafetida. Then I just left the box
where the boys would be sure to dip into it; but it
seems the cigarman put them on, and so they just put
that box into my own private stock and I smoked the
fumigators and never knew the difference.
“That whole story is a pernicious
malrepresentation invented by the enemy of mankind
in order to throw obloquy over a virtuous old telegraph-operator brand
it!”
Witness, therefore, that I have branded it, forevermore!
Once upon a day I wrote an article
on Alexander Humboldt. And in that article among
other things I said, “This world of ours, round
like an orange and slightly flattened at the Poles,
has produced but five educated men.”
And ironical ladies and gents from
all parts of the United States wrote me on postal
cards, begging that I should name the other four.
Let us leave the cynics to their little pleasantries,
and make our appeal to people who think.
Education means evolution, development,
growth. Education is comparative, for there is
no fixed standard all men know more than
some men, and some men know more than some other men.
“Every man I meet is my master in some particular,”
said Emerson. But there are five men in history
who had minds so developed, and evolved beyond the
rest of mankind so far, that they form a class by
themselves, and deserve to be called Educated Men.
The men I have in mind were the following:
Pericles, Builder of Athens.
Aristotle, tutor of Alexander, and
the world’s first naturalist.
Leonardo, the all-round man the
man who could do more things, and do them well, than
any other man who every lived.
Sir Isaac Newton, the mathematician,
who analyzed light and discovered the law of gravitation.
Alexander von Humboldt, explorer and
naturalist, who compassed the entire scientific knowledge
of the world, issued his books in deluxe limited editions
at his own expense, and sold them for three thousand
dollars a set.
Newton and Humboldt each wore a seven
and three-fourths hat. Leonardo and Aristotle
went untaped, but Pericles had a head so high and so
big that he looked like a caricature, and Aristophanes,
a nice man who lived at the same time, said that the
head of Pericles looked like a pumpkin that had been
sat upon. All the busts of Pericles represent
him wearing a helmet this to avoid what
the artists thought an abnormality, the average Greek
having a round, smooth chucklehead like that of a Bowery
bartender.
America has produced two men who stand
out so far beyond the rest of mankind that they form
a class by themselves: Benjamin Franklin and
Thomas A. Edison.
Franklin wore a seven and a half hat;
Edison wears a seven and three-fourths.
The difference in men is the difference
in brain-power. And while size does not always
token quality, yet size and surface are necessary to
get power, and there is no record of a man with a
six and a half head ever making a ripple on the intellectual
sea. Without the cells you get no mind, and if
mind exists without the cells, it has not yet been
proven. The brain is a storage-battery made up
of millions of minute cells.
The weight of an average man’s
brain is forty-nine ounces. Now, Humboldt’s
brain weighed fifty-six ounces, and Newton’s
and Franklin’s weighed fifty-seven. Let
us hope the autopsist will not have a chance to weigh
Edison’s brain for many years, but when he does
the mark will register fifty-seven ounces.
An orang-utan weighs about the same
as a man, but its brain weighs only a pound, against
three pounds for a man. Give a gorilla a brain
weighing fifty ounces, and he would be a Methodist
Presiding Elder. Give him a brain the same size
of Edison’s, say fifty-seven ounces, and instead
of spending life in hunting for snakes and heaving
cocoanuts at monkeys as respectable gorillas are wont,
he would be weighing the world in scales of his own
invention and making, and measuring the distances of
the stars.
Pericles was taught by the gentle
Anaxagoras, who gave all his money to the State in
order that he might be free. The State reciprocated
by cutting off his head, for republics are always
ungrateful.
Aristotle was a pupil of Plato and
worked his way through college, sifting ashes, washing
windows and sweeping sidewalks.
Leonardo was self-taught and gathered
knowledge as a bee gathers honey, although honey isn’t
honey until the bee digests it.
Sir Isaac Newton was a Cambridge man.
He held the office of Master of the Mint, and to relieve
himself of the charge of atheism he anticipated the
enemy and wrote a book on the Hebrew Prophets, which
gave the scientists the laugh on him, but made his
position with the State secure. Newton is the
only man herein mentioned who knew anything about theology,
all the others being “infidels” in their
day, devoting themselves strictly to this world.
Humboldt was taught by the “natural method,”
and never took a college degree.
Franklin was a graduate of the University
of Hard Knocks, and Edison’s Alma Mater is the
same.
There is one special characteristic
manifested by the Seven Educated men I have named good-cheer,
a great welling sense of happiness! They were
all good animals: they gloried in life; they loved
the men and women who were still on earth; they feasted
on the good things in life; breathed deeply; slept
soundly and did not bother about the future. Their
working motto was, “One world at a time.”
They were all able to laugh.
Genius is a great fund of joyousness.
Each and all of these men influenced
the world profoundly. We are different people
because they lived. Every house, school, library
and workshop in Christendom is touched by their presence.
All are dead but Edison, yet their
influence can never die. And no one in the list
has influenced civilization so profoundly as Edison.
You can not look out of a window in any city in Europe
or America without beholding the influence of his
thought. You may say that the science of electricity
has gone past him, but all the Sons of Jove have built
on him.
He gave us the electric light and
the electric car and pointed the way to the telephone three
things that have revolutionized society. As Athens
at her height was the Age of Pericles, so will our
time be known as the Age of Edison.