describing the history of his
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention, "the first printing
machine was completed exactly upon the plan which I have
described in the
specification of my first
patent. It was set to
Work in April, 1811. The sheet (H) of the new Annual Register
for 1810, 'Principal Occurrences,' 3000 copies, was printed with
it; and is, I have no doubt, the first part of a book ever
printed with a machine. The
actual use of it, however, soon
suggested new ideas, and led to the rendering it less complicated
and more powerful"[2]
Of course! No great
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention was ever completed at one effort.
It would have been strange if Koenig had been satisfied with his
first attempt. It was only a
beginning, and he naturally
proceeded with the
improvement of his machine. It took Watt more
than twenty years to
elaborate his condensing
steam-engine; and
since his day, owing to the
perfection of self-acting tools, it
has been greatly improved. The power of the Steamboat and the
Locomotive also, as well as of all other
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
inventions, have been
developed by the
constantly succeeding
improvements of a nation
of
mechanical" target="_blank" title="a.机械的;力学的">
mechanical engineers.
Koenig's experiment was only a
beginning, and he naturally
proceeded with the
improvement of his machine. Although the
platen machine of Koenig's has since been taken up a new, and
perfected, it was not considered by him
sufficiently simple in
its
arrangements as to be adapted for common use; and he had
scarcely completed it, when he was already revolving in his mind
a plan of a second machine on a new principle, with the object of
ensuring greater speed,
economy, and simplicity.
By this time, other
well-known London printers, Messrs. Taylor
and Woodfall, had joined Koenig and Bensley in their partnership
for the manufacture and sale of printing machines. The idea
which now occurred to Koenig was, to employ a
cylinder instead of
a flat Platen machine, for
taking the
impressions off the type,
and to place the sheet round the
cylinder,
thereby making it, as
it were, part of the periphery. As early as the year 1790, one
William Nicholson had taken out a
patent for a machine for
printing "on paper, linen, cotton, woollen, and other articles,"
by means of "blocks, forms, types, plates, and originals," which
were to be "firmly imposed upon a cylindrical surface in the same
manner as common letter is imposed upon a flat stone."[3] From
the mention of "colouring
cylinder," and "paper-hangings,
floor-cloths, cottons, linens, woollens, leather, skin, and every
other
flexible material," mentioned in the
specification, it
would appear as if Nicholson's
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention were adapted for
calico-printing and paper-hangings, as well as for the printing
of books. But it was never used for any of these purposes. It
contained merely the
register of an idea, and that was all. It
was left for Adam Parkinson, of Manchester, to
invent and make
practical use of the
cylinder printing machine for
calico in the
year 1805, and this was still further
advanced by the
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
inventionof James Thompson, of Clitheroe, in 1813; while it was left for
Frederick Koenig to
invent and carry into practical operation the
cylinder printing press for newspapers.
After some
promising experiments, the plans for a new machine on
the cylindrical principle were proceeded with. Koenig admitted
throughout the great benefit he derived from the
assistance of
his friend Bauer. "By the judgment and precision," he said,
"with which he executed my plans, he greatly contributed to my
success." A
patent was taken out on October 30th, 1811; and the
new machine was completed in December, 1812. The first sheets
ever printed with an entirely cylindrical press, were sheets G
and X of Clarkson's 'Life of Penn.' The papers of the Protestant
Union were also printed with it in February and March, 1813. Mr.
Koenig, in his
account of the
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention, says that "sheet M of
Acton's 'Hortus Kewensis,' vol. v., will show the progress of
improvement in the use of the
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention. Altogether, there are
about 160,000 sheets now in the hands of the public, printed with
this machine, which, with the aid of two hands, takes off 800
impressions in the hour"[4]
Koenig took out a further
patent on July 23rd, 1813, and a fourth
(the last) on the 14th of March, 1814. The
contrivance of these
various
arrangements cost the
inventor many
anxious days and
nights of study and labour. But he saw before him only the end
he wished to
compass, and thought but little of himself and his
toils. It may be mentioned that the
principal feature of the
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention was the printing
cylinder in the centre of the machine,
by which the
impression was taken from the types, instead of by
flat plates as in the first
arrangement. The forme was fixed in
a cast-iron plate which was carried to and fro on a table, being
received at either end by strong
spiral springs. A double
machine, on the same principle,--the forme
alternately passing
under and giving an
impression at one of two
cylinders at either
end of the press,--was also included in the
patent of 1811.
How
diligently Koenig continued to
elaborate the details of his
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention will be
obvious from the two last
patents which he took
out, in 1813 and 1814. In the first he introduced an important
improvement in the inking
arrangement, and a
contrivance for
holding and carrying on the sheet, keeping it close to the
printing
cylinder by means of endless tapes; while in the second,
he added the following new expedients: a
feeder, consisting of an
endless web,--an improved
arrangement of the endless tapes by
inner as well as outer friskets,--an
improvement of the
register(that is, one page falling exactly on the back of another), by
which greater
accuracy of
impression was also secured; and
finally, an
arrangement by which the sheet was thrown out of the
machine, printed by the revolving
cylinder on both sides.
The partners in Koenig's Patents had established a manufactory in
Whitecross Street for the production of the new machines. The
workmen employed were sworn to
secrecy. They entered into an
agreement by which they were
liable to
forfeit 100L. if they
communicated to others the secret of the machines, either by
drawings or
description, or if they told by whom or for whom they
were
constructed. This was to avoid the
hostility of the
pressmen, who, having heard of the new
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention, were up in arms
against it, as likely to
deprive them of their
employment. And
yet, as stated by Johnson in his 'Typographia,' the
manual labour
of the men who worked at the hand press, was so
severe and
exhausting, "that the stoutest constitutions fell a sacrifice to
it in a few years." The number of sheets that could be thrown off
was also
extremely limited.
With the improved press, perfected by Earl Stanhope, about 250
impressions could be taken, or l25 sheets printed on both sides
in an hour. Although a greater number was produced in newspaper
printing offices by
excessive labour, yet it was necessary to
have
duplicate presses, and to set up
duplicate forms of type, to
carry on such extra work; and still the production of copies was
quite inadequate to satisfy the rapidly increasing demand for
newspapers. The time was
thereforeevidently ripe for the
adoption of such a machine as that of Koenig. Attempts had been
made by many
inventors, but every one of them had failed.
Printers generally regarded the steam-press as
altogetherchimerical.
Such was the condition of affairs when Koenig finished his
improved printing machine in the manufactory in Whitecross
Street. The partners in the
invention" target="_blank" title="n.创造;发明;虚构">
invention were now in great hopes.
When the machine had been got ready for work, the proprietors of
several of the leading London newspapers were invited to witness
its performances. Amongst them were Mr. Perry of the Morning
chronicle, and Mr. Walter of The Times. Mr. Perry would have
nothing to do with the machine; he would not even go to see it,
for he regarded it as a gimcrack.[5] On the
contrary, Mr.
Walter, though he had five years before declined to enter into