states that the studies for these papers had been
made twenty-five or twenty-seven years before.
He probably referred to the Monday Evening Club essay,
“What Is Happiness?” (February, 1883).
See chap. cxli.]—A number of the books were
sent to newspaper reviewers, and so effectually had
he concealed the personality of his work that no critic
seems to have suspected the book’s authorship.
It was not over-favorably received. It was generally
characterized as a clever, and even brilliant, expose
of philosophies which were no longer startlingly new.
The supremacy of self-interest and “man the
irresponsible machine” are the main features
of ‘What Is Man’ and both of these and
all the rest are comprehended in his wider and more
absolute doctrine of that inevitable life-sequence
which began with the first created spark. There
can be no training of the ideals, “upward and
still upward,” no selfishness and unselfishness,
no atom of voluntary effort within the boundaries
of that conclusion. Once admitting the postulate,
that existence is merely a sequence of cause and effect
beginning with the primal atom, and we have a theory
that must stand or fall as a whole. We cannot
say that man is a creature of circumstance and then
leave him free to select his circumstance, even in
the minutest fractional degree. It was selected
for him with his disposition; in that first instant
of created life. Clemens himself repeatedly emphasized
this doctrine, and once, when it was suggested to
him that it seemed to “surround every thing,
like the sky,” he answered:
“Yes, like the sky; you can’t break through
anywhere.”
Colonel Harvey came to Dublin that summer and persuaded
Clemens to let him print some selections from the
dictations in the new volume of the North American
Review, which he proposed to issue fortnightly.
The matter was discussed a good deal, and it was believed
that one hundred thousand words could be selected
which would be usable forthwith, as well as in that
long-deferred period for which it was planned.
Colonel Harvey agreed to take a copy of the dictated
matter and make the selections himself, and this plan
was carried out. It may be said that most of the
chapters were delightful enough; though, had it been
possible to edit them with the more positive documents
as a guide, certain complications might have been
avoided. It does not matter now, and it was not
a matter of very wide import then.
The payment of these chapters netted Clemens thirty
thousand dollars—a comfortable sum, which
he promptly proposed to spend in building on the property
at Redding. He engaged John Mead Howells to prepare
some preliminary plans.
Clara Clemens, at Norfolk, was written to of the matter.
A little later I joined her in Redding, and she was
the first of the family to see that beautiful hilltop.
She was well pleased with the situation, and that
day selected the spot where the house should stand.
Clemens wrote Howells that he proposed to call it “Autobiography
House,” as it was to be built out of the Review
money, and he said: