The dinner with Emperor William II.
at General von Versen’s was set for the 20th
of February. A few days before, Mark Twain entered
in his note-book:
In that day the Imperial lion
and the Democratic lamb shall sit down
together, and a little General
shall feed them.
Mark Twain was the guest of honor
on this occasion, and was seated at the Emperor’s
right hand. The Emperor’s brother, Prince
Heinrich, sat opposite; Prince Radolin farther along.
Rudolf Lindau, of the Foreign Office, was also present.
There were fourteen at the table, all told. In
his memorandum made at the time, Clemens gave no account
of the dinner beyond the above details, only adding:
After dinner 6 or 8 officers came in,
& all hands adjourned to the big room out of the
smoking-room and held a “smoking parliament”
after the style of the ancient Potsdam one, till
midnight, when the Emperor shook hands and left.
It was not until fourteen years later
that Mark Twain related some special matters pertaining
to that evening. He may have expanded then somewhat
to fill out spaces of his memory, and embroidered them,
as was his wont; but that something happened, either
in reality or in his imagination, which justified
his version of it we may believe. He told it
as here given, premising: “This may appear
in print after I am dead, but not before.
“From 1891 until day before yesterday
I had never mentioned the matter, nor set it down
with a pen, nor ever referred to it in any way not
even to my wife, to whom I was accustomed to tell
everything that happened to me.
“At the dinner his Majesty chatted
briskly and entertainingly along in easy and flowing
English, and now and then he interrupted himself to
address a remark to me or to some other individual
of the guests. When the reply had been delivered
he resumed his talk. I noticed that the table
etiquette tallied with that which was the law of my
house at home when we had guests; that is to say,
the guests answered when the host favored them
with a remark, and then quieted down and behaved
themselves until they got another chance. If I
had been in the Emperor’s chair and he in
mine I should have felt infinitely comfortable
and at home, but I was guest now, and consequently
felt less at home. From old experience I was familiar
with the rules of the game and familiar with their
exercise from the high place of host; but I was
not familiar with the trammeled and less satisfactory
position of guest, therefore I felt a little strange
and out of place. But there was no animosity no,
the Emperor was host, therefore, according to
my own rule, he had a right to do the talking,
and it was my honorable duty to intrude no interruptions
or other improvements except upon invitation; and of
course it could be my turn some day some
day, on some friendly visit of inspection to America,
it might be my pleasure and distinction to have
him as guest at my table; then I would give him a
rest and a quiet time.
“In one way there was a difference
between his table and mine-for instance, atmosphere;
the guests stood in awe of him, and naturally they
conferred that feeling upon me, for, after all, I am
only human, although I regret it. When a
guest answered a question he did it with a deferential
voice and manner; he did not put any emotion into
it, and he did not spin it out, but got it out of his
system as quickly as he could, and then looked
relieved. The Emperor was used to this atmosphere,
and it did not chill his blood; maybe it was an
inspiration to him, for he was alert, brilliant, and
full of animation; also he was most gracefully
and felicitously complimentary to my books and
I will remark here that the happy phrasing of
a compliment is one of the rarest of human gifts and
the happy delivery of it another. I once
mentioned the high compliment which he paid to
the book ‘Old Times on the Mississippi’;
but there were others, among them some high praise
of my description in ’A Tramp Abroad’
of certain striking phases of German student life.
“Fifteen or twenty minutes before
the dinner ended the Emperor made a remark to
me in praise of our generous soldier pensions; then,
without pausing, he continued the remark, not speaking
to me, but across the table to his brother, Prince
Heinrich. The Prince replied, endorsing the
Emperor’s view of the matter. Then I followed
with my own view of it. I said that in the beginning
our government’s generosity to the soldier
was clear in its intent and praiseworthy, since
the pensions were conferred upon soldiers who had
earned them, soldiers who had been disabled in the
war and could no longer earn a livelihood for
themselves and their families, but that the pensions
decreed and added later lacked the virtue of a clean
motive, and had, little by little, degenerated into
a wider and wider and more and more offensive
system of vote-purchasing, and was now become
a source of corruption, which was an unpleasant thing
to contemplate and was a danger besides. I
think that that was about the substance of my
remark; but in any case the remark had a quite
definite result, and that is the memorable thing about
it manifestly it made everybody uncomfortable.
I seemed to perceive this quite plainly.
I had committed an indiscretion. Possibly it
was in violating etiquette by intruding a remark
when I had not been invited to make one; possibly
it was in taking issue with an opinion promulgated
by his Majesty. I do not know which it was, but
I quite clearly remember the effect which my act
produced to wit, the Emperor refrained
from addressing any remarks to me afterward, and not
merely during the brief remainder of the dinner, but
afterward in the kneip-room, where beer and cigars
and hilarious anecdoting prevailed until about
midnight. I am sure that the Emperor’s good
night was the only thing he said to me in all that
time.
“Was this rebuke studied and intentional?
I don’t know, but I regarded it in that
way. I can’t be absolutely sure of it because
of modifying doubts created afterward by one or
two circumstances. For example: the
Empress Dowager invited me to her palace, and the
reigning Empress invited me to breakfast, and also
sent for General von Versen to come to her palace
and read to her and her ladies from my books.”
It was a personal message from the
Emperor that fourteen years later recalled to him
this curious circumstance. A gentleman whom Clemens
knew went on a diplomatic mission to Germany.
Upon being presented to Emperor William, the latter
had immediately begun to talk of Mark Twain and his
work. He spoke of the description of German student
life as the greatest thing of its kind ever written,
and of the sketch on the German language as wonderful;
then he said:
“Convey to Mr. Clemens my kindest
regards, ask him if he remembers that dinner at Von
Versen’s, and ask him why he didn’t do
any more talking at that dinner.”
It seemed a mysterious message.
Clemens thought it might have been meant to convey
some sort of an imperial apology; but again it might
have meant that Mark Twain’s breach and the
Emperor’s coolness on that occasion were purely
imaginary, and that the Emperor had really expected
him to talk far more than he did.
Returning to the Royal Hotel after
the Von Versen dinner, Mark Twain received his second
high compliment that day on the Mississippi book.
The portier, a tow-headed young German, must have
been comparatively new at the hotel; for apparently
he had just that day learned that his favorite author,
whose books he had long been collecting, was actually
present in the flesh. Clemens, all ready to apologize
for asking so late an admission, was greeted by the
portier’s round face all sunshine and smiles.
The young German then poured out a stream of welcome
and compliments and dragged the author to a small
bedroom near the front door, where he excitedly pointed
out a row of books, German translations of Mark Twain.
“There,” he said; “you
wrote them. I’ve found it out. Lieber
Gott! I did not know it before, and I ask a million
pardons. That one there, Old Times on the Mississippi,
is the best you ever wrote.”
The note-book records only one social
event following the Emperor’s dinner a
dinner with the secretary of the legation. The
note says:
At the Emperor’s dinner black
cravats were ordered. Tonight I went in a black
cravat and everybody else wore white ones. Just
my luck.
The Berlin activities came to an end
then. He was still physically far from robust,
and his doctors peremptorily ordered him to stay indoors
or to go to a warmer climate. This was March
1st. Clemens and his wife took Joseph Very, and,
leaving the others for the time in Berlin, set out
for Mentone, in the south of France.