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Reference
>
Cambridge History
>
The Victorian Age, Part Two
>
The Growth of Journalism
> Delane
The Times;
The Walters
The Stuarts and
The Morning Post
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
Volume XIV. The Victorian Age, Part Two.
IV.
The Growth of Journalism
.
§ 8. Delane.
That
The Times
possessed enormous influence under Barnes and his successor (1841), John Thaddeus Dalane, is indicated in all the political memoirs of the period. In the first number of
The Saturday Review
(3 November, 1855), it was stated that one of the chief functions of the vigorous newcomer was to undermine this influence by the exercise of common-sense and ordinary perspicacity. No apology, it wrote, is necessary for assuming that this country is ruled by
The Times.
We all know it, or if we do not know it, we ought to know it. In 1834, lord Althorpe had written to Brougham, then lord chancellor, What I wanted to see you about is
The Times;
whether we are to make war on it, or come to terms. By politicians, it was read, in its, opposition days, for the slashing articles, first, of Peter Fraser, and, next, of captain Edward Sterling, father of John Sterling, the friend of Carlyle. Sterling is said to have put into lively and vigorous language ideas already floating in the minds of his readers. He gained for
The Times
the title The Thunderer, by writing, We thundered out the other day an article on social and political reform;
12
and, of his writing, Wellington, in 1812, said, Here is someone not afraid to write like a man. Macaulay, as is recorded by Thomas Moore in his diary, contributed verses to
The Times
in 1831. Leigh Hunt, radical though he was, wrote literary reviews for it; Coleridge made advances to the second John Walter, proposing the impossiblethat he should be appointed editor, with a perfectly free hand as to policy; George Borrow, while wandering in Spain, collecting materials for his famous book, acted as correspondent for
The Times,
and, writing with a freedom from the dignity which hedged in staff-writers of the great journal, became, it is said, a model for many who wrote for the cheaper newspapers. According to Escott, the young lions(Matthew Arnolds name for the writers on
The Daily Telegraph
)owed much to Borrow, and one of captain Hambers staff on
The Standard
had so steeped himself in Borrows pure and easy phrasing that some of the disciples
Letters from Corsica
were mistaken by experts for the Masters own. But it is to Peter Fraser, a veritable man-about-town in behalf of his paper, that was attributed the influence won in the city of London by
The Times,
in the first quarter of the century.
The Times
always desired to feel the pulse not only of Westminster, but, also, of the city; it scarcely recognised public opinion in the manufacturing centres; hence, in part, at least, its opposition to all the great political evolutions of the century. Under Delane,
The Times
attained a larger cosmopolitan standing. It is said that Barnes furnished his coming successor with useful introductions, including one to Charles Greville of
The Memoirs.
Delane was, perhaps naturally, and certainly by training, more given to society than Barnes; he was not a writer in the same sense as his predecessor; at no time did he write much, and, in later years, he confined himself almost solely to receiving information which enabled him to direct or control other men. Disraeli had appeared in
The Times
with his
Runnymede Letters
(1836) and had won the friendship of Barnes.
13
He had some practical experience of newspaper work in behalf of his party, and formed notable conclusions upon the value of journalism.
14
Delanes advent was followed shortly by the defeat of the Melbourne administration, and much credit for this was taken by, and given to,
The Times.
Delane had a cross bench mind; though representing the conservative tendencies largely inherent in the professional and well-to-do classes, he was yet ready to criticise freely, not merely the government of the day, whatever its party complexion, but, also, a great mass of constitutional and social anomalies, thus paving the way for reforms. The famous letters by S. G. O. (lord Sidney Godolphin Osborne, who, twenty-five years after the appearance of his letters, read the service at Delanes funeral), were a rousing call for better conditions for the agricultural labourer. In 1839,
The Times
had opposed the duties on corn; but, apparently, John Walter was personally hostile to Sir Robert Peel, and
The Times
attacked both Peel and Sir James Graham. Especially was it against Peels suggestion of a sliding scale of duties; but, to Bright and Cobden and the anti-Corn-law league, it was consistently adverse, though it assisted them grudgingly when opposition was seen to be useless.
18
A notable illustration of the way in which Delane picked up a policy is connected with the Crimean war. During the Aberdeen administration of 1852, the eastern question came to a head. Thomas Chenery was then Constantinople correspondent of
The Times,
and reflected the opinions of Stratford Canning, the British ambassador. In September, 1853, Delane wrote to Chenery, fiercely declaring it to be
impossible for you to continue to be our correspondent, if you persist in taking a line so diametrically opposed to the interests of this country . You seem to imagine that England can desire nothing better than to sacrifice all its greatest interests, and its most cherished objects, to support barbarism against civilisation, the Moslem against the Christian, slavery against liberty, to exchange peace for warall to oblige the Turk. Pray undeceive yourself.
Aberdeen drifted; Palmerston became the favourite of the classes for which
The Times
wrote; and Delane adopted the policy Chenery had been advocating.
19
During the war,
The Times,
by means of the letters written by W. H. Russell, its correspondent with the army in the Crimea, rendered signal service to the nation. There was then no press censorship, and Russell described freely conditions which brought needless suffering upon our troops. The facts gave rise to a loud outcry, and Florence Nightingale, assisted by S. G. O., and others, organised an adequate hospital system.
The Times
had now, undoubtedly, a commanding position, and its reputation was sustained in such a degree that when, in 1870, on the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian war, the general staffs of the two powers issued strict regulations for duly licensed war correspondents, all others being threatened as spies, there were, in this country, persons of repute for intelligence who wondered whether
The Times
would consent to such a limitation of its enterprise. During the sixth, seventh and eighth decades of the nineteenth century, foreign statesmen looked much to
The Times
as indicating the probable policy of this country. Greville records that, in 1858, lord Derby asked him to see Delane, to dissuade him from writing any more irritating articles about France, for these articles provoked the French to madness, and lord Derby was concerned as to the consequences. Napoleon III, however, was quite ready to use
The Times
by sending it important information
15
without the knowledge of his ministers.
20
During the American civil war (1866),
The Times
again represented the majority of the professional and wealthy classes, in favouring the secessionists. Needless to say, it was not a supporter of slavery, and it would not, in all cases, have advocated the right of a portion of a kingdom or a federation to separate from the remainder. Probably, the underlying sentiment was that the southern states embodied a continuance of the traditions surrounding ancestral homes and estate holding, while the north was associated with manufacturing and trade.
21
Delane supervised very carefully the articles by leader writers and correspondents, altering, or adding finishing touches; for instance, to a narrative of the Heenan and Sayers prize fight, he added, Restore the prize ring? As well re-establish the heptarchy. The prize ring, in a modified form, has since been re-established. His caution was great. When, in 1875, Blowitz, of world fame in his day as Paris correspondent of
The Times,
sent word that Bismarck contemplated a fresh war with France, to prevent the latter from recovering her military strength, Delane held back the news for a fortnightrisking the grave possibility of being forestalledwhile Chenery went to Paris, and obtained evidence fully confirming the report. This caution has been, not unnaturally, contrasted with the action of
The Times
in 1886, when the paper published the famous facsimile Parnell letter, the forgery of which was afterwards confessed by Pigott.
22
John Walter the third had succeeded his father in 1847 when the paper contained normally about six times as much matter as
The Times
of 1803; and a large part of its prosperity was due to the forty-four years management by the second John Walter. His successor was twenty-nine years of age, and on the eve of entering parliament as a liberal-conservative. Delane was firmly seated in the saddle, and, though the Walter family steadily turned to the conservative side, the paper continued more or less independent until the last years of Delanes editorship, when Disraelis foreign policy, and, for the most part, his internal policy, had the support of the journal.
23
In the next period,
The Times
suffered from the competition of the penny press; and, at the very end of the century, from that of the halfpenny press also. Among its chief competitors were
The Daily Telegraph,
with its exuberant vitality, and the more steady-going, but more fashionable,
Morning Post.
16
24
Note 12
. Escotts
Masters of English Journalism,
p. 175.
[
back
]
Note 13
. See,
ante,
Vol.XIII, Chap.
XI.
[
back
]
Note 14
. It is certain that, at the time of his weekly newspaper,
The Press
(1853); he looked up to
The Times
articles as a model.
[
back
]
Note 15
. Grevilles
Memoirs
(third part), vol.
I,
p. 119.
[
back
]
Note 16
. Later changes in the proprietorship and control of
The Times
may not be noted here.
[
back
]
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Times;
The Walters
The Stuarts and
The Morning Post
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