登陆注册
19572800000032

第32章

AGENTS OF COMMUNICATION

Communication is one of man's primal needs.There was indeed a time when no formula of language existed, when men communicated with each other by means of gestures, grimaces, guttural sounds, or rude images of things seen; but it is impossible to conceive of a time when men had no means of communication at all.And at last, after long ages, men evolved in sound the names of the things they knew and the forms of speech; ages later, the alphabet and the art of writing; ages later still, those wonderful instruments of extension for the written and spoken word: the telegraph, the telephone, the modern printing press, the phonograph, the typewriter, and the camera.

The word "telegraph" is derived from Greek and means "to write far"; so it is a very exact word, for to write far is precisely what we do when we send a telegram.The word today, used as a noun, denotes the system of wires with stations and operators and messengers, girdling the earth and reaching into every civilized community, whereby news is carried swiftly by electricity.But the word was coined long before it was discovered that intelligence could be communicated by electricity.It denoted at first a system of semaphores, or tall poles with movable arms, and other signaling apparatus, set within sight of one another.

There was such a telegraph line between Dover and London at the time of Waterloo; and this telegraph began relating the news of the battle, which had come to Dover by ship, to anxious London, when a fog set in and the Londoners had to wait until a courier on horseback arrived.And, in the very years when the real telegraph was coming into being, the United States Government, without a thought of electricity, was considering the advisability of setting up such a system of telegraphs in the United States.

The telegraph is one of America's gifts to the world.The honor for this invention falls to Samuel Finley Breese Morse, a New Englander of old Puritan stock.Nor is the glory that belongs to Morse in any way dimmed by the fact that he made use of the discoveries of other men who had been trying to unlock the secrets of electricity ever since Franklin's experiments.If Morse discovered no new principle, he is nevertheless the man of all the workers in electricity between his own day and Franklin's whom the world most delights to honor; and rightly so, for it is to such as Morse that the world is most indebted.Others knew;Morse saw and acted.Others had found out the facts, but Morse was the first to perceive the practical significance of those facts; the first to take steps to make them of service to his fellows; the first man of them all with the pluck and persistence to remain steadfast to his great design, through twelve long years of toil and privation, until his countrymen accepted his work and found it well done.

Morse was happy in his birth and early training.He was born in 1791, at Charlestown, Massachusetts.His father was a Congregational minister and a scholar of high standing, who, by careful management, was able to send his three sons to Yale College.Thither went young Samuel (or Finley, as he was called by his family) at the age of fourteen and came under the influence of Benjamin Silliman, Professor of Chemistry, and of Jeremiah Day, Professor of Natural Philosophy, afterwards President of Yale College, whose teaching gave him impulses which in later years led to the invention of the telegraph."Mr.Day's lectures are very interesting," the young student wrote home in 1809; "they are upon electricity; he has given us some very fine experiments, the whole class taking hold of hands form the circuit of communication and we all receive the shock apparently at the same moment." Electricity, however, was only an alluring study.It afforded no means of livelihood, and Morse had gifts as an artist; in fact, he earned a part of his college expenses painting miniatures at five dollars apiece.He decided, therefore, that art should be his vocation.

A letter written years afterwards by Joseph M.Dulles of Philadelphia, who was at New Haven preparing for Yale when Morse was in his senior year, is worth reading here:

"I first became acquainted with him at New Haven, when about to graduate with the class of 1810, and had such an association as a boy preparing for college might have with a senior who was just finishing his course.Having come to New Haven under the care of Rev.Jedidiah Morse, the venerable father of the three Morses, all distinguished men, I was commended to the protection of Finley, as he was then commonly designated, and therefore saw him frequently during the brief period we were together.The father Iregard as the gravest man I ever knew.He was a fine exemplar of the gentler type of the Puritan, courteous in manner, but stern in conduct and in aspect.He was a man of conflict, and a leader in the theological contests in New England in the early part of this century.Finley, on the contrary, bore the expression of gentleness entirely.In person rather above the ordinary height, well formed, graceful in demeanor, with a complexion, if Iremember right, slightly ruddy, features duly proportioned, and often lightened with a genial and expressive smile.He was, altogether, a handsome young man, with manners unusually bland.

It is needless to add that with intelligence, high culture, and general information, and with a strong bent to the fine arts, Mr.

Morse was in 1810 an attractive young man.During the last year of his college life he occupied his leisure hours, with a view to his self-support, in taking the likenesses of his fellow-students on ivory, and no doubt with success, as he obtained afterward a very respectable rank as a portrait-painter.Many pieces of his skill were afterward executed in Charleston, South Carolina."** Prime, "The Life of Samuel F.B.Morse, LL.D.", p.26.

同类推荐
  • 顺中论

    顺中论

    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。
  • 圣善住意天子所问经

    圣善住意天子所问经

    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。
  • 佛说无希望经

    佛说无希望经

    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。
  • 高峰乔松亿禅师语录

    高峰乔松亿禅师语录

    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。
  • 乙酉笔记

    乙酉笔记

    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
  • 火器营往事之八旗子弟们

    火器营往事之八旗子弟们

    北京西郊长河畔有个名叫“外火器营”的村镇。五六十年前,外火器营的大营东门前,绿茵如毯的河岸下,清碧的河水拂捋着如女人长发般的荇藻缓缓自颐和园南宫门水闸流出。两岸垂柳依依,河的边缘高高下下的镶嵌着巨大的、不以人工雕琢的青石块,倘春夏之际信步至此,极目远眺,十里长堤芳草如茵,和风徐来,倦倚大石小憩,清风拂柳,俯观鱼阵,游哉悠哉,真乐事也!遗憾的是,在今天,古老苍凉美丽的火器营旧时的一切均已荡然无存,——或许,你亦可将此书视为一篇“火器营祭”来读读罢。笔者不忍将这些美好回忆仅定格为个人的怀旧,遂于闲暇时记录下儿时所见闻的火器营市井画面,让更多的人与我一同分享我曾经的快乐时光。
  • 我的傲娇总裁老婆

    我的傲娇总裁老婆

    佣兵战场上的绝世枭雄楚飞重返都市,当上美女总裁未婚妻的贴身保镖,楚飞一边护美,一边探索身世之谜……职场上步步为营,情场上各路美女纷至沓来,命运弄人,楚飞陷入职场、情场、战场上的各种漩涡,且看他如何逆转命运,做真正的人生赢家!
  • 我欲成神

    我欲成神

    失意差生高亮做梦都不敢想的事,玩游戏意外穿越到越光宝盒空间,在天使小萝莉指点下练功升级,逐级成神,玩死敌手,本来磨难重重的修炼路也变得顺利起来,神位伸手可得,封神近在咫尺!
  • 薄情总裁:专宠100天

    薄情总裁:专宠100天

    她刚刚考上大学,就多了一个禁欲系的男神老公。说一不二,颜值逆天,脾气暴躁,无比难缠。她还有一个直男癌的婆婆和一个事多的小姑子,生活悲催,她却过得风生水起。老虎的屁股摸不得,她却动上瘾。一天不摸皮痒痒,结果就是被禁欲系的老公按在墙壁上,各种姿势来一遍,到了外面再练习一遍。她摸着酸痛的腰,发誓离家出走。
  • 仙雷

    仙雷

    雷霆至刚至烈,集天地之正气而成,沛然莫能御之。仙资只有二十的李子宇本终身再难踏进仙道之门,一次机缘巧和,得到了一道雷电分身。这道雷电分身妙用无穷,其分裂的混沌雷火是天下底下炼器最好的火焰,再比说,他可以吞噬劫雷……有了这道分身后,李子宇重新踏进了仙道之门。一段淹没在历史禁忌重新掀起滔天的波浪。
  • 无上丹尊

    无上丹尊

    平凡少年,逆势而起,横扫各路,碾压上古神魔,得证无上丹道,成就无上丹尊!
  • 《冰山王子的甜心宝贝》

    《冰山王子的甜心宝贝》

    “丫头”“丫头”“丫头”三位帅哥同时说“我们结婚吧”三女石化中
  • 鸵鸟进化记

    鸵鸟进化记

    都说职场是一门艺术,可叶雪乔发现自己身上居然没有这种艺术细胞。初入职场,叶雪乔便在这个没有硝烟的战场上落花流水。幸好身边有温和的方禹:那就离开,安安静静地做我身边一只小驼鸟吧。几年以后,叶雪乔悲哀地发现,原来鸵鸟把头埋进沙子久了会呼吸不动。她决定重返职场。依然没有硝烟,却是暗流汹涌。万奕说:有人的地方就有江湖,叶雪乔,你虽然有鸵鸟的潜质,但千万别忘了鸵鸟其实还有两条大长腿呢……”好吧,虽然职场猛于虎,她这只鸵鸟只能选择再向虎山行......
  • 我非兵王

    我非兵王

    犯我中华民族利益之外寇,杀无赦!损我中华民族利益之内贼,杀无赦!身怀旷世医术的乡村少年韩钉,为了筹集学费而救了一位身负重伤的老汉,糊里糊涂地卷入了莫名其妙的纷争,在历经了无数曲折经历之后,他才发现——命运原来是掌握在……本书讲述的是一名国家忠诚卫士生前编织的强国之梦……
  • 半魔

    半魔

    狂风席卷,黄沙滚滚。在那片传说中的干涸大地,寻宝者竟自相残杀。暴雨倾盆,天地间蒙蒙一片,鲜红的血在雨水中流淌,尽头……裂缝中那诡异的水晶棺。钢铁一般的男子站在雨中,任风雨鞭挞他的身体。我是谁?谁是我?重生?还是复活?神和魔的传说,一个失去记忆男人的铁血传奇。热血沸腾的故事,开始在这片银河大陆,当神奇双刃斧剖开苍穹,雪亮神剑刺穿大地……那个身穿黑衣的男人,左手斧、右手剑的屹立于天地之间!扣人心弦的故事中,请您不要忽略那个顽皮的黑龙……还有神奇的风兔……还有那些义气当头令人唏嘘的配角,还有……很多很多……半魔唯一群,真喜欢者入:15529994