The Life & Times of Mark Twain - 4 Biographical Works in One Edition. Марк Твен
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу The Life & Times of Mark Twain - 4 Biographical Works in One Edition - Марк Твен страница 55

Название: The Life & Times of Mark Twain - 4 Biographical Works in One Edition

Автор: Марк Твен

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

Серия:

isbn: 9788027236879

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ length and in happy phrase assured me that there was no crime in unconscious plagiarism; that I committed it every day, that he committed it every day, that every man alive on the earth who writes or speaks commits it every day and not merely once or twice but every time he opens his mouth; that all our phrasings are spiritualized shadows cast multitudinously from our readings; that no happy phrase of ours is ever quite original with us, there is nothing of our own in it except some slight change born of our temperament, character, environment, teachings and associations; that this slight change differentiates it from another man’s manner of saying it, stamps it with our special style, and makes it our own for the time being; all the rest of it being old, moldy, antique, and smelling of the breath of a thousand generations of them that have passed it over their teeth before!

      In the thirty-odd years which have come and gone since then, I have satisfied myself that what Dr. Holmes said was true.

      I wish to make a note upon the preface of the “Innocents.” In the last paragraph of that brief preface, I speak of the proprietors of the “Daily Alta California” having “waived their rights” in certain letters which I wrote for that journal while absent on the “Quaker City” trip. I was young then, I am white-headed now, but the insult of that word rankles yet, now that I am reading that paragraph for the first time in many years, reading it for the first time since it was written, perhaps. There were rights, it is true — such rights as the strong are able to acquire over the weak and the absent. Early in ‘66 George Barnes invited me to resign my reportership on his paper, the San Francisco “Morning Call,” and for some months thereafter I was without money or work; then I had a pleasant turn of fortune. The proprietors of the “Sacramento Union,” a great and influential daily journal, sent me to the Sandwich Islands to write four letters a month at twenty dollars apiece. I was there four or five months, and returned to find myself about the best known honest man on the Pacific Coast. Thomas McGuire, proprietor of several theatres, said that now was the time to make my fortune — strike while the iron was hot! — break into the lecture field! I did it. I announced a lecture on the Sandwich Islands, closing the advertisement with the remark, “Admission one dollar; doors open at halfpast 7, the trouble begins at 8.” A true prophecy. The trouble certainly did begin at 8, when I found myself in front of the only audience I had ever faced, for the fright which pervaded me from head to foot was paralyzing. It lasted two minutes and was as bitter as death, the memory of it is indestructible, but it had its compensations, for it made me immune from timidity before audiences for all time to come. I lectured in all the principal Californian towns and in Nevada, then lectured once or twice more in San Francisco, then retired from the field rich — for me — and laid out a plan to sail Westward from San Francisco, and go around the world. The proprietors of the “Alta” engaged me to write an account of the trip for that paper — fifty letters of a column and a half each, which would be about two thousand words per letter, and the pay to be twenty dollars per letter.

      I went East to St. Louis to say goodbye to my mother, and then I was bitten by the prospectus of Captain Duncan of the “Quaker City” excursion, and I ended by joining it. During the trip I wrote and sent the fifty letters; six of them miscarried, and I wrote six new ones to complete my contract. Then I put together a lecture on the trip and delivered it in San Francisco at great and satisfactory pecuniary profit, then I branched out into the country and was aghast at the result: I had been entirely forgotten, I never had people enough in my houses to sit as a jury of inquest on my lost reputation! I inquired into this curious condition of things and found that the thrifty owners of that prodigiously rich “Alta” newspaper had copyrighted all those poor little twenty-dollar letters, and had threatened with prosecution any journal which should venture to copy a paragraph from them!

      And there I was! I had contracted to furnish a large book, concerning the excursion, to the American Publishing Co. of Hartford, and I supposed I should need all those letters to fill it out with. I was in an uncomfortable situation — that is, if the proprietors of this stealthily acquired copyright should refuse to let me use the letters. That is just what they did; Mr. Mac — something — I have forgotten the rest of his name — said his firm were going to make a book out of the letters in order to get back the thousand dollars which they had paid for them. I said that if they had acted fairly and honorably, and had allowed the country press to use the letters or portions of them, my lecture-skirmish on the coast would have paid me ten thousand dollars, whereas the “Alta” had lost me that amount. Then he offered a compromise: he would publish the book and allow me ten per cent. royalty on it. The compromise did not appeal to me, and I said so. I was now quite unknown outside of San Francisco, the book’s sale would be confined to that city, and my royalty would not pay me enough to board me three months; whereas my Eastern contract, if carried out, could be profitable to me, for I had a sort of reputation on the Atlantic seaboard acquired through the publication of six excursion-letters in the New York “Tribune” and one or two in the “Herald.”

      In the end Mr. Mac agreed to suppress his book, on certain conditions: in my preface I must thank the “Alta” for waiving “rights” and granting me permission. I objected to the thanks. I could not with any large degree of sincerity thank the “Alta” for bankrupting my lecture-raid. After considerable debate my point was conceded and the thanks left out.

      (1902.)

      (1904.)

      (1897.)

      Noah Brooks was the editor of the “Alta” at the time, a man of sterling character and equipped with a right heart, also a good historian where facts were not essential. In biographical sketches of me written many years afterward (1902), he was quite eloquent in praises of the generosity of the “Alta” people in giving to me without compensation a book which, as history had afterward shown, was worth a fortune. After all the fuss, I did not levy heavily upon the “Alta” letters. I found that they were newspaper matter, not book matter. They had been written here and there and yonder, as opportunity had given me a chance working-moment or two during our feverish flight around about Europe or in the furnace-heat of my stateroom on board the “Quaker City,” therefore they were loosely constructed, and needed to have some of the wind and water squeezed out of them. I used several of them — ten or twelve, perhaps. I wrote the rest of “The Innocents Abroad” in sixty days, and I could have added a fortnight’s labor with the pen and gotten along without the letters altogether. I was very young in those days, exceedingly young, marvellously young, younger than I am now, younger than I shall ever be again, by hundreds of years. I worked every night from eleven or twelve until broad day in the morning, and as I did two hundred thousand words in the sixty days, the average was more than three thousand words a day — nothing for Sir Walter Scott, nothing for Louis Stevenson, nothing for plenty of other people, but quite handsome for me. In 1897, when we were living in Tedworth Square, London, and I was writing the book called “Following the Equator” my average was eighteen hundred words a day; here in Florence (1904), my average seems to be fourteen hundred words per sitting of four or five hours.

      I was deducing from the above that I have been slowing down steadily in these thirty-six years, but I perceive that my statistics have a defect: three thousand words in the spring of 1868 when I was working seven or eight or nine hours at a sitting has little or no advantage over the sitting of to-day, covering half the time and producing half the output. Figures often beguile me, particularly when I have the arranging of them myself; in which case the remark attributed to Disraeli would often apply with justice and force:

      “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.”

      [Dictated, January 23, 1907.] — The proverb says that Providence protects children and idiots. This is really true. I know it because I have tested it. It did not protect George through the most of his campaign, but it saved him in his last inning, and the veracity of the proverb stood confirmed.

      (1865.)

      I СКАЧАТЬ