登陆注册
15709400000271

第271章

In each of these cases the practice acts to the prejudice of the department. In order to escape the tax on delivery, which varies from two cents to one cent a letter, all men in trade, and many who are not in trade, hold office boxes; consequently immense space is required. The space given at Chicago, both to the public without and to the official within, for such delivery, is more than four times that required at Liverpool for the same purpose. But Liverpool is three times the size of Chicago. The corps of clerks required for the window delivery is very great, and the whole affair is cumbrous in the extreme. The letters at most offices are given out through little windows, to which the inquirer is obliged to stoop. There he finds himself opposite to a pane of glass with a little hole, and when the clerk within shakes his head at him, he rarely believes but what his letters are there if he could only reach them. But in the second case, the tax on the delivery, which is intended simply to pay the wages of the men who take them out, is paid with a bad grace; it robs the letter of its charm, and forces it to present itself in the guise of a burden: it makes that disagreeable which for its own sake the post-office should strive in every way to make agreeable. This practice, moreover, operates as a direct prevention to a class of correspondence which furnishes in England a large proportion of the revenue of the post-office.

Mercantile houses in our large cities send out thousands of trade circulars, paying postage on them; but such circulars would not be received, either in England or elsewhere, if a demand for postage were made on their delivery. Who does not receive these circulars in our country by the dozen, consigning them generally to the waste-paper basket, after a most cursory inspection? As regards the sender, the transaction seems to us often to be very vain; but the post-office gets its penny. So also would the American post-office get its three cents.

But the main objection in my eyes to the American post-office system is this, that it is not brought nearer to the poorer classes.

Everybody writes or can write in America, and therefore the correspondence of their millions should be, million for million, at any rate equal to ours. But it is not so; and this I think comes from the fact that communication by post-office is not made easy to the people generally. Such communication is not found to be easy by a man who has to attend at a post-office window on the chance of receiving a letter. When no arrangement more comfortable than that is provided, the post-office will be used for the necessities of letter writing, but will not be esteemed as a luxury. And thus not only do the people lose a comfort which they might enjoy, but the post-office also loses that revenue which it might make.

I have said that the correspondence circulating in the United States is less than that of the United Kingdom. In making any comparison between them, I am obliged to arrive at facts, or rather at the probabilities of facts, in a somewhat circuitous mode, as the Americans have kept no account of the number of letters which pass through their post-offices in a year; we can, however, make an estimate, which, if incorrect, shall not at any rate be incorrect against them. The gross postal revenue of the United States for the year ended June 30th, 1861, was in round figures 1,700,000l. This was the amount actually cashed, exclusive of a sum of 140,000l. paid to the post-office by the government for the carriage of what is called in that country free mail matter; otherwise, books, letters, and parcels franked by members of Congress. The gross postal revenue of the United Kingdom was in the last year, in round figures, 3,358,000l., exclusive of a sum of 179,000l. claimed as earned for carrying official postage, and also exclusive of 127,866l., that being the amount of money order commissions, which in this country is considered a part of the post-office revenue. In the United States there is at present no money order office. In the United Kingdom the sum of 3,358,000l. was earned by the conveyance and delivery of 593,000,000 of letters, 73,000,000 of newspapers, 12,000,000 of books. What number of each was conveyed through the post in the United States we have no means of knowing; but presuming the average rate of postage on each letter in the States to be the same as it is in England, and presuming also that letters, newspapers, and books circulated in the same proportion there as they do with us, the sum above named of 1,700,000l. will have been earned by carrying about 300,000,000 of letters. But the average rate of postage in the States is in fact higher than it is in England. The ordinary single rate of postage there is three cents, or three half-pence, whereas with us it is a penny; and if three half-pence might be taken as the average rate in the United States, the number of letters would be reduced from 300,000,000 to 200,000,000 a year. There is, however, a class of letters which in the States are passed through the post-office at the rate of one half-penny a letter, whereas there is no rate of postage with us less than a penny. Taking these half-penny letters into consideration, I am disposed to regard the average rate of American postage at about five farthings, which would give the number of letters at 250,000,000. We shall at any rate be safe in saying that the number is considerably less than 300,000,000, and that it does not amount to half the number circulated with us. But the difference between our population and their population is not great.

The population of the States during the year in question was about 27,000,000, exclusive of slaves, and that of the British Isles was about 29,000,000. No doubt in the year named the correspondence of the States had been somewhat disturbed by the rebellion; but that disturbance, up to the end of June, 1861, had been very trifling.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 华为工作法

    华为工作法

    员工工作效率低是许多企业困扰的问题之一,然而华为员工高效率的工作给许多企业提供了可借鉴的方式。本书围绕员工工作低效率问题展开,再结合华为员工成功的实践方式,解读华为员工在日常工作中的总结出的有效经验和技巧,以此来全面提高工作效率。
  • 傲世为尊重生毒医女

    傲世为尊重生毒医女

    一朝穿越,看她如何叱咤风云。一曲倾城,让世人倾倒。“主子,夫人把您房里的婢女全部卖去了倚春楼!”“吩咐下去,把我书房里侍候的婢女一起卖去。”“主子,夫人把您以前画的美人图全部烧了!”“把我这些天画的一并送去让她烧。”
  • 福妻驾到

    福妻驾到

    现代饭店彪悍老板娘魂穿古代。不分是非的极品婆婆?三年未归生死不明的丈夫?心狠手辣的阴毒亲戚?贪婪而好色的地主老财?吃上顿没下顿的贫困宭境?不怕不怕,神仙相助,一技在手,天下我有!且看现代张悦娘,如何身带福气玩转古代,开面馆、收小弟、左纳财富,右傍美男,共绘幸福生活大好蓝图!!!!快本新书《天媒地聘》已经上架开始销售,只要3.99元即可将整本书抱回家,你还等什么哪,赶紧点击下面的直通车,享受乐乐精心为您准备的美食盛宴吧!)
  • 穿你妹的位面

    穿你妹的位面

    从来没想过自家的地下室居然是位面交流站!从来没想过自家小菜园居然是位面的垃圾场!从来没想过自己一个四肢不勤的宅男居然会在人工智能“考沃斯”的帮助下游走在一个又一个的位面中!从来没想过自己有一天会成为一个超人!从来没想过我居然会有无数个位面的统治权!
  • 飞刀至尊

    飞刀至尊

    小李飞刀李寻欢成仙以后因爱情、友情勇闯轮回,发现自己竟来到了未来,通过《奇迹轮回》一款网游开始了不同的生活。
  • 腹黑君少:宠公主万岁

    腹黑君少:宠公主万岁

    上官灵,因为贪玩意外和自己的灵宠来到现代世界,并且遇到了c国顶顶有名的君轻绝。初来现代的她不熟悉地方。而借住在了君轻绝家。看她在现代过的风声雨水吧!
  • 将门嫡女:拐个皇子生宝宝

    将门嫡女:拐个皇子生宝宝

    她是二十一世纪的黑道花痴大姐大。他是天朝云国的腹黑战王六皇子。一朝穿越,她正被抬下葬,欲哭无泪,天要亡我。当他救她破棺而出,她发誓,此生定要睡了他,来报答恩情。从此以后,安瑾年的人生目标便是……睡他,睡他,睡他。“六皇子,只要你带我去参加宫宴,大不了我晚上陪你睡。”“好,成交。”安瑾年瞬间觉得自己掉进了狼窝的深渊,从此万劫不复。
  • 原来我是圣皇大人

    原来我是圣皇大人

    叶修忽然听说自己是圣皇大人?中二少年表示这真是太棒了。恩,不想写了。简介就这样吧。
  • 桃色激情

    桃色激情

    谭爱妮有个双胞胎姊妹,姐姐的优秀突显出她的笨拙,高中第一次纯纯的初恋,更让她清楚明白姐姐的阴影她只是只不起眼的“丑小鸭”,是个可有可无的影子然而,在异国躲避了六年,回国后她却必须假扮姐姐出席宴会,老天爷哪!那个坏男人赴夜把她给,“吃了”,她都已经不跟他计较,他居然还敢厚脸皮的指控她“负责”?!等、等一下现在是什么情况?谁来告诉她这到底是谁的比较吃亏啊?麦凯恩,堂堂麦氏企业的副总裁,竟为了一个女人失魂落魄?!以前,那女子曹是他心目中深爱的女神,现在却将成为他的大嫂。在这场无聊的宴会里,一抹熟悉的俏丽身影吸引了他的目光,当初不能表露的狂情霸爱,他决定要投注在这貌似她的女人身上,偏偏,在这诡谲的爱情风暴中,他却又厘不清他爱的究竟是谁……
  • 无情血魔

    无情血魔

    我为了你,放下繁荣富贵,封印力量。而你,为什么这般负我,为什么