Page:Lectures on Ten British Physicists of the Nineteenth Century.djvu/83

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CHARLES BABBAGE
77

the Ministers acted on their own judgment, but it was not so; Airy, the astronomer at Greenwich, records in his Autobiography that he was consulted and that he pronounced the Difference Engine to be worthless. Naturally the ministry attached great weight to this opinion, for the immediate value of this engine was claimed to be the construction of astronomical and nautical tables.

The portion of the Difference Engine which was put together has been exhibited at various Expositions in London, and is now in the Science and Art Museum at South Kensington; I saw it, and heard it explained, on the occasion of the Loan Exhibition of Scientific Apparatus in 1876. It consists of three columns; each column contained six cages, each cage one figure wheel. Each figure wheel has the numbers 0 to 9 placed around the circumference and may be set by hand at any one of the numbers. The right-hand column is for the resulting number, the middle column for the first difference, and the left-hand column for the second difference. Suppose any sets of proper numbers to be placed upon the three columns, then the mechanism is such that four half turns of the handle—two backwards and two forwards—causes the first difference to be added to the previous result and the second difference to be added to the first difference; hence if the machine printed the results, mere turning of the handle would produce the entire table of numbers or all the results requiring to be interpolated between two given values. To make the portion assembled more useful, slight departures from the general plan were adopted. The three upper wheels of the left-hand column were separated from the rest of the machine and employed to count the natural numbers, that is, to register the number of calculations made and give' the numbers corresponding with the terms of the table computed. A wheel at the top of the central column indicated when each calculation is complete and also the position of the handle when the figure wheel was to be adjusted.

About this time (1829) the Earl of Bridgewater died, leaving a sum of £10,000 to trustees to be expended in the production of books "on the Power, Wisdom, and Goodness of God as