Just after midnight on the 13th December 1889, George Murray Smith, London publisher and businessman, received the telegram from Venice telling him of the death of his friend Robert Browning. The night was bitterly cold and the streets deep in snow, but he decided to take the news to the editor of The Times. A cab was hard to find and he had to walk to Hyde Park Corner from his house in Queen's Gate Gardens before he hailed one, and when he arrived at Printing House Square his reception was as cold as the weather:
I found the Editor of The Times after midnight as difficult of approach as a cabinet minister. I was shown first into one room, then into another, and after being duly inspected in each room I was then invited to take a seat and wait. The time went on; at length I rang a bell and sent in a message to Mr. Buckle that if he didn't see me soon I must be gone. This produced the great man. He thanked me for the news which was quite exclusive, and there was more than a column about Browning in The Times of that morning.