|
Had it been possible for any human intellect, at the
close of the eighteenth century, or the commencement
of this its nineteenth successor, so to grasp and
comprehend the development of science, its expansion
and diffusion, and, above all, its application to the
every-day wants and conveniences of ordinary human
life, as to predict, only fifty years beforehand, anyone
of the almost incredible marvels which have long
ceased to move especial wonder, as being now established
facts, witnessed by all eyes, and of occurrence
at all hours, the owner of that intellect would not
have been merely laughed at as a crazy, crackbrained
enthusiast, but would have run a very reasonable
chance of being consigned to the cell of a
madhouse, as an incorrigible and incurable monomaniac.
The writer of these lines, lacking several years yet
of the completion' of his tenth lustre, clearly remembers
how, within thirty years at furthest, to assert an
opinion of the feasibility of lighting streets by gas
was to be sneered at for a visionary, or regarded with
suspicion as a probable speculator in the fancy, even
by the best informed, and most enlightened classes.
To the youngest of his readers the dictum of the
then infallible Doctor Dionysills Lardner against the
possibility of Ocean Steam Navigation-for, deny it
now as he may, he can be clearly convicted of its
utterance-is familiar as a household word.
And now, what insigniticant town, to say nothing
of innumerable private dwelling, innumerable factories
and workshops, prison houses, as it were, and
ergasteria, would it were otherwise! of plebeian
labor, innumerable theatres, assembly-halls, and banquet-
rooms, abodes of patrician pleasure, are not
ablaze through the murkiest midnight, and light as
the broadest day, with the released and radiant spirit,
that lay so long enthralled and unsuspected in the
hard heart of the swart coal mine ?
And now, with what quarter of the world are we
not in daily, if not hourly, communication by the
united agencies of those two most irreconcilable
powers, fire and water?
Hardly one century has elapsed since the American
Franklin revealed to the admiring world the scareely
suspected fact, that the subtle spark elicited from the
electrifying magazine. or from the hairs of a cat,
rubbed contrariwise to their direction, is identical
with the sovereign, all-pervading flash,
" Which issues from the loaded cloud,
And rives the oak asunder."
And now, at this day, we sit quietly engaged in our
study, or stand, even, as it may be, laboriously plying
our trade of manual labor, and send that very lightning-
flash, a tamed domestic influence, nay, but a
very slave and pack-horse to our will, to speed our
tidings to New Orleans, or to Newfoundland, and to
bring us back the answer, before a second hour has
lagged round the dial.
Time was, nor very long ago, when to receive
news from Europe within thirty days, was esteemed
a feat, if not a miracle, on the part of the carriers,
Now, or ere a second summer shall have passed, the
electric telegraph will be in operation to Cape Racc. the
south-easternmost point of Newfoundland, and mail
steamers will be cleaving the Atlantic far to the
northward, to and fro, from the green shores of Galway.
Then, within seven days at the utmost, the
news of farthest Europe, news from the Vistula, the
Danube, and the Don; news from the Tartar and the
Turk, shall he sped, more swiftly than though they
"had taken the wings of the morning," to the uttermost
parts of America, shall be read almost simultaneously
on the shores of the Atlantic and Pacific,
and sent far aloof among the oceanic isles of the
southern hemisphere, even to drowsy China and remote
Taprobane, by the almost unearthly powers of
steam and electricity, and last: not least, the press.
The word is out-we have said it-the press-a
kindred, not antagonistic, scarcely even rival, power
to the two mighty elements we have named-since
it has pressed both into its service; and itself, purely
human in its origin, its influence, and its importance,
purely material in "its age and body, form and pressure,"
derives most of its incalculable puissance from
the cooperation and subservience of the two mightiest.
most unearthly, most immaterial, and most spiritual of
essences, existing, or ,vhich have existed, in the universe.
But we are not about to write an essay on the
power, the infuence, the utility of the press. These
are too generally appreciated and acknowledged, to
render a single paragraph necessary. In the two
first particulars of power and influence, the press is
incomparable-not to be equaled by any instrument
or agency of humanity that ever has existed. The
extent of its utility-although still unquestionable-is
limited and diminished," cribbed. confined," and curtailed
by the weakness, the willfulness, and the wickedness
of the very many men, unfit and evil-minded,
who have thrust themselves forward, assuming to
conduct it, and through it the Public mind, with no
ulterior object nobler or higher than the misapplication
of the weight and moral power with which it
invests them, to all sorts of immorality and wrong,
to which avarice, rapacity, ambition, and the insanc
desire of demagogueism may impel them.
This is, however, only to a limit that the press is an
agency of time and mortality; and as such liable, of a
necessity, to be perverted. Perhaps it is rather to be
wondered, that there are few base, dishonest, licentious,
and self-seeking journals in circulation, than
that there are any; and it is clear, that the general
tone of thq reading world is so gradually and greatly
improving, that few of those which now exist receive
any considerable support, unless where they have the
skill to introduce their false doetrines under cover of
some specious sophistry, making them to wear the
semblance of reforms. Even these, it may be observed,
are daily becoming more and more transparent to
the broad and keen eye of the public; and, in proportion
as they are comprchended, lose their ill-acquired
and abused populanty and power,
in one word, the utility of the press, its beneficial
influences, its charities, its diffusion of knowledge and
true light, and its general maintenance of the right,
out-balance, as by ten thousand fold, the occasional
obliquities, injustice, falsehood, and advocacy of
devil's doings here on earth: which periodically disgrace
its columns.
|
|