

Dreading even a gentle gust at first, for fear it might overturn them, they have gained so rapidly in skill that, thanks to their experience and the stability of their machines, the airmen of to-day will do battle with a gale. So, also, in regard to their enemy the wind. At first men dared only to fly above a smooth-surfaced aerodrome, in case their motors should stop and send them gliding back to earth but soon, gaining confidence in themselves and in their engines, they were passing high across country. The world being given thus an aeroplane which would fly, the steps which followed were mainly those of perfection and improvement. Their diligent study is described their perfected glider the building of their own motor and, finally, that great day of triumph which came in 1903-just eleven years ago.


This stage, of course, introduces Otto Lilienthal-the German engineer who, by his gliding flights from hilltops with outstretched, bird-like wings, has won the honour of being styled “the father of the aeroplane.”įrom a narration of his work, so vital a link in the chain of progress, the story passes to those two men-unflurried, reserved, and infinitely painstaking-who at last evolved order out of chaos: Wilbur and Orville Wright. First there is the story of the very early and haphazard tests, and of the notes and speculations of scientists then of the advent of the practical, patient experimenter-the man who, taking a hint from the birds, realized that ere he could hope to fly he must learn first to balance himself when in the air. The book divides itself naturally into sections.
#Middle school sudende for liking a photo gun series#
With this strongly human note, emphasizing the romance of the tale, there goes also a series of explanations-made clearer by drawings and diagrams-and tending always to show how, link by link and step by step, data and experience were secured how each pioneer, however humble, played his individual and useful part and how in the end, by sifting all such knowledge and carrying experiment to its final stage, the Wrights achieved the apparent miracle, and flew safely and successfully in a power-driven machine. Instead of being a compilation of dates, with certain explanatory matter added, our book endeavours to make these men live: to show what induced them to embark upon their seemingly hopeless quest to tell of their dreams and longings, and how they built their first frail craft to trace them to their boyhood and their play with kites to reveal them, in a word, as living beings, and not merely as names. There is one aspect of this history which has an especial fascination and it is the personality of the men who-braving ridicule and scorn and surmounting obstacles without number-laid the foundation-stones of flight. Our aim in these pages is to tell a complete story of the aerial conquest, beginning from crude experiments, made hundreds of years ago passing thence to the first serious experimenters, with their difficulties and triumphs and so carrying on the tale to present-day achievements and the latest-type machines.
