登陆注册
38544000000059

第59章 CHAPTER IX THE FUTURE OF THE TELEPHONE(5)

Thus it happened that when Bell invented the telephone, he surprised the world with a new idea. He had to make the thought as well as the thing. No Jules Verne or H. G. Wells had foreseen it. The author of the Arabian Nights fantasies had conceived of a flying carpet, but neither he nor any one else had conceived of flying conversation. In all the literature of ancient days, there is not a line that will apply to the telephone, except possibly that expressive phrase in the Bible, "And there came a voice."In these more privileged days, the telephone has come to be regarded as a commonplace fact of everyday life; and we are apt to forget that the wonder of it has become greater and not less;and that there are still honor and profit, plenty of both, to be won by the inventor and the scientist.

The flood of electrical patents was never higher than now. There are literally more in a single month than the total number issued by the Patent Office up to 1859. The Bell System has three hundred experts who are paid to do nothing else but try out all new ideas and inventions; and before these words can pass into the printed book, new uses and new methods will have been discovered. There is therefore no immediate danger that the art of telephony will be less fascinating in the future than it has been in the past. It will still be the most alluring and elusive sprite that ever led the way through a Dark Continent of mysterious phenomena.

There still remains for some future scientist the task of showing us in detail exactly what the telephone current does. Such a man will study vibrations as Darwin studied the differentiation of species. He will investigate how a child's voice, speaking from Boston to Omaha, can vibrate more than a million pounds of copper wire; and he will invent a finer system of time to fit the telephone, which can do as many different things in a second as a man can do in a day, transmitting with every tick of the clock from twenty-five to eighty thousand vibrations. He will deal with the various vibrations of nerves and wires and wireless air, that are necessary in conveying thought between two separated minds. He will make clear how a thought, originating in the brain, passes along the nerve-wires to the vocal chords, and then in wireless vibration of air to the disc of the transmitter. At the other end of the line the second disc re-creates these vibrations, which impinge upon the nerve-wires of an ear, and are thus carried to the consciousness of another brain.

And so, notwithstanding all that has been done since Bell opened up the way, the telephone remains the acme of electrical marvels. No other thing does so much with so little energy. No other thing is more enswathed in the unknown.

Not even the gray-haired pioneers who have lived with the telephone since its birth, can understand their protege. As to the why and the how, there is as yet no answer. It is as true of telephony to-day as it was in 1876, that a child can use what the wisest sages cannot comprehend.

Here is a tiny disc of sheet-iron. I speak--it shudders. It has a different shudder for every sound. It has thousands of millions of different shudders. There is a second disc many miles away, perhaps twenty-five hundred miles away.

Between the two discs runs a copper wire. As I speak, a thrill of electricity flits along the wire.

This thrill is moulded by the shudder of the disc.

It makes the second disc shudder. And the shudder of the second disc reproduces my voice.

That is what happens. But how--not all the scientists of the world can tell.

The telephone current is a phenomenon of the ether, say the theorists. But what is ether? No one knows. Sir Oliver Lodge has guessed that it is "perhaps the only substantial thing in the material universe"; but no one knows. There is nothing to guide us in that unknown country except a sign-post that points upwards and bears the one word--"Perhaps." The ether of space!

Here is an Eldorado for the scientists of the future, and whoever can first map it out will go far toward discovering the secret of telephony.

Some day--who knows?--there may come the poetry and grand opera of the telephone.

Artists may come who will portray the marvel of the wires that quiver with electrified words, and the romance of the switchboards that trem-ble with the secrets of a great city. Already Puvis de Chavannes, by one of his superb panels in the Boston Library, has admitted the telephone and the telegraph to the world of art.

He has embodied them as two flying figures, poised above the electric wires, and with the following inscription underneath: "By the wondrous agency of electricity, speech dashes through space and swift as lightning bears tidings of good and evil."But these random guesses as to the future of the telephone may fall far short of what the reality will be. In these dazzling days it is idle to predict. The inventor has everywhere put the prophet out of business. Fact has outrun Fancy. When Morse, for instance, was tacking up his first little line of wire around the Speedwell Iron Works, who could have foreseen two hundred and fifty thousand miles of submarine cables, by which the very oceans are all aquiver with the news of the world? When Fulton's tiny tea-kettle of a boat steamed up the Hudson to Albany in two days, who could have foreseen the steel leviathans, one-sixth of a mile in length, that can in the same time cut the Atlantic Ocean in halves? And when Bell stood in a dingy workshop in Boston and heard the clang of a clock-spring come over an electric wire, who could have foreseen the massive structure of the Bell System, built up by half the telephones of the world, and by the investment of more actual capital than has gone to the ****** of any other industrial association? Who could have foreseen what the telephone bells have done to ring out the old ways and to ring in the new; to ring out delay, and isolation and to ring in the efficiency and the friendliness of a truly united people?

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 请陈先生爱我一次

    请陈先生爱我一次

    许荏苒爱上了陈湘毅,初中三年,高中三年,大学四年,许荏苒仍然爱着陈湘毅,陈湘毅爱上了许荏苒,可是,许荏苒已经走了,几年后,许荏苒带着流量回归,带着自己的初心寻找陈湘毅,在酒店里,壁咚了陈湘毅,说“陈先生,请你继续爱我”
  • 大学那点破事

    大学那点破事

    作为当代大学生所必须经历和不必经历的故事——年轻人的热血和激情,女生们的暗斗和张扬。一个小女子的大学奋斗史,是现代大学生的真实成长。80,90纯真现实的大学生活,记忆深处里那最柔弱,美好,伤痛的回忆,怀念青春的稚嫩,慰藉成长后的自己。当时的年少和疯狂,是成长后最美好的留恋。。。。。。少年不识愁滋味,为赋新词强说愁。如今识得愁滋味,却道天凉好个秋。
  • 圣雅学院:冷酷少爷的甜心丫头

    圣雅学院:冷酷少爷的甜心丫头

    楚莫惜是个平凡的不能再平凡的丫头了,但是,因为成绩优异进了圣雅学院。一场贵公子与穷丫头的戏码开始上演。偶买噶,这个人居然是大明星诶~“从经纪人给我好好当起!”楚莫惜表示很无语,这个人太冷了吧?和名字一模一样!接下来,会是什么样的呢?
  • 我能复刻万物

    我能复刻万物

    穿越后,顾小东的识海里出现一个奇异的空间。灵丹仙药,可以复刻,每天管饱!灵石符咒,可以复刻,拿去花掉!天材地宝,可以复刻,尽情打造!法宝?也能复刻!“来吧,让我们的法宝同归于尽!”顾小东喝道。“什么?”对手目瞪口呆,“明明拼完了,你怎么还有一件同样的法宝?”
  • Fly!羁绊之篮

    Fly!羁绊之篮

    本来想画成漫画的,但是因为本人并非是美术专业,再加上做漫画需要的成本较大,所以还是觉得写成小说会现实一些!因为不是专业人员,所以对于篮球上的技术术语神马的不是很了解,会出现超级系的东西,还希望大家可以接受!
  • 网游之原罪

    网游之原罪

    欲望和贪婪是衍生罪恶的温床,当人简单的只需要为生存搏斗、拼杀时,那是我们必须要救赎自己,经历苦难的原罪。没有缠绵悱恻,只是一个男人为了生存要经历的困苦磨难……
  • 弹道导弹防御计划与国际安全

    弹道导弹防御计划与国际安全

    本书内溶涉及美国战略防御思想的历史沿革以及后冷战时代美国国内政治与导弹防御计划之间的关系涉及了国际军控、导弹管制国际机制、美俄关系、美欧关系、中美关系以及东亚地区安全等若干领域。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 爵少的专属情人:盛宠密爱99秒

    爵少的专属情人:盛宠密爱99秒

    “到底要怎么样你才肯放过我?!”她怒吼一声,水漾的眼眸中充满了无奈。“真抱歉,我可能这一辈子都不会放过你了。”他却轻笑,看着她生气的样子,竟也觉得美的惊心动魄。“……”她僵住,忽然冰冷一笑,“你不就是觉得是我害的她丢了命吗?好,朱景琛,她的命,我还给你!”“她的命,你永远也还不起。顾伊人,我只要你留在我的身边,生生世世。”他依旧在笑,唇边却是那样的嗜血,可怕的仿佛是从地狱走出的修罗。
  • 快穿之继承者她不在线

    快穿之继承者她不在线

    [女扮男装,无男主]易殊是个女生,一位女主神,在她老妈的希望下,她女扮男装成为她老爹的“完美”继承者穿越时空完成修补裂缝的任务。无意间,身后已经聚集了一大片迷弟迷妹。“别跟着我,我只想安安静静的做个继承人。”“您说什么我们听不见……”