登陆注册
19880300000272

第272章

The division of the Southern from the Northern States, as far as the post-office was concerned, did not take place till the end of May, l861; and therefore but one month in the year was affected by the actual secession of the South. The gross postal revenue of the States which have seceded was, for the year prior to secession, 1,200,500 dollars, and for that one month of June it would therefore have been a little over 100,000 dollars, or 20,000l. That sum may therefore be presumed to have been abstracted by secession from the gross annual revenue of the post-office. Trade, also, was no doubt injured by the disturbance in the country, and the circulation of letters was, as a matter of course, to some degree affected by this injury; but it seems that the gross revenue of 1861 was less than that of 1860 by only one thirty-sixth. I think, therefore, that we may say, making all allowance that can be fairly made, that the number of letters circulating in the United Kingdom is more than double that which circulates, or ever has circulated, in the United States.

That this is so, I attribute not to any difference in the people of the two countries, not to an aptitude for letter writing among us which is wanting with the Americans, but to the greater convenience and wider accommodation of our own post-office. As I have before stated, and will presently endeavor to show, this wider accommodation is not altogether the result of better management on our part. Our circumstances as regards the post-office have had in them less of difficulties than theirs. But it has arisen in great part from better management; and in nothing is their deficiency so conspicuous as in the absence of a free delivery for their letters.

In order that the advantages of the post-office should reach all persons, the delivery of letters should extend not only to towns, but to the country also. In France all letters are delivered free.

However remote may be the position of a house or cottage, it is not too remote for the postman. With us all letters are not delivered, but the exceptions refer to distant solitary houses and to localities which are almost without correspondence. But in the United States there is no free delivery, and there is no delivery at all except in the large cities. In small towns, in villages, even in the suburbs of the largest cities, no such accommodation is given. Whatever may be the distance, people expecting letters must send for them to the post-office; and they who do not expect them, leave their letters uncalled for. Brother Jonathan goes out to fish in these especial waters with a very large net. The little fish which are profitable slip through; but the big fish, which are by no means profitable, are caught--often at an expense greater than their value.

There are other smaller sins upon which I could put my finger--and would do so were I writing an official report upon the subject of the American post-office. In lieu of doing so, I will endeavor to explain how much the States office has done in this matter of affording post-office accommodation, and how great have been the difficulties in the way of post-office reformers in that country.

In the first place, when we compare ourselves to them we must remember that we live in a tea-cup, and they in a washing-tub. As compared with them we inhabit towns which are close to each other.

Our distances, as compared with theirs, are nothing. From London to Liverpool the line of railway I believe traverses about two hundred miles, but the mail train which conveys the bags for Liverpool carries the correspondence of probably four or five millions of persons. The mail train from New York to Buffalo passes over about four hundred miles, and on its route leaves not one million. Acomparison of this kind might be made with the same effect between any of our great internal mail routes and any of theirs.

Consequently the expense of conveyance to them is, per letter, very much greater than with us, and the American post-office is, as a matter of necessity, driven to an economy in the use of railways for the post-office service which we are not called on to practice.

From New York to Chicago is nearly 1000 miles. From New York to St.

Louis is over 1400. From New York to New Orleans is 1600 miles. Ineed not say that in England we know nothing of such distances, and that therefore our task has been comparatively easy. Nevertheless the States have followed in our track, and have taken advantage of Sir Rowland's Hill's wise audacity in the reduction of postage with greater quickness than any other nation but our own. Through all the States letters pass for three cents over a distance less than 3000 miles. For distances above 3000 miles the rate is ten cents, or five pence. This increased rate has special reference to the mails for California, which are carried daily across the whole continent at a cost to the States government of two hundred thousand pounds a year.

With us the chief mail trains are legally under the management of the Postmaster-General. He fixes the hours at which they shall start and arrive, being of course bound by certain stipulations as to pace. He can demand trains to run over any line at any hour, and can in this way secure the punctuality of mail transportation. Of course such interference on the part of a government official in the working of a railway is attended with a very heavy expense to the government. Though the British post-office can demand the use of trains at any hour, and as regards those trains can make the dispatch of mails paramount to all other matters, the British post-office cannot fix the price to be paid for such work. This is generally done by arbitration, and of course for such services the payment is very high. No such practice prevails in the States. The government has no power of using the mail lines as they are used by our post-office, nor could the expense of such a practice be borne or nearly borne by the proceeds of letters in the States.

同类推荐
  • 净土五会念佛诵经观行仪

    净土五会念佛诵经观行仪

    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。
  • 诗说

    诗说

    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。
  • The Holly-Tree

    The Holly-Tree

    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。
  • 请缨日记

    请缨日记

    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。
  • 雪峰义存禅师语录

    雪峰义存禅师语录

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 末世王者来袭

    末世王者来袭

    末世来临,王者来袭......让她好好地当这个世界的旁观者不行吗?为何要三番五次地打她的主意?只因她那恐怖的实力以及神秘的背景?罢了罢了,待她重活一次,重新走上王者之路......
  • 洪荒召唤

    洪荒召唤

    无聊的李默从古玩店淘到了一个奇怪的卷轴,不小心滴上自己的鲜血却昏了过去,清醒后却发现自己来到了一个奇怪的大陆。这种大陆的战士全部以召唤为业,但之后李默却惊愕的发现穿越到这里的不止自己,马丹!说好的主角光环呢!!!没办法,拿起这个神秘的卷轴,李默毅然决然的踏上了干掉其他穿越者的不归路……
  • 中国共产党早期革命家的故事(之三)

    中国共产党早期革命家的故事(之三)

    本套丛书中收录的人物,都是在创建中华人民共和国的伟大斗争中和领导人民进行社会主义经济建设的伟大事业中立下了丰功伟绩的老一辈无产阶级革命家,都是中华民族几千年历史上涌现出来的风云人的中出类拔萃者。
  • 中华典故(第九卷)

    中华典故(第九卷)

    本书编者在先秦到晚清的文化典籍中穿梭往来,精选出数千则典故,并对每则典故的出处、故事、含义、用法进行了详解。为了方便读者查阅,根据笔画多少对这些典故进行了分类,使读者用起来方便快捷、得心应手。一书在手,尽览中国语言文化的博大精深。
  • 星火大陆

    星火大陆

    九星连珠日,时空逆乱时。宇宙亘古如一,人却永不低头!征服未知本身就是一件愉快的事情不是吗?冷静,睿智,桀骜!在绝对的实力之下,你,还能忍住不颤抖吗?至少用你害怕的神色来逗老子开心吧!!
  • 王爷兴亡,宠妃有责

    王爷兴亡,宠妃有责

    聂臻,宁国史上第一位女太傅,性情多变,对至亲之人笑靥如花,对陌生之人清高冷傲。身为一个打破常规风华正茂的女官,泛滥桃花运自然源源不断而来,她看得眼花缭乱,索性一个不理,安心做好自己的太傅之职!他,宁国最尊贵的王爷,权倾朝野,精心制造与她相遇的机会,怜她爱她,为她编织一个美丽的幻梦城堡,笑意温柔却从不达眼底!经历短暂风雨的洗礼,聂臻美丽的生命更加绚烂如花,光芒四射!苍茫草原,再相遇,已然陌路,问一句,臻儿,你还记得我吗?
  • 再见梦之谷

    再见梦之谷

    读这套书,可以体验到什么是真正的快乐阅读。哦,“开心学校”真开心!仔细阅读这套幽默校园小说,可以帮助孩子们放松心情,跟着作家李志伟娓娓动人的叙述,不知不觉地进入到各种故事场景,这种故事场景及场景里的人物,是孩子们十分熟悉的,因此会使他们感到特别亲切。
  • 幕苍幽愿

    幕苍幽愿

    她身性慵懒,不理世事,却极其有孝心,为了减缓养父母的负担,回到自家祖坟,刨了还不说,费了九牛二虎之力好不容易挖出宝贝,却一招给穿越了?!穿就穿吧,反正这里还是地球离家不远,她怕啥,拐一锅子的古董宝贝拿回家贴补家用就是!
  • 白发死神

    白发死神

    人生!权力!命运!而我一无所有―世界留给我的只有痛苦!孤独!黑暗!我努力的微笑着,可笑!我渴望跟蝴蝶一样的蜕变,从现在开始我是...
  • 卧庐词话

    卧庐词话

    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。