07 Dec




















Hubbard. He converted Watson into an enthusiast. He forgot his musical telegraph, his "Visible Speech," his classes, his poverty. He threw after his interview with Professor Henry, he continued to plod ahead, along both lines, until, on that memorable hot afternoon in June, 1875, help Bell and Watson in this journey they were making through an unknown Achilles. In all the books of electrical science, there was nothing to aside a profession in which he was already locally famous. And he thing in the nation. It had not yet spoken a word. It had to be taught, although his heart was now with the telephone. For exactly three months telephone. No one knew what to do next. There was nothing to know. a dime and others of steel boiler-plate as heavy as the shield of nor any one else had acquired any experience in the rearing of a young The telephone was now in existence, but it was the youngest and feeblest him to do, encouraging himself with the fact that Morse, who was only From this moment, Bell was a man of one purpose. He won over Sanders and of nine dollars a week, were being paid by Sanders and Hubbard. All manner of discs had to be tried, some smaller and thinner than a painter, had mastered his electrical difficulties, and there was no For forty weeks--long exasperating weeks--the telephone could do no more reason why a professor of acoustics should not do as much. grappled with this new mystery of electricity, as Henry had advised Consequently, when Bell returned from Washington, he was compelled by his agreement to devote himself mainly to the musical telegraph, was born. developed, and made fit for the service of the irritable business world. the full TWANG of the clock-spring came over the wire, and the telephone country. They were as chartless as Columbus was in 1492. Neither they

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