<h3> CHAPTER XXIV <br/><br/> HOLT WHITE'S STORY OF SEDAN AND HOW IT<br/> REACHED THE NEW YORK TRIBUNE<br/> </h3>
<p>I pass over the interval between Worth and
Sedan, crowded as it was with events, stopping
only to remark that <i>The Tribune</i> was indebted to
an American writer on <i>The Daily News</i> for its
account of Gravelotte, but not to <i>The Daily News</i>
except for the opportunity of buying that account,
at a high price. There was an entangling alliance
which forbade <i>The Daily News</i> to hand it over to
<i>The Tribune</i>, but did not prevent the correspondent
of that paper from selling it. I am not sure
whether the name of the writer is known but in
the circumstances it is not for me to disclose it.
The narrative was, of course, cabled to <i>The
Tribune</i> at once. Gravelotte was fought on the 18th
of August. The account of the battle reached
New York, I think, on the 21st. It was, at any
rate, the first, and for some time the only narrative
published. The defeated French called it the
battle of Rézonville, and under that name was
this description first printed. From a military
point of view the account had no great value,
but it was picturesquely written and in those
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P236"></SPAN>236}</span>
difficult days anything from the field was eagerly
read.</p>
<p>Greater days were at hand. The battle of
Sedan was fought on Thursday, September 1st,
1870, followed by the surrender of the town, the
army, and the Emperor Napoleon on the day
following. The news of the catastrophe was not
known in London till Saturday morning at ten
o'clock, and then only in the briefest form; the
mere fact and not much more; through the general
Press agency; I suppose Reuter's. Mr. Robinson
wired me and I went to <i>The Daily News</i> office.
But the bare news was of no great use for my
purposes. I went back to <i>The Tribune</i> office in
Pall Mall wondering what I was to do, and still
more what <i>The Tribune</i> correspondent in the
field were doing. I had not long to wait. A
dispatch arrived from Mr. Holt White saying he
should be in London that afternoon, and at five
o'clock he walked into the office.</p>
<p>Seldom have I been so glad to see any man's
face as I was to see his, but there was hardly so
much as a greeting between us. I asked first:</p>
<p>"Is your dispatch ready?"</p>
<p>"Not a word of it written."</p>
<p>"Will you sit down at once and begin?"</p>
<p>"I cannot. I am dead tired, and have had no
food since daybreak. I must eat and sleep before
I can write."</p>
<p>He looked it; a mere wreck of a correspondent,
haggard, ragged, dirty, incapable of the effort
which nevertheless had to be made. It was no
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P237"></SPAN>237}</span>
time to consider anybody's feelings. A continent
was waiting for the news locked up in that one
man's brain, and somehow or other the lock must
be forced, the news told, and the waiting continent
supplied with what it wanted. Incidentally, it
was such an opportunity for <i>The Tribune</i> as
seldom had come to any newspaper. It was
necessary to use a little authority. I said to
Mr. Holt White:</p>
<p>"You shall have something to eat, but sleep
you cannot till you have done your dispatch.
That must be in New York to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>So we went over to the Pall Mall Restaurant,
which was then in the building now replaced by
the Oceanic House, the headquarters of the
International Marine Navigation Company; if that
be its name. Food and drink refreshed him.
We were back in <i>The Tribune</i> office not long after
six and work began.</p>
<p>Mr. Holt White wrote one of the worst hands
ever seen, so I said to him I would copy as he
wrote and my copy would go to the cable
operators. Bad or good, mine was a hand they were
familiar with. We sat opposite each other at the
same table, and I copied sheet by sheet till there
was enough to give the cable a start, then took it
to the Anglo-American cable office in Telegraph
Street. I went myself for two reasons: first to
make sure it was delivered, and second to make
sure it went without interruption. The latter,
indeed, was a point of which it was impossible,
under the Weaver régime, to make sure. But I
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P238"></SPAN>238}</span>
could at least hand in the message over the counter.
Many a message have I trusted myself and
nobody else with, and many a letter have I posted
with my own hands; everything, in fact, of
importance ever since I had anything to do with
journalism. It is often inconvenient but I have
found it a good rule.</p>
<p>I dwell on these details. Few things in American
journalism, the Civil War excepted, have made
more stir than this exploit of Mr. Holt White.
But the full credit which belongs to him he has
never had. Consider what he had done. He had
been all through the battle; he had been in the
saddle all day from four o'clock in the morning
till nightfall. The battle over, he started for
London. He rode with his life in his hand. He
had to pass the lines of three armies, the Prussians
who refused him a permit, the French outposts to
the north of Sedan, and the Belgians, who made a
pretence of guarding their frontier and the neutrality
of Belgian territory. He could not explain
how he managed it. When he reached Brussels
he thought it might be possible to write there and
to wire his account from Brussels to London.
But at the chief telegraph office in Brussels the
official in charge told him flatly he would accept
no dispatch relating to the war. The issue of the
battle was unknown in Brussels. Anything handed
in for transmission to London or elsewhere would
be submitted first of all to the censor; and in
Brussels, as elsewhere, the censorship is a
heart-rending business; delay inevitable; and there was
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P239"></SPAN>239}</span>
no time for delay. It was, as I explained in an
earlier chapter, one reason why all correspondents
were directed to come straight to London where
the censorship did not exist. Mr. Holt White was
soon satisfied that it was useless to try to telegraph
from Brussels, and he came on by train to Calais,
missed the Calais boat, caught a later one, which
did not connect with the Dover-London service,
and, once at Dover, chartered a special train to
London and so at last arrived.</p>
<p>I asked him if any other correspondent had
come with him. He thought not; at any rate, no
one whom he knew as correspondent and, of course,
no one came by the special train. Still, there was
no certainty. It was already two days since the
sun had gone down on the beaten French in sedan.
There was nothing to do except to hurry on the
dispatch to New York.</p>
<p>With indomitable courage White wrote on.
After a time I asked him if he would rest a
little before finishing.</p>
<p>"No," he said, "if I stop I shall go to sleep,
and if I go to sleep I shall not wake."</p>
<p>The man's pluck was a splendid thing to see.
His answer was like the answer of an Atlantic
captain who, in the old days when there was no
telephone and designers had not learned how to
make the captain's cabin the nerve centre of the
ship, had been for three days and nights on the
bridge. I asked him how he lived through it.
He said it was rather trying to the knees.</p>
<p>"But did you never sit down?"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P240"></SPAN>240}</span></p>
<p>"Oh, if I had sat down I should have gone to
sleep."</p>
<p>There are heroisms of that kind in the routine
of life, professional and other, and even in the
profession of journalism of which the newspaper
reader in the morning over his coffee and rolls
never thinks. But they are real and without them,
and without the loyalty and devotion of such men,
there might sometimes be nothing for the man
with his coffee and rolls to read.</p>
<p>White sat at his table till midnight and later.
It was nearer two o'clock than one before the
last of his message was filed in Telegraph Street.
Whether by Mr. Weaver's intervention or not I
cannot say, but there was a delay on the wires.
The delay, I was afterwards told, was on the
Newfoundland land lines to New York. It may
be so. It was a message six columns long and
not all of it appeared in <i>The Tribune</i> that next
Sunday morning though all of it had been filed
in ample time; two o'clock in the morning in
London being only nine o'clock of the evening
before in New York.</p>
<p>No matter. It was a clear, coherent, vivid
battle story, and it was the only one. No morning
paper in London had any account of the battle
till the Tuesday following; and all New York
accounts, <i>The Tribune</i> excepted, were from the
London Press or Press agencies. It is not worth
while to recall the comments of <i>The Tribune's</i>
rivals. They were angry, naturally enough, and
they resorted to conjectures which might as well
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P241"></SPAN>241}</span>
have been left unexpressed. It is enough to
explain further that Mr. Holt White's narrative
did not appear in <i>The Daily News</i> because he had
an agreement with <i>The Pall Mall Gazette</i>. Part
of this account, therefore, was printed in an
abridged form in <i>The Pall Mall</i> of Monday, for
which it was written separately. <i>The Pall Mall</i>
is an evening paper, and when that was cabled to
New York and found to be obviously from the
same source as <i>The Tribune's</i> the guesses grew
wild. But the plain truth is now told, and is
simple enough.</p>
<p>Mr. Holt White was a journalist but not at that
time a journalist of any exceptional reputation
or position. This, I think, was the first very
considerable thing he had done. I am sorry to
have to add that it was also the last. He was a
man to whom, after such an achievement as this,
a long repose became necessary. He rejoined the
Prussian headquarters, spent the winter at Versailles,
and during all those months did practically
nothing. Of his great gifts and capacities he made
no further use, even down to the end of his life,
and the end came early. But he is entitled to be
remembered as a man who at one supreme moment
accomplished one of the most brilliant exploits in
the history of journalism. Let us judge him by
his best, and, so judged, his name must take its
place with those of Russell, McGahan, Forbes,
Steevens, and others of that rank if there are any
others.</p>
<p>One more remark, to remind you how alien from
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P242"></SPAN>242}</span>
the mind of the British journalist at that time was
the free use of the telegraph, which in America
had become a thing of every day. When White sat
down to write he said to me: "I suppose I am to
condense as much as possible?"</p>
<p>"No, write fully."</p>
<p>"But it is going by cable."</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"It will be some columns long."</p>
<p>"The longer the better."</p>
<p>He thought a little, then said:</p>
<p>"I still don't quite understand."</p>
<p>"Then please put the cable out of your mind,
and write exactly as if you were writing for a
London paper and the printer's devil waiting." And
he did.</p>
<p><br/><br/><br/></p>
<p><SPAN id="chap25"></SPAN></p>
<p><span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P243"></SPAN>243}</span></p>
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