A Family Sketch and Other Private Writings Read online




  The publisher gratefully acknowledges the generous support of the Fletcher Jones Foundation Humanities Endowment Fund of the University of California Press Foundation.

  JUMPING FROGS

  UNDISCOVERED, REDISCOVERED, AND CELEBRATED WRITINGS OF MARK TWAIN

  Named after one of Mark Twain’s best-known and beloved short stories, the Jumping Frogs series of books brings neglected treasures from Mark Twain’s pen to readers.

  1. Is He Dead? A Comedy in Three Acts, by Mark Twain. Edited with foreword, afterword, and notes by Shelley Fisher Fishkin.

  Text established by the Mark Twain Project, The Bancroft Library. Illustrations by Barry Moser.

  2. Mark Twain’s Helpful Hints for Good Living: A Handbook for the Damned Human Race, by Mark Twain. Edited by Lin Salamo, Victor Fischer, and Michael B. Frank of the Mark Twain Project, The Bancroft Library.

  3. Mark Twain’s Book of Animals, by Mark Twain. Edited with introduction, afterword, and notes by Shelley Fisher Fishkin.

  Texts established by the Mark Twain Project, The Bancroft Library. Illustrations by Barry Moser.

  4. Dear Mark Twain: Letters from His Readers. Edited by R. Kent Rasmussen.

  5. A Family Sketch and Other Private Writings, by Mark Twain, Livy Clemens, and Susy Clemens. Edited by Benjamin Griffin of the Mark Twain Project, The Bancroft Library.

  A FAMILY SKETCH AND OTHER PRIVATE WRITINGS

  A Family Sketch

  and

  Other Private Writings

  BY

  Mark Twain

  Livy Clemens

  Susy Clemens

  EDITED BY

  Benjamin Griffin

  OF THE MARK TWAIN PROJECT

  UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA PRESS

  University of California Press, one of the most distinguished university presses in the United States, enriches lives around the world by advancing scholarship in the humanities, social sciences, and natural sciences. Its activities are supported by the UC Press Foundation and by philanthropic contributions from individuals and institutions. For more information, visit www.ucpress.edu.

  University of California Press

  Oakland, California

  A Family Sketch and Other Private Writings by Mark Twain; Livy Clemens; Susy Clemens Copyright © 2014, 2001 by the Mark Twain Foundation. All Rights Reserved.

  Transcription, reconstruction, and creation of the texts, introduction, and notes, Copyright © 2014 by The Regents of the University of California. The Mark Twain Foundation expressly reserves to itself, its successors and assigns, all dramatization rights in every medium, including without limitation stage, radio, television, motion picture, and public reading rights, in and to these texts and all other texts by Mark Twain and members of his family in copyright to the Mark Twain Foundation.

  All texts by Mark Twain and his family members in A Family Sketch and Other Private Writings have been published previously, by permission of the Mark Twain Foundation, in the Mark Twain Project’s Microfilm Edition of Mark Twain’s Literary Manuscripts Available in the Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (Berkeley: The Bancroft Library, 2001). “A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It” was first published in the Atlantic Monthly, November 1874. “Mark Twain by Susy Clemens” was published, by permission of the Mark Twain Foundation, as Papa: An Intimate Biography of Mark Twain, edited by Charles Neider (Garden City, N.Y.: Doubleday, 1985).

  MARK TWAIN PROJECT® is a registered trademark of The Regents of the University of California in the United States and the European Community.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Twain, Mark, 1835–1910.

  [Works. Selections]

  A family sketch and other private writings / Mark Twain, Livy Clemens, Susy Clemens ; edited by Benjamin Griffin of the Mark Twain Project.

  pages cm. — (Jumping frogs: undiscovered, rediscovered, and celebrated writings of Mark Twain ; 5) Includes bibliographical references.

  ISBN 978-0-520-28073-1 (hardback) — ISBN 978-0-520-95963-7 (ebook)

  1. Twain, Mark, 1835–1910—Family. 2. Authors, American—19th century—Biography. I. Clemens, Olivia Langdon, 1845–1904. II. Clemens, Susy, 1872–1896. III. Griffin, Benjamin, 1968– editor. IV. Title.

  PS1302.G75 2014

  818’.409--dc232014008634

  [B]

  Manufactured in the United States of America

  23 22 21 20 19 18 17 16 15 14

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  The paper used in this publication meets the minimum requirements of ANSI/NISO Z39.48–1992 (R 2002) (Permanence of Paper).

  CONTENTS

  Introduction

  A Family Sketch

  BY MARK TWAIN

  A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It

  BY MARK TWAIN

  A Record of the Small Foolishnesses of Susie and “Bay” Clemens (Infants)

  BY MARK TWAIN

  At the Farm

  BY MARK TWAIN

  Quarry Farm Diary

  BY LIVY CLEMENS

  Mark Twain

  BY SUSY CLEMENS

  About the Texts

  About the Illustrations

  Biographical Directory

  Works Cited

  Acknowledgments

  INTRODUCTION

  This book publishes in full, for the first time, the two most revealing of Mark Twain’s private writings about his family life, neither of them actually written for publication. In their company we have placed closely related writing by his wife, Olivia (“Livy”), and by his eldest daughter, Susy. In this collection the reader will find Samuel Langhorne Clemens in the context of the daily life he shared with Livy, their three daughters, a great many servants, and an imposing array of pets.

  • • •

  The exuberant “Family Sketch” has its origins in Mark Twain’s response to unimaginable loss. Susy Clemens died on 18 August 1896, at the age of twenty-four, succumbing to meningitis in the Hartford, Connecticut, house where she and her sisters were raised. Her father, mother, and sister Clara were in England, having just completed a tour around the world. Alerted by cablegram to her illness, mother and daughter crossed the Atlantic to be with Susy. She died before they arrived. Starting in these first days of his grief, and continuing at intervals over the next five years, Mark Twain tried to write a memorial to Susy, accumulating a large mass of mostly unfinished manuscript. Some of this material was eventually incorporated into his Autobiography, which he dictated and compiled in 1906–9; but most of it remains unpublished. Inevitably, his project of a memorial to Susy was never completed. Years later, his secretary, Isabel V. Lyon, recorded his admission that he “was never able to write a memorial of her. It was never anything but a Lament, & couldn’t ever be anything but that.”1

  Yet from these abandoned papers, full of loose ends and repetitions, there arose one complete and startling essay. It springs from the same impetus as the rest of the “Susy memorial” manuscripts: its original title was “In Memory of Olivia Susan Clemens, 1872–1896.” But having set out to commemorate Susy, Clemens found “A Family Sketch” growing under his hands to become an account of the entire household—family and servants too. Servants especially, we might say; for herein will be found his fullest and most revealing account of the household servants, their characters and their part in the Clemenses’ lives. Four of them, especially long-serving, are singled out for greater attention: Patrick McAleer (coachman), George Griffin (butler), Katy Leary (lady’s maid; housekeeper, after Livy’s death), and Rosina Hay (nursemaid). To these must be added the remark
able account of Maria McLaughlin, wet-nurse, of brief tenure and immortal fame. Free from the anguished note that runs through the other Susy manuscripts, “A Family Sketch” describes the Clemens family in the period of its flourishing.

  The manuscript was not composed at a single sitting. From physical evidence and mentions of dates, we can judge it was mainly composed in 1901–2; yet parts of it incorporate or revise pages clearly written nearer the date of Susy’s death. Clemens returned to the manuscript around 1906 and made a few revisions. If he was thinking of using this material in the Autobiography, he decided against it. His plans for the sketch remain unknown. A reference in the sketch itself to the personal friends “to whom this small book will go” was later deleted by the author. It is not even certain what happened to this manuscript when Clemens died in 1910. It was not part of the Mark Twain Papers bequeathed by Clara, his sole heir, to the University of California in 1949. Perhaps at that time it was already in the Doheny Library in southern California, or that library may have acquired it in one of several sales of Clara’s property in the 1950s. Sold when the Doheny collection was broken up in 1988, the manuscript passed to the James S. Copley Library in San Diego; that library was sold at auction in 2010, and “A Family Sketch” was acquired by The Bancroft Library. It is now in the Mark Twain Papers; this is its first complete publication.

  The last “character” drawn in “A Family Sketch” is that of Mary Ann Cord, the cook at Sue Crane’s farm outside Elmira, New York, where the Clemenses spent the summers. Clemens, for whom endings were always a problem, requires his editor to conclude the “Sketch” by appending the lightly fictionalized account of “Aunty Cord” which he had published in the Atlantic Monthly in 1874: “A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It.” This short tale has, as Clemens warned Atlantic editor William Dean Howells, “no humor in it.”2 Aunt Rachel (Cord’s fictional incarnation) is introduced as a laughing, loyal servant—uncomfortably resembling, at first glance, the “happy darky” of antebellum nostalgia. When “Mr. C.” asks her how it happens that she has reached the age of sixty and “never had any trouble,” Rachel’s aspect changes, and she unfolds her own story of slavery, the forced dispersion of her family, and its (partial) restoration. Mark Twain expressively deploys spatial and physical relationships between the speaker and the listeners: Rachel starts out “sitting respectfully below our level, on the steps” of the porch, but rises midway through her story, “and now she towered above us, black against the stars.” As she brings her tale to its close, Rachel is even manhandling Mr. C., “pushing,” “grabbing” and “shoving” his foot, clothing and hair—familiarities which, under slavery, would have been whipping or killing offenses.3

  As his first publication in the Atlantic Monthly, the country’s preeminent literary journal, “A True Story” was a career landmark for Mark Twain; and if the publication opened up new opportunities for him, so did the subject matter and the technique. In his future writing the use of dialect narration, and the exploration of race and slavery, would figure prominently. “A True Story” is presented here in a freshly prepared text based on the original manuscript. The spelling—obviously significant in the case of dialect narration—hews close to Mark Twain’s manuscript, giving Rachel’s speech a starker and simpler aspect—one that was obscured by the fussy spelling and punctuation imposed by the Atlantic Monthly editors in 1874 and reproduced in all subsequent reprintings.

  “A Record of the Small Foolishnesses of Susie & ‘Bay’ Clemens (Infants)” is a manuscript record kept by the parents of the sayings and doings of their daughters. The title reflects the tally of daughters at the time the record was begun; youngest daughter Jean would not be born until 1880. The record accumulated between 1876 and 1885; three entries are in Livy’s hand, the rest in her husband’s. Mark Twain usually referred to it as “the Children’s Record.” This is its first complete publication.

  In an autobiographical dictation of 5 September 1906 Mark Twain said:

  It is years since I have examined the Children’s Record. I have turned over a few of its pages this morning. This book is a record in which Mrs. Clemens and I registered some of the sayings and doings of the children, in the long ago, when they were little chaps. Of course we wrote these things down at the time because they were of momentary interest—things of the passing hour, and of no permanent value—but at this distant day I find that they still possess an interest for me and also a value, because it turns out that they were registrations of character. The qualities then revealed by fitful glimpses, in childish acts and speeches, remained as a permanency in the children’s characters in the drift of the years, and were always afterward clearly and definitely recognizable.4

  On this subject, it ought to be remarked that accurate registrations of character may nevertheless be faulty registrations of fact. Take the anecdote of Clara at prayer (page 68): from a contemporary letter from Livy to her husband, we know that it was actually Susy who declared “O, one’s enough!”5 But this utterance fit Mark Twain’s idea of Clara’s character—worldly, pragmatic—better than it did his idea of Susy’s; he was not present when the words were said; and despite Livy’s accurate report, he unconsciously transferred the saying to Clara. Certainly “Small Foolishnesses” has aims in view beyond mere accurate reporting. Longer entries, clustering mostly around 1880, attain an essayistic character, fluent and discursive.

  To this long-accumulating manuscript, the brief “At the Farm” forms a kind of pendant. Written in the summer of 1884, it picks up where the earlier manuscript leaves off. It gives valuable particulars of Jean, who, as the youngest of the girls, was underrepresented in “Small Foolishnesses.”

  Livy’s diary entries from the summer of 1885 were written in what had started out as a guest-book at the Clemenses’ Hartford house. Since they persistently forgot to ask guests to sign it, Livy resolved in June 1885 to “make some use of it,” keeping a diary in its pages through November of that year. (Further entries, not reproduced here, were added in 1892–93, 1894, and 1902.) Writers on Mark Twain have typically found it difficult to grasp Livy’s character; the entries included here will not, perhaps, fundamentally alter this situation, but it has seemed important to let her voice be heard in the present collection. Her writing style is seldom more than functional, but there are compensations. She treats many of the same events related elsewhere in this volume from other family members’ perspectives; and, even in the brief compass of this selection, it will be seen that her frame of reference is as broad as her husband’s—quite as many works of science and literature are referred to in her few pages as could be found in an equivalent stretch of Mark Twain’s notebooks. His own accounts of Livy’s character, in these writings and elsewhere, are hyperbolic, and no easier to interpret because of that. He represents her as an untarnishable character, incapable of wrong; it follows that she is the perfect mother, from whose ruling there is no appeal. But Susy, in the biography of her father shortly to be discussed, allows herself more latitude: “Mamma’s oppinions and ideas upon the subject of bringing up children has always been more or less of a joke in our family.” It is indeed difficult to locate the point upon which these testimonies converge.

  “Somewhere between the ages of nine and twelve Susy fell to scribbling a little in a fragmentary way,” Mark Twain wrote, “but she was all of thirteen years old before she deliberately essayed authorship.”6 He was delighted, in April 1885, to find that she was composing a biography of himself: “the dearest compliment I could imagine, and the most gratifying.” Just weeks after her death, he remembered that time:

  Poor fair & slender & comely little maid, with her plaited tails hanging down her back, what a brave enterprise it was! And we practised treasons against her—her mother & I—for when we found out by accident that she was at this secret labor of love we stole her book every night after she was asleep, & carried it to bed & read it. It was delicious reading, because of its naivety, its penetration, its sure touch, its
curiously accurate exploration of my character, & the bland frankness of its judgments upon the questionable features of it. . . . Her studies & travels interfered with the biography; and increasingly; but she never gave up her purpose of completing it. She added a page or so to it at intervals, both at home & abroad; for it shared with Shakespeare the honorable distinction of being carried around with her wherever she went.

  Susy’s biography breaks off, mid-sentence, in July 1886. Mark Twain believed she had continued it into 1894, but if there were any addenda to the text, they have not been found.

  Susy’s work immortalizes a time when the family was flourishing and the mutual affection and admiration of father and daughter were strong. Little need be said in its explication—Mark Twain did that, inimitably, after Susy’s death. His scheme for a “memorial to Susy” included publication of her book, with his comments.7 The book did not appear, and he eventually inserted much of the biography, again with his comments, into his own Autobiography. When portions of the Autobiography ran as a serial in the North American Review (1906–7), passages from Susy’s document figured prominently in the selections. “I cannot bring myself to change any line or word in Susy’s sketch of me,” Mark Twain wrote. “The spelling is frequently desperate, but it was Susy’s, and it shall stand. . . . To correct it would alloy it, not refine it.”8 Actually, he did modify many of Susy’s misspellings, and inserted clarifications of fact. A different approach was taken by Charles Neider in his 1985 edition. Neider intended to give Susy’s orthography as she left it; his transcription, however, was careless, and he included Mark Twain’s comments and diversions, as printed in his Autobiography. The present edition aims to preserve Susy’s spelling and grammar, with minimal editorial correction, and to print her little book as she wrote it, without the intervention of her famous father.