
CHARACTER READ BY DOTS AND DASHES.
One by one the contestants stepped to the test table,
and manipulated the key. There was a tense stillness throughout the
hall, broken when "time" was called by a trill of metallic pulsations read
by most of the audience as from a printed page. The text of the matter
is of no concern, an excerpt from a great speech, a page of blank verse,
or only the "conditions" found at the top of a telegraph form. Speed
and accuracy alone are vital. Forty, forty-five, fifty words a minute
are rattled off seven hundred and fifty motions of the wrist and still
the limit is not reached. The contestants show the same evidences
of strain that characterize the most strenuous physical contest -- the
dilating nostril, the quick or suspended breathing, the starting eye.
Presently a fair-haired young man takes the chair,
self confidence and reserve force in every gesture. Away he goes,
and his transmission is as swift and pure as a mountain stream. "To
guard against mistakes and delays, the sender of a message should order
it repeated back." The audience, enthralled, forgets the speed, and
hearkens only to the beauty of the sending. On and on fly the dots
and dashes, and though it is clear that his pace is not up to that set
by the leaders, nevertheless there is a finish -- an indefinable quality
of perfection in the performance that at the end brings the multitude to
its feet in a spontaneous burst of
applause; such an outburst as might have greeted a great piece of oratory
or acting.
A REBEL BETRAYED BY HIS SOUTHERN ACCENT
A telegrapher's Morse, then, is as distinctive as
his face, his tones, or his handwriting and as difficult to counterfeit
as his voice or writing. Of this individual quality of telegraphese, the
old war telegraphers tell many stories. A Confederate, for example,
encounters on the march, a line of wire which he suspects is being used
by the enemy. He taps the wire, "cuts in" his instruments, and listens.
His surmise is correct; he "grounds off" one or the other end, and, trying
to disguise his style of "sending," makes inquiries calculated to
develop important information. But the Southern accent is recognized
in his Morse by the distant manipulator, who, indeed, may have been a co-worker
in the days "before the war." So the intruder gets only a good humored
chaffing. "The trick won't work, Jim," says the Federal operator.
"Let's shake for old times' sake, and then you 'git' out of this."
In the wire world a telegrapher is known by his
"sign" -- it may be the letter X or Q or &. Now there is certainly
nothing in a mere letter to warm up to, or the reverse; and yet, after
a day or two of this wire acquaintance with a man whom one has never seen,
and whose name one does not know, a conversation, mind you, not of your
own, but of exchanging other persons' telegrams, one gets an idea of the
other's personality as distinct as if there had been personal intercourse;
one feels friendly toward him, or dislikes him. And one's own feeling
toward him is probably shared by every one who has had this wire contact
with him. X or Q or & may thus stand for a distinct personality
in the telegraph world, in the same sense that the name Thackeray or Longfellow
stands for an individuality in the literary world.
A LAUGH ON THE WIRE
Expressed in print a laugh is a bald "ha ha!" that
requires other words to describe its quality. In wire talk the same
form is used, but the manner of rendering it imparts quality to the laughter.
In dot-and-dash converse, as in speech, "ha! ha!" may give an impression
of mirthlessness, of mild amusement, or of convulsion. The double
"i," again, in wire parlance, has a wide range of meaning according to
its rendition. A few double "i's" are used as a prelude to a conversation,
as well as to break the abruptness in ending it. They are also made
to express doubt or acquiescence; and in any hesitation for a word or phrase
are
used to preserve the continuity of a divided sentence. When an
order is given in Morse over the wire, the operator's acknowledgment is
a ringing "ii!" which has the same significance as a sailor's "aye, aye,
sir!"
The man would be put a poor observer of little things
who, after "working a wire" with a stranger at "the other end" for a week,
could not give a correct idea of his distant 'vis-a-vis' disposition and
character. And it would be quite possible for an imaginative operator
to build up a fairly accurate mental image of him, whether he ate with
his knife, or wore his hat cocked on the side of his head, or talked loud
in public places.
A FRIENDSHIP FORMED BY WIRE
Some years ago, in a Southern office, I was assigned
to a "circuit" which had its terminus at the national capital. My fellow
operator at the other end of the wire used the letters "C G" for his wire
signature.
C G's Morse was so clear, even, and rhythmic, his
dots and dashes so perfectly timed and accurately spaced, that I immediately
conceived a cordial liking for him. In a short time this liking, to which
he heartily responded, ripened into a strong and sincere attachment.
My friend's distinct though delicate wire touch made working with him exceedingly
restful. Indeed, every day for months I "received" from him without perceptible
fatigue, or the necessity of "breaking." Almost from the beginning
of our acquaintanceship I fancied that I should know him at sight if I
chanced to meet him. I pictured him a tall, frail man, with the refined
and patient manner of one who has suffered much, his features delicately
molded, his eyes of the kind that kindle quickly when lighted by a smile,
and his mouth ready to apply the torch whenever his sense of humor prompted.
I fancied that I should know his dress, the old fashioned collar; the small
white tie; the thin, rather long, black sack coat.
Some months after our first meeting by wire, I was
called to Washington, and while there I visited the big operating room
of the main office, in order to greet the many friends of other days.
As I made my way about, I kept a sharp lookout for my old wire friend.
I did not ask to have him pointed out, because I wished to see if it were
possible to identify him by my mental photograph. Presently I spied
him, just as I had pictured him. I stood beside him for a moment; then,
touching his shoulder, I held out my hand.
"How do you do, C G? I am very glad to see
you and to have the pleasure of shaking your hand."
Though he was a much older man than I, there was
no lack of respect in my words, for it is not uncommon for one telegrapher
to address another by his "sign."
C G rose with a quiet dignity, and taking my hand
looked down at me over his glasses, his eyes beaming.
"It's H, is it not? I am very glad to meet you,
my son!" And then we fell to chatting, face to face, as we had so often
done by wire.
I never met him again in the flesh. A few
months after my Washington visit I missed him from my wire. In response
to an inquiry I was told that my dear old friend had been seriously injured
in a cable car accident, and that being alone in the world he had been
taken to a hospital for treatment. There he lingered a while, at
times half conscious; then his gentle spirit went out.
I made another trip to Washington, to attend his
funeral; afterward making a visit to the hospital to hear from the head
nurse the story of his injury and death.
"Late in the evening," said the good woman as our
interview was ending, "I was called into his room. He was rapidly
failing, and was talking as if in a dream, two fingers of his right hand
tapping the bedclothes as if he were sending a message. I did not
understand the purport, but perhaps you will. 'You say you can't
read me?' he would say; 'then let H come to the key. He can read and understand
me. Let H come there, please.' Now and again his fingers would cease
moving, as if he were waiting for the right person to answer. Then
he would go on once more: 'Dear me, dear me, this will never do! I want
to talk with H. I have an important message for him. Please
tell him to hurry.' Then would follow another pause, during which
he would murmur to himself regretfully. But at last he suddenly assumed
the manner of one listening intently; then, his face breaking into a smile,
he cried, his fingers keeping time with his words: 'Is that you, H?
I'm so glad you've come! I have a message for you.' And so, his fingers
tapping out an unspoken message, his kindly spirit took its flight."
The nurse's eyes were brimming, and I gulped vainly
at a lump in my throat. After a moment's silence she continued:
"But there was one feature of Mr. G--'s dying talk
that particularly impressed me. While he tapped out his messages
he spoke in a tense half whisper, like one trying to project his voice
through space. Between times, however, in communing with himself,
he spoke in his natural tones. But I noticed that he glided from
one tone to the other, quite as a linguist would in conversing with two
persons of different nationalities."
The head nurse in a hospital had stumbled upon a
discovery which up to this time remains a sealed book to the linguistic
student.
A MISTAKE OF NATURE'S REVEALED.
A woman's Morse is as feminine as her voice or her
handwriting. I have often put to the test my ability to distinguish
between the Morse of a man and that of a woman, and only once have I been
deceived.
On this same Washington "circuit" I one day encountered
a sender at the other end, a stranger, who for hours "roasted" me as I
seldom had been in my telegraphic experience. The dots and dashes
poured from the sounder in a bewildering torrent, and I had the hardest
kind of work to keep up in copying. With all its fearful swiftness
the Morse was clean-clipped and musical, though it had a harsh, staccato
ring which indicated a lack of sentiment and feeling in the transmitter.
From this, and from a certain dash and swagger, I gathered, before the
day was out, a pretty distinct impression of the personality of the transmitter.
I
conceived him to be of a well kept, aggressively clean appearance,
with a shining red complexion and close-cropped hair; one, in brief, whose
whole manner and make-up bespoke the self satisfied sport. That he
wore a diamond in his loudly striped shirt-front I considered extremely
likely, and that he carried a tooth-pick between his lips was morally certain.
Next day I took occasion to make some inquiries
of my fellow operator at Washington.
"Oh, you mean T Y," he said, laughing. "Yes, for
a girl, she is a fly sender."
It was mortifying to find that I had mistaken the
sex of the sender, but I was consoled when I met the young woman.
The high coloring was there, and the self satisfied air; so also were the
masculine tie, the man's vest, and the striped shirt-front. Nor were
the diamond pin and the toothpick wanting. When she introduced herself
by her sign, called me "Culley," and said I was "a crackerjack receiver,"
I was convinced that it was nature, and not I, that had made the mistake
as to her sex.
FEELING FOR A LOST CITY
How powerfully the imagination may be stimulated
by a story told in dots and dashes is illustrated by an episode of the
Charleston earthquake. At the moment of the final shock, every wire
connecting Charleston with the outside world was instantly "lost."
And as no other tidings could be had from the doomed city, it was as if
in an instant it had been swept from the face of the earth. And for
many hours Charleston remained literally dead to the world.
The next morning, before the average citizen had
time to collect his wits, the telegraph people had started out gangs of
linemen to get the wires in working order. Operators in the principal
offices within a radius of several hundred miles were set to calling "C
N." For a long time there was no response; but at last, on the wire
which I had in charge, a slight answering signal was felt, rather than
heard faint and flickering, like the first sign of returning life.
From that moment my watch was, if possible, more diligent. For an
hour or more I called, "adjusted," and used every effort to revive the
feeble pulse. I could fancy myself working desperately to resuscitate
a half-drowned man. Again I felt the flickering signal, and then
once more all signs of life faded away. Finally, as the wires were
gradually cleared of débris, the current began to strengthen, and
then came the answering "ii! C N", weak and unsteady, but still sufficiently
plain to be made out. To me it sounded like a voice from the tomb,
and I shouted aloud the tidings that Charleston was still in existence.
Quickly the sounder was surrounded by a throng of excited telegraphers.
The Morse was broken and unsteady at first. Then the current grew
stronger as the patient was growing better and for a long time we listened
to the labored clicking, until at last the worst was known. And at
the end of the recital a great sigh went out from the hearts of all of
us, as if literally in our presence a long-buried city had been exhumed.
EXCITED SENDING OF EXCITING NEWS
In the reporting of races or games by wire, the Morse imparts a singular vitality to the description. The listening crowd hears the description repeated by mouth from the sounder, and they grow enthusiastic or depressed. But it is the showing of the teams that moves them; there is nothing in the sound of the words to stir them. Not so with the Morse reader, particularly if the distant reporter be clever with his telegraphese. The short, sharp dots and dashes impart a most thrilling quality to his announcements -- a quality that stirs the blood and makes the heart of the receiver thump with excitement. "They're off!" in print is cold and empty compared to its counterpart in Morse uttered at a critical moment. Some indescribable quality in the sound reflects the sender's interest and feeling as no man, not an elocutionist or an actor, would reflect them in voice or gesture.
COMEDIES OF THE MORSE CODE
Telegraphic anecdotes there are in plenty. The difficulty
is so to set them before the reader as to give him an idea of their telegraphic
flavor. Here is one with the flavor partly obscured.
To begin with, it is necessary to say that the letter
E in Morse is a single dot, while an O is two dots slightly spaced.
It should be plain, therefore, that an O imperfectly spaced, or misinterpreted
in receiving, makes the same impression upon the ear as the double E.
Upon this rests the point of the story. I was transmitting a message addressed
to "Gen. Fitz Lee, Washington"; an old comrade of Lee's was sending him
a congratulatory message. As I went ahead "To Gen. Fitz Lee, Washington,"
the receiver
stopped me. "Is that Gen. Fitz Lo?" he queried. "No," I
answered impatiently," it is to Gen. Fitz Lee." "Bk! bk!" (break! break!)
said the receiver; "Gen. Fitz Lee or Gen. Fitz Lo -- it's infernally stupid
of your people to take in a message addressed to a Chinese laundryman in
this town without giving a street number."
The fellow's evident earnestness and his naïveté,
as evidenced in his Morse, made the ejaculation deliciously funny.
The story reached the general, and I afterward heard him tell it at his
own expense. But in the telling, the telegraphic flavor was lost.
THE SLANG OF THE WIRE
Like any other language, Morse has its patois --
a corrupted version of the purer speech used by the inexperienced or by
those to whom nature has denied the finer perceptions of timing and spacing.
This patois might be called "hog-Morse." It would be quite impossible
to give even a rude idea of the humor contained, for the expert, in some
of the corruptions of which hog-Morse is guilty. These consist largely
in closely joining elements which ought to be spaced, or in separating
others that are meant to be close-coupled.
In the patois of the wires "pot" means "hot," "foot"
is rendered "fool," "U. S. Navy" is "us nasty," "home" is changed to "hog,"
and so on. If, for example, while receiving a telegram, a user of
the patois should miss a word and say to you "6naz fimme q," the expert
would know that he meant "Please fill me in." But there is no difficulty
about the interpretation of the patois provided the receiver be experienced
and always on the alert. When, however, the mind wanders in receiving,
there is always danger that the hand will record exactly what the ear dictates.
On one occasion, at Christmas time, a hilarious citizen of Rome, New York,
telegraphed a friend at a distance a message which reached its destination
reading, "Cog hog to rog and wemm pave a bumy tig." It looked to
the man addressed like Choctaw, and of course was not understood.
Upon being repeated, it read, "Come home to Rome, and we'll have a bully
time." Another case of confusion wrought by hog-Morse was that of
the Richmond, Virginia, commission firm, who were requested by wire to
quote the price on a carload of "undressed slaves." The member of the firm
who receipted for the telegram being something of a wag, wired back: "No
trade in naked chattel since Emancipation Proclamation." The original
message had been transmitted by senders of hog-Morse, called technically
"hams," and the receivers had absent-mindedly recorded the words as they
had really sounded. What the inquirer wanted, of course, was a quotation
on a carload of staves in the rough.
The mere sound of the styles of some transmitters
is irresistibly comic. One of these natural humorists may be transmitting
nothing more than a string of figures, and still make you chuckle at the
grotesqueness of his Morse. It is an every-day thing to hear senders
characterized as Miss Nancys, rattle-brains, swell-heads, or cranks, or
"jays," simply because the sound of their dots and dashes suggests the
epithets.
When a telegram is being read by sound, the receiver
is not conscious of the dots and dashes that make up the sentences.
The impression upon the ear is similar to that produced by spoken words.
Indeed, if an experienced telegrapher were asked suddenly what a certain
letter is in dots and dashes, the chances are that he would hesitate before
being able to answer. In view of this fact I should say that thinking
in telegraphese is not possible, and in this point of comparison with a
spoken tongue the Morse is deficient. Curiously enough, however,
as an aid to memory in the spelling of words the telegraphese is useful.
If a
telegrapher should be in doubt as to the orthography of a word, whether
it were spelt with an ie or an ei, for example, he would only have to sound
it on an instrument or click it out on his teeth to dispel at once any
uncertainty.
Among the other interesting facts is that, in Morse,
family resemblance is shown as often as in face and manner. Furthermore,
just as two persons of kindred temperaments, man and wife, say, who have
been long associated, are said gradually to grow into a physical resemblance
to each other. So, in a like manner, two telegraphers who have worked
a wire together for years insensibly mold their Morse each after the other's,
until the resemblance between them is readily perceptible.
CLANNISHNESS OF OPERATORS.
If anything else were needed to complete the parallel
between the telegraphese and a recognized vehicle of expression, I might
add that the users of the language of dots and dashes are animated by a
spirit as clannish as that of the Highland Scots. Bring two strangers
together; let each know that the other is acquainted with the wire tongue,
and in five minutes' time the pair will be swapping telegraph yarns as
if they had known each other for years. Country operators, when they
get leave to come to town, are drawn irresistibly to the city telegraph
office. However strange the city may be, in the central commercial
office or the railroad dispatcher's den they are sure to find other who
speak their language, and with whom they may fraternize and feel at home.
Nor is this clannishness felt in personal intercourse alone; it applies
to those who, in widely separated cities, are brought in daily touch by
a wire used jointly by all. In idle intervals, on an Associated Press circuit,
for example, a wire touching at a dozen or more cities distance is lost
sight of, and all the features of personal intercourse are distinctly present.
Stories are told, opinions exchanged, and laughs enjoyed, just as if the
participants were sitting together at a club. They grow to know each
other's habits moods, and foibles, their likes and dislikes and when
there is a break in the circle through the death of a member, his absence
is felt just as in personal association.