登陆注册
38560000000144

第144章

LETTERS, 1883, TO HOWELLS AND OTHERS.A GUEST OF THE MARQUIS OF LORNE.

THE HISTORY GAME.A PLAY BY HOWELLS AND MARK TWAINMark Twain, in due season, finished the Mississippi book and placed it in Osgood's hands for publication.It was a sort of partnership arrangement in which Clemens was to furnish the money to make the book, and pay Osgood a percentage for handling it.It was, in fact, the beginning of Mark Twain's adventures as a publisher.

Howells was not as happy in Florence as he had hoped to be.The social life there overwhelmed him.In February he wrote: "Our two months in Florence have been the most ridiculous time that ever even half-witted people passed.We have spent them in chasing round after people for whom we cared nothing, and being chased by them.

My story isn't finished yet, and what part of it is done bears the fatal marks of haste and distraction.Of course, I haven't put pen to paper yet on the play.I wring my hands and beat my breast when I think of how these weeks have been wasted; and how I have been forced to waste them by the infernal social circumstances from which I couldn't escape."Clemens, now free from the burden of his own book, was light of heart and full of ideas and news; also of sympathy and appreciation.

Howells's story of this time was "A Woman's Reason." Governor Jewell, of this letter, was Marshall Jewell, Governor of Connecticut from 1871 to 1873.Later, he was Minister to Russia, and in 1874was United States Postmaster-General.

To W.D.Howells, in Florence:

HARTFORD, March 1st, 1883.

MY DEAR HOWELLS,--We got ourselves ground up in that same mill, once, in London, and another time in Paris.It is a kind of foretaste of hell.

There is no way to avoid it except by the method which you have now chosen.One must live secretly and cut himself utterly off from the human race, or life in Europe becomes an unbearable burden and work an impossibility.I learned something last night, and maybe it may reconcile me to go to Europe again sometime.I attended one of the astonishingly popular lectures of a man by the name of Stoddard, who exhibits interesting stereopticon pictures and then knocks the interest all out of them with his comments upon them.But all the world go there to look and listen, and are apparently well satisfied.And they ought to be fully satisfied, if the lecturer would only keep still, or die in the first act.But he described how retired tradesmen and farmers in Holland load a lazy scow with the family and the household effects, and then loaf along the waterways of the low countries all the summer long, paying no visits, receiving none, and just lazying a heavenly life out in their own private unpestered society, and doing their literary work, if they have any, wholly uninterrupted.If you had hired such a boat and sent for us we should have a couple of satisfactory books ready for the press now with no marks of interruption, vexatious wearinesses, and other hellishnesses visible upon them anywhere.We shall have to do this another time.We have lost an opportunity for the present.Do you forget that Heaven is packed with a multitude of all nations and that these people are all on the most familiar how-the-hell-are-you footing with Talmage swinging around the circle to all eternity hugging the saints and patriarchs and archangels, and forcing you to do the same unless you choose to make yourself an object of remark if you refrain?

Then why do you try to get to Heaven? Be warned in time.

We have all read your two opening numbers in the Century, and consider them almost beyond praise.I hear no dissent from this verdict.I did not know there was an untouched personage in American life, but I had forgotten the auctioneer.You have photographed him accurately.

I have been an utterly free person for a month or two; and I do not believe I ever so greatly appreciated and enjoyed--and realized the absence of the chains of slavery as I do this time.Usually my first waking thought in the morning is, "I have nothing to do to-day, I belong to nobody, I have ceased from being a slave." Of course the highest pleasure to be got out of *******, and having nothing to do, is labor.

Therefore I labor.But I take my time about it.I work one hour or four as happens to suit my mind, and quit when I please.And so these days are days of entire enjoyment.I told Clark the other day, to jog along comfortable and not get in a sweat.I said I believed you would not be able to enjoy editing that library over there, where you have your own legitimate work to do and be pestered to death by society besides;therefore I thought if he got it ready for you against your return, that that would be best and pleasantest.

You remember Governor Jewell, and the night he told about Russia, down in the library.He was taken with a cold about three weeks ago, and Istepped over one evening, proposing to beguile an idle hour for him with a yarn or two, but was received at the door with whispers, and the information that he was dying.His case had been dangerous during that day only and he died that night, two hours after I left.His taking off was a prodigious surprise, and his death has been most widely and sincerely regretted.Win.E.Dodge, the father-in-law of one of Jewell's daughters, dropped suddenly dead the day before Jewell died, but Jewell died without knowing that.Jewell's widow went down to New York, to Dodge's house, the day after Jewell's funeral, and was to return here day before yesterday, and she did--in a coffin.She fell dead, of heart disease, while her trunks were being packed for her return home.

同类推荐
  • Grandfather'  s Chair

    Grandfather' s Chair

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 唐尊前集

    唐尊前集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 澎湖厅志

    澎湖厅志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 东坡诗话

    东坡诗话

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 外科医镜

    外科医镜

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 曾经有过最爱的爱情

    曾经有过最爱的爱情

    滚滚红尘曾经有你,一路相伴今生无悔。爱的路上风风雨雨,情路漫漫爱情万岁。只有真正经历过爱情的朋友才会懂得,世间最美好的东西莫过于曾经有过最美的爱情。
  • 八年静落

    八年静落

    八年的陪伴以为这就是他的默许,以为在他的心里会有一点不同直到他说他欠我的,江华琛你知道吗?我们错过的不是青春是彼此······
  • 欲火蓝皇

    欲火蓝皇

    吴晓佳一没有当官的老爹,二没有自已的企业,就凭他那千数块的工资,要想找一个如花似玉、美轮美奂、人见人爱的靓丽MM,那和天方夜谭有何区别?但是,神奇的穿越大门向他敞开了,引领他来到一个叫做泛蓝大陆的小国,成为小城守家里多病、聪明的小少爷……
  • 我心目中的花店

    我心目中的花店

    是本人作者从小到中年的一些人生经历,从一个自卑的女孩到事业上人认可后慢慢变的自信,但是后来确因为家庭的缘故没有得到自己想要的生活,为了大我舍弃自我,只能牺牲自己却又不甘心
  • 我爱迪克

    我爱迪克

    女艺术家克丽丝,39岁、已婚、事业失败,有一天疯狂地爱上了她的丈夫、后现代理论家西尔维尔的同事迪克,并在丈夫的帮助下,开始给迪克写长信。“我爱迪克”——这是一句炽热而坦荡的单恋声明,也是一场革新书信体的文学实验,更是一份英勇的女性主义宣言——关于如何使用第一人称来言说,以及女性如何重新生成她自己。
  • 如烟甚喜

    如烟甚喜

    我还是很喜欢你,湖畔微冷执伞独立,絮扬柳堤,枯待一人期颐。我还是很喜欢你,山花烂漫桥边轻倚,残香十里,可悲一人寒凄。
  • 一切从深渊降临开始

    一切从深渊降临开始

    搞笑版文案:我叫张伟,我是个胖子,同时也是个包租公。在临近新年之际,我收到了来自502租客的一枚戒指。我以为这只是个普通的戒指,后来我发现我想错了。我以为我会平平顺顺的过完一生包租公的生活,后来我发现我还是想错了。戒指来自异界,感觉有点精神方面的病,最糟糕的是,它带来了不小的麻烦。哦对了,我还有一条狗,它是哈士奇,名字叫二屁,别看它名字难听,拆家本领又高,我还是不忍心打死它。再重申一次,我叫张伟,我变瘦了,同时没有了包租公的身份,改当救世主。夕阳下,你见到的那个狂奔的背影,是我。、、、、、、正经版文案:怪物飘落,世界混乱,人类文明陷入前所未有的巨大危机之中,人类,从不畏惧挑战!
  • 总裁大人独宠爱妻

    总裁大人独宠爱妻

    徐雅歌在相亲失败N次之后又被老妈勒令再次相亲,这一次,她决定要好好的吓唬一下那个相亲男,岂料她不仅认错了人,那人还对她有些意思,这节奏不对!陆谨言没有想到突然出来喝杯咖啡也会被人喊住,喜当爹么?这女人倒是有点意思,闪婚?行?那就一起吧!
  • 末世之战神联盟

    末世之战神联盟

    作者首发,多多关照星球的枷锁铮开,世界的封印开启,进化的历程加快。且看少年在神禁之地,踏上进化的道路,耀远古华夏人族之威!!!
  • 最强幸运主播

    最强幸运主播

    我能从游戏里抽取一切事物,带进现实!吃鸡里的轰炸区,王者里的泉水,火线里的神器,星战里的飞船,萌萌经里的鲲,修仙游戏里的仙魔神佛……只有你想不到,没有我抽不到的!异界入侵?怪物横行?没关系,看我凭借各种神级游戏道具,花样拯救世界!群号:579406705