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Wednesday, November 25, 2009, 9:00 AM
Joe Carter

Kristin Parker, an archivist for Boston’s Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum, recently shared this snippet of a letter Gardner received from novelist F. Marion Crawford on August 23, 1896:

The old fashioned novel is really dead, and nothing can revive it nor make anybody care for it again. What is to follow it? . . . A clever German who is here suggested to me last night that the literature of the future might turn out to be the daily exchange of ideas of men of genius—over the everlasting telephone of course—published every morning for the whole world.

We publish on the Internet rather than using an everlasting telephone, but otherwise this is a spot on description of First Things Online, wouldn’t you say?

(Via: Kottke)

1 Comment

    Chuck
    November 25th, 2009 | 3:32 pm

    I see your everlasting telephone and raise you one society that is totally wired. “The Machine Stops” be E. M. Forster, published in 1908.