Now came the tranquil days of the
Connecticut autumn. The change of the landscape
colors was a constant delight to Mark Twain. There
were several large windows in his room, and he called
them his picture-gallery. The window-panes were
small, and each formed a separate picture of its own
that was changing almost hourly. The red tones
that began to run through the foliage; the red berry
bushes; the fading grass, and the little touches of
sparkling frost that came every now and then at early
morning; the background of distant blue hills and changing
skies-these things gave his gallery a multitude of
variation that no art-museums could furnish.
He loved it all, and he loved to walk out in it, pacing
up and down the terrace, or the long path that led
to the pergola at the foot of a natural garden.
If a friend came, he was willing to walk much farther;
and we often descended the hill in one direction or
another, though usually going toward the “gorge,”
a romantic spot where a clear brook found its way through
a deep and rather dangerous-looking chasm. Once
he was persuaded to descend into this fairy-like place,
for it was well worth exploring; but his footing was
no longer sure and he did not go far.
He liked better to sit on the grass-grown,
rocky arch above and look down into it, and let his
talk follow his mood. He liked to contemplate
the geology of his surroundings, the record of the
ageless periods of construction required to build
the world. The marvels of science always appealed
to him. He reveled in the thought of the almost
limitless stretches of time, the millions upon millions
of years that had been required for this stratum and
that he liked to amaze himself with the
sounding figures. I remember him expressing a
wish to see the Grand Canon of Arizona, where, on
perpendicular walls six thousand feet high, the long
story of geological creation is written. I had
stopped there during my Western trip of the previous
year, and I told him something of its wonders.
I urged him to see them for himself, offering to go
with him. He said:
“I should enjoy that; but the
railroad journey is so far and I should have no peace.
The papers would get hold of it, and I would have to
make speeches and be interviewed, and I never want
to do any of those things again.”
I suggested that the railroads would
probably be glad to place a private car at his service,
so that he might travel in comfort; but he shook his
head.
“That would only make me more conspicuous.”
“How about a disguise?”
“Yes,” he said, “I
might put on a red wig and false whiskers and change
my name, but I couldn’t disguise my drawling
speech and they’d find me out.”
It was amusing, but it was rather
sad, too. His fame had deprived him of valued
privileges.
He talked of many things during these
little excursions. Once he told how he had successively
advised his nephew, Moffett, in the matter of obtaining
a desirable position. Moffett had wanted to become
a reporter. Clemens devised a characteristic
scheme. He said:
“I will get you a place on any
newspaper you may select if you promise faithfully
to follow out my instructions.”
The applicant agreed, eagerly enough. Clemens
said:
“Go to the newspaper of your
choice. Say that you are idle and want work,
that you are pining for work longing for
it, and that you ask no wages, and will support yourself.
All that you ask is work. That you will do anything,
sweep, fill the inkstands, mucilage-bottles, run errands,
and be generally useful. You must never ask for
wages. You must wait until the offer of wages
comes to you. You must work just as faithfully
and just as eagerly as if you were being paid for it.
Then see what happens.”
The scheme had worked perfectly.
Young Moffett had followed his instructions to the
letter. By and by he attracted attention.
He was employed in a variety of ways that earned him
the gratitude and the confidence of the office.
In obedience to further instructions, he began to
make short, brief, unadorned notices of small news
matters that came under his eye and laid them on the
city editor’s desk. No pay was asked; none
was expected. Occasionally one of the items was
used. Then, of course, it happened, as it must
sooner or later at a busy time, that he was given
a small news assignment. There was no trouble
about his progress after that. He had won the
confidence of the management and shown that he was
not afraid to work.
The plan had been variously tried
since, Clemens said, and he could not remember any
case in which it had failed. The idea may have
grown out of his own pilot apprenticeship on the river,
when cub pilots not only received no salary, but paid
for the privilege of learning.
Clemens discussed public matters less
often than formerly, but they were not altogether
out of his mind. He thought our republic was in
a fair way to become a monarchy that the
signs were already evident. He referred to the
letter which he had written so long ago in Boston,
with its amusing fancy of the Archbishop of Dublin
and his Grace of Ponkapog, and declared that, after
all, it contained something of prophecy. He would
not live to see the actual monarchy, he said, but
it was coming.
“I’m not expecting it
in my time nor in my children’s time, though
it may be sooner than we think. There are two
special reasons for it and one condition. The
first reason is, that it is in the nature of man to
want a definite something to love, honor, reverently
look up to and obey; a God and King, for example.
The second reason is, that while little republics
have lasted long, protected by their poverty and insignificance,
great ones have not. And the condition is, vast
power and wealth, which breed commercial and political
corruptions, and incite public favorites to dangerous
ambitions.”
He repeated what I had heard him say
before, that in one sense we already had a monarchy;
that is to say, a ruling public and political aristocracy
which could create a Presidential succession.
He did not say these things bitterly now, but reflectively
and rather indifferently.
He was inclined to speak unhopefully
of the international plans for universal peace, which
were being agitated rather persistently.
“The gospel of peace,”
he said, “is always making a deal of noise,
always rejoicing in its progress but always neglecting
to furnish statistics. There are no peaceful
nations now. All Christendom is a soldier-camp.
The poor have been taxed in some nations to the starvation
point to support the giant armaments which Christian
governments have built up, each to protect itself
from the rest of the Christian brotherhood, and incidentally
to snatch any scrap of real estate left exposed by
a weaker owner. King Leopold II. of Belgium, the
most intensely Christian monarch, except Alexander
VI., that has escaped hell thus far, has stolen an
entire kingdom in Africa, and in fourteen years of
Christian endeavor there has reduced the population
from thirty millions to fifteen by murder and mutilation
and overwork, confiscating the labor of the helpless
natives, and giving them nothing in return but salvation
and a home in heaven, furnished at the last moment
by the Christian priest.
“Within the last generation
each Christian power has turned the bulk of its attention
to finding out newer and still newer and more and more
effective ways of killing Christians, and, incidentally,
a pagan now and then; and the surest way to get rich
quickly in Christ’s earthly kingdom is to invent
a kind of gun that can kill more Christians at one
shot than any other existing kind. All the Christian
nations are at it. The more advanced they are,
the bigger and more destructive engines of war they
create.”
Once, speaking of battles great and
small, and how important even a small battle must
seem to a soldier who had fought in no other, he said:
“To him it is a mighty achievement,
an achievement with a big A, when to a wax-worn veteran
it would be a mere incident. For instance, to
the soldier of one battle, San Juan Hill was an Achievement
with an A as big as the Pyramids of Cheops; whereas,
if Napoleon had fought it, he would have set it down
on his cuff at the time to keep from forgetting it
had happened. But that is all natural and human
enough. We are all like that.”
The curiosities and absurdities of
religious superstitions never failed to furnish him
with themes more or less amusing. I remember one
Sunday, when he walked down to have luncheon at my
house, he sat under the shade and fell to talking
of Herod’s slaughter of the innocents, which
he said could not have happened.
“Tacitus makes no mention of
it,” he said, “and he would hardly have
overlooked a sweeping order like that, issued by a
petty ruler like Herod. Just consider a little
king of a corner of the Roman Empire ordering the
slaughter of the first-born of a lot of Roman subjects.
Why, the Emperor would have reached out that long arm
of his and dismissed Herod. That tradition is
probably about as authentic as those connected with
a number of old bridges in Europe which are said to
have been built by Satan. The inhabitants used
to go to Satan to build bridges for them, promising
him the soul of the first one that crossed the bridge;
then, when Satan had the bridge done, they would send
over a rooster or a jackass a cheap jackass;
that was for Satan, and of course they could fool
him that way every time. Satan must have been
pretty simple, even according to the New Testament,
or he wouldn’t have led Christ up on a high
mountain and offered him the world if he would fall
down and worship him. That was a manifestly absurd
proposition, because Christ, as the Son of God, already
owned the world; and, besides, what Satan showed him
was only a few rocky acres of Palestine. It is
just as if some one should try to buy Rockefeller,
the owner of all the Standard Oil Company, with a
gallon of kerosene.”
He often spoke of the unseen forces
of creation, the immutable laws that hold the planet
in exact course and bring the years and the seasons
always exactly on schedule time. “The Great
Law” was a phrase often on his lips. The
exquisite foliage, the cloud shapes, the varieties
of color everywhere: these were for him outward
manifestations of the Great Law, whose principle I
understood to be unity exact relations
throughout all nature; and in this I failed to find
any suggestion of pessimism, but only of justice.
Once he wrote on a card for preservation:
From everlasting to everlasting,
this is the law: the sum of wrong &
misery shall always keep exact
step with the sum of human
blessedness.
No “civilization,”
no “advance,” has ever modified these proportions
by even the shadow of a shade,
nor ever can, while our race endures.