In the Canadian department I heard ' To be or not to be ' — ' there's the rub,' through an electric telegraph wire; but, scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights, and gave me passages taken at random from the New York... A Manual of Telephony - Page 3by William Henry Preece, Arthur James Stubbs - 1893 - 508 pagesFull view - About this book
| James Samuelson, William Crookes - Science - 1876 - 606 pages
...relay, and then turned adrift as needlessly delicate for that. In the Canadian department he^heard " To be or not to be — there's the rub," through an...electric articulation rose to higher flights, and gave him passages taken at random from the New York newspapers with unmistakable distinctness by the thin... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - Science - 1877 - 826 pages
...to the helot work of recording from a relay, and then turned adrift aa needlessly delicate for that. In the Canadian Department I heard " To be or not to be there's the rub,'' through an electric telegraph wire ; but, scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights, and... | |
| Institution of Electrical Engineers - Electrical engineering - 1877 - 614 pages
...who in his opening address to Section A at the British Association at Glasgow thus referred to it : " In the Canadian Department I heard ' To be or not to be ... there's the rub,' through an electric telegraph wire ; but, scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights, and... | |
| Electricity - 1877 - 634 pages
...who in his opening address to Section A at the British Association at Glasgow thus referred to it : " In the Canadian Department I heard ' To be or not to be ... there's the rub,' through an electric telegraph wire ; but, scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights, and... | |
| English periodicals - 1877 - 796 pages
...Exhibition : — " In the Canadian department " (for Prof. Bell was not at the time an American citizen) "I heard 'To be or not to be — there's the rub,' through the electric wire ; but, scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights,... | |
| comte Th Du Moncel - Microphone - 1879 - 288 pages
...and, with some improvements in detail, this instrument is evidently capable of a fourfold delivery. In the Canadian department I heard ' To be or not to be ? There's the rub,' uttered through a telegraphic wire, and its pronunciation by electricity only made the rallying tone... | |
| 1885 - 1076 pages
...made upon an English student of science, by our progress in discovery and in practical science : ' In the Canadian department, I heard, "To be or not to be," "There's the rub, " through an electric telegraph wire; but scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher nights, and gave... | |
| Edward Nicoll Dickerson - Telephone - 1887 - 186 pages
...pair of instruments and took them home. He stood up in the British Association and showed them, and said: " In the Canadian Department I heard ' To be,...not to be;' 'there's the rub,' through an electric telegraph wire; but scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights and gave... | |
| Edward Nicoll Dickerson - 1887 - 616 pages
...pair of instruments and took them home. He stood up in the British Association and showed them, and said: "In the Canadian Department I heard ' To be,...not to be;' 'there's the rub,' through an electric telegraph wire; but scorning monosyllables, the electric articulation rose to higher flights and gave... | |
| Samuel Adams Drake - Biography - 1887 - 718 pages
...code; and with some improvements in detail this instrument is evidently capable of a fourfold delivery. In the Canadian Department I heard ' To be or not to be ? ... There's the rub,' uttered through a telegraphic wire; and its pronunciation by electricity only made the rallying tone... | |
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