Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume III, Part 1: 1900-1907 eBook

Albert Bigelow Paine
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 301 pages of information about Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume III, Part 1.

Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume III, Part 1: 1900-1907 eBook

Albert Bigelow Paine
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 301 pages of information about Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume III, Part 1.

“Yes,” he said, “not a sparrow falls but He is noticing, if that is what you mean; but the human conception of it is that God is sitting up nights worrying over the individuals of this infinitesimal race.”

Then he recalled a fancy which I have since found among his memoranda.  In this note he had written: 

The suns & planets that form the constellations of a billion billion solar systems & go pouring, a tossing flood of shining globes, through the viewless arteries of space are the blood-corpuscles in the veins of God; & the nations are the microbes that swarm and wiggle & brag in each, & think God can tell them apart at that distance & has nothing better to do than try.  This—­the entertainment of an eternity.  Who so poor in his ambitions as to consent to be God on those terms?  Blasphemy?  No, it is not blasphemy.  If God is as vast as that, He is above blasphemy; if He is as little as that, He is beneath it.

“The Bible,” he said, “reveals the character of its God with minute exactness.  It is a portrait of a man, if one can imagine a man with evil impulses far beyond the human limit.  In the Old Testament He is pictured as unjust, ungenerous, pitiless, and revengeful, punishing innocent children for the misdeeds of their parents; punishing unoffending people for the sins of their rulers, even descending to bloody vengeance upon harmless calves and sheep as punishment for puny trespasses committed by their proprietors.  It is the most damnatory biography that ever found its way into print.  Its beginning is merely childish.  Adam is forbidden to eat the fruit of a certain tree, and gravely informed that if he disobeys he shall die.  How could that impress Adam?  He could have no idea of what death meant.  He had never seen a dead thing.  He had never heard of one.  If he had been told that if he ate the apples he would be turned into a meridian of longitude that threat would have meant just as much as the other one.  The watery intellect that invented that notion could be depended on to go on and decree that all of Adam’s descendants down to the latest day should be punished for that nursery trespass in the beginning.

“There is a curious poverty of invention in Bibles.  Most of the great races each have one, and they all show this striking defect.  Each pretends to originality, without possessing any.  Each of them borrows from the other, confiscates old stage properties, puts them forth as fresh and new inspirations from on high.  We borrowed the Golden Rule from Confucius, after it had seen service for centuries, and copyrighted it without a blush.  We went back to Babylon for the Deluge, and are as proud of it and as satisfied with it as if it had been worth the trouble; whereas we know now that Noah’s flood never happened, and couldn’t have happened—­not in that way.  The flood is a favorite with Bible-makers.  Another favorite with the founders of religions is the Immaculate Conception.  It had been worn threadbare; but we adopted it as a new idea.  It was old in Egypt several thousand years before Christ was born.  The Hindus prized it ages ago.  The Egyptians adopted it even for some of their kings.  The Romans borrowed the idea from Greece.  We got it straight from heaven by way of Rome.  We are still charmed with it.”

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Mark Twain, a Biography — Volume III, Part 1: 1900-1907 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.