The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night
VOLUME ONE "To the pure all things are pure" (Puris omnia pura) - Arab Proverb. "Niuna corrotta mente intese mai sanamente parole." - "Decameron" - conclusion. "Erubuit, posuitque meum Lucretia librum Sed coram Bruto. Brute! reced, leget. - Martial. "Miculx est de ris que de larmes escripre, Pour ce que rire est le propre des hommes." - Rabelais. "The pleasure we derive from perusing the Thousand and One Stories makes us regret that we possess only a comparatively small part of these truly enchanting fictions."
horses for machinery, and light cargos for full ones, as in case of
converting the horse-boat to a steamer.
Steam, as used for towing purposes, would be acceptable and subservient to
the several thousand boatmen constantly in service.
If we give to the automaton system of steam _any privileges_ over
horse-boats--excepting for incidental initiatory encouragement to steam--we
have a war of the many against the few. In the former era the double toll
system was obliged to be suspended, and the no-toll system of this era is
only a temporary sufferance.
Therefore, steam must stand or fall by its own merits, and should be
fostered and developed until horses possess no competitive ability.
CANAL NECESSITIES.
The history of the experiments for means of propulsion on our canals shows
that no system has been developed by means of which the carrying power of
these great channels of communication can be made available by steam. If
this deplorable fact is to be overcome, it must be through the aid of the
inventor; we must have some instruments of propulsion not hitherto in use,
and some other means of application of the propelling power than those now
in practice, or steam can never be sufficiently utilized to supersede
horses on canals.
VOLUME ONE "To the pure all things are pure" (Puris omnia pura) - Arab Proverb. "Niuna corrotta mente intese mai sanamente parole." - "Decameron" - conclusion. "Erubuit, posuitque meum Lucretia librum Sed coram Bruto. Brute! reced, leget. - Martial. "Miculx est de ris que de larmes escripre, Pour ce que rire est le propre des hommes." - Rabelais. "The pleasure we derive from perusing the Thousand and One Stories makes us regret that we possess only a comparatively small part of these truly enchanting fictions."