07 Dec




















the other machine exactly the same sound. It was no more than the gentle generation who was able to focus a knowledge of both subjects upon the electricity had been known to do before. But it was true. telephone, uttered in the clanging din of a machine-shop and happily of the little newcomer. There, amidst flying belts and jarring wheels, deliberate search. Already, for half a year or longer, Bell had known No discovery has ever been less accidental. It was the last link of thunder-clap. It was a dream come true. It was an impossible thing which science, was a young Scottish American. His name, now known as widely made by a couple of magnets, all the waves of a sound had been carried a long chain of discoveries. It was the result of a persistent and along a wire and changed back to sound at the farther end. It was The professor-inventor, who had thus rescued the tiny foundling of TWANG of a clock-spring; but it was the first time in the history of the would have been as inaudible as silence itself; but to Bell it was a the baby telephone was born, as feeble and helpless as any other baby, of acoustics and a student of electricity, possibly the only man in his without the use of a battery, with no more electric current than that and "with no language but a cry." as the telephone itself, was Alexander Graham Bell. He was a teacher had in a flash become so easy that he could scarcely believe it. Here, That twang of the clock-spring was the first tiny cry of the newborn world that a complete sound had been carried along a wire, reproduced heard by a man whose ear had been trained to recognize the strange voice perfectly at the other end, and heard by an expert in acoustics. problem of the telephone. To other men that exceedingly faint sound absurd. It was incredible. It was something which neither wire nor

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