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Phonozoic Text
Library
Currently
undergoing reorganization. However, here are links to
our currently available texts.
-
002
"A
Phonogram Library." Public Opinion VIII:14 (January 11,
1890) p. 348, reprinted from the San Francisco Examiner.
-
003
"Uses of
the Phonograph." Public Opinion, VIII:7 (November
23, 1889), 171, reprinted from the Philadelphia Ledger.
-
004 Dexter W. Allis,
"Fun With the Phonograph," Scientific American,
November 25, 1905, p. 415.
-
005 [Syrian
missionary on phonograph's ability to record Arabic] New
York Times,
October 7, 1879, p. 4.
-
006 "The Phonograph,"
New York Times,
November
7, 1877, p. 4.
-
007
"Kisses By Phonograph. The Limitless Possibilities of
That Recording Instrument." New York Times,
December 3,
1888, p. 8.
-
008 "Phonograph Mars
a Soiree.
Paris
Husband Will Use Record Against Wife Accused of
Improprieties." Dated PARIS, Jan. 6.
Chicago
Sunday Tribune,
January 7, 1906, III:2.
-
009 "The Romantic and
Practical Use of the Phonograph," Scientific American,
March 10, 1894, p. 148.
-
010 "The Speaking
Phonograph," Scientific American Supplement,
March 16,
1878, p. 1828. Reprinted from the
New York
Sun.
-
011 "The Phonograph
Exhibited. Prof. Arnold's Description of the Machine in
Chickering Hall--Various Experiments, With Remarkable
Results," New York Times,
March 24,
1878, p. 2.
-
012 "Saluting a
Phonogram," Scientific American,
March 25, 1899, p. 185.
-
013 "The Phonograph,"
Harper's Weekly,
March 30,
1878, pp. 249-50.
-
014 "A Visit to the
Inventor of the Phonograph," Scientific American
Supplement,
April 20,
1878, pp. 1904-5.
-
015 "The
Edison Speaking Machine. Exhibition Before Members of
Congress--The Practical Uses to Which it May Be Applied."
Special Dispatch to the New York Times, dated
Washington,
April 19. New York Times, April 20, 1878, p. 1.
-
016 "The Phonograph
as a Witness in a Nuisance Suit," Scientific American,
April 21, 1894, p. 247.
-
017 "A
Time-Controlled Phonograph," Scientific American,
April 6, 1907, p. 289.
-
019 "Testing the
Phonograph,"
New York
Times,
May 13, 1888, p. 5.
-
020 "The Phonograph
and its Future," North American Review, No. 126
(May-June 1878), pp. 527-36.
-
025 "The Phonograph
Explained Just What Ailed a Big Pump in
California," Scientific American,
Sept. 28,
1895, p. 197.
-
027 "The Talking
Phonograph," Scientific American,
December
22, 1877, 384-5.
-
028 "A Wonderful
Invention.--Speech Capable of Indefinite Repetition from
Automatic Records," Scientific American,
November
17, 1877, 304.
-
029 "The Talking
Phonograph on Exhibition," Scientific American,
February 9, 1878, p. 86.
-
030 Item from the
Philadelphia Record, reprinted in the Indianapolis
News,
Mar. 13,
1878, p. 2.
-
031 "The Man Who
Invents. Tom Edison's Talk with a 'Post' Reporter. The
Wonderful Phonograph and its Eternal Voice--Description of
the Man of Genius. --What he has Accomplished -- The Key of
Science Only Touched."
Washington
Post,
April 19, 1878, p. 1
-
035 "The Talking
Machine,"
New York
Daily Tribune,
March 25, 1878.
-
036 "Improving the
Phonograph,"
New York
Evening Post.
Reprinted in the
Indianapolis News,
March 28, 1878.
-
037 "The
Phonograph," Scientific American,
March 30,
1878, p. 193.
-
038 "Possibilities of
the Phonograph," Cincinnati Commercial, reprinted in
the Indianapolis News,
March 30,
1878, p. 4.
-
039 "The Phonograph
Wins a Victory," Scientific American,
June 22,
1878, p. 384.
-
041 "Edison's
New Phonograph," Scientific American, October 29,
1887, p. 273. From the
New York
Evening Post.
-
042 "Edison's
Improved Phonograph," Scientific American, November
19, 1887, p. 328. From the
New York
World.
-
045 "The Perfected
Phonograph," by Thomas A. Edison. North American Review,
No. 379, June 1888, pp. 641-50.
-
046 "Sale
of the Phonograph. Said to Have Caused Edison and His
Lawyer to Fall Out." New York Times,
January 19,
1889.
-
047 "The Talking
Doll," New York Times,
February
17, 1889.
-
048 "Phonograph in
Medicine," New York Times,
March 5,
1889.
-
049 "The Talking
Machine. Cause of the Delay in Introducing Phonographs to
Public Uses,"
New York
Times,
March 24,
1889.
-
050 "Maury's
Prophecy. He Described a Talking Machine Nearly Fifty Years
Ago,"
Washington
Star,
Jan. 23, 1890. Reprinted New York Times, Jan. 26,
1890.
-
051 "A Nickel Brings
the Phonograph," New York Times,
February 9,
1890.
-
053 "Phonographs
Ordered Out.
Fairmount Park Commissioners Say That They Transmit
Disease,"
New York
Times,
July 29, 1890.
-
054 "It Does Not
Injure the Ear. A Senseless Objection Raised Against the
Phonograph," New York Times,
July 30,
1890.
-
059 "The Future of
the Phonograph,"
Chicago
Tribune,
May 1, 1878.
-
060 "Thomas A.
Edison.
A Tribune Correspondent Visits Him at Menlo Park--Some of
His Recent Extraordinary Discoveries and Inventions,"
Chicago
Tribune,
May 4, 1878. Special Correspondence of The Tribune,
by George H. Bliss.
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061 "The Phonograph.
Dom Pedro Will Grind Out Mr. Roach's Compliments and
Congratulations,"
Chicago
Tribune,
May 6, 1878.
-
062 "How
Edison
Amuses Himself,"
Cincinnati
Saturday Night,
reprinted
Chicago Tribune,
May 10, 1878.
-
063 "The Auraphone.
Edison's Very Latest--Extraordinary Development of the
Phonograph,"
New York
Star,
reprinted
Indianapolis News, May 21, 1878.
-
064 "The
Phonograph. An Exhibition of
Edison's
Wonderful Talking Machine. Many of the Experiments a
Positive Success--Others the Reverse. The Instrument Must
Be Regarded as Only in Its Infancy,"
Chicago
Tribune,
May 23, 1878.
-
065 "The Funny
Phonograph. Some New Facts About the Marvelous Machine.
The Wild Dream of a Writer of Fiction More than Realized. A
Hearing and Talking Instrument Combined,"
St. Louis
Evening Post,
May 30, 1878.
-
066 A Skeptical
Letter to the Editor,
Chicago
Tribune,
May 12, 1878.
-
067 "The Wonders of
the Phonograph," letter to the editor, Chicago Tribune,
May 16, 1878.
-
068 "The Phonograph
and Its Future,"
Chicago
Tribune,
May 31, 1878.
-
069 Herwick C.
Dodge, "The Speaking Phonograph,"
St. Louis Evening Post, May
31, 1878.
-
070 "The Orthophone.
An Invention that Eclipses All of
Edison's. The Truth-Telling Machine a New Madrid Man
Invented. Some of the Little Eccentricities of the
Contrivance. How It Gives Utterance to Mental Reservations
and Gives the Thinker Away."
St. Louis
Evening Post,
June 1, 1878.
-
072 "The
Phonograph.
Edison's
Wonderful Invention to be Exhibited Here,"
Indianapolis News,
June 6, 1878.
-
073 "Edison's
Phonograph,"
Indianapolis
News,
June 13, 1878.
-
074 "The Amusement
Record,"
Indianapolis Saturday Herald,
June 15, 1878.
-
075 "Amusements.
The Phonograph,"
Indianapolis
News,
June 15, 1878.
-
076 "The Funny
Phonograph. An Actor's Scheme for a Grand Operatic
Concert--Edison Makes one More Invention," St. Louis
Evening Post, April 29, 1878, p. 1
-
077 "Edison's
Phonograph, Its History and Development," by Edward H.
Johnson, of New York City. Scientific American
Supplement No. 743, March 29, 1890, p. 11872-3.
-
078 "The Phonograph
as a Wireless Detective," Literary Digest 63:8 (Nov.
22, 1918), p. 29.
-
079 "Phonograph
Pastors," Literary Digest 62:13 (No. 1536), Sept. 27,
1919, p. 28.
-
081 "To Call Trains
by Phonograph," Literary Digest 38:19 (No. 994), May
8, 1909, p. 795.
-
083 "Improvement of
the Phonograph," Literary Digest 22:12 (No. 570),
Mar. 23, 1901, p. 350.
-
085 "A Shouting
Phonograph," Literary Digest 21:7 (No. 539), Aug. 18,
1900, p. 194.
-
086 "The Future of
the Phonograph," Literary Digest 21:2 (No. 534), July
14, 1900, p. 43. [Azoulay]
-
087 "Reversing the
Phonograph," Literary Digest 19:5 (No. 484), July 29,
1899, p. 136.
-
088 "Islam and the
Phonograph," by Snouck Hurgronje. Moslem World 5
(1915), pp. 159ff.
-
090 "Kissing Goes by
-- Phonograph," Punch, Vol. 95, Dec. 22, 1888, p.
298.
-
091 "Talking
Machine,"
London
Times,
February 12, 1880. FABER
-
092 "Phonomime,
Autophone, and Kosmophone," New York Times, June 11,
1878, p. 5.
-
093 Franck Z.
Maguire, "The Graphophone," Harper's Weekly Vol. XXX
No. 1543, July 17, 1886, pp. 458-9.
-
094 Joseph Faber
biography.
Source: Constant von Wurzbach, Biographisches Lexikon des
Kaiserthums Österreich: enthaltend die Lebensskizzen der
denkwürdigen Personen, welche 1750 bis 1850 im Kaiserstaate
und in seinen Kronländern gelebt haben. 60 Bde., Wien
1856-91.
-
099 Early British
Phonograph Exhibition,
Nature
Vol. XVII, Mar. 21, 1878, p. 415.
-
102 "Helmholtz's
Vowel Theory and the Phonograph," Nature, Vol. XVII,
March 14, 1878,
p. 384.
-
103 "The
Phonograph,"
Nature,
Vol. XVII, March 28, 1878,
p. 423 [Fleeming Jenkin]
-
106 "Helmholtz's
Vowel Theory and the Phonograph,"
Nature,
Vol XVIII, May 23, 1878, p. 93.
-
107 "Examination of
the Phonograph Record Under the Microscope,"
Nature,
Vol XVIII, May 23, 1878, p. 101-02.
-
112 "The Phonograph
at the
Paris
Exhibition,"
Nature,
Vol XVIII, August 15, 1878, p. 424.
-
113 "Charge of
Ventriloquism,"
Nature,
Vol XVIII, September 19, 1878, p. 553.
-
114 "Not a Thinking
Machine,"
Nature,
Vol XVIII, October 10, 1878, p. 630.
-
115 "Reading the
Phonograph Record by Sight,"
Nature,
Vol XVIII, October 3, 1878, p. 599.
-
116 "Imprints of Italian Speech on
the Phonograph,"
Nature,
Vol XXI, November 6, 1879, p. 21.
-
117 "The French
Didn't Invent the Phonograph,"
Nature,
Vol XXI, January 15, 1880, p. 266.
-
118 "How to Build a
Working Phonograph, With Drawings Made to a Scale of Half
Size,"
Scientific American Supplement No. 133, July 20, 1878,
p. 2112.
-
119 "A Simple
Phonograph,"
Scientific
American
XXIX:8
(August 24, 1878), p. 118.
-
120 "The Euphonia,
or Speaking Automaton,"
Illustrated
London News, Vol. 9,
July 25,
1846, p. 59.
-
121 "The Euphonia,
or Speaking Automaton,"
Illustrated
London News, Vol.
9,
Aug. 8,
1846, p. 96.
-
122 "The Speaking
Automaton,"
London
Times,
August 12, 1846, p. 3.
-
123 "The Speaking
Machine," Punch, Volume 11 (July-December 1846), p.
83. Attributed to William Makepeace Thackeray.
-
124 "A Voice from
Egyptian Hall,"
Punch,
Volume 11 (July-December 1846), p. 64.
-
125 "The Speaking
Automaton on Railways,"
Punch,
Volume 11 (July-December 1846), p. 143.
-
126 "A Labor-Saving
Machine for the Lawyer's Office,"
American
Law Review,
Vol. 25
(1891), p. 436-7.
-
127 "The
Phonograph,"
American
Law Review,
Vol. 26
(1892), p. 254-55.
-
128 Philip G.
Hubert, Jr. "What the Phonograph will do for Music and
Music-Lovers,"
Scribner's
Monthly
46 (1893:May/Oct.), pp. 152-4. "Open Letters" section.
-
129 Barnet Phillips,
"A Record of Monkey Talk," Harper's Weekly Vol. 35
(1891), No. 1827, p. 1050. Illustrations from p. 1036.
-
130 Charles Cros, "Procédé
d’enregistrement et de reproduction des phénomènes perçus
par l’ouïe."
Comptes
Rendus Hebdomaires des Séances de l’Académie des Sciences,
Vol. 85 (July-December 1877), 1082-3. Meeting of December
3, 1877.
-
131 Abbé Lenoir
("Leblanc"), Description of the Cros "Phonographe,"
La
Semaine du Clergé,
October 10, 1877, reprinted in the Mercure de France,
May 1, 1927, pp. 518-520.
-
132 "Mrs.
Barstinglow's Phonograph." From the
Burlington
Hawkeye.
Reprinted
as “Echoes from the Phonograph: What Mrs. Barstinglow Heard
After Three Days’ Absence from Home,” The
Sun, April 21, 1878 (omits final paragraph); and as “The Phonograph: An
Evening with the Machine in a
Western
Town,” Evening Post, April 16, 1878.
-
133 "The Phonograph
in Congress,"
Philadelphia
Times,
April 25, 1878.
-
134 "The Poetry of
the Phonograph: Its Marvelous Feats and Capabilities -- Its
Humors and Solemnities,"
Washington
Post and Union,
April 24, 1878
-
135 The French
phonograph patent of Charles Cros. From the printed
record of American Graphophone Company vs. United
States Phonograph Company. The French text has been
corrected by comparison with the version given in Charles
Cros, Inédits & Documents (1992).
-
136 The French
phonograph patent of Charles Cros. From the printed
record of American Graphophone Company vs.
Berliner Gramophone Company. The text has been augmented
by comparison with the version given in Charles Cros,
Inédits & Documents (1992).
-
137 Le Comte Th. du
Moncel's description of the Lambrigot Phonograph. From
the printed record of American Graphophone Company
vs. United States Phonograph Company. Cited as from
Le Comte Th. du Moncel, Le Téléphone, le Microphone et le
Phonographe.
Paris,
1880.
-
138 Le Rappel
Article on Cros' Phonograph (1877). From the printed
record of American Graphophone Company vs. United
States Phonograph Company.
-
139 Cosmos
Article on Carbonel phonograph. From the printed
record of American Graphophone Company vs. United
States Phonograph Company. From Cosmos Vol. 47,
Sept-Dec 1878, pp. 590-591.
-
140 The Delecheneau
Phonograph. From the printed record of American
Graphophone Company vs. United States Phonograph
Company. From Comptes Rendus (1879) Vol. 88, p.
1140.
-
141 Moncel on the
Gamard Phonograph. From the printed record of
American Graphophone Company vs. United States
Phonograph Company. Cited as from Le Comte Th. du
Moncel, Le Téléphone, le Radiophone et le Phonographe.
Paris, 1882.
-
142 A Sixpenny
Phonograph. From the printed record of American
Graphophone Company vs. United States Phonograph
Company. Engineering, Vol. 27, p. 326.
April 18, 1879.
-
143 The Carbonel
Phonograph.
From the
printed record of American Graphophone Company vs.
United States Phonograph Company. Engineering, Vol. 27,
p. 326. April 18, 1879.
-
145 Rene Bache, "DO
MONKEYS HAVE SPEECH? THE QUESTION TESTED AT THE
SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION. Music for the Million Bottled by
the Phonograph."
Brooklyn
Times,
September 21, 1890.
-
146 "Phonograph is
Now Used in Hypnotism," Phonoscope, April, 1898, p.
7.
-
147 "Love and the
Phonograph," Phonoscope, March, 1899, p. 15.
-
148 "Talked Out of a
Wife," Phonoscope, May, 1900, p. 7.
-
149 "How Fryer Bacon
made a Brasen head to speake, by the which hee would have
walled England about with Brasse."
Early Prose
Romances, with Biographical and Historical Introductions,
ed. William J. Thoms. Vol. 1.
London: Nattali and Bond, 1858.
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150 The scene from
Robert Greene's The Honorable Historie of Frier Bacon and
Frier Bongay (1594) in which Friar Bacon's Brazen Head
Speaks.
The Life
and Complete Work in Prose and Verse of Robert Greene, M.A.,
Cambridge and Oxford, in Fourteen Volumes,
ed. Alexander B. Grosart. Volume 13. Printed for Private
Circulation, 1881-83.
-
151
Robert
Ganthony.
"The
Funnygraph."
From
"Bunkum Entertainments: being a collection of original
laughable skits on conjuring, physiognomy, juggling,
performing fleas, waxworks, panorama, phrenology,
phonograph, second sight, lightning calculators,
ventriloquism, spiritualism, etc., to which are added
humorous sketches, whimsical recitals, and drawing-room
comedies. London: L. Upcott Gill [circa 1900],
pp. 56-62.
-
152 Edward Bellamy.
"With
the Eyes Shut." Harper’s New
Monthly Magazine
79 (October
1889): 736-45.
-
153 O.
Henry, "The
Phonograph and the Graft."
McClure's Magazine
(Feb. 1903).
-
154 Selection
from The Openeer Papers (1900).
-
155 John
Philip Sousa, "The Menace of Mechanical Music,"
Appleton's Magazine,
Vol. 8 (1906), pp. 278-284.
-
1001
“Hunting Rabbits With Phonograph,”
Chicago Tribune,
December 13, 1903, p. 42.
-
1002
“Traps the Sly Fox With a Phonograph,” from
New York World,
n Phonogram 4 (February 1902), 61-2.
-
1003
“Novel Duck
Decoy,”
Indiana
Evening Gazette
(Indiana,
Pennsylvania), Jan. 6, 1908, p. 3.
-
1004 Homer
Bassford, “The Phonographic Call,” from
Detroit
Free Press,
in
Boston
Daily Globe,
May 25,
1890 p. 19.
-
1005
[Cartoon]:
“Suggestions for
Decatur Bicyclists,”
Decatur Review
(Decatur, Illinois),
Sept. 23, 1906, p. 18.
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Annual
Proceedings of Conventions of Local Phonograph Companies,
1890-93 (in rtf format)
-
A Collection
of Documents on Experimental French Phonograph Designs,
1877-1882, selected by Ray Wile
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Leon Scott's
French phonautograph patents of 1857 and 1859,
translated into English and annotated by George
Brock-Nannestad
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