History of American Literature
Chapter 10
No other work in American literature or history can take the place of this book and of his three great stories (pp. 359-361), which bring us face to face with life in the great Mississippi Valley in the middle of the nineteenth century.
LIFE IN THE FAR WEST.--In 1861 he went to Nevada as private secretary to his brother, who had been appointed secretary of that territory. Mark Twain intended to stay there but a short time. He says, "I little thought that I would not see the end of that three-month pleasure excursion for six or seven uncommonly long years."
The account of his experiences in our far West is given in the volume called _Roughing It_ (1871). This book should be read as a chapter in the early history of that section. The trip from St. Joseph to Nevada by stage, the outlaws, murders, sagebrush, jackass rabbits, coyotes, mining camps,--all the varied life of the time--is thrown distinctly on the screen in the pages of _Roughing It_. While in the West, he caught the mining fever, but he soon became a newspaper reporter and editor, and in this capacity he discovered the gold mine of his genius as a writer. The experience of these years was only second in importance to his remarkable life in the Mississippi Valley. No other American writer has received such a variety of training in the university of human nature.
LATER LIFE.--In 1867, he supplemented his purely American training with a trip to Europe, Egypt, and the Holy Land. The story of his journey is given in _The Innocents Abroad_ (1869), the work which first made him known in every part of the United States. _A Tramp Abroad_ (1880), and _Following the Equator: A Journey Around the World_ (1897), are records of other foreign travels. While they are largely autobiographical, and show in an unusually entertaining way how he became one of the most cosmopolitan of our authors, these works are less important than those which throb with the heart beats of that American life of which he was a part in his younger days.
In 1884 he became a partner in the publishing house of Charles L. Webster and Co. This firm incurred risks against his advice, and failed. The failure not only swallowed up every cent that he had saved, but left him, past sixty, staggering under a load of debt that would have been a despair to most young men. Like Sir Walter Scott in a similar misfortune, Mark Twain made it a point of honor to assume the whole debt. He lectured, he wrote, he traveled, till finally, unlike Scott, he was able to pay off the last penny of the firm's indebtedness. His life thus set a standard of honor to Americans, which is to them a legacy the peer of any left by any author to his nation.
After his early pioneer days, his American homes were chiefly in New England. For many years he lived in Hartford, Connecticut. In 1908 he went to a new home at Redding, Connecticut. His last years were saddened by the death of his daughter and his wife. His death in 1910 made plain the fact that few American authors had won a more secure place in the affections of all classes.
It does not seem possible that the life of any other American author can ever closely resemble his. He had Elizabethan fullness of experience. Even Sir Walter Raleigh's life was no more varied; for Mark Twain was a printer, pilot, soldier, miner, newspaper reporter, editor, special correspondent, traveler around the world, lecturer, biographer, writer of romances, historian, publisher, and philosopher.
STORIES OF THE MISSISSIPPI VALLEY.--The works by which Mark Twain will probably be longest known are those dealing with the scenes of his youth. He is the historian of an epoch that will never return. His works that reveal the bygone life of the Mississippi Valley are not unlikely to increase in fame as the years pass. He resembles Hawthorne in presenting the early history of a section of our country. New England was old when Hawthorne was a boy, and he imaginatively reconstructed the life of its former days. When Mark Twain was young, the West was new; hence his task in literature was to preserve contemporary life. He has accomplished this mission better than any other writer of the middle West.
_The Adventures of Tom Sawyer_ (1876) is a story of life in a Missouri town on the Mississippi River. Tom Sawyer, the hero, is "a combination," says the author, "of the characteristics of three boys whom I knew." Probably Mark Twain himself is the largest part of this combination. The book is the record of a wide-awake boy's impression of the life of that day. The wretched common school, the pranks of the boys, the Sunday school, the preacher and his sermon, the task of whitewashing the fence, the belief in witches and charms, the half-breed Indian, the drunkard, the murder scene, and the camp life of the boys on an island in the Mississippi,--are all described with a vividness and interest due to actual experience. The author distinctly says, "Most of the adventures recorded in this book really occurred; one or two were experiences of my own, the rest those of boys who were schoolmates of mine."
_Huckleberry Finn_ (1885) has been called the _Odyssey_ of the Mississippi. This is a story of life on and along the great river, just before the middle of the nineteenth century. Huckleberry Finn, the son of a drunkard, and the friend of Tom Sawyer, is the hero of the book. The reader becomes deeply interested in the fortunes of Jim, a runaway slave, who accompanies Huck on a raft down the river, and who is almost hourly in danger of being caught and returned or again enslaved by some chance white man.
One of the strongest scenes in the story is where Huck debates with himself whether he shall write the owner where to capture Jim, or whether he shall aid the poor creature to secure his freedom. Since Huck was a child of the South, there was no doubt in his mind that punishment in the great hereafter awaited one who deprived another of his property, and Jim was worth eight hundred dollars. Huck did not wish to lose his soul, and so he wrote a letter to the owner. Before sending it, however, he, like Hamlet, argued the case with himself. Should he send the letter or forfeit human respect and his soul? The conclusion that Huck reached is thoroughly characteristic of Mark Twain's attitude toward the weak. The thirty-first chapter of _Huckleberry Finn_, in which this incident occurs, could not have been written by one who did not thoroughly appreciate the way in which the South regarded those who aided in the escape of a slave. Another unique episode of the story is the remarkable dramatic description of the deadly feud between the families of the Shepherdsons and the Grangerfords.
This story is Mark Twain's masterpiece, and it is not improbable that it will continue to be read as long as the Mississippi flows toward the Gulf. Of Mark Twain's achievement in these two tales, Professor William Lyon Phelps of Yale says: "He has done something which many popular novelists have signally failed to accomplish--he has created real characters. His two wonderful boys, Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn, are wonderful in quite different ways. The creator of Tom exhibited remarkable observation; the creator of Huck showed the divine touch of imagination.... _Tom Sawyer_ and _Huckleberry Finn_ are prose epics of American life."
Mark Twain says that he was reared to believe slavery a divine institution. This fact makes his third story of western life, _Pudd'nhead Wilson_. interesting for its pictures of the negro and slavery, from a different point of view from that taken by Mrs. Stowe in _Uncle Tom's Cabin._
GENERAL CHARACTERISTICS.--During his lifetime, Mark Twain's humor was the chief cause of his well-nigh universal popularity. The public had never before read a book exactly like his _Innocents Abroad_. Speaking of an Italian town, he says, "It is well the alleys are not wider, because they hold as much smell now as a person can stand, and, of course, if they were wider they would hold more, and then the people would die." Incongruity, or the association of dissimilar ideas, is the most frequent cause of laughter to his readers. His famous cablegram from England that the report of his death was much exaggerated is of this order, as is also the following sentence from _Roughing It:_--
"Then he rode over and began to rebuke the stranger with a six-shooter, and the stranger began to explain with another."
Such sentences convey something more than a humorous impression. They surpass the usual historical records in revealing in an incisive way the social characteristics of those pioneer days. His humor is often only a means of more forcibly impressing on readers some phase of the philosophy of history. Even careless readers frequently recognize that this statement is true of much of the humor in _A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur's Court_, which is one of his most successful exhibitions of humor based on incongruity.
While his humor is sometimes mechanical, coarse, and forced, we must not forget that it also often reveals the thoughtful philosopher. To confirm this statement, one has only to glance at the humorous philosophy that constitutes _Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar_.
Mark Twain's future place in literature will probably be due less to humor than to his ability as a philosopher and a historian. Humor will undoubtedly act on his writings as a preservative salt, but salt is valuable only to preserve substantial things. If matter of vital worth is not present in any written work, mere humor will not keep it alive.
One of his most humorous scenes may be found in the chapter where Tom Sawyer succeeds in getting other boys to relieve him of the drudgery of whitewashing a fence. That episode was introduced to enable the author to make more impressive his philosophy of a certain phase of human action:--
"He had discovered a great law of human action without knowing it--namely, that in order to make a man or a boy covet a thing, it is only necessary to make the thing difficult to attain. If he had been a great and wise philosopher, like the writer of this book, he would now have comprehended that Work consists of whatever a body is obliged to do, and that Play consists of whatever a body is not obliged to do."
His statement about illusions shows that his philosophy does not always have a humorous setting:--
"The illusions are the only things that are valuable, and God help the man who reaches the time when he meets only the realities."
Hatred of hypocrisy is one of his emphatic characteristics. If Tom Sawyer enjoyed himself more in watching a dog play with a pinch-bug in church than in listening to a doctrinal sermon, if he had a better time playing hookey than in attending the execrably dull school, Mark Twain is eager to expose the hypocrisy of those who would misrepresent Tom's real attitude toward church and school. While Mark Twain is determined to present life faithfully as he sees it, he dislikes as much as any Puritan to see evil triumph. In his stories, wrongdoing usually digs its own grave.
His strong sense of justice led him to write _Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc_ (1896), to defend the Maid of Orleans. Because he loved to protect the weak, he wrote _A Dogs Tale_ (1904). For the same reason he paid all the expenses of a negro through an eastern college.
Although he was self-taught, he gradually came to use the English language with artistic effect and finish. His style is direct and energetic, and it shows his determination to say a thing as simply and as effectively as possible. One of the rules in _Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar_ is, "As to the Adjective: when in doubt, strike it out." He followed this rule. Some have complained that the great humorist's mind, like Emerson's, often worked in a disconnected fashion, but this trait has been exaggerated in the case of both. Mark Twain has certainly made a stronger impression than many authors whose "sixthly" follows more inevitably. It is true that his romances do not gather up every loose end, that they do not close with a grand climax which settles everything; but they reflect the spirit of the western life, which also had many loose ends and left much unsettled.
His mingled humor and philosophy, his vivid, interesting, contemporary history, which gives a broad and sympathetic delineation of important phases of western life and development, fill a place that American literature could ill afford to leave vacant.
SUMMARY
Lincoln spoke to the common people in simple virile English, which serves as a model for the students of Oxford University. Bret Harte wrote stories filled with the humor and the pathos of the rough mining camps of the far West. Eugene Field's simple songs appeal to all children. The virtues of humble homes, the smiles and tears of everyday life, are presented in James Whitcomb Riley's poems. Mark Twain, philosopher, reformer of the type of Cervantes, and romantic historian, has, largely by means of his humor, made a vivid impression on millions of Americans. Every member of this group had an unusual development of humor. Each one was imbued with the democratic spirit and eager to present the elemental facts of life. For these reasons, the audiences of this group have been numbered by millions.
REFERENCES
Roosevelt's _The Winning of the West_.
Turner's _Rise of the New West_.
Hart's _National Ideals Historically Traced_.
Johnston's _High School History of the United States_ (612 pp.).
Clemens's _Life on the Mississippi_.
Clemens's _Roughing It_.
Schurz's _Abraham Lincoln_. (Excellent.)
Morse's _Abraham Lincoln_.
Chubb's _Selections from the Addresses, Inaugurals, and Letters of Abraham Lincoln, edited with an Introduction and Notes_. (Macmillan's Pocket Classics.)
Boynton's _Bret Harte_.
Pemberton's _The Life of Bret Harte_.
Erskinels _Leading American Novelists_, pp. 325-379. (Harte.)
Canby's _The Short Story in English_, Chap. XIV. (Harte.)
Field's _The Eugene Field Book_, edited by Burt and Cable. (Contains autobiographical matter and Field's best juvenile poems and stories.)
Thompson's _Eugene Field_, 2 vols.
Field's _The Writings in Prose and Verse of Eugene Field_, Sabine Edition, 12 vols.
Garland's _A Dialogue between James Whitcomb Riley and Hamlin Garland_, in Me duress Magazine, February, 1894.
_In Honor of James Whitcomb Riley, with a Brief Sketch of his Life_, by Hughes, Beveridge, and Others, Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill Company, 1906.
Clemens's _Autobiography_.
Matthews's _Biographical Criticism of Mark Twain_, in the _Introduction_ to _The Innocents Abroad_.
Phelps's _Essays on Modern Novelists_. (Mark Twain; excellent.)
Henderson's _Mark Twain_, in _Harpers Magazine_, May, 1909.
Howells's _My Mark Twain_.
SUGGESTED READINGS
Lincoln.--_The Gettysburg Address_, part of the _Second Inaugural Address_.
Harte.--_Tennessee's Partner_, and _How Santa Claus came to Simpson's Bar_. Harte's two greatest stories, _The Luck of Roaring Camp_ and _The Outcasts of Poker Flat_, should be read in mature years. These stories may all be found in the single volume, entitled _The Luck of Roaring Camp and Other Stories_. (Riverside Aldine Press Series.)
Field.--_Little Boy Blue_, _The Duel_, _Krinken_, _Wynken, Blynken, and Nod_, _The Rock-a-By Lady_. These poems may all be found in Burt and Cable's _The Eugene Field Book_.
Riley.--_When the Frost is on the Punkin, The Clover, The First Bluebird, Ike Walton's Prayer, A Life Lesson, Away, Griggsby's Station, Little Mahala Ashcraft, Our Hired Girl, Little Orphant Annie._ These poems may be found in the three volumes, entitled _Neighborly Poems_, _Afterwhiles_, and _Rhymes of Childhood_.
Mark Twain.--_Life on the Mississippi_, Chaps. VIII., IX., XIII. _Roughing It_, Chap. II. If the first two chapters of _The Adventures of Tom Sawyer_ and _The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn_ are read, the time will probably be found to finish the books. For specimens of his humor at its best, read _Pudd'nhead Wilson's Calendar_, printed at the beginning of the twenty-one chapters of _Pudd'nhead Wilson_. His humor depending on incongruity is well shown in _A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthurs Court_. _The Prince and the Pauper_ is a fascinating story of sixteenth-century England.
QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS
Why does Oxford University display on its walls _The Gettysburg Address_ of Lincoln? What books helped mold his style?
What period of our development do Bret Harte's stories illustrate? What are some special characteristics of his short stories? Does he belong to the school of Poe or Hawthorne? Which one of our great short story writers has the most humor,--Irving, Hawthorne, Poe, or Harte? Which one of them do you enjoy the most?
Why is Eugene Field called the poet-laureate of children? Which of his poems indicated for reading do you prefer? What are the most striking qualities of his verse?
Point out the chief characteristics of Riley's verse. What lines please you most for their humor, references to rural life, optimism, kindly spirit, and pathos? Why is he so widely popular?
Which of Mark Twain's works are most valuable to the student of American literature and history? In what sense is he a historian? What phases of western development does he describe? Give instances (_a_) of his humor which depends on incongruity, (_b_) of his philosophical humor, (_c_) of his hatred of hypocrisy, and (_d_) of his solicitude for the weak. Why is he said to belong to the school of Cervantes? What specially impresses you about Mark Twain's style?