<h3> CHAPTER XXVI <br/><br/> A PARENTHESIS </h3>
<p>To what I have said of journalism I need not
add much. I remained in London as the
representative of <i>The New York Tribune</i>, and in
charge of its European affairs from 1867 to 1895;
returning then to New York and Washington for
<i>The Times</i>, till 1905.</p>
<p>When <i>The Tribune</i> began publishing a Sunday
edition, one other innovation upon the established
practice followed. I sent each week, by cable, a
column containing a summary view of what seemed
most important during the week. It was not a
summary of news and it was not a leading article
but a compromise between the two. It was, at
any rate, the first of its kind, and I was allowed
to put it in such shape as I thought best, since
then, the American demand for what are called
"Sunday cables" has grown, the despatches to all
the great journals of the United States have
increased in number, in length, in variety, and in
daring. All I claim for mine is that it was the
first. I do not know whether any work in
journalism has in it the elements of permanency.
Probably not. Journalism is an expression of the
<span class="pagenum">{<SPAN id="P252"></SPAN>252}</span>
governing forces of the day, and day by day
changes as the forces change and the days change.
But should a history of international journalism
be written, the historian will perhaps remember
that as agent of <i>The Tribune</i> I set up in London
that European news-bureau which all other great
American journals after some years copied; that I
was in charge of it during the Franco-German
War; and that the success of <i>The Tribune</i> during
that war was due to the system already described,
which I had established three years before.</p>
<p>The years that follow are full of miscellaneous
interests. The Memories, some of which are
reprinted in this volume, are not primarily historical,
though I hope they are accurate. They are
impressions. They cannot be presented as a sequence,
and as each chapter, or group of chapters, deals
with a separate subject, I republish most of them
in the order in which they were written and
printed, or otherwise as may seem convenient.
I pass now to an incident of the Irish "War," and
then to a diplomatic experiment in the history of
those long contentious relations between Canada
and the United States which have so often
imperilled the friendship between England and the
United States.</p>
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