登陆注册
5364000000044

第44章 CHAPTER VII THE TELEPHONE AND NATIONAL EFFICIENCY(

The larger significance of the telephone is that it completes the work of eliminating the hermit and gypsy elements of civilization.

In an almost ideal way, it has made intercommunication possible without travel. It has enabled a man to settle permanently in one place, and yet keep in personal touch with his fellows.

Until the last few centuries, much of the world was probably what Morocco is to-day--a region without wheeled vehicles or even roads of any sort. There is a mythical story of a wonderful speaking-trumpet possessed by Alexander the Great, by which he could call a soldier who was ten miles distant; but there was probably no substitute for the human voice except flags and beacon-fires, or any faster method of travel than the gait of a horse or a camel across ungraded plains. The first sensation of rapid transit doubtless came with the sailing vessel; but it was the play-toy of the winds, and unreliable. When Columbus dared to set out on his famous voyage, he was five weeks in crossing from Spain to the West Indies, his best day's record two hundred miles. The swift steamship travel of to-day did not begin until 1838, when the Great Western raced over the Atlantic in fifteen days.

As for organized systems of intercommunication, they were unknown even under the rule of a Pericles or a Caesar. There was no post office in Great Britain until 1656--a generation after America had begun to be colonized. There was no English mail-coach until 1784; and when Benjamin Franklin was Postmaster General at Philadelphia, an answer by mail from Boston, when all went well, required not less than three weeks.

There was not even a hard-surface road in the thirteen United States until 1794; nor even a postage stamp until 1847, the year in which Alexander Graham Bell was born. In this same year Henry Clay delivered his memorable speech on the Mexican War, at Lexington, Kentucky, and it was telegraphed to The New York Herald at a cost of five hundred dollars, thus breaking all previous records for news-gathering enterprise.

Eleven years later the first cable established an instantaneous sign-language between Americans and Europeans; and in 1876 there came the perfect distance-talking of the telephone.

No invention has been more timely than the telephone. It arrived at the exact period when it was needed for the organization of great cities and the unification of nations. The new ideas and energies of science, commerce, and cooperation were beginning to win victories in all parts of the earth. The first railroad had just arrived in China; the first parliament in Japan; the first constitution in Spain. Stanley was moving like a tiny point of light through the heart of the Dark Continent. The Universal Postal Union had been organized in a little hall in Berne. The Red Cross movement was twelve years old. An International Congress of Hygiene was being held at Brussells, and an International Congress of Medicine at Philadelphia. De Lesseps had finished the Suez Canal and was examining Panama. Italy and Germany had recently been built into nations; France had finally swept aside the Empire and the Commune and established the Republic. And what with the new agencies of railroads, steamships, cheap newspapers, cables, and telegraphs, the civilized races of mankind had begun to be knit together into a practical consolidation.

To the United States, especially, the telephone came as a friend in need. After a hundred years of growth, the Republic was still a loose confederation of separate States, rather than one great united nation. It had recently fallen apart for four years, with a wide gulf of blood between;and with two flags, two Presidents, and two armies. In 1876 it was hesitating halfway between doubt and confidence, between the old political issues of North and South, and the new industrial issues of foreign trade and the development of material resources. The West was being thrown open. The Indians and buffaloes were being driven back. There was a line of railway from ocean to ocean. The population was gaining at the rate of a million a year. Col-orado had just been baptized as a new State.

And it was still an unsolved problem whether or not the United States could be kept united, whether or not it could be built into an organic nation without losing the spirit of self-help and democracy.

It is not easy for us to realize to-day how young and primitive was the United States of 1876. Yet the fact is that we have twice the population that we had when the telephone was invented. We have twice the wheat crop and twice as much money in circulation. We have three times the railways, banks, libraries, newspapers, exports, farm values, and national wealth. We have ten million farmers who make four times as much money as seven million farmers made in 1876. We spend four times as much on our public schools, and we put four times as much in the savings bank. We have five times as many students in the colleges.

And we have so revolutionized our methods of production that we now produce seven times as much coal, fourteen times as much oil and pig-iron, twenty-two times as much copper, and forty-three times as much steel.

There were no skyscrapers in 1876, no trolleys, no electric lights, no gasoline engines, no self-binders, no bicycles, no automobiles.

There was no Oklahoma, and the combined population of Montana, Wyoming, Idaho, and Arizona was about equal to that of Des Moines.

It was in this year that General Custer was killed by the Sioux; that the flimsy iron railway bridge fell at Ashtabula; that the "Molly Maguires"terrorized Pennsylvania; that the first wire of the Brooklyn Bridge was strung; and that Boss Tweed and Hell Gate were both put out of the way in New York.

The Great Elm, under which the Revolutionary patriots had met, was still standing on Boston Common. Daniel Drew, the New York financier, who was born before the American Constitution was adopted, was still alive; so were Commodore Vanderbilt, Joseph Henry, A.

同类推荐
  • 佛说救面然饿鬼陀罗尼神咒经

    佛说救面然饿鬼陀罗尼神咒经

    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。
  • 黄帝内经灵枢

    黄帝内经灵枢

    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。
  • 星阁史论

    星阁史论

    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。
  • 闲情偶寄

    闲情偶寄

    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。
  • Merchant of Venice

    Merchant of Venice

    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。
热门推荐
  • 新混迹记

    新混迹记

    都市小农民的风格,90年代左右及后期的一些故事,贴近生活略加夸张地描述着,一个从贫困山区出来打工的青年,艰辛和成功的生活道路,故事略带幽默,让你感觉着阅读的轻松,生活原本是很相似着的,有可能被你给忽略了。
  • 许地山作品集(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    许地山作品集(中国现代文学名家作品集)

    生本不乐,能够使人觉得稍微安适的,只有躺在床上那几小时,但要在那短促的时间中希冀极乐,也是不可能的事。
  • 君如初见

    君如初见

    谁说女子不如男,在这个异世安月馨必当活出当代女子的潇洒。
  • 婚期已到:老婆哪里逃

    婚期已到:老婆哪里逃

    三年前,我为成全凤凰男老公的事业,放弃工作成为全职主妇。然而等待我的是出轨、冷暴力、背叛和被算计流产的命运。原本正常不过的妇科手术,背后却是惊天阴谋。我失了孩子绝望透顶,白莫庭成为我的救赎,他将最好的捧到我面前,却又让我背上小三的罪名,受尽白眼。在水深火热中挣扎,彷徨,我渐渐的丢了心。当谜底揭晓,最绝望的又该是谁呢?何时婚期已到,与我携手共白头?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 正灵创变

    正灵创变

    天地之间,有十大正灵属性。上古十大强者用十属性创造了强大的职业—正灵者,流传至今,但在天地中,介于十大属性之外的新属性,正缓缓出世。
  • 杀青,青春

    杀青,青春

    本书是一部青春成长励志小说,主要描述了以主人公何小龙为代表的一批80后富裕阶层的子女,被称为“富二代”的大学生在成长过程中的种种经历。他们含着金钥匙出生,没遭遇生活的折磨和社会的伤害,他们违犯校纪、追求女生、酗酒、飙车,他们毫无顾忌的个性、无端的放纵行为引起了社会的非议,于是他们彷徨、苦闷、愤怒、浮躁、骚动、反叛。然而受伤跌倒后,他们并没有放弃对自己心灵的救赎。他们学会自己舔伤,在这些情绪中他们不断成长、不断融入正常的社会生活,并逐步走向成熟。
  • 像我这样的一个读者

    像我这样的一个读者

    独一无二的经典文学作品阅读指南,世界华文文学奖得主西西的私人书单。打开这本无限之书,你可以停留在任何一页上。这是一册很个人的阅读笔记,如同马可·波罗向忽必烈描述自己游历过的奇异城市一样,西西用比译文更流畅的语言重述了当代外国文学中打动人心的故事,向我们介绍她喜欢的略萨、卡尔维诺、马尔克斯、博尔赫斯、格拉斯、杜拉斯、卡彭铁尔、阿斯图里亚斯、鲁尔福、冯内古特……
  • 武境

    武境

    世人修武,三脉分,月读稀,烈日阳,星辉强,武道磨折多,离愁欢喜修武道,世间再乱,三脉合,武帝出,人物阴险狡诈、性格豪爽。
  • 博弈心理学

    博弈心理学

    弗洛伊德曾说过:“任何人都无法保守他内心的秘密。即使他的嘴巴保持沉默,但他的指尖却喋喋不休,甚至他的每一个毛孔都会背叛他。”本书既是一本通俗易懂而又不失准确深刻的心理学读物,同时又为读者提供了一种全新而又实用的博弈论思维。
  • 被诅咒的家族

    被诅咒的家族

    1976年春节刚过,家里便来了三位客人,可以说是稀客。他们是大姑、大姑丈、小姑。虽说是至亲,但父亲过世后,我们再也没有回过老家,非常明确地与老家断绝了关系。所以他们忽然降临,带给我们的更多是惊诧、狐疑,和强烈的陌生、不安。这陌生、不安更多来自这三位客人的严肃、郑重、冷漠。从他们的架势来看,他们显然是有备而来的,是为处理大事而来的。家里顿时弥漫着一种剑拔弩张的气氛。大姑拿出一毛钱,让我带弟弟到小店铺买葱头糖吃,还特意叮咛买回来后就在庭院里吃,别进屋去。我知道她是想把我和弟弟支开。