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Prior to this books original publication in 1910, no complete,
authentic, and authorised record of the work of Mr Edison had been
given to the world. The authors deemed themselves happy in the
confidence reposed in them, and in the constant assistance they
enjoyed from Mr. Edison while preparing these pages, a great many
of which are altogether Mr Edisons own. The cooperation in no sense
relieved the authors of responsibility as to any of the views or
statements of their own that the book contains. They realised the
extreme reluctance of Mr Edison to be made the subject of any
biography at all; but he felt that, if it must be written, it were
best done by the hands of friends and associates of longstanding,
whose judgment and discretion he could trust, and whose intimate
knowledge of the facts would save him from misrepresentation. These
pages were designed to bring the reader face to face with Edison;
to glance at an interesting childhood and a youthful period marked
by a capacity for doing things, and by an insatiable thirst for
knowledge; then to accompany him into the great creative stretch of
forty years, during which he had done so much. This book shows him
plunged deeply into work for which he always had an incredible
capacity, reveals the exercise of his unsurpassed inventive
ability, his keen reasoning powers, his tenacious memory, and his
fertility of resource. It follows him through a series of
innumerable experiments, conducted methodically, reaching out like
rays of search-light into all the regions of science and nature,
and finally exhibits him emerging triumphantly from countless
difficulties bearing with him in new arts the fruits of victorious
struggle.
American youths to-day are given, if of a mechanical turn of mind,
to amateur telegraphy or telephony, but seldom, if ever, have to
make any part of the system constructed. In Edison's boyish days it
was quite different, and telegraphic supplies were hard to obtain.
But he and his "chum" had a line between their homes, built of
common stove-pipe wire. The insulators were bottles set on nails
driven into trees and short poles.
American youths to-day are given, if of a mechanical turn of mind,
to amateur telegraphy or telephony, but seldom, if ever, have to
make any part of the system constructed. In Edison's boyish days it
was quite different, and telegraphic supplies were hard to obtain.
But he and his "chum" had a line between their homes, built of
common stove-pipe wire. The insulators were bottles set on nails
driven into trees and short poles.
American youths to-day are given, if of a mechanical turn of mind,
to amateur telegraphy or telephony, but seldom, if ever, have to
make any part of the system constructed. In Edison's boyish days it
was quite different, and telegraphic supplies were hard to obtain.
But he and his "chum" had a line between their homes, built of
common stove-pipe wire. The insulators were bottles set on nails
driven into trees and short poles.
American youths to-day are given, if of a mechanical turn of mind,
to amateur telegraphy or telephony, but seldom, if ever, have to
make any part of the system constructed. In Edison's boyish days it
was quite different, and telegraphic supplies were hard to obtain.
But he and his "chum" had a line between their homes, built of
common stove-pipe wire. The insulators were bottles set on nails
driven into trees and short poles.
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