effort than a pair of villagers would make
 over a game at bowls?
Easily as the whole thing seems to be taken,
 there is a vast deal of hidden work that keeps
 the line alive. One main secret of economical
and easy management consists in the
 fact that the Company carries on for itself
 the manufacture of all that it requires for
 daily use. Carriages, waggons, engines, coke
 and gas, are produced on railway premises
 and by railway servants.
Besides the well-known London terminus
 for passengers, the many stations built along
 the lines, and the great termini at Liverpool
 and Manchester, there are connected with
 the railway business goods' depôts at Camden
 Town and Haydon Square, London; at
Manchester, and at three separate spots in
Liverpool. There are also waggon and carriage
 manufactories at Birmingham, rolling-mills
 for rails at Crewe, and locomotive factories
 at Crewe and Wolverton.
We will speak of the last first. The
locomotive depôt at Crewe employs about sixteen
hundred operatives, who are constantly
engaged in the manufacture of new engines and
 tenders. So perfect is their organization and
 their skill that they at some seasons turn out
 a new engine with its accompanying tender
 every week, and seldom produce less than
forty in a year.
The Wolverton factory gives employment
 to about nine hundred workmen, and these
 are engaged solely upon repairs and alterations.
Crewe is the nursery, and Wolverton
 the hospital for locomotives. At the
 Wolverton infirmary may be seen scores of
 the metal steeds laid up, or rather laid down,
 in regular wards, as distinct and orderly and
comfortable as the wards of Saint Bartholomew's.
There is the worn-out ward, the
 ricketty ward, and the ''accidents" ward;
 and there are sundry other wards, in all of
 which locomotives are to be seen undergoing
 cure. Red hot pieces of iron are being forcibly
administered here; holes are being probed,
and nuts screwed on there; steam-hammers
are battering; steam lathes are paring
 the callosities; hundreds of locomotive
surgeons —stalwart, brawny-limbed and iron-
fisted —dress and bind up the cases in their
wards with a tremendous energy. There are
 sickly looking locomotives being fitted with
 brand new insides; there are several, in the
 last stage of collapse, having strong doses of
 copper rivets forced into their systems.
 Metal giants, shakey about the knees, are
 being fitted with new sets of joints. In short,
 there is every conceivable stage of disorder
 to be seen at Wolverton treated by surgeons,
 who are seldom at a loss. In the most
 desperate cases they effect a cure. Ninety-
nine out of every hundred of these battered
patients come out perfectly restored to their
 bereaved stokers, to run upon the rails as
 fast as ever, and with no diminution in their
 healthy appetite for coke and water. Even
 the one incurable among a hundred invalids
 does not entirely perish. By the help of a
 blast furnace and steam-hammer, he is beaten
 young again, and eventually reproduced as
 a new locomotive, called perhaps the
Phœnix.
Nothing is wasted in the railway hospital.
 The broken nails —the very hoof-parings and
 hair-cuttings and mane-trimmings of these
 iron steeds—are turned to useful purposes.
 Odd lumps of iron, crooked bits of boiler-
plate, bruised wheels and fractured spokes
 are heaped in piles upon the blast furnace;
 and, when of a bright white heat are welded
together. Many of these welded masses
 are again exposed to a like heat; and then,
 brought under the action of a great steam
 hammer, become fit for duty as axles, or
 cranks, or anything requiring strength and
temper.
In addition to the kind of work thus indicated
there are, in various parts of the dozen
 acres covered by the hospital at Wolverton,
 many other operations to be watched. Huge
 and solid bars of iron or of copper are there cut
 through whilst cold and hard, as readily as
 a cook snips carrots in her kitchen; engines
 driving wheels of eight feet in diameter may
 be seen placed on a steam-lathe and spun like
humming-tops, whilst shavings fly from their
 hard sides as freely as deal chips. Great
 steam pIanes, too, cut and trim, and smooth
 the most rugged metal surfaces.
Wolverton, having been formed entirely by
the Company, is a railway colony. Not a hut
 stood where Wolverton now is when the
 directors determined to establish their
locomotive hospital. Now, hundreds of pretty
 red-bricked model cottages, a neat model
 church, a model school-room, and an
operatives' library, a mechanics' institute, shops,
 and even an apothecary's store, are there
 established; all neat, clean and orderly, and
 all exclusively belonging to the railway
 world.
At Crewe the works are on a larger scale.
 There, too, the Company has built a little
 town, let out at very low rates to the operatives
and their superintendents. This is the
great North-Western nursery, where
locomotives, still in the first month, are reared
 by means of a steam dietary, and whence
 some of the greatest public characters of
 railway life have issued. Some engines are
 to be seen at Crewe of an entirely new
construction, and of such power, that their
 builders offer to convey the mails by them
 from London to Edinburgh in less than four
 hours.
Much consideration must be taken for the
 food of working locomotives. To keep the
 whole stud of the North-Western Railway
 properly fed, it is required that six enormous
 coke-baking establishments should be at
 work incessantly, the consumption being at
 the rate of a thousand tons a day. Would it
 be possible to conceive any line of road so
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