登陆注册
19880300000080

第80章

And now for Buffalo, and the elevators. I trust I have made it understood that corn comes into Buffalo, not only from Chicago, of which I have spoken specially, but from all the ports round the lakes: Racine, Milwaukee, Grand Haven, Port Sarnia, Detroit, Toledo, Cleveland, and many others. At these ports the produce is generally bought and sold; but at Buffalo it is merely passed through a gateway. It is taken from vessels of a size fitted for the lakes, and placed in other vessels fitted for the canal. This is the Erie Canal, which connects the lakes with the Hudson River and with New York. The produce which passes through the Welland Canal--the canal which connects Lake Erie and the upper lakes with Lake Ontario and the St. Lawrence--is not transhipped, seeing that the Welland Canal, which is less than thirty miles in length, gives a passage to vessels of 500 tons. As I have before said, 60,000,000 bushels of breadstuff were thus pushed through Buffalo in the open months of the year 1861. These open months run from the middle of April to the middle of November; but the busy period is that of the last two months--the time, that is, which intervenes between the full ripening of the corn and the coming of the ice.

An elevator is as ugly a monster as has been yet produced. In uncouthness of form it outdoes those obsolete old brutes who used to roam about the semi-aqueous world, and live a most uncomfortable life with their great hungering stomachs and huge unsatisfied maws.

The elevator itself consists of a big movable trunk--movable as is that of an elephant, but not pliable, and less graceful even than an elephant's. This is attached to a huge granary or barn; but in order to give altitude within the barn for the necessary moving up and down of this trunk--seeing that it cannot be curled gracefully to its purposes as the elephant's is curled--there is an awkward box erected on the roof of the barn, giving some twenty feet of additional height, up into which the elevator can be thrust. It will be understood, then, that this big movable trunk, the head of which, when it is at rest, is thrust up into the box on the roof, is made to slant down in an oblique direction from the building to the river; for the elevator is an amphibious institution, and flourishes only on the banks of navigable waters. When its head is ensconced within its box, and the beast of prey is thus nearly hidden within the building, the unsuspicious vessel is brought up within reach of the creature's trunk, and down it comes, like a musquito's proboscis, right through the deck, in at the open aperture of the hole, and so into the very vitals and bowels of the ship. When there, it goes to work upon its food with a greed and an avidity that is disgusting to a beholder of any taste or imagination. And now I must explain the anatomical arrangement by which the elevator still devours and continues to devour, till the corn within its reach has all been swallowed, masticated, and digested. Its long trunk, as seen slanting down from out of the building across the wharf and into the ship, is a mere wooden pipe;but this pipe is divided within. It has two departments; and as the grain-bearing troughs pass up the one on a pliable band, they pass empty down the other. The system, therefore, is that of an ordinary dredging machine only that corn and not mud is taken away, and that the buckets or troughs are hidden from sight. Below, within the stomach of the poor bark, three or four laborers are at work, helping to feed the elevator. They shovel the corn up toward its maw, so that at every swallow he should take in all that he can hold. Thus the troughs, as they ascend, are kept full, and when they reach the upper building they empty themselves into a shoot, over which a porter stands guard, moderating the shoot by a door, which the weight of his finger can open and close. Through this doorway the corn runs into a measure, and is weighed. By measures of forty bushels each, the tale is kept. There stands the apparatus, with the figures plainly marked, over against the porter's eye; and as the sum mounts nearly up to forty bushels he closes the door till the grains run thinly through, hardly a handful at a time, so that the balance is exactly struck. Then the teller standing by marks down his figure, and the record is made.

The exact porter touches the string of another door, and the forty bushels of corn run out at the bottom of the measure, disappear down another shoot, slanting also toward the water, and deposit themselves in the canal boat. The transit of the bushels of corn from the larger vessel to the smaller will have taken less than a minute, and the cost of that transit will have been--a farthing.

But I have spoken of the rivers of wheat, and I must explain what are those rivers. In the working of the elevator, which I have just attempted to describe, the two vessels were supposed to be lying at the same wharf on the same side of the building, in the same water, the smaller vessel inside the larger one. When this is the case the corn runs direct from the weighing measure into the shoot that communicates with the canal boat. But there is not room or time for confining the work to one side of the building. There is water on both sides, and the corn or wheat is elevated on the one side, and reshipped on the other. To effect this the corn is carried across the breadth of the building; but, nevertheless, it is never handled or moved in its direction on trucks or carriages requiring the use of men's muscles for its motion. Across the floor of the building are two gutters, or channels, and through these, small troughs on a pliable band circulate very quickly.

They which run one way, in one channel, are laden; they which return by the other channel are empty. The corn pours itself into these, and they again pour it into the shoot which commands the other water. And thus rivers of corn are running through these buildings night and day. The secret of all the motion and arrangement consists, of course, in the elevation. The corn is lifted up; and when lifted up can move itself and arrange itself, and weigh itself, and load itself.

I should have stated that all this wheat which passes through Buffalo comes loose, in bulk. Nothing is known of sacks or bags.

To any spectator at Buffalo this becomes immediately a matter of course; but this should be explained, as we in England are not accustomed to see wheat traveling in this open, unguarded, and plebeian manner. Wheat with us is aristocratic, and travels always in its private carriage.

Over and beyond the elevators there is nothing specially worthy of remark at Buffalo. It is a fine city, like all other American cities of its class. The streets are broad, the "blocks" are high, and cars on tramways run all day, and nearly all night as well.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • Barrack-Room Ballads

    Barrack-Room Ballads

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 礼法华经仪式

    礼法华经仪式

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 铁血江湖

    铁血江湖

    这是一部现代山东黑帮20年的隐秘发展史。20世纪80年代,正值国家严打,待业青年元庆、向春满、胡金、古大彬因为一次斗殴被判入狱。在狱中,元庆因种种原因与人结怨。刑满后,元庆伺机报复的同时,对方也在寻找机会复仇。于是,双方展开一场血腥的江湖混战……
  • 战天道

    战天道

    【我自有道,战天之道。】秦辰,本是帝国太子,虽英明神武,一人之下万人之上,却因丹田残废而不能修武,成天下第一废人。在一次生死大战中,他竟意外引发上古大阵,得天命传承,重塑身体。……是命运选择了我,还是说,这个世道让我活着就是一个错。……就算我一无所有,就算天下神魔皆与我为敌,无所谓,因为我有兄弟在!还有她们!……PS:犯我者!毁我者!我一定会强势归来!读者群【潜龙勿用】,天君孤身站于门前相迎,群号:177729429
  • 绝品大闲人

    绝品大闲人

    身为现代人的林夕水穿越了,穿越到一个未知的大云朝。他不想改变世界,二世为人的他只想赚点小钱,成为乡下土财主,领着一群狗奴才,上街调戏良家妇女。可人太出色也是种罪过,大云朝正因为他的到来,而悄然改变着。本书主角很有节(wu)操(chi),道(bei)德(bi)高(xia)尚(liu)。大家可以放心阅读。
  • 一学就会做宵夜

    一学就会做宵夜

    《一学就会做宵夜》精选了近百种宵夜的做法,实用性强,操作方便,制作简单,一学就会,是喜欢吃宵夜和经营宵夜的人士的必需读本。
  • 今天开始扮恶魔

    今天开始扮恶魔

    面对身材劲爆的恶魔姐姐,面对成熟风韵的恶魔母亲,徐飞将如何面对同居一室的恶魔们?人类的肉体、恶魔的心灵,当肉体的欲望吞噬了理智的堤防,黑暗的笼罩就将渗入人心。他能摆脱恶魔的吞噬吗?他能脱离恶魔的蛊惑吗?他能在恶魔的笼罩中苟且偷生卧薪尝胆吗?他能救赎自己的家人吗?
  • 武霸乾坤

    武霸乾坤

    一个二十一世纪的青年,却意外穿越到一个异界大陆!在这里,强者为尊,光怪陆离!好吧,那么就让吾为主宰,天道臣服!
  • 道心凡尘

    道心凡尘

    人真的能成为仙吗?老祖宗说:"能,只要一心向道必能羽化飞升。”可仙是属于那一物种?是人进化后的产物吗?道又是什么?是道路?是道理?还是道可道,非常道?希望本书能为您带来一种新的观点。
  • 四部正讹

    四部正讹

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。