Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume I, Part 1: 1835-1866 eBook

Albert Bigelow Paine
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 325 pages of information about Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume I, Part 1.

Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume I, Part 1: 1835-1866 eBook

Albert Bigelow Paine
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 325 pages of information about Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume I, Part 1.
The connection had become equally unsatisfactory to proprietor and employee.  They had a heart-to-heart talk presently, with the result that Mark Twain was free.  He used to claim, in after-years, with his usual tendency to confess the worst of himself, that he was discharged, and the incident has been variously told.  George Barnes himself has declared that Clemens resigned with great willingness.  It is very likely that the paragraph at the end of Chapter LVIII in ‘Roughing It’ presents the situation with fair accuracy, though, as always, the author makes it as unpleasant for himself as possible: 

“At last one of the proprietors took me aside, with a charity I still remember with considerable respect, and gave me an opportunity to resign my berth, and so save myself the disgrace of a dismissal.”

As an extreme contrast with the supposititious “butterfly idleness” of his beginning in San Francisco, and for no other discoverable reason, he doubtless thought it necessary, in the next chapter of that book, to depict himself as having reached the depths of hard luck, debt, and poverty.

“I became an adept at slinking,” he says.  “I slunk from back street to back street....  I slunk to my bed.  I had pawned everything but the clothes I had on.”

This is pure fiction.  That he occasionally found himself short of funds is likely enough—­a literary life invites that sort of thing—­but that he ever clung to a single “silver ten-cent piece,” as he tells us, and became the familiar of mendicancy, was a condition supplied altogether by his later imagination to satisfy what he must have regarded as an artistic need.  Almost immediately following his separation from the ‘Call’ he arranged with Goodman to write a daily letter for the Enterprise, reporting San Francisco matters after his own notion with a free hand.  His payment for this work was thirty dollars a week, and he had an additional return from his literary sketches.  The arrangement was an improvement both as to labor and income.

Real affluence appeared on the horizon just then, in the form of a liberal offer for the Tennessee land.  But alas! it was from a wine-grower who wished to turn the tract into great vineyards, and Orion had a prohibition seizure at the moment, so the trade was not made.  Orion further argued that the prospective purchaser would necessarily be obliged to import horticultural labor from Europe, and that those people might be homesick, badly treated, and consequently unhappy in those far eastern Tennessee mountains.  Such was Orion’s way.

XLVIII

THE REFUGE OF THE HILLS

Those who remember Mark Twain’s Enterprise letters (they are no longer obtainable)—­[Many of these are indeed now obtainable by a simple Web search.  D.W.]—­declare them to have been the greatest series of daily philippics ever written.  However this may be, it is certain that they made a stir.  Goodman permitted him to say absolutely what he pleased upon any subject.  San Francisco was fairly weltering in corruption, official and private.  He assailed whatever came first to hand with all the fierceness of a flaming indignation long restrained.

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Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume I, Part 1: 1835-1866 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.