Transcript
Introduction
"I have my periods of restlessness when my brain is crowded with ideas tingling to my fingertips, when I'm excited and cannot stop for anybody. Let me alone, let me work as I like even if I had to sit up all night or even for 2 nights. When you see me flagging, getting tired, discouraged, put your hands over my eyes so that I go to sleep and let me sleep as long as I like until I wake.
Then I may hang around, read novels and be stupid without an idea in my head until I get rested and ready for another period of work. But, oh, do not do as you often do, stop me in the midst of my work, my excitement with, 'Alex, Alex, aren't you coming to bed? It's 1:00. Do come.' Then I have to come feeling cross and ugly. Then you put your hands on my eyes. And after a while, I go to sleep, but the ideas are gone, the work is never done."
That is a letter that Alexander Graham Bell wrote to his wife Mabel Bell in March 1879, and it's in the book that I'm going to talk to you about today, which is Reluctant Genius: The Passionate Life and Inventive Mind of Alexander Graham Bell and is written by Charlotte Gray. So you and I have talked about this idea many times, that books are the original links, that they lead us to one idea or one person to another, just like the Internet does today, right?