Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 5 (1901-1906) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 137 pages of information about Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 5 (1901-1906).

Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 5 (1901-1906) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 137 pages of information about Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 5 (1901-1906).

3.  Are there passages which burn with real fire—­not punk, fox-fire, make believe?

4.  Has he heroes and heroines who are not cads and cadesses?

5.  Has he personages whose acts and talk correspond with their characters as described by him?

6.  Has he heroes and heroines whom the reader admires, admires, and knows why?

7.  Has he funny characters that are funny, and humorous passages that are humorous?

8.  Does he ever chain the reader’s interest, and make him reluctant to lay the book down?

9.  Are there pages where he ceases from posing, ceases from admiring the placid flood and flow of his own dilutions, ceases from being artificial, and is for a time, long or short, recognizably sincere and in earnest?

10.  Did he know how to write English, and didn’t do it because he didn’t want to?

11.  Did he use the right word only when he couldn’t think of another one, or did he run so much to wrong because he didn’t know the right one when he saw it?

13.  Can you read him? and keep your respect for him?  Of course a person could in his day—­an era of sentimentality and sloppy romantics —­but land! can a body do it today?

Brander, I lie here dying, slowly dying, under the blight of Sir Walter.  I have read the first volume of Rob Roy, and as far as chapter XIX of Guy Mannering, and I can no longer hold my head up nor take my nourishment.  Lord, it’s all so juvenile! so artificial, so shoddy; and such wax figures and skeletons and spectres.  Interest?  Why, it is impossible to feel an interest in these bloodless shams, these milk-and-water humbugs.  And oh, the poverty of the invention!  Not poverty in inventing situations, but poverty in furnishing reasons for them.  Sir Walter usually gives himself away when he arranges for a situation—­elaborates, and elaborates, and elaborates, till if you live to get to it you don’t believe in it when it happens.

I can’t find the rest of Rob Roy, I can’t stand any more Mannering—­I do not know just what to do, but I will reflect, and not quit this great study rashly.  He was great, in his day, and to his proper audience; and so was God in Jewish times, for that matter, but why should either of them rank high now?  And do they?—­honest, now, do they?  Dam’d if I believe it.

My, I wish I could see you and Leigh Hunt! 
                                      Sincerely Yours
                                             S. L. Clemens.

To Brander Matthews, in New York: 

Riverdale, May 8,’03 (Mailed June, 1910).  Dear Brander,—­I’m still in bed, but the days have lost their dulness since I broke into Sir Walter and lost my temper.  I finished Guy Mannering—­that curious, curious book, with its mob of squalid shadows jabbering around a single flesh-and-blood being—­Dinmont; a book crazily put together out of the very refuse of the romance-artist’s stage properties—­finished it and took up Quentin Durward, and finished that.

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Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 5 (1901-1906) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.