Holy land pleasure
excursion
Steamer: Quaker City.
Captain
C. C. Duncan.
Left New
York at 2 P.m., June 8, 1867.
Rough weather anchored
within the harbor to lay all night.
That first note recorded an event
momentous in Mark Twain’s career an
event of supreme importance; if we concede that any
link in a chain regardless of size is of more importance
than any other link. Undoubtedly it remains the
most conspicuous event, as the world views it now,
in retrospect.
The note further heads a new chapter
of history in sea-voyaging. No such thing as
the sailing of an ocean steamship with a pleasure-party
on a long transatlantic cruise had ever occurred before.
A similar project had been undertaken the previous
year, but owing to a cholera scare in the East it
had been abandoned. Now the dream had become a
fact a stupendous fact when we consider
it. Such an important beginning as that now would
in all likelihood furnish the chief news story of the
day.
But they had different ideas of news
in those days. There were no headlines announcing
the departure of the Quaker City only the
barest mention of the ship’s sailing, though
a prominent position was given to an account of a
senatorial excursion-party which set out that same
morning over the Union Pacific Railway, then under
construction. Every name in that political party
was set dawn, and not one of them except General Hancock
will ever be heard of again. The New York Times,
however, had some one on its editorial staff who thought
it worth while to comment a little on the history-making
Quaker City excursion. The writer was pleasantly
complimentary to officers and passengers. He
referred to Moses S. Beach, of the Sun, who was taking
with him type and press, whereby he would “skilfully
utilize the brains of the company for their mutual
edification.” Mr. Beecher and General Sherman
would find talent enough aboard to make the hours
go pleasantly (evidently the writer had not interested
himself sufficiently to know that these gentlemen
were not along), and the paragraph closed by prophesying
other such excursions, and wishing the travelers “good
speed, a happy voyage, and a safe return.”
That was handsome, especially for
those days; only now, some fine day, when an airship
shall start with a band of happy argonauts to land
beyond the sunrise for the first time in history, we
shall feature it and emblazon it with pictures in
the Sunday papers, and weeklies, and in the magazines. [The
Quaker City idea was so unheard-of that in some of
the foreign ports visited, the officials could not
believe that the vessel was simply a pleasure-craft,
and were suspicious of some dark, ulterior purpose.]
That Henry Ward Beecher and General
Sherman had concluded not to go was a heavy disappointment
at first; but it proved only a temporary disaster.
The inevitable amalgamation of all ship companies took
place. The sixty-seven travelers fell into congenial
groups, or they mingled and devised amusements, and
gossiped and became a big family, as happy and as
free from contention as families of that size are likely
to be.
The Quaker City was a good enough
ship and sizable for her time. She was registered
eighteen hundred tons about one-tenth the
size of Mediterranean excursion-steamers today and
when conditions were favorable she could make ten
knots an hour under steam or, at least,
she could do it with the help of her auxiliary sails.
Altogether she was a cozy, satisfactory ship, and
they were a fortunate company who had her all to themselves
and went out on her on that long-ago ocean gipsying.
She has grown since then, even to the proportions of
the Mayflower. It was necessary for her to grow
to hold all of those who in later times claimed to
have sailed in her on that voyage with Mark Twain. [The
Quaker City passenger list will be found under Appendix
F, at the end of last volume.]
They were not all ministers and deacons
aboard the Quaker City. Clemens found other congenial
spirits be sides his room-mate Dan Slote among
them the ship’s surgeon, Dr. A. Reeve Jackson
(the guide-destroying “Doctor” of The
Innocents); Jack Van Nostrand, of New Jersey ("Jack");
Julius Moulton, of St. Louis ("Moult"), and other care-free
fellows, the smoking-room crowd which is likely to
make comradeship its chief watchword. There were
companionable people in the cabin crowd also fine,
intelligent men and women, especially one of the latter,
a middle-aged, intellectual, motherly soul Mrs.
A. W. Fairbanks, of Cleveland, Ohio. Mrs. Fairbanks herself
a newspaper correspondent for her husband’s
paper, the Cleveland Herald had a large influence on
the character and general tone of those Quaker City
letters which established Mark Twain’s larger
fame. She was an able writer herself; her judgment
was thoughtful, refined, unbiased altogether
of a superior sort. She understood Samuel Clemens,
counseled him, encouraged him to read his letters
aloud to her, became in reality “Mother Fairbanks,”
as they termed her, to him and to others of that ship
who needed her kindly offices.
In one of his home letters, later, he said of her:
She was the most refined, intelligent,
cultivated lady in the ship, and altogether the
kindest and best. She sewed my buttons on, kept
my clothing in presentable trim, fed me on Egyptian
jam (when I behaved), lectured me awfully on the
quarter-deck on moonlit promenading evenings,
and cured me of several bad habits. I am under
lasting obligations to her. She looks young because
she is so good, but she has a grown son and daughter
at home.
In one of the early letters which
Mrs. Fairbanks wrote to her paper she is scarcely
less complimentary to him, even if in a different way.
We have D.D.’s and M.D.’s we
have men of wisdom and men of wit. There
is one table from which is sure to come a peal of laughter,
and all eyes are turned toward Mark Twain, whose
face is, perfectly mirth-provoking. Sitting
lazily at the table, scarcely genteel in his appearance,
there is something, I know not what, that interests
and attracts. I saw to-day at dinner venerable
divines and sage- looking men convulsed with laughter
at his drolleries and quaint, odd manners.
It requires only a few days on shipboard
for acquaintances to form, and presently a little
afternoon group was gathering to hear Mark Twain read
his letters. Mrs. Fairbanks was there, of course,
also Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Severance, likewise of Cleveland,
and Moses S. Beach, of the Sun, with his daughter
Emma, a girl of seventeen. Dan Slote was likely
to be there, too, and Jack, and the Doctor, and Charles
J. Langdon, of Elmira, New York, a boy of eighteen,
who had conceived a deep admiration for the brilliant
writer. They were fortunate ones who first gathered
to hear those daring, wonderful letters.
But the benefit was a mutual one.
He furnished a priceless entertainment, and he derived
something equally priceless in return the
test of immediate audience and the boon of criticism.
Mrs. Fairbanks especially was frankly sincere.
Mr. Severance wrote afterward:
One afternoon I saw him tearing up a
bunch of the soft, white paper- copy paper, I
guess the newspapers call it-on which he had written
something, and throwing the fragments into the
Mediterranean. I inquired of him why he cast
away the fruits of his labors in that manner.
“Well,” he drawled, “Mrs.
Fairbanks thinks it oughtn’t to be printed,
and, like as not, she is right.”
And Emma Beach (Mrs. Abbott Thayer)
remembers hearing him say:
“Well, Mrs. Fairbanks has just
destroyed another four hours’ work for me.”
Sometimes he played chess with Emma
Beach, who thought him a great hero because, once
when a crowd of men were tormenting a young lad, a
passenger, Mark Twain took the boy’s part and
made them desist.
“I am sure I was right, too,”
she declares; “heroism came natural to him.”
Mr. Severance recalls another incident
which, as he says, was trivial enough, but not easy
to forget:
We were having a little celebration
over the birthday anniversary of Mrs. Duncan, wife
of our captain. Mark Twain got up and made a little
speech, in which he said Mrs. Duncan was really older
than Methuselah because she knew a lot of things that
Methuselah never heard of. Then he mentioned
a number of more or less modern inventions, and wound
up by saying, “What did Methuselah know about
a barbed-wire fence?”
Except Following the Equator, The
Innocents Abroad comes nearer to being history than
any other of Mark Twain’s travel-books.
The notes for it were made on the spot, and there
was plenty of fact, plenty of fresh, new experience,
plenty of incident to set down. His idea of descriptive
travel in those days was to tell the story as it happened;
also, perhaps, he had not then acquired the courage
of his inventions. We may believe that the adventures
with Jack, Dan, and the Doctor are elaborated here
and there; but even those happened substantially as
recorded. There is little to add, then, to the
story of that halcyon trip, and not much to elucidate.
The old note-books give a light here
and there that is interesting. It is curious
to be looking through them now, trying to realize that
these penciled memoranda were the fresh, first impressions
that would presently grow into the world’s most
delightful book of travel; that they were set down
in the very midst of that care-free little company
that frolicked through Italy, climbed wearily the arid
Syrian hills. They are all dead now; but to us
they are as alive and young to-day as when they followed
the footprints of the Son of Man through Palestine,
and stood at last before the Sphinx, impressed and
awed by its “five thousand slow-revolving years.”
Some of the items consist of no more
than a few terse, suggestive words serious,
humorous, sometimes profane. Others are statistical,
descriptive, elaborated. Also there are drawings “not
copied,” he marks them, with a pride not always
justified by the result. The earlier notes are
mainly comments on the “pilgrims,” the
freak pilgrims: “the Frenchy-looking woman
who owns a dog and keeps up an interminable biography
of him to the passengers”; the “long-legged,
simple, wide-mouthed, horse-laughing young fellow
who once made a sea voyage to Fortress Monroe, and
quotes eternally from his experiences”; also,
there is reference to another young man, “good,
accommodating, pleasant but fearfully green.”
This young person would become the “Interrogation
Point,” in due time, and have his picture on
page 71 (old edition), while opposite him, on page
70, would appear the “oracle,” identified
as one Doctor Andrews, who (the note-book says) had
the habit of “smelling in guide-books for knowledge
and then trying to play it for old information that
has been festering in his brain.” Sometimes
there are abstract notes such as:
How lucky Adam was. He knew when
he said a good thing that no one had ever said it
before.
Of the “character” notes,
the most important and elaborated is that which presents
the “Poet Lariat.” This is the entry,
somewhat epitomized:
Bloodgood H.
Cutter
He is fifty years old, and small of
his age. He dresses in homespun, and is a
simple-minded, honest, old-fashioned farmer, with
a strange proclivity for writing rhymes. He
writes them on all possible subjects, and gets
them printed on slips of paper, with his portrait
at the head. These he will give to any man who
comes along, whether he has anything against him
or not....
Dan said:
“It must be a great
happiness to you to sit down at the close of day
and put its events all down
in rhymes and poetry, like Byron and
Shakespeare and those fellows.”
“Oh yes, it is it
is Why, many’s the time I’ve
had to get up in
the night when it comes on
me:
Whether
we’re on the sea or the land
We’ve
all got to go at the word of command
“Hey! how’s that?”
A curious character was Cutter a
Long Island farmer with the obsession of rhyme.
In his old age, in an interview, he said:
“Mark was generally writing
and he was glum. He would write what we were
doing, and I would write poetry, and Mark would say:
“‘For Heaven’s sake,
Cutter, keep your poems to yourself.’
“Yes, Mark was pretty glum,
and he was generally writing.”
Poor old Poet Lariat dead
now with so many others of that happy crew. We
may believe that Mark learned to be “glum”
when he saw the Lariat approaching with his sheaf
of rhymes. We may believe, too, that he was “generally
writing.” He contributed fifty-three letters
to the Alta during that five months and six to the
Tribune. They would average about two columns
nonpareil each, which is to say four thousand words,
or something like two hundred and fifty thousand words
in all. To turn out an average of fifteen hundred
words a day, with continuous sight-seeing besides,
one must be generally writing during any odd intervals;
those who are wont to regard Mark Twain as lazy may
consider these statistics. That he detested manual
labor is true enough, but at the work for which he
was fitted and intended it may be set down here upon
authority (and despite his own frequent assertions
to the contrary) that to his last year he was the
most industrious of men.