登陆注册
26524100000270

第270章

THE POST-OFFICE.

Any Englishman or Frenchman residing in the American States cannot fail to be struck with the inferiority of the post-office arrangements in that country to those by which they are accommodated in their own country. I have not been a resident in the country, and as a traveler might probably have passed the subject without special remark, were it not that the service of the post-office has been my own profession for many years. I could therefore hardly fail to observe things which to another man would have been of no material moment. At first I was inclined to lean heavily in my judgment upon the deficiencies of a department which must be of primary importance to a commercial nation. It seemed that among a people so intelligent, and so quick in all enterprises of trade, a well-arranged post-office would have been held to be absolutely necessary, and that all difficulties would have been made to succumb in their efforts to put that establishment, if no other, upon a proper footing. But as I looked into the matter, and in becoming acquainted with the circumstances of the post-office learned the extent of the difficulties absolutely existing, I began to think that a very great deal had been done, and that the fault, as to that which had been left undone, rested not with the post-office officials, but was attributable partly to political causes altogether outside the post-office, and partly--perhaps chiefly--to the nature of the country itself.

It is I think undoubtedly true that the amount of accommodation given by the post-office of the States is small, as compared with that afforded in some other countries, and that that accommodation is lessened by delays and uncertainty. The point which first struck me was the inconvenient hours at which mails were brought in and dispatched. Here in England it is the object of our post-office to carry the bulk of our letters at night; to deliver them as early as possible in the morning, and to collect them and take them away for dispatch as late as may be in the day; so that the merchant may receive his letters before the beginning of his day business, and dispatch them after its close. The bulk of our letters is handled in this manner, and the advantage of such an arrangement is manifest. But it seemed that in the States no such practice prevailed. Letters arrived at any hour in the day miscellaneously, and were dispatched at any hour, and I found that the postmaster at one town could never tell me with certainty when letters would arrive at another. If the towns were distant, I would be told that the conveyance might take about two or three days; if they were near, that my letter would get to hand "some time to-morrow." Iascertained, moreover, by painful experience that the whole of a mail would not always go forward by the first dispatch. As regarded myself this had reference chiefly to English letters and newspapers.

"Only a part of the mail has come," the clerk would tell me. With us the owners of that part which did not "come," would consider themselves greatly aggrieved and make loud complaint. But in the States complaints made against official departments are held to be of little moment.

Letters also in the States are subject to great delays by irregularities on railways. One train does not hit the town of its destination before another train, to which it is nominally fitted, has been started on its journey. The mail trains are not bound to wait; and thus, in the large cities, far distant from New York, great irregularity prevails. It is I think owing to this--at any rate partly to this--that the system of telegraphing has become so prevalent. It is natural that this should be so between towns which are in the due course of post perhaps forty-eight hours asunder; but the uncertainty of the post increases the habit, to the profit of course of the companies which own the wires, but to the manifest loss of the post-office.

But the deficiency which struck me most forcibly in the American post-office, was the absence of any recognized official delivery of letters. The United States post-office does not assume to itself the duty of taking letters to the houses of those for whom they are intended, but holds itself as having completed the work for which the original postage has been paid, when it has brought them to the window of the post-office of the town to which they are addressed.

It is true that in most large towns--though by no means in all--a separate arrangement is made by which a delivery is afforded to those who are willing to pay a further sum for that further service;but the recognized official mode of delivery is from the office window. The merchants and persons in trade have boxes at the windows, for which they pay. Other old-established inhabitants in town, and persons in receipt of a considerable correspondence, receive their letters by the subsidiary carriers and pay for them separately. But the poorer classes of the community, those persons among which it is of such paramount importance to increase the blessing of letter writing, obtain their letters from the post-office windows.

同类推荐
  • 介为舟禅师语录

    介为舟禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 甲申战事记

    甲申战事记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 证类本草

    证类本草

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 虎韬

    虎韬

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 红楼圆梦

    红楼圆梦

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 三国谋圣传

    三国谋圣传

    唐枫一个很聪明,又狡猾的毕业生,没有能得到满意的工作,一次意外穿越回了三国时期。酷爱历史的他,能否在这战乱四起的汉末争得立足之地,能否在三国抱得美人入怀,能否用自己的智谋扫平乱世。。。
  • 无敌大民工

    无敌大民工

    有人的地方就有江湖,平凡屌丝青年凌飞一次意外邂逅白富美,拜师高人获得《乾蓝心经》,且看我们的单身穷屌丝如何纵横都市,快意情仇于江湖。
  • 铁血星魂

    铁血星魂

    战火纷飞的未来,日渐破败的地球,因一颗陨落的流星发生巨变,曾经温驯呆萌的羔羊也会成为杀人嗜血的怪兽,曾经主宰这个世界的人类却濒临灭绝的边缘,这样的世界唯有强者才能生存。出生在这样的年代,让这个善良懵懂的少年,不得不为国仇家恨四处征战厮杀,那些他爱的,爱他的女人们却又有怎样的结局?而人类又将去向何方?是那遥远的星际,还是这满目疮痍的故乡。。。。。。。。。
  • 穿越重生之面具

    穿越重生之面具

    她,是古代大家闺秀,家族灭门而走投无路最终走进了后宫,被皇后所杀;她,穿越重生,变成21世纪娱乐圈一颗闪耀新星。看古代纯情女子如何一步步堕落到戴上面具,最终走向了娱乐圈的帝王之位吧!
  • 风落星云

    风落星云

    一个是叱咤风云的大神,一个是傲娇毒舌的学生党,当网游遇上魔法,会擦出什么样的火花?“喂,信不信我要向警察叔叔投诉,你这无良的广告,专门欺负我这种善良的学生啊!”某人哀怨的咆哮着。昔日的大神跌落云端,毫无魔法的大小姐落入星云大陆,一个又一个的阴谋,菜鸟该如何一步一个脚印登上这片大陆的顶端,傲视群雄?废柴的逆袭日记现在开始书写,即使艰险丛生,本小姐也要闯出一片天!
  • 丫头,我们恋爱吧

    丫头,我们恋爱吧

    刚考入大学的阮晴暑假去祠乌镇的外婆家开的小旅馆帮忙,在海边救下了她以为要自杀的少年苏辛拉,结果反被他救。苏辛拉莫名地成为了阮晴的救命恩人,却因为嘲笑阮晴发育不良、乡巴老两人之间变得“气氛紧张”。在争吵中,两人也产生了朦胧的感情,而此时辛拉突然接到前女友蓝寇的电话,说她回国了。苏辛拉欣喜,连夜离开小镇,留下伤心的阮晴。在学校阮晴意外的遇见苏辛拉,他的身边是美丽的蓝寇,而苏辛拉对阮晴绝情冷漠,再一次伤害了阮晴……
  • 穿越之粉色女仆

    穿越之粉色女仆

    我弃文,求编辑大大删除,大家就表看咯,哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈哈
  • 悄悄偷走她的爱:童话之外

    悄悄偷走她的爱:童话之外

    【此文很悲剧,心早期作品,全文待休,慎入,踩雷概不负责!】童年,母亲站在楼顶边沿,回头对她说:“别相信爱!”然后她白衣翩然从楼顶跃下,坠在血泊中。那天,最爱的妈妈离开,羽舒再也不知道爱为何物。然而三个光芒闪烁的少年,却以小偷的身份闯入了羽舒的世界,悄悄的给了她幸福,偷走了她的爱。爱情却在来临时,被残酷的现实打破。是母亲当年的告诫应验?还是此生不渝的爱情来临?!爱情,该不该信……
  • 王权者存在的学园都市

    王权者存在的学园都市

    第二卷预告↓周防尊叛出了特力研,特力研是否会像是表面上那么无害的研究所呢?刺猬头的少年上条当麻意图寻找周防尊,对于周防尊放不下的他在自身的破运气下又会遭遇什么?实验体的少女对生活中的一切毫无所知,周防尊满头雾水的又将烦恼什么?金发的少女想要夺回自己的桃莉,她又会干出什么?统括理事长又究竟会不会参与其中呢?“来吧,我的火焰将焚烧一切!”周防尊这么说道,无所畏惧,只是一介人渣而已。
  • 你恶我心计多

    你恶我心计多

    我不知道别人怎样,但我自己,所求从不能得到。最后,倦了。