 CHAPTER 249 BILLYARDS The return to New York marked the beginning of a new era in my relations with Mark Twain. I have not meant to convey up to this time that there was between us anything resembling a personal friendship. Our relations were friendly, certainly, but they were relations of convenience and mainly of a business, or at least of a literary nature. He was twenty-six years my senior, and the discrepancy of experience and attainments was not measurable. With such conditions friendship must be a deliberate growth, something there must be to bridge the dividing gulf. Truth requires the confession that, in this case, the bridge took a very solid material form, it being, in fact, nothing less than a billiard-table. Clemens had been without a billiard-table since 1891, the old one having been disposed of on the departure from Hartford. It was a present from Mrs. Henry H. Rogers, and had been intended for his Christmas. But when he heard of it, he could not wait, and suggested, delicately, that if he had it right now, he could begin using it sooner. So he went one day with Mr. Rogers to the Bulk-Collander Company, and they selected a handsome combination table suitable to all games, the best that money could buy. He was greatly excited over the prospect, and his former bedroom was carefully measured to be certain that it was large enough for billiard purposes. Then his bed was moved into the study, and the bookcases and certain appropriate pictures were placed and hung in the billiard room to give it the proper feeling. The billiard-table arrived, and was put in place. The brilliant green cloth in contrast with the rich red wallpaper and the book-bindings and pictures, making the room wonderfully handsome and inviting. Sam Clemens, with one of his sudden impulses, had conceived the notion of spending the winter in Egypt on the Nile. He had gone so far, within a few hours after the idea developed, as to plan the time of his departure, and to partially engage a travelling secretary, so that he might continue his dictations. He was quite full of the idea just at the moment when the billiard-table was being installed. He had sent for a book on the subject, the letters of Lady Duff Gordon whose daughter Janet Rose had become a dear friend in Florence during the Viviani days. He spoke of this new purpose on the morning when we renewed the New York dictations a month or more following the return from Dublin. When the dictation ended he said, Have you any special place to lunch today? I replied that I had not. Lunch here, he said, and we'll try the new billiard-table. I said what was eminently true that I could not play, that I had never played more than a few games of pool and those very long ago. No matter, he answered, the poorer you play, the better I shall like it. So I remained for luncheon and we began, November 2, the first game ever played on the Christmas table. We played the English game in which caroms and pockets both count. I had a beginner's luck on the whole, and I remember it as a riotous, rollicking game, the beginning of a closer understanding between us of a distinct epoch in our association. When it was ended he said, I'm not going to Egypt. There was a man here yesterday afternoon who said it was bad for bronchitis, and besides it's too far away from this billiard-table. He suggested that I come back in the evening and play some more. I did so, and the game lasted until after midnight. He gave me odds, of course, and my nigger luck, as he called it, continued. It kept him sweating and swearing feverishly to win. Finally, once I made a great fluke, a carom followed by most of the balls falling into the pockets. Well, he said, when you pick up that cue, this damn table drips at every pour. After that the morning dictations became a secondary interest. Like a boy he was looking forward to the afternoon of play, and it never seemed to come quick enough to suit him. I remained regularly for luncheon, and he was inclined to cut the courses short that he might the sooner get upstairs to the billiard-room. His earlier habit of not eating in the middle of the day continued, but he would get up and dress and walk about the dining-room in his old fashion, talking that marvellous, marvellous talk, which I was always trying to remember, and with only fractional success at best. To him it was only a method of killing time. I remember once, when he had been discussing with great earnestness the Japanese question, he suddenly noticed that the luncheon was about ending, and he said, Now we'll proceed to more serious matters. It's your shot. And he was quite serious, for the green cloth and the rolling balls afforded him a much larger interest. To the donor of his new possession Clemens wrote, Dear Mrs. Rogers, the billiard table is better than the doctors. I have a billiardist on the premises, and walk not less than ten miles every day with the cue in my hand. And the walking is not the whole of the exercise, nor the most health-giving part of it, I think. Through the multitude of the positions and attitudes it brings in to play every muscle in the body, and exercises them all. The games begin right after luncheon's daily, and continue until midnight, with two hours' intermission for dinner and music, and so it is nine hours' exercise per day, and ten or twelve on Sunday. Yesterday and last night it was twelve, and I slept until eight this morning without waking. The billiard table as a sabbath here can beat any coal-breaker in Pennsylvania and give it thirty in the game. If Mr. Rogers will take to daily billiards he can do without the doctors and the massager, I think. We are really going to build a house on my farm, an hour and a half from New York. It is decided. With love and many thanks, S. L. C. Naturally enough with continued practice I improved my game, and he reduced my odds accordingly. He was willing to be beaten, but not too often. Like any other boy he preferred to have the balance in his favor. We set down a record of the games, and he went to bed happier if the tally sheet showed him winner. It was natural too that an intimacy of association and of personal interest should grow under such conditions, to me a precious boon, and I wish here to record my own boundless gratitude to Mrs. Rogers for her gift, which whatever it meant to him meant so much more to me. The disparity of ages no longer existed, other discrepancies no longer mattered. The pleasant land of play is a democracy where such things do not count. To recall all the humours and interesting happenings of those early billiard days would be to fill a large volume. I can preserve no more than a few characteristic phases. He was not an even-tempered player. When the balls were perverse in their movements and his aim unsteady, he was likely to become short with his opponent, critical and even thought-finding. Then presently a reaction would set in, and he would be seized with remorse. He would become unnecessarily gentle and kindly, even attentive, placing the balls as I knocked them into the pockets, hurrying from one end of the table to render this service, endeavouring to show in every way except by actual confession and words, that he was sorry for what seemed to him, no doubt, an unworthy display of temper, unjustified irritation. Naturally this was a mood that I enjoyed less than that which had induced it. I did not wish him to humble himself. I was willing that he should be severe, even harsh, if he felt so inclined. His age, his position, his genius, entitled him to special privileges. Yet I am glad, as I remember it now, that the other side revealed itself, for it completes the sum of his great humanity. Indeed he was always not only human, but superhuman, not only a man, but superman. Nor does this term apply only to his psychology. In no other human being have I ever seen such physical endurance. I was comparatively a young man, and by no means an invalid, but many a time, far in the night, when I was ready to drop with exhaustion, he was still as fresh and buoyant and eager for the game as at the moment of beginning. He smoked and smoked continually and followed the endless track around the billiard table with a light step of youth. At three or four o'clock in the morning he would urge just one more game, and would taunt me for my weariness. I can truthfully testify that never until the last year of his life did he willingly lay down the billiard cue, or show the least suggestion of fatigue. He played always at high pressure. Now and then, in periods of adversity, he would fly into a perfect passion with things in general. But in the end it was a sham battle, and he saw the uselessness and humor of it, even in the moment of his climax. Once, when he found it impossible to make any of his favourite shots, he became more and more restive. The lightning became vividly picturesque as the clouds blackened. Finally, with the regular thunderblast, he seized the cue with both hands and literally mowed the balls across the table, landing one or two of them on the floor. I do not recall his exact remarks during the performance. I was chiefly concerned in getting out of the way, and those sublime utterances were lost. I gathered up the balls and we went on playing as if nothing had happened. Only he was very gentle and sweet, like the sun on the meadows after the storm has passed by. After a little he said, This is a most amusing game. When you play badly it amuses me, and when I play badly and lose my temper, it certainly must amuse you. His enjoyment of his opponent's perplexities was very keen. When he had left the balls in some unfortunate position, which made it almost impossible for me to score, he would laugh boisterously. I used to effect to be injured and disturbed by this ridicule, once when he had made the conditions unusually hard for me, and was enjoying the situation accordingly. I was tempted to remark, Whenever I see you laugh at a thing like that, I always doubt your sense of humor, which seemed to add to his amusement. Sometimes when the balls were badly placed for me, he would offer a sensible advice, suggesting that I should shoot here and there, shots that were possible, perhaps, but not promising. Often I would follow his advice, and then, when I failed to score, his amusement broke out afresh. Other billiardists came from time to time, Colonel Harvey, Mr. Duneca, and Major Lee of the Harper Company, and Peter Finley Dunn, Mr. Dooley. But they were handicapped by their business affairs and were not dependable for daily and protracted sessions. Any number of his friends were willing, even eager, to come for his entertainment, but the percentage of them who could and would devote a number of hours each day to being beaten at billiards, and enjoy the operation dwindled down to a single individual. Even I could not have done it, could not have afforded it, however much I might have enjoyed the diversion, had it not been contributory to my work. To me the association was invaluable, it drew from him a thousand long forgotten incidents, it invited a stream of picturesque comments and philosophies, it furnished the most intimate insight into his character. He was not always glad to see promiscuous callers, even someone that he might have met pleasantly elsewhere. One afternoon a young man whom he had casually invited to drop in some day, in town, happened to call in the midst of a very close series of afternoon games. It would all have been well enough if the visitor had been content to sit quietly on the couch and bet on the game, as Clemens suggested, after the greetings were over, but he was a very young man and he felt the necessity of being entertaining. He insisted on walking about the room and getting in the way, and on talking about the Mark Twain books he had read, and the people he had met from time to time who had known Mark Twain on the river, or on the Pacific coast or elsewhere. I knew how fatal it was for him to talk to Clemens during his play, especially concerning matters most of which had been laid away. I trembled for our visitor. If I could have got his ear privately, I should have said, for heaven's sake, sit down and keep still or go away. There's going to be a combination of earthquake and cyclone and avalanche if you keep this thing up. I did what I could. I looked at my watch every other minute, and last in desperation I suggested that I retire from the game and let the visitor have my cue. I suppose I thought this would eliminate an element of danger. He declined on the ground that he seldom played and continued his deadly visit. I have never been in an atmosphere so fraught with danger. I did not know how the game stood, and I played mechanically and forgot to count the score. Clemens' face was grim and set and savage. He no longer ventured even a word. By and by I noticed that he was getting white, and I said privately, now this young man's hour has come. It was certainly by the mercy of God just then that the visitor said, I am sorry, but I've got to go. I'd like to stay longer, but I've got an engagement for dinner. I don't remember how he got out, but I know that tons lifted as the door closed behind him. Clemens made his shot, then very softly said, if he had stayed another five minutes I should have offered him twenty-five cents to go. But a moment later he glared at me, why in nation did you offer him your cue? Wasn't that the courteous thing to do? I asked. No! he ripped out. The courteous and proper thing would have been to strike him dead. Did you want to saddle that disaster upon us for life? He was blowing off steam and I knew it and encouraged it. My impulse was to lie down on the couch and shout with hysterical laughter, but I suspected that would be indiscreet. He made some further comment on the propriety of offering a visitor a cue and suddenly began to sing a travesty of an old hymn. How tedious are they, who they're sovereign obey! And so loudly that I said, aren't you afraid he'll hear you and come back? Whereupon he pretended alarm and sang under his breath, and for the rest of the evening was in boundless good humor. I have recalled this incident merely as a sample of things that were likely to happen at any time in his company, and to show the difficulty one might find in fitting himself to his varying moods. He was not to be learned in a day, or a week, or a month. Some of those who knew him longest did not learn him at all. We celebrated his seventy-first birthday by playing billiards all day. He invented a new game for the occasion, inventing rules for it with almost every shot. It happened that no member of the family was at home on this birthday. Ill health had banished everyone, even the secretary. Flowers, telegrams, and congratulations came, and there was a string of callers. But he saw no one beyond some intimate friends, the guilders, late in the afternoon. When they had gone, we went down to dinner. We were entirely alone, and I felt the great honour of being his only guest on such an occasion. Once between the courses, when he rose, as usual, to walk about, he wandered into the drawing-room, and, seating himself at the orchestral, began to play the beautiful flower-song from Faust. It was a thing I had not seen him do before, and I never saw him do it again. When he came back to the table he said, Speaking of companions of long ago, after fifty years they become only shadows, and might as well be in the grave. Only those whom one has really loved mean anything at all. Of my playmates I recall John Briggs, John Garth, and Laura Hawkins. Just those three. The rest I buried long ago, and memory cannot even find their graves. He was in his loveliest humour all that day and that night, when he stopped playing, he said, I have never had a pleasanter day at this game. I answered, I hope ten years from tonight we shall still be playing it. Yes, he said, still playing the best game on earth. Mark Twain of Biography by Albert Bigelow Payne. Chapter 250. Philosophy and Pessimism. In a letter to MacAllister, written at this time, he said, The doctors banished Jean to the country five weeks ago. They banished my secretary to the country for a fortnight last Saturday. They banished Clara to the country for a fortnight last Monday. They banished me to Bermuda to sail next Wednesday. But I struck and shan't go. My complaint is permanent bronchitis and is one of the very best assets I've got, for it excuses me from every public function this winter and all other winters that may come. If he had bronchitis when this letter was written, it must have been a very mild form, for it did not interfere with billiard games which were more protracted and strenuous than at almost any other period. I conclude therefore that it was a convenient bronchitis, useful on occasion. For a full ten days we were alone in the big house with the servants. It was a holiday most of the time. We hurried through the mail in the morning and the telephone calls. Then while I answered such letters as required attention he dictated for an hour or so to Miss Hobby, after which billiards for the rest of the day and evening. When callers were reported by the butler I went down and got rid of them. Clara Clemens, before her departure, had pinned up a sign, no billiards after ten p.m., which still hung on the wall, but it was outlawed. Clemens occasionally planned excursions to and other places, but remembering the billiard table which he could not handily take along, he abandoned these projects. He was a boy whose parents had been called away, left to his own devices, and bent on a good time. There were likely to be irritations in his morning's mail, and more often he did not wish to see it until it had been pretty carefully sifted. So many people wrote who wanted things, so many people who made the claim of more or less distant acquaintanceship the excuse for long and trivial letters. I have stirred up three generations, he said, first the grandparents, then the children, and now the grandchildren. The great-grandchildren will begin to arrive soon. His mail was always large, but often it did not look interesting. One could tell from the envelope and the superscription something of the contents. Going over one assortment he burst out, Look at them! Look how trivial they are! Every envelope looks as if it contained a trivial human soul. Many letters were filled with fulsome praise and compliment, usually one pattern. He was sated with such things, and seldom found it possible to bear more than a line or two of them. Yet a fresh, well expressed note of appreciation always pleased him. I can live for two months on a good compliment, he once said. Certain persistent correspondence too self-centered to realize their lack of consideration, or the futility of their purpose, followed him relentlessly. Of one such, he remarked, that woman intends to pursue me to the grave. I wish something could be done to appease her. And again, everybody in the world who wants something, something of no interest to me, writes to me to get it. These morning sessions were likely to be of great interest. Once a letter spoke of the desirability of being an optimist. That word perfectly disgusts me, he said, and his features materialized the disgust, just as that other word pessimist does, and the idea that one can, by any word of will, be one or the other any more than he can change the color of his hair. The reason why a man is a pessimist or an optimist is not because he wants to be, but because he was born so. And this man, a minister of the gospel who was going to explain life to him, is going to tell me why he isn't a pessimist. Oh, he'll do it, but he won't tell the truth. He won't make it short enough. Yet he was always patient with anyone who came with spiritual messages, theological arguments and consolations. He might have said to them, oh, dear friends, those things of which you speak are the toys that long ago I played with and set aside. He could have said it and spoken the truth, but I believe he did not even think it. He listened to anyone for whom he had respect and was grateful for any effort in his behalf. One morning he read aloud a lecture given in London by George Bernard Shaw on religion, commenting as he read. He said, this letter is a frank breath of expression. And his comments were equally frank. There is no such thing as morality. It is not immoral for the tiger to eat the wolf or the wolf, the cat, or the cat, the bird, and so on down. That is their business. There is always enough for each one to live on. It is not immoral for one nation to seize another nation by force of arms or for one man to seize another man's property or life if he is strong enough and wants to take it. It is not immoral to create the human species with or without ceremony. Nature intended exactly these things. At one place in the lecture Shaw had said, no one of good sense can accept my creed today without reservation. Certainly not, commented Clemens. The reservation is that he is a damned fool to accept it at all. He was in one of his somber moods that morning. I had received a print of a large picture of Thomas Nast, the last one taken. The face had a pathetic expression which told the tragedy of his last years. Clemens looked at the picture several moments without speaking, then he broke out. Why can't a man die when he's had a tragedy? I ought to have died long ago." And somewhat later, once Twitchell heard me cussing the human race, and he said, Why, Mark, you are the last person in the world to do that, one selected and set apart as you are. I said, Joe, you don't know what you are talking about. I am not cussing all together about my own little troubles. Anyone can stand his own misfortunes. But when I read in the papers all about the rascalities and outrages going on, I realize what a creature the human animal is. Don't you care more about the wretchedness of others than anything that happens to you? Joe said he did, and shut up. It occurred to me to suggest that he should not read the daily papers. No difference, he said. I read books printed two hundred years ago, and they hurt just the same. Those people are all dead and gone, I objected. They hurt just the same, he maintained. I sometimes thought of his inner consciousness as a pool darkened by his tragedies, its glassy surface when calm, reflecting all the joy and sunlight and merriment of the world, but easily, so easily troubled and stirred even to violence. Once following the dictation when I came to the billiard room he was shooting the balls about the table, apparently much depressed. He said, I have been thinking it out. If I live two years more, I will put an end to it all. I will kill myself. You have much to learn for. But I am so tired of the eternal round," he interrupted, so tired. And I knew he meant that he was ill of the great loneliness that had come to him that day in Florence, and would never pass away. I referred to the pressure of social demands in the city and the relief he would find in his country home. He shook his head. The country home I need, he said fiercely, is a cemetery. Yet the mood changed quickly enough when the play began. He was gay and hilarious presently, full of the humours and complexities of the game. H. H. Rogers came in with a good deal of frequency, seldom making very long calls, but never seeming to have that air of being hurried which one might expect to find in a man whose day was only twenty-four hours long, and whose interests were so vast and innumerable. He would come in where we were playing, and sit down and watch the game, or perhaps would pick up a book and read, exchanging a remark now and then. More often, however, he sat in the bedroom, for his visits were likely to be in the morning. They were seldom business calls, or if they were, the business was quickly settled, and then followed gossip, humorous incident, or perhaps Clemens would read aloud something he had written. But once, after greetings, he began, Well, Rogers, I don't know what you think of it, but I think I have had about enough of this world, and I wish I were out of it. Mr. Rogers replied, I don't say much about it, but that expresses my view. This, from the foremost man of letters and one of the foremost financiers of the time, was impressive. Each, at the mountaintop of his career, they agreed that the journey was not worthwhile, that what the world had still to give was not attractive enough to tempt them to prevent a desire to experiment with the next stage. One could remember a thousand poor and obscure men who were perfectly willing to go on struggling and starving, postponing the day of settlement as long as possible, but perhaps when one has had all the world has to give, when there are no new worlds in sight to conquer, one has a different feeling. Well, the realization lay not so far ahead for either of them, though at that moment they both seemed full of life and vigor, full of youth. One could not imagine the day when for them it would all be over. A Lobbying Expedition Clara Clemens came home now and then to see how matters were progressing and very properly, for Clemens was likely to become involved in social intricacies which required a directing hand. The daughter inherited no little of the father's characteristics of thought and phrase, and it was always a delight to see them together when one could be just out of range of the crossfire. I remember soon after her return when she was making some searching inquiries concerning the billiard room sign, and others suggested or instituted reforms. He said, Oh, well, never mind, it doesn't matter. I'm boss in this house. She replied quickly, Oh, no, you're not. You're merely owner. I'm the captain, the commander-in-chief. One night at dinner she mentioned the possibility of going abroad that year. During several previous summers she had planned to visit Vienna to see her old music master Leshetitsky once more before his death. She said, Leshetitsky is getting so old, if I don't go soon I'm afraid I shan't be in time for his funeral. Yes, said her father thoughtfully, you keep rushing over to Leshetitsky's funeral and you'll miss mine. He had made one or two social engagements without careful reflection and the situation would require some delicacy of adjustment. During a moment between the courses when he left the table and was taking his exercise in the farther room she made some remark which suggested a doubt of her father's gift for social management. I said, Oh, he is a king, you know, and a king can do no wrong. Yes, I know," she answered. The king can do no wrong. But he frightens me, almost to death sometimes he comes so near it. He came back and began to comment rather critically on some recent performance of Roosevelt's, which had stirred up a good deal of newspaper amusement. It was the store matter and those indiscreet letters which Roosevelt had written relative to the ambassadorship which store so much desired. Miss Clemens was inclined to defend the President and spoke with considerable enthusiasm concerning his elements of popularity which had won him such extraordinary admiration. Certainly he is popular, Clemens admitted, and with the best of reasons. If the twelve apostles should call at the house, he would say, Come in, come in, I am delighted to see you. I've been watching your progress and I admired it very much. Then if Satan should come he would slap him on the shoulder and say, Why Satan, how do you do? I am so glad to meet you. I've read all your works and enjoyed every one of them. Anybody could be popular with a gift like that. It was that evening or the next perhaps that he said to her Ben, one of his pet names for her, Now that you are here to run the ranch, Payne and I are going to Washington on a vacation. You don't seem to admire our society much anyhow. There were still other reasons for the Washington expedition. There was an important bill up for the extension of the book royalty period and the forces of copyright were going down in a body to use every possible means to get the measure through. Clemens, during Cleveland's first administration some nineteen years before, had accompanied such an expedition and through SS Sunset Cox had obtained the privileges of the floor of the house which had enabled him to canvas the members individually. Cox assured the door keeper that Clemens had received the thanks of Congress for a national literary service and was therefore entitled to that privilege. This was not strictly true, but regulations were not very severe in those days and the ruse had been regarded as a good joke which had yielded excellent results. Clemens had a similar scheme in mind now and believed that his friendship with Speaker Cannon, Uncle Joe, would obtain for him a similar privilege. The Copyright Association working in its regular way was very well, he said, but he felt he could do more as an individual than by acting merely as a unit of that body. I canvassed the entire house personally that other time, he said. Cox introduced me to the Democrats and John D. Long afterward, Secretary of the Navy, introduced me to the Republicans. I had a darling time converting those members and I'd like to try the experiment again. I should have mentioned earlier perhaps that at this time he had begun to wear white clothing regularly, regardless of the weather and season. On the return from Dublin he had said, I can't bear to put on black clothes again. I wish I could wear white all winter. I should prefer, of course, to wear colors, beautiful rainbow hues such as the women have monopolized. Their clothing makes a great opera audience an enchanting spectacle, a delight to the eye and to the spirit, a garden of Eden for charm and color. The men, clothed in odious black, are scattered here and there over the garden like so many charred stumps. If we are going to be gay in spirit, why be clad in funeral garments? I should like to dress in a loose and flowing costume, made all of silks and velvets, resplendent with stunning dyes, and so would every man I have ever known. But none of us dares to venture it. If I should appear on Fifth Avenue on Sunday morning, closed as I would like to be closed, the churches would all be vacant and the congregation would come tagging after me. They would scoff, of course, but they would envy me too. When I put on black it reminds me of my funerals. I could be satisfied with white all the year round. It was not long after this that he said, I have made up my mind not to wear black any more, but white, and let the critics say what they will. So his tailor was sent for, and six creamy flannel and surge suits were ordered, made with the short coats which he preferred, with a gray suit or two for travel, and he did not wear black again except for evening dress and on special occasions. It was a gratifying change, and though the newspapers made much of it, there was no one who was not gladdened by the beauty of his garments and their general harmony with his person. He had never worn anything so appropriate or so impressive. This departure of costume came along a week or two before the Washington trip, and when his bags were being packed for the excursion he was somewhat in doubt as to the propriety of bursting upon Washington in December in that snowy plumage. I ventured, this is a lobbying expedition of a peculiar kind, and does not seem to invite any half-way measures. I should vote in favor of the white suit. I think Miss Clemens was for it too. She must have been, or the vote wouldn't have carried, though it was clear he strongly favored the idea. At all events the white suits came along. We were off the following afternoon, Howells, Robert Underwood Johnson, one of the Appletons, one of the Putnam's, George Bowker, and others were on the train. On the trip down in the dining-car there was a discussion concerning the copywriting of ideas which finally resolved itself into the possibility of originating a new one. Clemens said, There is no such thing as a new idea. It is impossible. We simply take a lot of old ideas and put them into a sort of mental kaleidoscope. We give them a turn and they make new and curious combinations. We keep on turning and making new combinations indefinitely, but they are the same old pieces of colored glass that have been in use through all the ages. We put up at the Willard and in the morning drove over to the Congressional Library where the copyright hearing was in progress. There was a joint committee of the two houses seated round a long work and a number of spectators more or less interested in the bill. Mainly it would seem men concerned with the protection of mechanical music roles. The fact that this feature was mixed up with literature was not viewed with favor by most of the writers. Clemens referred to the musical contingent as those hand-organ men who ought to have a bill of their own. I should mention that early that morning Clemens had written this letter to Speaker Cannon. December 7, 1906. Dear Uncle Joseph, please get me the thanks of the Congress, not next week, but right away. It is very necessary. Do accomplish this for your affectionate old friend right away, by persuasion if you can, by violence if you must, for it is imperatively necessary that I get on the floor for two or three hours and talk to the members man by man in behalf of the support, encouragement, and protection of one of the nation's most valuable assets and industries, its literature. I have arguments with me, also a barrel with liquid in it. Give me a chance. Get me the thanks of Congress. Don't wait for others. There isn't time. I have stayed away and let Congress alone for seventy-one years and I am entitled to thanks. Congress knows it perfectly well and I have long felt hurt that this quite proper and earned expression of gratitude has been merely felt by the House and never publicly uttered. Send me an order on the sergeant at arms quick. When shall I come? With love and a benediction, Mark Twain. We went over to the Capitol now to deliver to Uncle Joe this characteristic letter. We had picked up Clemens' nephew, Samuel E. Moffat, at the library, and he came along and led the way to the speaker's room. Arriving there, Clemens laid off his dark overcoat and stood there, all in white, certainly a startling figure among those clerks, newspaper men and incidental politicians. He had been noticed as he entered the Capitol and a number of reporters had followed close behind. Within less than a minute word was being passed through the corridors that Mark Twain was at the Capitol in his white suit. The privileged ones began to gather and a crowd assembled in the hall outside. Speaker Cannon was not present at the moment, but a little later he billowed in, which seems to be the word to express it. He came with such a rush and tide of life. After greetings, Clemens produced the letter and read it to him solemnly, as if he were presenting a petition. Uncle Joe listened quite seriously, his head bowed a little, as if it were really a petition, as in fact it was. He smiled, but he said, quite seriously, that is a request that ought to be granted, but the time has gone by when I am permitted any such liberties. Tom Reed, when he was speaker, inaugurated a strict precedent excluding all outsiders from the use of the floor of the house. I got in. The other time, Clemens insisted. Yes, said Uncle Joe, but that ain't now. Sunset Cox could let you in, but I can't. They'd hang me. He reflected a moment and added, I'll tell you what I'll do. I've got a private room downstairs that I never use. It's all fitted up with table and desk, stationery, chinaware, and cutlery. You could keep house there if you wanted to. I'll let you have it as long as you want to stay here, and I'll give you my private servant, Neil, who's been here all his life and knows every official, every senator and representative, and they all know him. He'll bring you whatever you want, and you can send in messages by him. You can have the members brought down singly or in bunches, and convert them as much as you please. I'd give you a key to the room only I haven't got one myself. I never can get in when I want to, but Neil can get in, and he'll unlock it for you. You can have the room, and you can have Neil. Now, will that do you?" Clemens said it would. It was, in fact, an offer without precedent. Probably never in the history of the country had a speaker given up his private room to lobbyists. We went in to see the house open, and then went down with Neil and took possession of the room. The reporters had promptly seized upon the letter, and they now got hold of its author, led him to their own quarters, and gathering around him, fired questions at him, and kept their notebooks busy. He made a great figure, all in white there among them, and they didn't fail to realize the value of it as copy. He talked about copyright, and about his white clothes, and about a silk hat which hells wore. Back in the speaker's room at last he began laying out the campaign which would begin next day. By and by he said, Look here! I believe I've got to speak over there in that committee room today or tomorrow. I ought to know just when it is. I had not heard of this before, and offered to go over and see about it, which I did at once. I hurried back faster than I had gone. Mr. Clemens, you are to speak in half an hour, and the room is crowded full, people waiting to hear you. The devil, he said. Well, all right. I'll just lie down here a few minutes, and then we'll go over. Take paper and pencil, and make a few headings. There was a couch in the room. He lay down while I sat at the table with a pencil, making headings now and then, as he suggested, and presently he rose and shoving the notes into his pocket was ready. It was half past three when we entered the committee room, which was packed with people and rather dimly lighted, for it was gloomy outside. Herbert Putnam, the librarian, led us to seats among the literary group, and Clemens, removing his overcoat, stood in that dim room clad as in great armour. There was a perceptible stir. Howells startled for a moment, whispered, Why in the world did he wear that white suit for? Though in his heart he admired it as much as the others. I don't remember who was speaking when we came in, but he was saying nothing important. Whoever it was, he was followed by Dr. Edward Everett Hale, whose age always commanded respect, and whose words always was invited interest. Then it was Mark Twain's turn. He did not stand by his chair as the others had done, but walked over to the speaker's table, and, turning, faced his audience. I have never seen a more impressive sight than that snow-white figure in that dimly crowded room. He never touched his notes. He didn't even remember them. He began in that even quiet, deliberate voice of his, the most even, the most quiet, the most deliberate voice in the world, and without a break or a hesitation for a word he delivered a copyright argument full of humour and serious reasoning, such a speech as no one in that room, I suppose, had ever heard. Certainly it was a fine and dramatic bit of impromptu pleading. The weary committee, which had been tortured all day with dull, statistical arguments made by the mechanical device and dreary platitudes unloaded by men whose chief ambition was to shine as copyright champions, suddenly realised that they were being rewarded for the long waiting. They began to brighten and freshen and uplift and smile, like flowers that have been wilted by a drought when comes the refreshing shower that means renewed life and vigor. Every listener was as if standing on tiptoe. When the last sentence was spoken the applause came like an explosion. Howells, in his book My Mark Twain, speaks of Clemens' white clothing as an inspiration which few men would have had the courage to act upon. He adds, The first time I saw him wear it was at the author's hearing before the Congressional Committee on Copyright in Washington. Nothing could have been more dramatic than the gesture with which he flung off his long, loose overcoat and stood forth in white from his feet to the crown of his silvery head. It was a magnificent coup, and he dearly loved a coup. But the magnificent speech which he made, tearing to shreds the venerable fragot of nonsense about non-property and ideas which had formed the basis of all copyright legislation, made you forget even his spectacularity. There came a universal rush of men and women to get near enough for a word and to shake his hand, but he was anxious to get away. We drove to the Willard and talked and smoked and got ready for dinner. He was elated and said the occasion required full dress. We started down at last, fronted and frocked, like penguins. I did not realize then the fullness of his love for theatrical effect. I supposed he would want to go down with as little ostentation as possible, so took him by the elevator which enters the dining-room without passing through the long corridor known as Peacock Alley, because of its being a favorite place for handsomely dressed fashionables of the national capital. When we reached the entrance of the dining-room he said, Isn't there another entrance to this place? I said there was, but that it was very conspicuous. We should have to go down the long corridor. Oh, well, he said, I don't mind that. Let's go back and try it over. So we went back up the elevator, walked to the other end of the hotel, and came down to the F Street entrance. There is a fine stately flight of steps, a really royal stair leading from this entrance down into Peacock Alley. To slowly descend that flight is an impressive thing to do. It is like descending the steps of a throne room, or to some royal landing-place where Cleopatra's barge might lie. I confess that I was somewhat nervous at the awfulness of the occasion, but I reflected that I was powerfully protected. So, step by side, both in full dress, white ties, white silk whiskets and all, we came down that regal flight. Of course he was seized upon at once by a lot of feminine admirers, and the passage along the corridor was a perpetual gauntlet. I realize now that this gave the dramatic finish to his day, and furnished him with proper appetite for his dinner. I did not again make the mistake of taking him to a more secluded elevator. I aided and abetted him every evening in making that spectacular descent of the royal stairway, and in running that fair and frivolous gauntlet the length of Peacock Alley. The dinner was a continuous reception. No sooner was he seated than this congressman, and that senator came over to shake hands with Mark Twain. Governor Francis of Missouri also came, eventually Howells drifted in, and Clemens reviewed the day, its humors and successes. Back in the rooms at last he summed up the progress thus far, smoked, laughed over Uncle Joe's surrender to the copyright bandits, and turned in for the night. We were at the Capitol headquarters in Speaker Cannon's private room about eleven o'clock next morning. Clemens was not in the best humor, because I had allowed him to oversleep. He was inclined to be discouraged at the prospect, and did not believe many of the members would come down to see him. He expressed a wish for some person of influence and wide acquaintance, and walked up and down smoking gloomily. I slipped out and found the speaker's colored bodyguard, Neil, and suggested that Mr. Clemens was ready now to receive the members. That was enough. They began to arrive immediately. John Sharp Williams came first, then Boutel from Illinois, Littlefield from Maine, and after them a perfect procession, including all the leading lights, Dalsel, Champ Clark, McGaul, one hundred and eighty or so in all, during the next three or four hours. Neil announced each name at the door, and in turn I announced it to Clemens when the press was not too great. He had provided boxes of cigars, and the room was presently blue with smoke. Clemens and his white suit in the midst of it, surrounded by those darker figures, shaking hands, dealing out copyright gospel and anecdotes. Happy and wonderfully excited. There were chairs, but usually there was only standing room. He was on his feet for several hours and talked continually. But when at last it was over, and Champ Clark, who I believe remained longest and was most enthusiastic in the movement, had bad him good-bye, he declared that he was not a particle tired, and added, I believe if our bill could be presented now, it would pass. He was highly elated and pronounced everything a perfect success. Neil, who was largely responsible for the triumph, received a ten dollar bill. We drove to the hotel and dined that night with the Dodges, who had been neighbors at Riverdale. Later the usual crowd of admirers gathered around him. Among them I remember the minister from Costa Rica, the Italian minister, and others of the diplomatic service, most of whom he had known during his European residence. Someone told of traveling in India and China, and how a certain Hindu god, who had exchanged autographs with Mark Twain during his sojourn there, was familiar with only two other American names, George Washington and Chicago. While the king of Siam had read but three English books, the Bible, Bryce's American Commonwealth, and The Innocence Abroad. We were at Thomas Nelson Pages for dinner next evening, a wonderfully beautiful home, full of art treasures. A number of guests had been invited, Clemens naturally led the dinner talk, which eventually drifted to cheating. He told of Mrs. Clemens' embarrassment when Stepniak had visited them and talked books, and asked her what her husband thought of Balzac, Thackeray, and the others. She had been obliged to say that he had not read them. How interesting, said Stepniak, but it wasn't interesting to Mrs. Clemens. It was torture. He was light-spirited and gay, but recalling Mrs. Clemens saddened him, perhaps, for he was silent as we drove to the hotel, and after he was in bed he said, with a weary despair, which even the words do not convey, If I had been there a minute earlier, it is possible it is possible that she might have died in my arms. Sometimes I think that perhaps there was an instant, a single instant, when she realized that she was dying and that I was not there. In New York I had once brought him a print of the superb Adams Memorial by St. Godin's, the bronze woman who sits in the still court in the Rock Creek Cemetery at Washington. On the morning following the page dinner at breakfast he said, Engage a carriage, and we will drive out and see the St. Godin's bronze. It was a bleak dull December day, and as we walked down through the avenues of the dead there was a presence of realized sorrow that seemed exactly suited to such a visit. We entered the little enclosure of cedars, where sits the dark figure, which is art's supreme expression of the great human mystery of life and death. Instinctively we removed our hats, and neither spoke until after we had come away. Then, What does he call it? he asked. I did not know, though I had heard applied to it that great line of Shakespeare's The Rest is Silence. But that figure is not silent, he said, and later, as we were driving home, it is in deep meditation on sorrowful things. When we returned to New York he had the little print framed, and kept it all was on his mantelpiece. End of Chapter 251 A Lobbying Expedition From the Washington trip dates a period of still closer association with Mark Twain. On the way to New York he suggested that I take up residence in his apartment. Mark Twain, a biography by Albert Bigelow Payne, Chapter 252 Theology and Evolution From the Washington trip dates a period of still closer association with Mark Twain. On the way to New York he suggested that I take up residence in his house, a privilege which I had no wish to refuse. There was room going to waste, he said, and it would be handier for the early and late billiard sessions. So after that most of the days and nights I was there. Looking back on that time now I see pretty vividly three quite distinct pictures. One of them the rich red interior of the billiard room with the brilliant green square in the center on which the gay balls are rolling and bending over it that luminous white figure in the instant of play. Then there is the long, lighted drawing-room with the same figure stretched on a couch in the corner, drowsily smoking, while the rich organ tones fill the place summoning for him scenes and faces which others do not see. This was the hour between dinner and billiards, the hour which he sounded most restful of the day. Sometimes he rose, walking the length of the parlors, his step-time to the music and his thought. Of medium height he gave the impression of being tall, his head thrown up, and like a lion's rather large for his body. But oftener he lay among the cushions, the light flooding his white hair and dress and heightening his brilliant coloring. The third picture is that of the dinner-table, all was beautifully laid and all was a shrine of wisdom when he was there. He did not always talk, but it was his habit to do so, and memory holds the clearer vision of him when, with eyes and face alive with interest, he presented some new angle of thought in fresh picturesqueness of speech. These are the pictures that have remained to me out of the days spent under his roof, and they will not fade while memory lasts. Of Mark Twain's table philosophies it seems proper to make rather extended record. They were usually unpremeditated, and they presented the man as he was and thought. I preserved as much of them as I could, and have verified phrase and idea when possible from his own notes and other unprinted writings. The dinner-table talk naturally varied in character from that of the billiard room. The latter was likely to be anecdotal and personal. The former was more often philosophical and commentative, ranging through a great variety of subjects, scientific, political, sociological, and religious. His talk was often of infinity, the forces of creation, and it was likely to be satire of the orthodox conceptions intermingled with heresies of his own devising. Once after a period of general silence he said, No one who thinks can imagine the universe made by chance. It is too nicely assembled and regulated. There is, of course, a great mastermind, but it cares nothing for our happiness or our unhappiness. It was objected by one of those present that, as the infinite mind suggested perfect harmony, sorrow and suffering were defects which that mind must feel and eventually regulate. Yes, he said, Not a sparrow falls, but he is noticing. 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 and planets that form the constellations of a billion, billion solar systems and go pouring a tossing flood of shining globes through the viewless arteries of space are the blood corpuscles in the veins of God, and the nations are the microbes that swarm and wiggle and brag in each and think God can tell them apart at that distance and 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. He would continue in this strain, rising occasionally and walking about the room. Once considering the character of God, the Bible God, he said, We haven't been satisfied with God's character as it is given in the Old Testament. We have amended it. We have called him a God of mercy and love and morals. He didn't have a single one of those qualities in the beginning. He didn't hesitate to send the plagues on Egypt, the most fiendish punishments that could be devised, not for the king, but for his innocent subjects, the women and the little children, and then only to exhibit his power just to show off. And he kept hardening Pharaoh's heart so that he could send some further ingenuity of torture, new rivers of blood and swarms of vermin, and new pestilences merely to exhibit samples of his workmanship. Now and then, during the forty years' wandering, Moses persuaded him to be a little more lenient with the Israelites, which would show that Moses was the better character of the two. That Old Testament God never had an inspiration of his own. He referred to the larger conception of God, that infinite mind which had projected the universe. He said, In some details that Old Bible God is probably a more correct picture than our conception of that incomparable one that created the universe and flung upon its horizonless ocean of space those giant suns whose signal lights are so remote that we only catch their flash when it has been a myriad of years on its way. For that Supreme One is not a God of pity or mercy, not as we recognize these qualities. Think of a God of mercy who would create the typhus germ or the housefly or the centipede or the rattlesnake, yet these are all his handiwork. They are a part of the infinite plan. The minister is careful to explain that all these tribulations are sent for a good purpose, but he hires a doctor to destroy the fever germ, and he kills the rattlesnake when he doesn't run from it, and he sets paper with molasses on it for the housefly. Two things are quite certain. One is that God, the limitless God, manufactured those things for no man could run it. The man has never lived who could create even the humblest of God's creatures. The other conclusion is that God has no special consideration for man's welfare or comfort, or he wouldn't have created those things to disturb and destroy him. The human conception of pity and morality must be entirely unknown to that infinite God, as much unknown as the conception of a microbe to man, or at least as little regarded. If God ever contemplates those qualities in man, he probably admires them, as we always admire the thing which we do not possess ourselves. Probably a little grain of pity in a man, or a little atom of mercy would look as big to him as a constellation. He could create a constellation with a thought, but he has been all the measureless ages, and he has never acquired those qualities that we have named pity and mercy and morality. He goes on destroying a whole island of people with an earthquake, or a whole cityful with a plague, when we punish a man in the electric chair for merely killing the poorest of our race. The human being needs to revise his ideas again about God. Most of the scientists have done it already, but most of them don't dare to say so. He pointed out how the moral idea was undergoing constant change, that what was considered justifiable in an earlier day was regarded as highly immoral now. He pointed out that the decalogue made no reference to lying, except in the matter of bearing false witness against a neighbor. Also that there was a commandment against covetousness, though covetousness today was the basis of all commerce. The general conclusion being that the morals of the Lord had been the morals of the beginning, the morals of the first created man, the morals of the troglodyte, the morals of necessity, and that the morals of mankind had kept pace with necessity, whereas those of the Lord had remained unchanged. It is hardly necessary to say that no one ever undertook to contradict any statements of this sort from him. In the first place there was no desire to do so, and in the second place anyone attempting it would have cut a puny figure with his less substantial arguments and his less vigorous phrase. It was the part of wisdom and immeasurably the part of happiness to be silent and listen. On another evening he began, the mental evolution of this species proceeds, apparently, by regular progress side by side with the physical development until it comes to man, then there is a long unexplained gulf. Somewhere man acquired an asset which sets him immeasurably apart from the other animals, his imagination. Out of it he created for himself a conscience and clothes and immodesty and a hereafter and a soul. I wonder where he got that asset. It almost makes one agree with Alfred Russell Wallace that the world and the universe were created just for his benefit, that he is the chief love and delight of God. Wallace says that the whole universe was made to take care of and to keep steady this little floating moat in the center of it which we call the world. It looks like a good deal of trouble for such a small result but it's dangerous to dispute with a learned astronomer like Wallace. Still I don't think we ought to decide too soon about it, not until the returns are all in. There is the geological evidence, for instance. Even after the universe was created it took a long time to prepare the world for man. Some of the scientists ciphering out the evidence furnished by geology have arrived at the conviction that the world is prodigiously old. Lord Kelvin doesn't agree with them. He says that it isn't more than a hundred million years old and he thinks the human race has inhabited it about thirty thousand years of that time. Even so it was ninety nine million nine hundred and seventy thousand years getting ready, impatient as the creator doubtless was, to see man and admire him. That was because God first had to make the oyster. You can't make an oyster out of nothing, nor you can't do it in a day. You've got to start with a vast variety of invertebrates. Bellamnites, trilobites, gebusites, amylokites, and that sort of fry and put them into soak in a primary sea and observe and wait what will happen. Some of them will turn out a disappointment. The bellamnites and the amylokites and such will be failures and they will die out and become extinct in the course of the nineteen million years covered by the experiment. But all is not lost. For the amylokites will develop gradually into encronites and stalactites and blatherskites and one thing and another as the mighty ages creep on and the periods pile their lofty crags in the primordial seas and at last the first grand stage in the preparation of the world for man stands completed. The oyster is done. Now an oyster has hardly any more reasoning power than a man has, so it is probable this one jumped to the conclusion that the nineteen million years was a preparation for him. That would be just like an oyster and anyway this one could not know at that early date that he was only an incident in a scheme and that there was some more to the scheme yet. The oyster being finished, the next step in the preparation of the world for man was fish. So the old salurian seas were opened up to breed the fish in. It took twenty million years to make the fish and to fossilize him so we'd have the evidence later. Then in the Paleozoic limit having been reached it was necessary to start a new age to make the reptiles. Man would have to have some reptiles, not to eat, but to develop himself from. Thirty million years were required for the reptiles and out of such material as was left were made those stupendousaurians that used to prowl about the steamy world in remote ages with their snaky heads forty feet in the air and their sixty feet of body and tail racing and thrashing after them. They are all gone now, every one of them. Just a few fossil remnants of them left on this far flung fringe of time. It took all those years to get one of those creatures properly constructed to proceed to the next step. Then came the pterodactyl who thought all that preparation all those millions of years had been intended to produce them, for there wasn't anything too foolish for a pterodactyl to imagine. I suppose he did attract a good deal of attention, for even the least observant could see that there was the making of a bird in him, also the making of a mammal in the course of time. You can't say too much for the picturesqueness of the pterodactyl. He was the triumph of his period. He wore wings and had teeth and was a starchy looking creature. But the progression went right along. During the next thirty million years the bird arrived and the kangaroo and by and by the mastodon and the giant sloth and the Irish elk and the old salurian ass and some people thought that man was about due. But that was a mistake. For the next time they knew there came a great ice sheet and those creatures all escaped across the Bering Strait and wandered around in Asia and died, all except a few to carry on the preparation with. There were six of those glacial periods with two million years or so between each. They chased those poor orphans up and down the earth from weather to weather, from tropic temperature to fifty degrees below. They never knew what kind of weather was going to turn up next and if they settled any place the whole continent suddenly sank from under them and they had to make a scramble for dry land. Sometimes a volcano would turn itself loose just as they got located. They led that uncertain, strenuous existence for about twenty-five million years, always wondering what was going to happen next, never suspecting that it was just a preparation for man who had to be done just so or there wouldn't be any proper or harmonious place for him when he arrived and then at last the monkey came and everybody could see at a glance that man wasn't far off now and that was true enough. The monkey went on developing for close upon five million years and then he turned into a man to all appearances. It does look like a lot of fuss and trouble to go through to build anything, especially a human being and nowhere along the way is there any evidence of where he picked up that final asset, his imagination. It makes him different feathers, not any better, but certainly different. Those earlier animals didn't have it and the monkey hasn't it or he wouldn't be so cheerful. Editors note, Paine records Twain's thoughts in that magnificent essay was the world made for man, published long after his death in the group of essays under the title Letters from the Earth. There are minor additions in the published version, coal to fry the fish and the remnants of life being chased from pole to pole without a dry rag on them and the coat of paint on top of the bulb on top of the Eiffel Tower representing man's portion of this world's history. He often held forth on the short lines of the human race, always a favorite subject, the incompetencies and imperfections of this final creation in spite of or because of his great attribute, the imagination. Once, this was in the billiard room, I started him by saying that whatever the conditions in other planets there seemed no reason why life should not develop in each, adapted perfectly to prevailing conditions as man is suited to conditions here. He said, Is it your idea then that man is perfectly adapted to the conditions of this planet? I began to qualify rather weakly, but what I said did not matter. He was off on his favorite theme. Man adapted to the Earth, he said. Why, he can't sleep out of doors without freezing to death or getting the rheumatism or the malaria. He can't keep his nose under water over a minute without being drowned. He can't climb a tree without falling out and breaking his neck, why he's the poorest, clumsiest excuse of all the creatures that inhabit this Earth. He has got to be coddled and housed and swathed and bandaged and upholstered to be able to live at all. He is a rickety sort of a thing, any way you take him, a regular British museum of infirmities and inferiorities. He is always undergoing repairs, a machine that is as unreliable as he is would have no market. The higher animals get their teeth without pain or inconvenience. The original caveman, the troglodyte, may have got his that way, but now they come through months and months of cruel torture and at a time of life when he is least able to bear it. As soon as he gets them they must all be pulled out again, for they were of no value in the first place, not worth the loss of a night's rest. The second set will answer for a while, but he will never get a set that can be depended on until the dentist makes one. The animals are not much trouble that way. In a wild state, a natural state, they have few diseases. Their main one is old age. But man starts in as a child and lives on diseases to the end as a regular diet. He has mumps, measles, whooping cough, croup, tonsillitis, diphtheria, scarlet fever as a matter of course. Afterward as he goes along, his life continues to be threatened at every turn by colds, coughs, asthma, bronchitis, Quincy, consumption, yellow fever, blindness, influenza, carbuncles, pneumonia, softening of the gene, diseases of the heart and bones, and a thousand other maladies of one sort and another. He's just a basketful of festering, pestilent corruption provided for the support and entertainment of microbes. Look at the workmanship of him in some of its particulars. What are his tonsils for? They perform no useful function. They have no value. They are but a trap for tonsillitis and Quincy. And what is the appendix for? It has no value. Its sole interest is to lie and wait for stray grape seeds and breed trouble. What is his beard for? It is just a nuisance. All nations persecute it with the razor. Nature, however, always keeps him supplied with it instead of putting it on his head where it ought to be. You seldom see a man bald-headed on his chin but on his head. A man wants to keep his hair. It is a graceful ornament, a comfort, the best of all protections against weather, and he prizes it above emeralds and rubies and nature. Half the time puts it on so it won't stay. Man's sight and smell and hearing are all inferior. If he were suited to the conditions, he could smell an enemy. He could hear him. He could see him just as the animals can detect their enemies. The robin hears the earthworm burrowing his course under the ground. The bloodhound follows a scent that is two days old. Man isn't even handsome, as compared with the birds, and as for style, look at the Bengal tiger, that ideal of grace, physical perfection, and majesty. Think of the lion and the tiger and the leopard, and then think of man, that poor thing, the animal of the wig, the ear trumpet, the glass eye, the porcelain teeth, the wooden leg, the trepanned skull, the silver windpipe, a creature that is mended and patched all over from top to bottom. If he can't get renewals of his bric-a-brac in the next world, what will he look like? He has just that one stupendous superiority, his imagination, his intellect. It makes him supreme. The higher animals can't match him there. It's very curious. A letter which he wrote to J. Howard Moore concerning his book The Universal Kinship was of this period and seems to belong here. Dear Mr. Moore, the book has furnished me several days of deep pleasure and satisfaction. It has compelled my gratitude at the same time since it saves me the labour of stating my own long cherished opinions and reflections and resentments by doing it lucidly and fervently and aggressively for me. There is one thing that always puzzles me. As inheritors of the mentality of our reptile ancestors, we have improved the inheritance by a thousand grades. But in the matter of the morals which they left us, we have gone backward as many grades. That evolution is strange and, to me, unaccountable and unnatural. Necessarily we started equipped with their perfect and blemishless morals. Now we are wholly destitute. We have no real morals, but only artificial ones. Morals created and preserved by the forced suppression of natural and healthy instincts. Yes, we are a sufficiently comical invention, we humans. Sincerely yours, S. L. Clemens. I recall two pleasant social events of that winter, one a little party given at the Clemens' home on New Year's Eve with charades and storytelling and music. It was the music feature of this party that was distinctive. It was supplied by wire through an invention known as the telharmonium which, it was believed, would revolutionize musical entertainment in such places as hotels and, to some extent, in private houses. The music came over the regular telephone wire and was delivered through a series of horns or megaphones, similar to those used for phonographs, the playing being done meanwhile by skilled performers at the central station. Just why the telharmonium has not made good its promises of popularity I do not know. Clemens was filled with enthusiasm over the idea. He made a speech a little before midnight in which he told how he had generally been enthusiastic about inventions which had turned out more or less well in about equal proportions. He did not dwell on the failures, but he told how he had been the first to use a typewriter for manuscript work, how he had been one of the earliest users of the fountain pen, how he had installed the first telephone ever used in a private house, and how the audience now would have a demonstration of the first telharmonium music so employed. It was just about the stroke of midnight when he finished, and a moment later the horns began to play chimes and old langzine and America. The other pleasant evening referred to was a little company given in honor of Helen Keller. It was fascinating to watch her and to realize with what a store of knowledge she had lighted the black silence of her physical life. To see Mark Twain and Helen Keller together was something not easily to be forgotten. When Mrs. Macy, who as Miss Sullivan had led her so marvelously out of the shadows, communicated his words to her with what seemed a lightning touch of the fingers, her face radiated every shade of his meaning, humorous, serious, pathetic. Helen visited the various objects in the room and seemed to enjoy them more than the usual observer of these things, and certainly in greater detail. Her sensitive fingers spread over articles of brick-a-brack, and the exclamation she uttered were always fitting, showing that she somehow visualized each thing in all its particulars. There was a bronze cat of handsome workmanship and happy expression, and when she had run those all-seeing fingers of hers over it, she said, End of Chapter 253 An Evening with Helen Keller Read by John Greenman Section 43 of Mark Twain, A Biography Part I, 1900-1907 This Libber Box recording is in the public domain. Mark Twain, A Biography By Albert Bigelow Payne Chapter 254 Billiard Room Notes The Billiard games went along pretty steadily that winter. My play improved, and Clemens found it necessary to eliminate my odds altogether, and to change the game frequently in order to keep me in subjection. Frequently there were long and apparently violent arguments over the legitimacy of some particular shot or play, arguments to us quite as enjoyable as the rest of the game. Sometimes he would count a shot which was clearly out of the legal limits, and then it was always a delight to him to have a mock, serious discussion over the matter of conscience and whether or not his conscience was in its usual state of repair. It would always end by him saying, I don't wish even to seem to do anything which can invite suspicion, I refuse to count that shot, or something of like nature. Sometimes when I had let a questionable play pass without comment he would watch anxiously until I had made a similar one and then insist on my scoring it to square accounts. His conscience was always repairing itself. He had experimented, a great many years before, with what was in the nature of a trick on some unsuspecting player. It consisted in turning out twelve pool balls on the table with one cue ball and asking his guest how many karams he thought he could make with all those twelve balls to play on. He had learned that the average player would seldom make more than thirty-one counts, and usually before this number was reached he would miss through some careless play or get himself into a position where he couldn't play at all. The thing looked absurdly easy. It looked as if one could go on playing all day long, and the victim was usually eager to bet that he could make fifty or perhaps a hundred. But for more than an hour I tried it patiently and seldom succeeded in scoring more than fifteen or twenty without missing. Long after the play itself ceased to be amusing to me he insisted on my going on and trying it some more, and he would throw himself back and roar with laughter, the tears streaming down his cheeks to see me work and fume and fail. It was very soon after that that Peter Dunn, Mr. Dooley, came down for luncheon, and after several games of the usual sort Clemens quietly, as if the idea had just occurred to him, rolled out the twelve balls and asked Dunn how many karams he thought he could make without a miss. Dunn said he thought he could make a thousand. Clemens quite indifferently said that he didn't believe he could make fifty. Dunn offered to bet five dollars that he could, and the wager was made. Dunn scored about twenty-five the first time and missed. Then he insisted on betting five dollars again and his defeats continued until Clemens had twenty-five dollars of Dunn's money, and Dunn was sweating and swearing, and Mark Twain rocking with delight. Dunn went away still unsatisfied, promising that he would come back and try it again. Perhaps he practiced in his absence, for when he returned he had learned something. He won his twenty-five dollars back, and I think something more added. Mark Twain was still ahead, for Dunn furnished him with a good five hundred dollars worth of amusement. Clemens never cared to talk and never wished to be talked to when the game was actually in progress. If there was anything to be said on either side he would stop and rest his cue on the floor or sit down on the couch until the matter was concluded. Such interruptions happened pretty frequently, and many of the bits of personal comment and incident scattered along through this work are the result of those brief rests. Some shot or situation or word would strike back through the past and awaken a note long silent, and I generally kept a pad and pencil on the windowsill with the score sheet, and later during his play I would scroll some reminder that would be precious by and by. On one of these I find a memorandum of what he called his three recurrent dreams. All of us have such things, but his seem worth remembering. There is never a month passes, he said, that I do not dream of being in reduced circumstances and obliged to go back to the river to earn a living. It is never a pleasant dream either. I love to think about those days, but there's always something sickening about the thought that I have been obliged to go back to them, and usually in my dream I am just about to start into a black shadow without being able to tell whether it is Selma Bluff or Hat Highland or only a black wall of night. Another dream that I have of that kind is being compelled to go back to the lecture platform. I hate that dream worse than the other. In it I am always getting up before an audience with nothing to say, trying to be funny, trying to make the audience laugh, realizing that I am only making silly jokes. Then the audience realizes it, and pretty soon they commence to get up and leave. That dream always ends by my standing there in the semi-darkness talking to an empty house. My other dream is of being at a brilliant gathering in my night garments. People don't seem to notice me there at first, and then pretty soon somebody points me out, and they all begin to look at me suspiciously, and I can see that they are wondering who I am and why I am there in that costume. Then it occurs to me that I can fix it by making myself known. I take hold of some man and whisper to him, I am Mark Twain, but that does not improve it, for immediately I can hear him whispering to the others. He says he is Mark Twain, and they all look at me a good deal more suspiciously than before, and I can see that they don't believe it, and that it was a mistake to make that confession. Sometimes in that dream I am dressed like a tramp instead of being in my night clothes, but it all ends about the same. They go away and leave me standing there ashamed. I generally enjoy my dreams, but not those three, and they are the ones I have oftenest. Quite often some curious episode of the world's history would flash upon him, something amusing or coarse or tragic, and he would bring the game to a standstill and recount it with wonderful accuracy as to date and circumstance. He had a natural passion for historic events and a gift for mentally fixing them, but his memory in other ways was seldom reliable. He was likely to forget the names even of those he knew best and saw oftenest, and the small details of life seldom registered at all. He had his breakfast served in his room, and once on a slip of paper he wrote for his own reminder, the accuracy of your forgetfulness is absolute. It seems never to fail. I prepare to pour my coffee so it can cool while I shave, and I always forget to pour it. Yet very curiously he would sometimes single out a minute detail, something everyone else had overlooked, and days or even weeks afterward would recall it vividly, and not always at an opportune moment. Perhaps this also was a part of his old pilot training. Once, Clara Clemens remarked, It always amazes me the things that father does and does not remember, some little trifle that nobody else would notice, and you are hoping that he didn't. We'll suddenly come back to him just when we expect it, or care for it. My notebook contains the entry, February 11, 1907. He said to-day, A blind-folded chess player can remember every play and discuss the game afterward, while we can't remember from one shot to the next. I mentioned his old pilot memory as an example of what he could do if he wished. Yes, he answered, Those are special memories. A pilot will tell you the number of feet in every crossing at any time, but he can't remember what he had for breakfast. How long did you keep your pilot memory? I asked. Not long. It faded out right away. But the training served me, for when I went to report on a paper a year or two later, I never had to make any notes. I suppose you still remember some of the river? Not much. Hat Island, Helena, and here and there a place. But that is about all. End of Chapter 254, Billiard Room Notes. Read by John Greenman.