<h2 class='c007'>XIV</h2>
<p class='c013'>A TALK WITH EDISON</p>
<p class='c022'>DRAMATIC INCIDENTS IN HIS EARLY LIFE</p>
<p class='drop-capa0_25_0_675 c014'>TO discover the opinion of Thomas A.
Edison concerning what makes and
constitutes success in life is an easy
matter—if one can first discover Mr. Edison.
I camped three weeks in the vicinity of Orange,
N.J., awaiting the opportunity to come upon
the great inventor and voice my questions. It
seemed a rather hopeless and discouraging
affair until he was really before me; but, truth
to say, he is one of the most accessible of men,
and only reluctantly allows himself to be hedged
in by pressure of endless affairs.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Mr. Edison is always glad to see any visitor,”
said a gentleman who is continually with
him, “except when he is hot on the trail of
something he has been working for, and then
it is as much as a man’s head is worth to come
in on him.”</p>
<p class='c011'>He certainly was not hot on the trail of anything
on the morning when, for the tenth time,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_221'>221</span>I rang at the gate in the fence which surrounds
the laboratory on Valley Road, Orange. A
young man appeared, who conducted me up
the walk to the Edison laboratory office.</p>
<h3 class='c015'>THE LIBRARY</h3>
<p class='c017'>is a place not to be passed through without
thought, for, with a further store of volumes
in his home, it contains one of the most
costly and well-equipped scientific libraries in
the world; the collection of writings on patent
laws and patents, for instance, is absolutely
exhaustive. It gives, at a glance, an idea of
the breadth of thought and sympathy of this
man who grew up with scarcely a common
school education.</p>
<p class='c011'>On the second floor, in one of the offices of
the machine shop, I was asked to wait, while a
grimy youth disappeared with my card, which
he said he would “slip under the door of Mr.
Edison’s office.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Curious,” I thought; “what a lord this
man must be if they dare not even knock at his
door!”</p>
<p class='c011'>Thinking of this and gazing out the window,
I waited until a working man, who had entered
softly, came up beside me. He looked with a
<span class='pageno' id='Page_222'>222</span>sort of “Well, what is it?” in his eyes, and
quickly it began to come to me that the man in
the sooty, oil-stained clothes was Edison himself.
The working garb seemed rather incongruous,
but there was no mistaking the broad
forehead, with its shock of blackish hair
streaked with gray. The gray eyes, too, were
revelations in the way of alert comprehensiveness.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Oh!” was all I could get out at the time.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Want to see me?” he said, smiling in the
most youthful and genial way.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Why,—yes, certainly, to be sure,” I stammered.</p>
<p class='c011'>He looked at me blankly.</p>
<p class='c011'>“You’ll have to talk louder,” said an assistant
who worked in another portion of the
room; “he don’t hear well.”</p>
<p class='c011'>This fact was new to me, but I raised my
voice with celerity, and piped thereafter in an
exceedingly shrill key. After the usual humdrum
opening remarks, in which he acknowledged
his age as fifty-two years, and that he
was born in Erie county, O., of Dutch parentage,
the family having emigrated to America
in 1730, the particulars began to grow more
interesting.</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_223'>223</span>His great-grandfather, I learned, was a
banker of high standing in New York; and,
when Thomas was but a child of seven years,
the family fortune suffered reverses so serious
as to make it necessary that he should become a
wage-earner at an unusually early age, and
that the family should move from his birth-place
to Michigan.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Did you enjoy mathematics as a boy?” I
asked.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Not much,” he replied. “I tried to read
Newton’s ‘Principia,’ at the age of eleven.
That disgusted me with pure mathematics, and
I don’t wonder now. I should not have been
allowed to take up such serious work.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“You were anxious to learn?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes, indeed, <i>I attempted to read through
the entire Free Library at Detroit</i>, but other
things interfered before I had done.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>A CHEMICAL NEWSBOY</h3>
<p class='c016'>“Were you a book-worm and dreamer?” I
questioned.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Not at all,” he answered, using a short,
jerky method, as though he were unconsciously
checking himself up. “I became a newsboy,
<span class='pageno' id='Page_224'>224</span>and liked the work. Made my first coup as a
newsboy in 1869.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“What was it?” I ventured.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I bought up on ‘futures’ a thousand copies
of the <i>Detroit Free Press</i> containing important
war news,—gained a little time on my
rivals, and sold the entire batch like hot cakes.
The price reached twenty-five cents a paper
before the end of the route,” and he laughed.
“I ran the <i>Grand Trunk Herald</i>, too, at that
time—a little paper I issued from the train.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“When did you begin to be interested in invention?”
I questioned.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Well,” he said, “I began to dabble in
chemistry at that time. I fitted up a small
laboratory on the train.”</p>
<p class='c011'>In reference to this, Mr. Edison subsequently
admitted that, during the progress of some occult
experiments in this workshop, certain
complications ensued in which a jolted and
broken bottle of sulphuric acid attracted the
attention of the conductor. He, who had been
long suffering in the matter of unearthly odors,
promptly ejected the young devotee and all his
works. This incident would have been only
amusing but for its relation to, and explanation
of, his deafness. A box on the ear, administered
<span class='pageno' id='Page_225'>225</span>by the irate conductor, caused the lasting
deafness.</p>
<h3 class='c015'>TELEGRAPHY</h3>
<p class='c016'>“What was your first work in a practical
line?” I went on.</p>
<p class='c011'>“A telegraph line between my home and
another boy’s, I made with the help of an old
river cable, some stove-pipe wire, and glass-bottle
insulators. I had my laboratory in the
cellar and studied telegraphy outside.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“What was the first really important thing
you did?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I saved a boy’s life.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“How?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“The boy was playing on the track near the
depot. I saw he was in danger and caught
him, getting out of the way just in time. His
father was station-master, and taught me telegraphy
in return.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Dramatic situations appear at every turn of
this man’s life. He seems to have been continually
arriving on the scene at critical moments,
and always with the good sense to take
things in his own hands. The chance of learning
telegraphy only gave him a chance to show
how apt a pupil he was, and the railroad company
<span class='pageno' id='Page_226'>226</span>soon gave him regular employment. At
seventeen, he had become one of the most expert
operators on the road.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Did you make much use of your inventive
talent at this time?” I questioned.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he answered. “I invented an automatic
attachment for my telegraph instrument
which would send in the signal to show I
was awake at my post, when I was comfortably
snoring in a corner. I didn’t do much of that,
though,” he went on; “for some such boyish
trick sent me in disgrace over the line into Canada.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Were you there long?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Only a winter. If it’s incident you want,
I can tell you one of that time. The place
where I was and Sarnier, the American town,
were cut off from telegraphic and other means
of communication by the storms, until I got at
a locomotive whistle and tooted a telegraphic
message. I had to do it again and again, but
eventually they understood over the water and
answered in the same way.”</p>
<p class='c011'>According to his own and various recorded
accounts, Edison was successively in charge of
important wires in Memphis, Cincinnati, New
Orleans, and Louisville. He lived in the free-and-easy
<span class='pageno' id='Page_227'>227</span>atmosphere of the tramp operators—a
boon companion with them, yet absolutely
refusing to join in the dissipations to which
they were addicted. So highly esteemed was
he for his honesty, that it was the custom of his
colleagues, when a spree was on hand, to make
him the custodian of those funds which they
felt obliged to save. On a more than usually
hilarious occasion, one of them returned rather
the worse for wear, and knocked the treasurer
down on his refusal to deliver the trust money;
the other depositors, we may be glad to note,
gave the ungentlemanly tippler a sound thrashing.</p>
<h3 class='c015'>HIS USE OF MONEY</h3>
<p class='c016'>“Were you good at saving your own
money?” I asked.</p>
<p class='c011'>“No,” he said, smiling. “I never was
much for saving money, as money. I devoted
every cent, regardless of future needs, to
scientific books and materials for experiments.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“You believe that an excellent way to succeed?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Well, it helped me greatly to future success.”</p>
<div>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_228'>228</span>
<h3 class='c015'>INVENTIONS</h3></div>
<p class='c016'>“What was your next invention?” I inquired.</p>
<p class='c011'>“An automatic telegraph recorder—a machine
which enabled me to record dispatches at
leisure, and send them off as fast as needed.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“How did you come to hit upon that?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Well, at the time, I was in such straits that
I had to walk from Memphis to Louisville. At
the Louisville station they offered me a place.
I had perfected a style of handwriting which
would allow me to take legibly from the wire,
long hand, forty-seven and even fifty-four
words a minute, but I was only a moderately
rapid sender. I had to do something to help
me on that side, and so I thought out that little
device.”</p>
<p class='c011'>Later I discovered an article by one of his
biographers, in which a paragraph referring to
this Louisville period, says:—</p>
<p class='c011'>“True to his dominant instincts, he was not
long in gathering around him a laboratory,
printing-office, and machine shop. He took
press reports during his whole stay, including
on one occasion, the Presidential message, by
Andrew Johnson, and this at one sitting, from
3.30 <span class='sc'>p.m.</span> to 4.30 <span class='sc'>a.m.</span></p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_229'>229</span>“He then paragraphed the matter he had
received over the wires, so that printers had
exactly three lines each, thus enabling them to
set up a column in two or three minutes’ time.
For this, he was allowed all the exchanges he
desired, and the Louisville press gave him a
dinner.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“How did you manage to attract public attention
to your ability?” I questioned.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I didn’t manage,” said the Wizard.
“Some things I did created comment. A device
that I invented in 1868, which utilized one
sub-marine cable for two circuits, caused considerable
talk, and the Franklin telegraph office
of Boston gave me a position.”</p>
<p class='c011'>It is related of this, Mr. Edison’s first trip
East, that he came with no ready money and
in a rather dilapidated condition. His colleagues
were tempted by his “hayseed” appearance
to “salt” him, as professional slang
terms the process of giving a receiver matter
faster than he can record it. For this purpose,
the new man was assigned to a wire manipulated
by a New York operator famous for his
speed. But there was no fun at all. Notwithstanding
the fact that the New Yorker was
in the game and was doing his most speedy
<span class='pageno' id='Page_230'>230</span>clip, Edison wrote out the long message accurately,
and, when he realized the situation, was
soon firing taunts over the wire at the sender’s
slowness.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Had you patented many things up to the
time of your coming East?” I queried.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Nothing,” said the inventor, ruminatively.
“I received my first patent in 1869.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“For what?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“A machine for recording votes, and designed
to be used in the State Legislature.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I didn’t know such machines were in use,”
I ventured.</p>
<p class='c011'>“They ar’n’t,” he answered, with a merry
twinkle. “The better it worked, the more impossible
it was; the sacred right of the minority,
you know,—couldn’t filibuster if they used
it,—didn’t use it.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Oh!”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes, it was an ingenious thing. Votes were
clearly pointed and shown on a roll of paper,
by a small machine attached to the desk of each
member. I was made to learn that such an
innovation was out of the question, but it
taught me something.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“And that was?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“To be sure of the practical need of, and demand
<span class='pageno' id='Page_231'>231</span>for, a machine, before expending time
and energy on it.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Is that one of your maxims of success?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“It is. It is a good rule to give people
something they want, and they will pay money
to get it.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>HIS ARRIVAL AT THE METROPOLIS</h3>
<p class='c016'>In this same year, Edison removed from Boston
to New York, friendless and in debt on
account of the expenses of his experiment. For
several weeks he wandered about the town
with actual hunger staring him in the face.
It was a time of great financial excitement, and
with that strange quality of Fortunism, which
seems to be his chief characteristic, he entered
the establishment of the Law Gold Reporting
Company just as their entire plant had shut
down on account of an accident in the machinery
that could not be located. The heads of
the firm were anxious and excited to the last
degree, and a crowd of the Wall street fraternity
waited about for the news which came
not. The shabby stranger put his finger on
the difficulty at once, and was given lucrative
employment. In the rush of the metropolis,
a man finds his true level without delay especially
<span class='pageno' id='Page_232'>232</span>when his talents are of so practical
and brilliant a nature as were this young telegrapher’s.
It would be an absurdity to imagine
an Edison hidden in New York. Within a
short time, he was presented with a check for
$40,000, as his share of a single invention—an
improved stock printer. From this time,
a national reputation was assured him. He
was, too, now engaged upon the duplex and
quadruplex systems—systems for sending two
and four messages at the same time over a
single wire,—which were to inaugurate almost
a new era in telegraphy.</p>
<h3 class='c015'>MENTAL CONCENTRATION</h3>
<p class='c016'>Recalling the incident of the Law Gold Reporting
Company, I inquired: “Do you believe
want urges a man to greater efforts, and
so to greater success?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“It certainly makes him keep a sharp look-out.
I think it does push a man along.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Do you believe that invention is a gift, or
an acquired ability?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I think it’s born in a man.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“And don’t you believe that familiarity
with certain mechanical conditions and defects
naturally suggests improvements to any one?”</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_233'>233</span>“No. Some people may be perfectly familiar
with a machine all their days, knowing it
inefficient, and never see a way to improve it.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“What do you think is the first requisite for
success in your field, or any other?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“<i>The ability to apply your physical and
mental energies to one problem incessantly
without growing weary.</i>”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>TWENTY HOURS A DAY</h3>
<p class='c016'>“Do you have regular hours, Mr. Edison?”
I asked.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Oh,” he said, “I do not work hard now.
I come to the laboratory about eight o’clock
every day and go home to tea at six, and then I
study or work on some problem until eleven,
which is my hour for bed.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Fourteen of fifteen hours a day can scarcely
be called loafing,” I suggested.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Well,” he replied, “for fifteen years I have
worked on an average of twenty hours a day.”</p>
<p class='c011'>When he was forty-seven years old, he estimated
his true age at eighty-two, since working
only eight hours a day would have taken
till that time.</p>
<p class='c011'>Mr. Edison has sometimes worked sixty
consecutive hours upon one problem. Then
<span class='pageno' id='Page_234'>234</span>after a long sleep, he was perfectly refreshed
and ready for another.</p>
<h3 class='c015'>A RUN FOR BREAKFAST</h3>
<p class='c016'>Mr. Dickson, a neighbor and familiar, gives
an anecdote told by Edison which well illustrates
his untiring energy and phenomenal endurance.
In describing his Boston experience,
Edison said he bought Faraday’s works on
electricity, commenced to read them at three
o’clock in the morning and continued until his
room-mate arose, when they started on their
long walk to get breakfast. That object was
entirely subordinated in Edison’s mind to
Faraday, and he suddenly remarked to his
friend: “‘Adams, I have got so much to do,
and life is so short, that I have got to hustle,’
and with that I started off on a dead run for my
breakfast.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I’ve known Edison since he was a boy of
fourteen,” said another friend; “and of my
own knowledge I can say he never spent an idle
day in his life. Often, when he should have
been asleep, I have known him to sit up half the
night reading. He did not take to novels or
wild Western adventures, but read works on
mechanics, chemistry, and electricity; and he
<span class='pageno' id='Page_235'>235</span>mastered them too. But in addition to his
reading, which he could only indulge in at odd
hours, he carefully cultivated his wonderful
powers of observation, till at length, when he
was not actually asleep, it may be said he was
learning all the time.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>NOT BY ACCIDENT AND NOT FOR FUN</h3>
<p class='c016'>“Are your discoveries often brilliant intuitions?
Do they come to you while you are
lying awake nights?” I asked him.</p>
<p class='c011'>“I never did anything worth doing by accident,”
he replied, “nor did any of my inventions
come indirectly through accident, except
the phonograph.<SPAN name='r4' /><SPAN href='#f4' class='c019'><sup>[4]</sup></SPAN> No, when I have fully decided
that a result is worth getting, I go about
it, and make trial after trial, until it comes.”</p>
<div class='footnote c020' id='f4'>
<p class='c018'><span class='label'><SPAN href='#r4'>4</SPAN>. </span>“I was singing to the mouthpiece of a telephone,”
said Edison, “when the vibrations of my voice caused a
fine steel point to pierce one of my fingers held just behind
it. That set me to thinking. If I could record
the motions of the point and send it over the same surface
afterward, I saw no reason why the thing would
not talk. I determined to make a machine that would
work accurately, and gave my assistants the necessary
instructions, telling them what I had discovered.
That’s the whole story. The phonograph is the result
of the pricking of a finger.”</p>
</div>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_236'>236</span>“I have always kept,” continued Mr. Edison,
“strictly within the lines of commercially
useful inventions. I have never had any time
to put on electrical wonders, valuable only as
novelties to catch the popular fancy.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>“I LIKE IT—I HATE IT”</h3>
<p class='c016'>“What makes you work?” I asked with
real curiosity. “What impels you to this constant,
tireless struggle? You have shown that
you care comparatively nothing for the money
it makes you, and you have no particular enthusiasm
for the attending fame. What is it?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I like it,” he answered, after a moment of
puzzled expression. “I don’t know any other
reason. Anything I have begun is always on
my mind, and I am not easy while away from
it, until it is finished; and then I hate it.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Hate it?” I said.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he affirmed, “when it is all done
and is a success, I can’t bear the sight of it.
I haven’t used a telephone in ten years, and I
would go out of my way any day to miss an
incandescent light.”<SPAN name='r5' /><SPAN href='#f5' class='c019'><sup>[5]</sup></SPAN></p>
<div class='footnote c020' id='f5'>
<p class='c018'><span class='label'><SPAN href='#r5'>5</SPAN>. </span>“After I have completed an invention,” remarked
Edison, upon another occasion, “I seem to lose interest
in it. One might think that the money value of an invention
constitutes its reward to the man who loves his
work. But, speaking for myself, I can honestly say
this is not so. Life was never more full of joy to me,
than when, a poor boy, I began to think out improvements
in telegraphy, and to experiment with the cheapest
and crudest appliances. But now that I have all the
appliances I need, and am my own master, I continue
to find my greatest pleasure, and so my reward, in the
work that precedes what the world calls success.”</p>
</div>
<div>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_237'>237</span>
<h3 class='c015'>DOING ONE THING EIGHTEEN HOURS IS THE SECRET</h3></div>
<p class='c016'>“You lay down rather severe rules for one
who wishes to succeed in life,” I ventured,
“working eighteen hours a day.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Not at all,” he said. “You do something
all day long, don’t you? Every one does. If
you get up at seven o’clock and go to bed at
eleven, you have put in sixteen good hours,
and it is certain with most men, that they have
been doing something all the time. They have
been either walking, or reading, or writing, or
thinking. The only trouble is that they do it
about a great many things and I do it about
one. If they took the time in question and
applied it in one direction, to one object, they
would succeed. Success is sure to follow such
<span class='pageno' id='Page_238'>238</span>application. The trouble lies in the fact that
people do not have an object—one thing to
which they stick, letting all else go. Success
is the product of the severest kind of mental
and physical application.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>POSSIBILITIES IN THE ELECTRICAL FIELD</h3>
<p class='c016'>“You believe, of course,” I suggested, “that
much remains to be discovered in the realm of
electricity?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“It is the field of fields,” he answered. “We
can’t talk of that, but it holds the secrets which
will reorganize the life of the world.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“You have discovered much about it,” I
said, smiling.</p>
<p class='c011'>“Yes,” he said, “and yet very little in comparison
with the possibilities that appear.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>ONLY SIX HUNDRED INVENTIONS</h3>
<p class='c016'>“How many inventions have you patented?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“Only six hundred,” he answered, “but I
have made application for some three hundred
more.”</p>
<p class='c011'>“And do you expect to retire soon, after all
this?”</p>
<p class='c011'>“I hope not,” he said, almost pathetically.
<span class='pageno' id='Page_239'>239</span>“I hope I will be able to work right on to the
close. I shouldn’t care to loaf.”</p>
<h3 class='c015'>HIS COURTSHIP AND HIS HOME</h3>
<p class='c016'>The idea of the great electrician’s marrying
was first suggested by an intimate friend, who
told him that his large house and numerous
servants ought to have a mistress. Although
a very shy man, he seemed pleased with the
proposition, and timidly inquired whom he
should marry. The friend, annoyed at his apparent
want of sentiment, somewhat testily replied,—“Anyone.”
But Edison was not without
sentiment when the time came. One day,
as he stood behind the chair of a Miss Stillwell,
a telegraph operator in his employ, he was not
a little surprised when she suddenly turned
round and said:</p>
<p class='c011'>“Mr. Edison, I can always tell when you are
behind me or near me.”</p>
<p class='c011'>It was now Miss Stillwell’s turn to be surprised,
for, with characteristic bluntness and
ardor, Edison fronted the young lady, and,
looking her full in the face, said:</p>
<p class='c011'>“I’ve been thinking considerably about you
of late, and, if you are willing to marry me, I
would like to marry you.”</p>
<p class='c011'><span class='pageno' id='Page_240'>240</span>The young lady said she would consider the
matter, and talk it over with her mother. The
result was that they were married a month later,
and the union proved a very happy one.</p>
<p class='c011'>It was in fact no more an accident than other
experiments in the Edison laboratory—his
bride having been long the subject of the Wizzard’s
observation—her mental capacity, her
temper and temperament, her aptitude for
home-making being duly tested and noted.</p>
<div class='pbb'>
<hr class='pb c004' /></div>
<div class='figcenter id004'>
<ANTIMG src='images/i241fp.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
<div class='ic004'>
<p><i>General Lew Wallace in his study.</i><br/>(<i>See page <SPAN href='#Page_241'>241</SPAN>.</i>)</p>
</div>
</div>
<span class='pageno' id='Page_241'>241</span>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />