Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 588 pages of information about Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals.

Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 588 pages of information about Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals.

On the 7th of August, Morse, with his wife and their eldest son, a lad of six, joined a large company of friends on board the steamer James Adger which sailed for Newfoundland.  There they were to meet the Sarah L. Bryant, from England, with the cable which was to be laid across the Gulf of St. Lawrence.  The main object of the trip was a failure, like so many of the first attempts in telegraphic communication, for a terrific storm compelled them to cut the cable and postpone the attempt, which, however, was successfully accomplished the next year.

The party seems to have had a delightful time otherwise, for they were feted wherever they stopped, notably at Halifax, Nova Scotia, and St. Johns, Newfoundland.  At the latter place a return banquet was given on board the James Adger, and the toastmaster, in calling on Morse for a speech, recited the following lines:—­

“The steed called Lightning (say the Fates)
Was tamed in the United States. 
’T was Franklin’s hand that caught the horse,
’T was harnessed by Professor Morse.”

To turn again for a moment to the darker side of the picture of those days, it must be kept in mind that annoying litigation was almost constant, and in the latter part of 1855 a decision had been rendered in favor of F.O.J.  Smith, who insisted on sharing in the benefits of the extension of the patent, although, instead of doing anything to deserve it, he had done all in his power to thwart the other patentees.  Commenting on this in a letter to Mr. Kendall of November 22, 1855, Morse, pathetically and yet philosophically, says:—­

“Is there any mode of arrangement with Smith by which matters in partnership can be conducted with any degree of harmony?  I wish him to have his legal rights in full, however unjustly awarded to him.  I must suffer for my ignorance of legal technicalities.  Mortifying as this is it is better, perhaps, to suffer it with a good grace and even with cheerfulness, if possible, rather than endure the wear and tear of the spirits which a brooding over the gross fraud occasions.  An opportunity of setting ourselves right in regard to him may be not far off in the future.  Till then let us stifle at least all outward expressions of disgust or indignation at the legal swindle.”

And, with the keen sense of justice which always actuated him, he adds in a postscript:  “By the by, if Judge Curtis’s decision holds good in regard to Smith’s inchoate right, does it not equally hold good in regard to Vail, and is he not entitled to a proportionate right in the extension?”

During the early months of 1856 the financial affairs of the inventor had so far been straightened out that he felt at liberty to leave the country for a few months’ visit to Europe.  The objects of this trip were threefold.  He wished, as electrician of the Cable Company, to try some experiments over long lines with certain English scientists, with a view to determining beyond peradventure the practicability

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Samuel F. B. Morse, His Letters and Journals from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.