From the Oxford Companion to American Literature, by Hart and Leininger:
Samuel Langhorne Clemens, (1835-1910), born in Florida,
Missouri, was the son of a Virginian imbued with the frontier spirit and grandiose
dreams of easy wealth, who had married in Kentucky and spent the rest of his
life in a restless watch for profits from land speculation. The family settled
in Hannibal, Mo. (1839), where Samuel grew up under the influence of this
attitude, and passed the adventurous boyhood and youth that he recalls in Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. After his father's death (1847), he left school
to be apprenticed to a printer, and was soon writing for his brother Orion's
newspaper. He was a journeyman printer in the East and Middle West (1853-54),
and in 1856 planned to seek his fortune in South America, but gave up this idea
to become a steamboat pilot on the Mississippi, a position that he considered
the most important discipline of his life. When the Civil War began, the
riverboats ceased operation, and, after a brief trial of soldiering with a
group of Confederate volunteers, Clemens went to Nevada with his brother, who
had been appointed secretary to the governor. In Roughing It he describes the trip west and his subsequent
adventures as a miner and journalist. After he joined the staff of the Virginia
City Territorial Enterprise (1862) he
adopted the pseudonym Mark Twain, by which he was thereafter known, and began
his career as a journalistic humorist in the frontier tradition. His articles
of the time are collected in Mark Twain
of the Enterprise (1957).
During this period he met Artemus Ward and others who encouraged
his work, collaborated with Bret Harte in San Francisco, and wrote "The
Celebrated Jumping Frog" sketch (1865) which won him immediate
recognition. He increased his popularity with letters and lectures about his
trip to the Sandwich Islands, went east to lecture, published The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County
and Other Sketches (1867), and made the tour of the Mediterranean and the
Holy Land that he describes in The
Innocents Abroad (1869), a humorous narrative that assured his position as a
leading author and shows his typical American irreverence for the classic and
the antique. In 1870 Clemens married Olivia Langdon, with whom he settled in
Hartford, Conn. The effect of this marriage upon his career has been
responsible for two divergent interpretations of his work. Mrs. Clemens
belonged to a genteel, conservative society, and it has been claimed (mainly by
Van Wyck Brooks) that the puritanical and materialistic surroundings into which
Clemens was thrust frustrated his potential creative force for fierce revolt
and satire. Others (principally Bernard De Voto) posit the idea that Clemens
began as a frontier humorist and storyteller, and that his later work shows the
unthwarted development of these essential talents.
ln Roughing It
(1872) he continues the method of The
Innocents Abroad, seasoning the realistic account of adventure with
humorous exaggerations in his highly personal idiom. Next he collaborated with
C. D. Warner in The Gilded Age (1873),
a satirical novel of post-Civil War boom times that gave a name to the era. A Tramp Abroad (1880) is another travel
narrative, this time of a walking trip through the Black Forest and the Alps.
England during the reign of Edward VI is the scene of The Prince and the Pauper (1882), while A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889) is a
realistic-satirical fantasy of Arthurian England. During this period, however,
Clemens was dealing with the background of his own early life in what are
generally considered the most significant of his characteristically American
works. In The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
(1876) he presents a nostalgic tale of boyish adventure in a Mississippi town
and the Valley, and in Life on the
Mississippi (1883) and Adventures of
Huckleberry Finn (1884) he celebrates the flowering of Mississippi Valley
frontier civilization, in terms of its own pungent tall talk and picaresque
adventure.
External events soon interfered with the even flow of
Clemens's creative activity. During his residence in Hartford, he had been a
partner in the publishing firm of Charles L. Webster and Company, which reaped
a fortune through the sale of Grant's Memoirs
and Clemens's own writings, but bad publishing ventures and the investment of
$200,000 in an unperfected typesetting machine drove him into bankruptcy
(1894). To discharge his debts he made a lecturing tour of the world, although
he had come to dislike lecturing, and the record of this tour, Following the Equator (1897) has an
undercurrent of bitterness not found in his earlier travel books. During this
decade, although he wrote The Tragedy of
Puddn'nhead Wilson (1894) and the Personal
Recollections of Joan of Arc (1896), most of his work is uneven in quality,
and The American Claimant (1892), Tom Sawyer Abroad (1894) and Tom Sawyer, Detective (1896) are feeble
echoes of earlier work. In 1898 he finished paying off his debts, but his
writings whow that the strain of pessimism he formerly repressed was now
dominating his mind. The Man That
Corrupted Hadleyburg (1900), What Is
Man? (1906) and The Mysterious Stranger (1916) demonstrate this attitude. He
continued to travel widely, lectured and wrote articles on contemporary events
and such controversial works as Christian
Science (1906) and Is Shakespeare
Dead? (1909), but his bitterness was deepened by the loss of his wife and
two daughters. His pessimism was perhaps no more profound than the optimism of
his own Colonel Sellers, but his feeling that it was too mordant for
publication caused him to instruct that certain of his works be published posthumously.
Since 1906 he had been engaged in dictating his
autobiography to his secretary, A. B. Paine, who later became the first
Literary Editor of the Mark Twain Estate, and issued a collection of Letters (1917), the authorized biography
(3 vols., 1912), and the Autobiography
(1924). The second editor, Bernard De Voto, edited volumes of materials from
the papers left by Clemens, including Letters
from the Earth (1963). Drawing on the same sources, the third editor, Dixon
Wecter, collected The Love Letters of
Mark Twain (1949); and the fourth editor, Henry Nash Smith, edited with
William M. Gibson, Mark Twain-Howells
Letters (2 vols., 1960). A scholarly edition of his Works began publication by the University of California Press in
1972, which also began issuing (1967) a scholarly edition of his previously
unpublished Papers, most of whose
originals are in the University's Bancroft Library.
An important early estimate of his work is My Mark Twain: Reminiscences and Criticisms
(1910), by his friend and adviser Howells. The prevalent critical attitude has
come to consider Clemens's most distinctive work as summing up the tradition of
Western humor and frontier realism. Beginning as a journalist, he assumed the
method and point of view of popular literature in the U.S., maintaining the
personal anecdotal style that he used also in his capacity of comic lecturer.
In travel books, he digresses easily from factual narrative to humorous
exaggeration and burlesque. The novels are episodic or autobiographical, and
not formed by any larger structural concepts. He wrote in the authentic native
idiom, exuberantly and irreverently, but underlying the humor was a vigorous
desire for social justice and a pervasive equalitarian attitude. The romantic
idealism of Joan of Arc, the bitter
satire of feudal tyranny in A Connecticut
Yankee, the appreciation of human values in Huckleberry Finn, and the sense of epic sweep in Life on the Mississippi establish
Clemens's place in American letters as an artist of broad understanding and
vital, although uneven and sometimes misdirected, achievement.
Works
The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, sketch by
Clemens written under his pseudonym Mark Twain, was published in the New York Saturday Press (1865) and reprinted as the
title piece of a series of sketches that formed his first book (1867). Although
his source was an old folk tale that had been in print in California as early
as 1853, Clemens was catapulted into fame by his version, which tells of the
jumping frog Dan'l Webster, pet of gambling Jim Smiley, which is defeated when
a stranger fills its gullet with quail shot while Smiley's attention is
distracted.
The Innocents Abroad; or,
The New Pilgrim's Progress, travel narrative by Clemens, published in 1869
under his pseudonym Mark Twain. It is based on letters written during 1867 to
the San Francisco Alta California and
the New York Tribune and Herald,
describing the tour of the steamship Quaker
City to Europe, Egypt, and the Holy Land. In this autobiographical account,
Clemens has an opportunity to ridicule foreign sights and manners from the
point of view of the American democrat, who scorns the sophisticated, revels in
his own national peculiarities and advantages, and is contemptuously amused by
anything with which he is unacquainted. Characteristic passages are concerned
with the comical difficulties of "innocent" tourists, their
adventures among deceptive guides, inefficient hotels, and misunderstood
customs; a comparison of Lake Como with Lake Tahoe, to the general advantage of
the latter; a burlesque account of the ascent of Vesuvius; experiences of
various Turkish "frauds"; an awestruck meeting with the Russian royal
family; and a naïvely sentimental description of Biblical scenes in Palestine.
Roughing It, autobiographical narrative by Clemens, published
in 1872 under his pseudonym Mark Twain. He records a journey from St. Louis
across the plains to Nevada, a visit to the Mormons, and life and adventures in
Virginia City, San Francisco, and the Sandwich Islands. The book is based on
Clemens's own experiences during the 1860s, but but facts are left far behind
in his creation of a picture of the frontier spirit and its lusty humor. The
entire work is unified by the character of the author and the ways in shich his
experiences changed him into a representative of the Far West, but seemingly
little attempt is made to integrate the tall tales, vivid descriptions,
narratives of adventure, and character sketches, except in so far as all of
them constitute a vigorous, many-sided portrait of the Western frontier.
The Gilded Age: A Tale of To-day, novel by Clemens and CD.
Warner, published in 1873 but dated 1874. It was dramatized by G.S. Densmore
(1874), and Clemens revised the play the same year. The theme is that of
unscrupulous individualism in a world of fantastic speculation and unstable
values, and the title has become a popular name for the era depicted in the
book, the boom times of post-Civil War Years, when unbridled acquisitiveness
dominated the national life.
"Squire" Si Hawkins moves, with his wife and
family, from Tennessee to a primitive Missouri settlement, the current
speculative project of his visionary friend, Colonel Beriah Sellers. During the
journey, Hawkins adopts two unrelated orphans, Clay and Laura. Ten years pass,
Sellers's optimism cost Hawkins several fortunes, and the children grow in
constant expectation of great wealth. When the Squire dies, his family moves to
Sellers's new promotion center, Hawkeye, where Laura is attracted by a
philanderer, Colonel Selby, who abandons her after a mock-marriage. Hary
Brierly, a New York engineer, collaborates with Sellers in a railroad land
speculation scheme, which fails, bankrupting them. Brierly falls in love with
Laura at this time, but Laura, hardened by her experience, considers him a mere
tool for her advancement. Her beauty impresses Senator Dilworthy, who invites
her and her foster brother to Washington, and there they and Sellers are
involved in the intrigues and financial deals of the unscrupulous senator. When
Selby reappears, Laura resumes her liaison with him, later murdering him when
he attempts to desert her again. She is acquitted after a spectacular court
trial, but dies of a heart attack when her career as a lecturer is a failure. A
subplot is concerned with the love affair of Philip Sterling, a friend of
Brierly, with Ruth Bolton, a Quaker girl, who takes up a medical career but
finally marries him after he successfully exploits her father's coal-mining
enterprise.
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, novel by Clemens, published in
1876 under his pseudonym Mark Twain. Its classic sequel, Huckleberry Finn, was followed by the relatively unimportant Tom Sawyer Abroad and Tom Sawyer, Detective.
In the drowsy Mississippi River town of St. Petersburg, Mo.,
Tom Sawyer, imaginative and mischievous, and his priggish brother Sid live with
their simple, kind-hearted aunt Polly. Sid "peaches" on Tom for
playing hooky, and Tom is punished by making to whitewash a fence, but
ingeniously leads his friends to do this job for him by pretending it is a
privilege. When his sweetheart, Becky Thatcher, is angered because Tom reveals
that he has previously been in love, he forsakes a temporary effort at virtue,
plays hooky, and decides to become a pirate or a Robin Hood. With his boon
companion, Huck Finn, a good-natured, irresponsible river rat, Tom goes to a
graveyard at midnight to swing a dead cat, an act advised by Huck as a cure for
warts. They watch Injun Joe, a half-breed criminal, stab the town doctor to
death and place the knife in the hands of drunken Muff Potter. After being
further scolded by Aunt Polly, and further spurned by Becky, Tom, with Huck and
Joe Harper, another good friend, hides on nearby Jackson's Island. Their
friends believe them drowned, but their funeral service is interrpted by the
discovery of the "corpses," who are listening from the church
gallery. Tom returns to school, is reconciled with Becky and his aunt, and
becomes a hero at the trial of Muff Potter, when he reveals Injun Joe's guilt.
Tom and Becky attend a school picnic, and are lost for several days in a cave,
where Tom spies Injun Joe. Later the half-breed is found dead, and his treasure
is divided between Tom and Huck, after which the latter is adopted by the Widow
Douglas. His only consolation, since he has surrendered his state of unwashed
happiness, lies in Tom's promise to admit him to his robber gang on the
strength of his social standing.
A Tramp Abroad, travel narrative by Clemens, published in 1880
under his pseudonym Mark Twain. It is a record of his European tour (1878) with
Joseph H. Twichell, whom he calls "Harris," and describes their
adventures in Germany, Italy, and Switzerland, chiefly during a walking tour
through the Black Forest and the Alps. Besides the serious, journalistic
account of European natural beauties, society, folklore, and history, including
enthusiastic descriptions of Alpine scenery that do not fail to praise comparable
descriptions in the US., there are passages ranging from crude face to tall
tales and typical satire. Thus a retelling of Whymper's conquest of the
Matterhorn is complemented by the author's "ascent of Mont Blanc by
telescope," and a description of ravens in the Black Forest prompts him to
recount "Baker's Blue-Jay Yarn," concerned with the sense of humour
of California jays. Characteristic humor also appears in Clemens's inept
drawings, purportedly the work of an art student, and the satirical passages on
subjects alien to the average American, such as "the awful German
language," Wagnerian opera, and "The Great French Duel."
The Prince and the Pauper,
novel by Clemens, published in 1882 under his pseudonym Mark Twain.
Designed to be a children's book, it shows an essentially adult point of view
in its attacks on the social evils of Tudor England.
Prince Edward (later Edward VI) discovers Tom Canty, pauper
boy, to be his exact twin in appearance. When they exchange clothes, the prince
is by error driven from the court, and the pauper is forced to act the part of
royalty. Edward finds Tom's family, is mistreated, and runs away with Sir Miles
Hendon, a disinherited knight, who takes pity on him, thinking his assertions
of royal birth a sign of madness. In their wanderings, the prince sees the
cruelty of church and court towards the poor, and learns the suffering of his
people through such dramatic incidents as the burning of two women whose only
crime is that of being Baptists. Tom meanwhile is also thought unbalanced
because of his peculiar behavior; becoming accustomed to his situation,
however, he attempts to act the part of the real prince. On the morning of his
coronation, Edward gets to Westminster Abbey and proves his identity by
revealing the hiding place of the Great Seal, which Tom did not recognize after
having taken it to crack some nuts. During his brief reign, Edward tempers the
harshness of the law with a sense of justice, learned during his contact with
the common people.
Life on the Mississippi, autobiographical narrative by Clemens,
published under his pseudonym Mark Twain (1883). The book opens with a brief
history of the Mississippi river since its discovery, and Chapters 4 to 22 deal
with Clemens's life as a boy on the river. These chapters, originally published
in the Atlantic Monthly, give a vivid
account of his participation in the steamboat age, the science of steamboat
piloting, and the life of the river as seen by the pilot. Chapter 3 also
contains a lively passage written for Huckleberry
Finn but never used in the novel. The second part of the book, written some
seven years after the first, is an account of Clemens's return to the river as
a traveler, 21 years after he had been a pilot. During his trip from St. Louis
to New Orleans, he finds that the glamour of the river has been destroyed by
railroad competition. Interspersed with his description of the river, his
accounts of meeting Cable and Joel Chandler Harris, and Horace Bixby, who first
taught him piloting, are anecdotes of the past, and a vigorous attack on
Scott's romanticism and its effect on Southern thought. The second part of the
book lacks the unity of the first, has none of its verve and gusto, and is more
descriptive and reminiscent.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn, novel by Clemens, written under his pseudonym Mark Twain. A sequel
to Tom Sawyer, it was begun in 1876
and published in 1884, omitting the chapter included in Life on the Mississippi. Although it carries on the picaresque
story of the characters in Tom Sawyer,
the sequel is a more accomplished and a more serious work of art as well as a
keener realistic portrayal of regional character and frontier experience on the
Mississippi.
Narrated by Huck, the sequel begins with its unschooled hero
under the motherly protection of the Widow Douglas and her sister, Miss Watson.
When his blackguard father appears to demand the boy's fortune, Huck tricks him
by transferring the money to Judge Thatcher, but his father kidnaps him and
imprisons him in a lonely cabin. During one of the old man's drunken spells,
Huck escapes to Jackson's Island, where he meets Miss Watson's runaway slave,
Jim. They start down the river in a raft, but, after several adventures, the
raft is hit by a steamboat and the two are separated. Huck swims ashore, and is
sheltered by the Grangerford family, whose feud with the Shepherdsons causes
bloodshed. The boy discovers Jim, and they set out again on the raft, giving
refuge to the "Duke of Bridgewater," itinerant printer and fraud, and
the "Dauphin," "Louis XVIII of France," actor, evangelist,
and temperance faker. At stopping places, the "King" lectures as a
reformed pirate, and they present, as "Kean" and "Garrick,"
dramatic performances culminating in the fraudulent exhibition of the
"Royal Nonesuch." Huck witnesses the murder of a harmless drunkard by
an Arkansas aristocrat, whose contempt discourages a mob of would-be lynchers. The
rogues learn of the death of Peter Wilks and claim legacies as his brothers.
Huck interferes in behalf of the three daughters, and the scheme is foiled by
the arrival of the real brothers. Then he discovers that the "King"
has sold Jim to Mrs. Phelps, Tom Sawyer's Aunt Sally, and at the Phelps farm he
impersonates Tom in an attempt to rescue Jim. When Tom arrives, he masquerades
as his brother Sid, and concocts a fantastic scheme to free Jim. In the
"mixed-up and splendid rescue," Tom is accidentally shot, and the
slave is recaptured. While Tom is recuperating he reveals that Miss Watson has
died, setting Jim free in her will, and that the rescue was necessary because
he "wanted the adventure of
it." It is also disclosed that Huck's fortune is safe, since his father is
dead, but he concludes: "I reckon I got to light out for the territory
ahead of the rest, because Aunt Sally she's going to adopt me, and sivilize me,
and I can't stand it. I been there before."
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court (1889),
realistic-satirical fantasy of Arthurian England by Clemens under his pseudonym
Mark Twain.
An ingenious Yankee mechanic, knocked unconscious in a
fight, awakens to find himself at Camelot in A.D. 528. Imprisoned by Sir Kay
the Seneschal and exhibited before the knights of the Round Table, he is
condemned to death, but saves himself by posing as a magician like Merlin,
correctly predicting an eclipse, and becoming minister to King Arthur. He
increases his power by applying 19th-century knowledge of gun-powder, electricity,
and industrial methods; but when he attempts to better the condition of the
peasantry he meets opposition from the church, the knights, Merlin, and the
sorceress Morgan le Fay. He accompanies the king in disguise on an expedition
among the common people, and when they are captured, they are rescued by the
Yankee's trained troop of 500 knights on bicycles. His daughter Hello-Central
becomes ill, and with his wife Alisande (Sandy) he takes her to France. Back in
England, he finds his work undone, Arthur killed, the land in civil war.
Gathering friends in a cave with modern armed defenses, he declares a republic,
fights off an attack, but is wounded. Merlin, pretending to nurse him, puts him
asleep until the 19th century.
Tom Sawyer Abroad, short novel by Clemens, published in 1894
under his pseudonym Mark Twain.
As a sequel to "all them adventures" in the book
bearing his name, Huck Finn tells of further exploits with Tom Sawyer and Jim,
the former slave, in a story that concerns a balloon voyage to the Sahara and
Near East, involving a mid-Atlantic storm, encounters with Bedouins and wild
lions, and a final takeoff for the return home from Mt. Sinai. Tom's romancing
and knowledge, Huck's common sense, and Jim's superstitions are revealed by
various incidents.
Tom Sawyer, Detective, story by Clemens, published in 1896
under his pseudonym Mark Twain.
As a final sequel to previous adventures, Huck Finn tells of
the remarkable way in which Tom Saywer solves an intricate mystery involving a
diamond robbery and a false accusation of murder made against his uncle Silas,
as well as a case of mistaken identity between a real and a supposed corpse.
The Tragedy of Pudd'nhead Wilson, novel by Clemens, published
in 1894 under the pseudonym Mark Twain. It was dramatized by Frank Mayo (1895).
On the Mississippi during the 1830s, at Dawson's Landing,
Mo., lives Percy Driscoll, a prosperous slave owner. On the day his son Tom is
born, his nearly white slave Roxy gives birth to a son, Chambers, whose father
is a Virginia gentleman. Since Tom's mother dies when he is only a week old, he
is raised by Roxy along with Chambers, whose twin he is in appearance. Roxy,
fearful that hr son may some day be sold down the river, changes the two
children, and upon the death of Percy, his brother Judge Driscoll adopts
Chambers, believing him to be Tom. The boy grows up a coward, a snob, and a
gambler. Even though Roxy tells him that she is his mother, he sells her to pay
his gambling debts. On escaping, she blackmails him. To obtain money he robs
the judge and murders him with a knife stolen from Luigi, one of a pair of
Italian twins with whom the judge once fought a duel. The evidence is against
the twins, who are defended by David Wilson, an unsuccessful lawyer, whose
"tragedy" consists in the ridicule that has resulted from his
eccentric originality and iconoclasm; his humor and his interest in palmistry
and fingerprints cause the people of Dawson's Landing to call him
"Pudd'nhead." Wilson feels secure in his case for the twins, since the
fingerprints on the knife are not those of the accused. One day he acquires the
fingerprints of the spurious Tom, and with this evidence he is able to
vindicate his methods, and to win at last the admiration of his fellow
townsmen, by saving the twins and convicting Chambers, who is sold down the
river while the real Tom is restored to his rightful position.
Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, fictional biography by Clemens, published in 1896. To conceal his
authorship, so that the book might be received without bias, Clemens invented
"The Sieur Louis de Conte," Joan's supposed "page and
secretary," whose work is "freely translated by Jean-François Alden."
The biography follows the known facts in the life of the 15th-century French
heroine but amplifies them with several fictional characters and interprets
such documents as those relating to the ecclesiastical trial at Rouen in the
light of Clemens's lifelong idealistic reverence for "the noble child, the
most innocent, the most lovely, the most adorable the ages have produced."
Her traits have been said to resemble those of women in the author's family.
Other figures, like the comically boastful Paladin and laughing Noël
Rainguesson, are related to characters in his earlier fiction. In general, the
mood is that of serious, although romanticized, history, but there are
characteristic Clemens touches in the use of European folklore, humor, and
American tall talk.
Following the Equator, autobiographical narrative by Clemens,
published in 1897 under his pseudonym Mak Twain. Describing the Australian
section of his lecture tour around the world (1895) he works up, in a rather
pedestrian way, second-hand materials concerning the aborigines, early
settlers, and local animals. Although there are witty interludes, vivid
accounts such as the one of the Sepoy Mutiny, and satirical disquisitions on
the Boer War and imperialistic morality, the book has little of the inspiration
that distinguishes Clemens's other travel accounts. In India, he is oppressed
by the overpopulation, superstition, plagues, famines, and disasters, and by
the disillusioned society resigned to the constant repetition of barren and
meaningless processes, which foreshadows the pessimism of the books he wrote
in 1898.
The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg, story by Clemens, published under his pseudonym Mark Twain as the
title piece of a collection of essays and fiction (1900).
Hadleyburg is proud of its disctinction as "the most
honest and upright town in the region round about." A stranger, offended
in some way by its people, decides to ruin its reputation. He leaves a sack
with bank cashier Edward Richards that he says contains a fortune in coins, and
a note announcing that the money is to go to a townsman who once befriended
him, and who can be identified by a remark he made, which is written on an
enclosed paper. Nineteen of Hadleyburg's leading men then receive notes
pretending to divulge the remark. Scruples dissolve under this temptation, and
even the hitherto honest Richards begins to think he may have made the remark.
At a town meeting, 18 of the citizens are exposed to ridicule, when the Rev.
Mr. Burgess reads the note setting forth their claims to the remark. Burgess
has lost Richard's note, and the cashier becomes a hero. The victims pay an
enormous sum to avoid having their names recorded on the lead slugs that prove
to be the sole contents of the sack, and this amount is given to Richards as a
reward for his supposed identity. Conscience destroys the health of the old man
and his wife, who in their dying delirium expose their guilt; thus "the
town was stripped of the last rag of its ancient glory."
What Is Man?, essay by Clemens based on his paper, "What
Is Happiness?," delivered before the Monday Evening Club of Hartford (Feb.
1883), rewritten (1898), privately published without the author's name (1906),
and posthumously collected in What Is
Man? And Other Essays (1917).
In this Platonic dialogue between a Young Man and a
disillusioned Old Man, the mouthpiece of the author's pessimistic view of
mankind, the Old Man considers human beings to be merely mechanisms, lacking
free will, motivated selfishly by a need for self-approval, and completely the
products of their environment. In an "Admonition to the Human Race,"
he pleads for the rising of ideals of conduct to a point where the individual's
satisfaction will coincide with the best interests of the community.
The Mysterious Stranger, story by Clemens, posthumously
published in 1916. It was edited from various manuscripts by A.B. Paine. A new edition (1969) based on a final
manuscript and titled No.44, The
Mysterious Stranger, shows that Paine had silently deleted about
one-quarter of Mark Twain's text, created a new character (The Astrologer),
altered the names of other characters, and conflated three manuscript drafts to
create his own version.
The Paine version is set in the medieval Austrian village of
Eseldorf, where a mysterious stranger visits young Theodor Fischer and his
friends Nikolaus and Seppi. He is discovered to be Satan, and shows his power
by building a miniature castle that he peoples with clay creatures, destroying
them almost as soon as he brings them to life. He then exerts his power on the
villagers, and, when Father Peter is falsely accused of theft by the Astrologer
and Father Adolf, he confounds the evil and makes the innocent crazy, since he
says earthly happiness is restricted to the mad. Other "kindness"
includes the drowning of Nikoaus, who would otherwise live as a cripple. His
total indifference to mankind and its conceptions of good and evil shocks the
boys' natural moral sense, yet Satan shows that from this moral sense came
wars, tortures, and inequalities. Finally he departs, and Theodor realices that
this was a dream, as false as a morality, and as illogical as a God who
tortured men yet commanded them to worship Him.
The version first published in 1969 is also set in Eseldorf.
To it in 1490, not long after the invention of moveable type, comes a likable
young printer's devil, called only No. 44, who is actually possessed of satanic
powers that allow him to master the craft of printing in a few hours.
Single-handedly he speedily produces a Bible and magically summons up phantasmagoric
people to print inumerable copies. He enjoys playing tricks on the town's
magician and on the cruel, hypocritical Father Adolf, while he also travels
back and forth in space and time between 19th-century U.S. and medieval Europe.
The story of his activities, both diabolical and whimsical, is told by his
17th-year-old friend August Feldner, a curious person with a split personality.
August's doppelgänger or "Dream-Self," named Emil Schwarz, has powers
like those of No. 44, and is caught up in similar adventures and activities.
The fanciful tale compunded of burlesque and satire concludes with the
revelation of No. 44 to August that "Life itself is only a vision, a dream
. . . ," the creation of "a
God . . who moulds morals . . . and has
none himself . . . who could make good children as easily as bad, yet preferred
to make bad ones."
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