CHAPTER CCXLIII. AN INVESTMENT IN REDDING
Many of the less important happenings
seem worth remembering now. Among them was the
sale, at the Nast auction, of the Mark Twain letters,
already mentioned. The fact that these letters
brought higher prices than any others offered in this
sale was gratifying. Roosevelt, Grant, and even
Lincoln items were sold; but the Mark Twain letters
led the list. One of them sold for forty-three
dollars, which was said to be the highest price ever
paid for the letter of a living man. It was the
letter written in 1877, quoted earlier in this work,
in which Clemens proposed the lecture tour to Nast.
None of the Clemens-Nast letters brought less than
twenty-seven dollars, and some of them were very brief.
It was a new measurement of public sentiment.
Clemens, when he heard of it, said:
“I can’t rise to General
Grant’s lofty place in the estimation of this
country; but it is a deep satisfaction to me to know
that when it comes to letter-writing he can’t
sit in the front seat along with me. That forty-three-dollar
letter ought to be worth as much as eighty-six dollars
after I’m dead.”
A perpetual string of callers came
to 21 Fifth Avenue, and it kept the secretary busy
explaining to most of them why Mark Twain could not
entertain their propositions, or listen to their complaints,
or allow them to express in person their views on
public questions. He did see a great many of
what might be called the milder type persons who were
evidently sincere and not too heavily freighted with
eloquence. Of these there came one day a very
gentle-spoken woman who had promised that she would
stay but a moment, and say no more than a few words,
if only she might sit face to face with the great
man. It was in the morning hour before the dictations,
and he received her, quite correctly clad in his beautiful
dressing-robe and propped against his pillows.
She kept her contract to the letter; but when she
rose to go she said, in a voice of deepest reverence:
“May I kiss your hand?”
It was a delicate situation, and might
easily have been made ludicrous. Denial would
have hurt her. As it was, he lifted his hand,
a small, exquisite hand it was, with the gentle dignity
and poise of a king, and she touched her lips to it
with what was certainly adoration. Then, as she
went, she said:
“How God must love you!”
“I hope so,” he said,
softly, and he did not even smile; but after she had
gone he could not help saying, in a quaint, half-pathetic
voice “I guess she hasn’t heard of our
strained relations.”
Sitting in that royal bed, clad in
that rich fashion, he easily conveyed the impression
of royalty, and watching him through those marvelous
mornings he seemed never less than a king, as indeed
he was the king of a realm without national
boundaries. Some of those nearest to him fell
naturally into the habit of referring to him as “the
King,” and in time the title crept out of the
immediate household and was taken up by others who
loved him.
He had been more than once photographed
in his bed; but it was by those who had come and gone
in a brief time, with little chance to study his natural
attitudes. I had acquired some knowledge of the
camera, and I obtained his permission to let me photograph
him a permission he seldom denied to any
one. We had no dictations on Saturdays, and I
took the pictures on one of these holiday mornings.
He was so patient and tractable, and so natural in
every attitude, that it was a delight to make the
negatives. I was afraid he would become impatient,
and made fewer exposures than I might otherwise have
done. I think he expected very little from this
amateur performance; but, by that happy element of
accident which plays so large a part in photographic
success, the results were better than I had hoped
for. When I brought him the prints, a few days
later, he expressed pleasure and asked, “Why
didn’t you make more?”
Among them was one in an attitude
which had grown so familiar to us, that of leaning
over to get his pipe from the smoking-table, and this
seemed to give him particular satisfaction. It
being a holiday, he had not donned his dressing-gown,
which on the whole was well for the photographic result.
He spoke of other pictures that had been made of him,
especially denouncing one photograph, taken some twenty
years before by Sarony, a picture, as he said, of
a gorilla in an overcoat, which the papers and magazines
had insisted on using ever since.
“Sarony was as enthusiastic
about wild animals as he was about photography, and
when Du Chaillu brought over the first gorilla he sent
for me to look at it and see if our genealogy was straight.
I said it was, and Sarony was so excited that I had
recognized the resemblance between us, that he wanted
to make it more complete, so he borrowed my overcoat
and put it on the gorilla and photographed it, and
spread that picture out over the world as mine.
It turns up every week in some newspaper or magazine;
but it’s not my favorite; I have tried to get
it suppressed.”
Mark Twain made his first investment
in Redding that spring. I had located there the
autumn before, and bought a vacant old house, with
a few acres of land, at what seemed a modest price.
I was naturally enthusiastic over the bargain, and
the beauty and salubrity of the situation. His
interest was aroused, and when he learned that there
was a place adjoining, equally reasonable and perhaps
even more attractive, he suggested immediately that
I buy it for him; and he wanted to write a check then
for the purchase price, for fear the opportunity might
be lost. I think there was then no purpose in
his mind of building a country home; but he foresaw
that such a site, at no great distance from New York,
would become more valuable, and he had plenty of idle
means. The purchase was made without difficulty a
tract of seventy-five acres, to which presently was
added another tract of one hundred and ten acres,
and subsequently still other parcels of land, to complete
the ownership of the hilltop, for it was not long
until he had conceived the idea of a home. He
was getting weary of the heavy pressure of city life.
He craved the retirement of solitude one
not too far from the maelstrom, so that he might mingle
with it now and then when he chose. The country
home would not be begun for another year yet, but
the purpose of it was already in the air. No
one of the family had at this time seen the location.