And Then The Very Writing Is In
Itself Below Mediocrity; As Though A Power Of Expression In Properly
Arranged Language Was Not Required By A Newspaper Editor, Either As
Regards Himself Or As Regards His Subordinates.
One is driven to
suppose that the writers for the daily press are not chosen with any
view to such capability.
A man ambitious of being on the staff of
an American newspaper should be capable of much work, should be
satisfied with small pay, should be indifferent to the world's good
usage, should be rough, ready, and of long sufferance; but, above
all, he should be smart. The type of almost all American newspapers
is wretched - I think I may say of all - so wretched that that alone
forbids one to hope for pleasure in reading them. They are ill
written, ill printed, and ill arranged, and in fact are not
readable. They are bought, glanced at, and thrown away.
They are full of boastings, not boastings simply as to their
country, their town, or their party, but of boastings as to
themselves. And yet they possess no self-assurance. It is always
evident that they neither trust themselves, nor expect to be
trusted. They have made no approach to that omniscience which
constitutes the great marvel of our own daily press; but finding it
necessary to write as though they possessed it, they fall into
blunders which are almost as marvelous. Justice and right judgment
are out of the question with them. A political party end is always
in view, and political party warfare in America admits of any
weapons. No newspaper in America is really powerful or popular; and
yet they are tyrannical and overbearing. The New York Herald has, I
believe, the largest sale of any daily newspaper; but it is
absolutely without political power, and in these times of war has
truckled to the government more basely than any other paper. It has
an enormous sale, but so far is it from having achieved popularity
that no man on any side ever speaks a good word for it. All
American newspapers deal in politics as a matter of course; but
their politics have ever regard to men and not to measures.
Vituperation is their natural political weapon; but since the
President's ministers have assumed the power of stopping newspapers
which are offensive to them, they have shown that they can descend
below vituperation to eulogy.
I shall be accused of using very strong language against the
newspaper press of America. I can only say that I do not know how
to make that language too strong. Of course there are newspapers as
to which the editors and writers may justly feel that my remarks, if
applied to them, are unmerited. In writing on such a subject, I can
only deal with the whole as a whole. During my stay in the country,
I did my best to make myself acquainted with the nature of its
newspapers, knowing in how great a degree its population depends on
them for its daily store of information; for newspapers in the
States of America have a much wider, or rather closer circulation,
than they do with us.
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