It was the summer of 1889 that Mark
Twain first met Rudyard Kipling. Kipling was
making his tour around the world, a young man wholly
unheard of outside of India. He was writing letters
home to an Indian journal, The Pioneer, and he came
to Elmira especially to see Mark Twain. It was
night when he arrived, and next morning some one at
the hotel directed him to Quarry Farm. In a hired
hack he made his way out through the suburbs, among
the buzzing planing-mills and sash factories, and toiled
up the long, dusty, roasting east hill, only to find
that Mark Twain was at General Langdon’s, in
the city he had just left behind. Mrs. Crane
and Susy Clemens were the only ones left at the farm,
and they gave him a seat on the veranda and brought
him glasses of water or cool milk while he refreshed
them with his talk-talk which Mark Twain once said
might be likened to footprints, so strong and definite
was the impression which it left behind. He gave
them his card, on which the address was Allahabad,
and Susy preserved it on that account, because to
her India was a fairyland, made up of magic, airy architecture,
and dark mysteries. Clemens once dictated a memory
of Kipling’s visit.
Kipling had written upon the
card a compliment to me. This gave it
an additional value in Susy’s
eyes, since, as a distinction, it was
the next thing to being recognized
by a denizen of the moon.
Kipling came down that afternoon and
spent a couple of hours with me, and at the end
of that time I had surprised him as much as he had
surprised me and the honors were easy.
I believed that he knew more than any person I
had met before, and I knew that he knew that I
knew less than any person he had met before though
he did not say it, and I was not expecting that
he would. When he was gone Mrs. Langdon wanted
to know about my visitor. I said:
“He is a stranger to
me, but he is a most remarkable man and
I am
the other one. Between
us we cover all knowledge; he knows all that
can be known, and I know the
rest.”
He was a stranger to me and to all the
world, and remained so for twelve months, then
he became suddenly known, and universally known.
From that day to this he has held this unique distinction that
of being the only living person, not head of a
nation, whose voice is heard around the world
the moment it drops a remark; the only such voice
in existence that does not go by slow ship and rail,
but always travels first-class by cable.
About a year after Kipling’s
visit in Elmira George Warner came into
our library one morning in
Hartford with a small book in his hand
and asked me if I had ever
heard of Rudyard Kipling. I said, “No.”
He said I would hear of him very soon,
and that the noise he was going to make would
be loud and continuous. The little book was the
Plain Tales, and he left it for me to read, saying
it was charged with a new and inspiriting fragrance,
and would blow a refreshing breath around the
world that would revive the nations. A day or
two later he brought a copy of the London World
which had a sketch of Kipling in it, and a mention
of the fact that he had traveled in the United
States. According to this sketch he had passed
through Elmira. This remark, with the additional
fact that he hailed from India, attracted my attention also
Susy’s. She went to her room and brought
his card from its place in the frame of her mirror,
and the Quarry Farm visitor stood identified.
Kipling also has left an account of
that visit. In his letter recording it he says:
You are a contemptible lot over yonder.
Some of you are Commissioners and some are Lieutenant-Governors,
and some have the V. C., and a few are privileged
to walk about the Mall arm in arm with the Viceroy;
but I have seen Mark Twain this golden morning, have
shaken his hand and smoked a cigar no, two
cigars with him, and talked with him
for more than two hours! Understand clearly that
I do not despise you; indeed, I don’t. I
am only very sorry for you, from the Viceroy downward.
A big, darkened drawing-room; a huge
chair; a man with eyes, a mane of grizzled hair,
a brown mustache covering a mouth as delicate as a
woman’s, a strong, square hand shaking mine,
and the slowest, calmest, levelest voice in all
the world saying:
“Well, you think you
owe me something, and you’ve come to tell me
so. That’s what
I call squaring a debt handsomely.”
“Piff!” from a cob-pipe
(I always said that a Missouri meerschaum was
the best smoking in the world), and behold! Mark
Twain had curled himself up in the big arm-chair,
and I was smoking reverently, as befits one in
the presence of his superior.
The thing that struck me first was that
he was an elderly man; yet, after a minute’s
thought, I perceived that it was otherwise, and in
five minutes, the eyes looking at me, I saw that
the gray hair was an accident of the most trivial.
He was quite young. I was shaking his hand.
I was smoking his cigar, and I was hearing him talk this
man I had learned to love and admire fourteen thousand
miles away.
Reading his books, I had striven to
get an idea of his personality, and all my preconceived
notions were wrong and beneath the reality. Blessed
is the man who finds no disillusion when he is brought
face to face with a revered writer.
The meeting of those two men made
the summer of ’89 memorable in later years.
But it was recalled sadly, too. Theodore Crane,
who had been taken suddenly and dangerously ill the
previous autumn, had a recurring attack and died July
3d. It was the first death in the immediate families
for more than seventeen years, Mrs. Clemens, remembering
that earlier period of sorrow, was depressed with
forebodings.