Mark Twain: The Final Years, 1891–1910

IF 0.2 0 LITERATURE, AMERICAN
Bruce Michelson
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And now we have the completion of Gary Scharnhorst’s The Life of Mark Twain, a spectacular effort to assemble and narrate the entire earthly story: childhood, family life, apprenticeships, excursions, adventures, professional and artistic growth, friends and enemies, financial ups and owns, celebrity, triumphs, disasters, you name it.Scharnhorst launched into all this with extraordinary background and momentum. He has immersed himself for half a century—and to our collective benefit—not only in Mark Twain’s writings and spoken words out beyond the widely-published materials, but also in how he was was regarded by family members and friends, by people who tried to do business with him, and by reporters, reviewers, and critics at every level of cultural clout. Additionally, Scharnhorst has strong credentials as a biographer and critic of several of Mark Twain’s famous contemporaries, among them Bret Harte, Horatio Alger, Jr., Owen Wister, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Julian Hawthorne, and Kate Field. Scharnhorst knows the Mark Twain story as thoroughly as anyone on the planet, along with the wide, dynamic world in which Sam Clemens grew up, flourished, suffered, and died. All of this experience is mustered to great effect in this final volume of The Life of Mark Twain.It’s no secret that narrative accounts of this life, or of segments of it, are typically organized around some central theme: the private self versus the public identity; the literary successes and struggles; the morally conflicted would-be tycoon; the career as humorist and wit; the political, spiritual, or moral growth or turmoil. Rejecting that kind of structure and limitation, Scharnhorst for the most part upholds an ethic of “just the facts,” getting avalanches of dates, places, doings, and companionships ordered and clarified. Opening in June 1891, with the departure of the Clemens family for the sojourn in Western Europe that wouldn’t bring them all home again until the spring of 1895, The Final Years commingles the wanderings, the publishing gambits and failures that (along with the Paige Compositor) led up to bankruptcy, the struggles and false starts in writing, and the Mark Twain travel letters, speeches, essays, and fresh books that reached the public during this interlude. Attention centers on The American Claimant, Pudd’nhead Wilson, and eventually Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, the deadpan historical novel that Clemens was struggling to complete in the neighborhood of Rouen in the summer and fall of 1894. Along the way, this segment of the narrative presents useful broader contexts of political and financial unrest, among them a spate of anti-Italian riots that broke out in France after the assassination of French President Carnot in June of that year, and the boggling scope and reverberations of the American Panic of 1893, which took down over one hundred U.S. railroad companies and six hundred banks. It was a tough season for anyone to think straight and feel secure.When the account moves to Mark Twain’s worldwide lecture tour of 1895–96, the organization settles into patterns that make this volume easy to navigate, yet also predictable in ways that might impede reading with the kind of sustained attention that theme-centered biography can elicit. As Sam and Livy head westward to board the steamship Warrimoo in Vancouver for their Pacific crossing, the pages load to the gunwales with names and dates: big cities and small towns, hotels and lecture halls and opera houses, local delegations, receptions, banquets, and quick side-trips—and the cumulative effect can be like a head-spilling scroll through old files of credit-card records and boarding passes. All this seems to resonate with another strong cadence in The Life: following each notable Mark Twain appearance, performance, or publication, Scharnhorst provides an extensive tally of where it got mentioned or critiqued. In one bulky paragraph, for example, covering initial response to the pot-boiler novel Tom Sawyer, Detective, we check-list our way through the Manchester Guardian, St. James Gazette, London Bookman, London Standard, Boston Transcript, Chicago Inter Ocean, Charleston News and Courier, and on and on. He musters longer arrays for “A Double-Barrelled Detective Story” and also for Christian Science, Mark Twain’s slim and thematically scrambled volume from 1907.Though these tallies can be useful for anyone interested in the immediate impact of Mark Twain’s later writings, a temptation rises to skate over the next italicized inventory and the next, and merely marvel at the archival labor that brought them into shape. One notable exception, however, is Scharnhorst’s recovery of a seldom-mentioned ludicrous burst of controversy about Eve’s Diary when it appeared from Harpers in 1906. This flap was not about anything in the verbal text, but rather the handful of gently Pre-Raphaelite line-drawings by Lester Ralph, representing Eve as a simple nature-girl before an apple-bite brought shame about wandering in the buff. Public libraries in Massachusetts actually banned this sentimental little book on that basis—only six years before Paul Chabas’s September Morn—another innocent, stink-causing picture of a young woman outdoors undressed—and the aggressive New York Armory Show permanently shook up nudity as a subject in American visual art.Scharnhorst’s extraordinary work ethic, his admirable self-discipline, and his encyclopedic knowledge of Mark Twain’s world are in evidence everywhere in The Final Years. If there are a few moments where the narrative veers into unconvincing commentary, it’s hard to think of other big-scale studies that don’t have similar lapses, and worse. For instance, a write-off of Mark Twain’s eldest daughter Susy Clemens: “Sam and Livy’s oldest daughter, idolized by her parents and idealized in the lore about the family, was in fact a spoiled snob” (27)—a judgment that seems to be based on a few letters and comments from Susy to her family and close friends about servants and social life around the Villa Viviani in Florence in 1893. It’s worth remembering that Susy, who had been abruptly pulled out of Bryn Mawr College by her mother after one semester, was now trailing around after her parents thousands of miles from her home turf, where a single young woman could thrive and sustain friendships and perhaps even meet a life partner, and that she was tagging along from one rented place to another on a deracination that seemed endless as her youth burned by. No empathy for a predicament like that? Right here in this Mark Twain Annual, Linda Morris offers strong reasons for a measure of compassion. Also, several pages are given over without impact to refereeing the lit-crit mess of how to read Pudd’nhead Wilson, its engagements with race, personal identity, the social class, the South, and all the rest of it. The commentary here, too brief to settle anything, culminates with an unusual suggestion that this Mississippi River novel is really a kind of Western, because Wilson himself “is a type of Western hero who straddles the East and the West, mediating between order and chaos” (36), because Sam was “familiar with such tropes in Western writing as the gunfight” (36), and because “In the space behind Wilson’s house, Luigi and Judge Driscoll fight a proxy duel that triggers an inexorable chain of events” (36). But if a few assertions like these “won’t wash” in this magisterial biography, there is so much here that’s useful and durable as contributions to what we know about this extraordinary career and legacy. The Life of Mark Twain: The Final Years is certainly a book that anyone truly interested in Mark Twain and his legacy ought to read and cherish.","PeriodicalId":41060,"journal":{"name":"Mark Twain Annual","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.2000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Mark Twain Annual","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.5325/marktwaij.21.1.0156","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"0","JCRName":"LITERATURE, AMERICAN","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0

Abstract

In a span of only seven years, the crowd that takes Mark Twain seriously has acquired six fat new volumes, 4,363 pages of rich, challenging biographical discourse to sort out. The first three of these tomes, the Mark Twain Project’s prodigiously annotated and introduced Autobiography of Mark Twain (2010–15), invites readers to rove back and forth between Sam’s free-form experiments in catching the motions of his own mind, and masses of “Explanatory Notes” that get the facts straighter and contextualize these cadenzas of reminiscence, whim, grief, and outrage. And now we have the completion of Gary Scharnhorst’s The Life of Mark Twain, a spectacular effort to assemble and narrate the entire earthly story: childhood, family life, apprenticeships, excursions, adventures, professional and artistic growth, friends and enemies, financial ups and owns, celebrity, triumphs, disasters, you name it.Scharnhorst launched into all this with extraordinary background and momentum. He has immersed himself for half a century—and to our collective benefit—not only in Mark Twain’s writings and spoken words out beyond the widely-published materials, but also in how he was was regarded by family members and friends, by people who tried to do business with him, and by reporters, reviewers, and critics at every level of cultural clout. Additionally, Scharnhorst has strong credentials as a biographer and critic of several of Mark Twain’s famous contemporaries, among them Bret Harte, Horatio Alger, Jr., Owen Wister, Charlotte Perkins Gilman, Julian Hawthorne, and Kate Field. Scharnhorst knows the Mark Twain story as thoroughly as anyone on the planet, along with the wide, dynamic world in which Sam Clemens grew up, flourished, suffered, and died. All of this experience is mustered to great effect in this final volume of The Life of Mark Twain.It’s no secret that narrative accounts of this life, or of segments of it, are typically organized around some central theme: the private self versus the public identity; the literary successes and struggles; the morally conflicted would-be tycoon; the career as humorist and wit; the political, spiritual, or moral growth or turmoil. Rejecting that kind of structure and limitation, Scharnhorst for the most part upholds an ethic of “just the facts,” getting avalanches of dates, places, doings, and companionships ordered and clarified. Opening in June 1891, with the departure of the Clemens family for the sojourn in Western Europe that wouldn’t bring them all home again until the spring of 1895, The Final Years commingles the wanderings, the publishing gambits and failures that (along with the Paige Compositor) led up to bankruptcy, the struggles and false starts in writing, and the Mark Twain travel letters, speeches, essays, and fresh books that reached the public during this interlude. Attention centers on The American Claimant, Pudd’nhead Wilson, and eventually Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, the deadpan historical novel that Clemens was struggling to complete in the neighborhood of Rouen in the summer and fall of 1894. Along the way, this segment of the narrative presents useful broader contexts of political and financial unrest, among them a spate of anti-Italian riots that broke out in France after the assassination of French President Carnot in June of that year, and the boggling scope and reverberations of the American Panic of 1893, which took down over one hundred U.S. railroad companies and six hundred banks. It was a tough season for anyone to think straight and feel secure.When the account moves to Mark Twain’s worldwide lecture tour of 1895–96, the organization settles into patterns that make this volume easy to navigate, yet also predictable in ways that might impede reading with the kind of sustained attention that theme-centered biography can elicit. As Sam and Livy head westward to board the steamship Warrimoo in Vancouver for their Pacific crossing, the pages load to the gunwales with names and dates: big cities and small towns, hotels and lecture halls and opera houses, local delegations, receptions, banquets, and quick side-trips—and the cumulative effect can be like a head-spilling scroll through old files of credit-card records and boarding passes. All this seems to resonate with another strong cadence in The Life: following each notable Mark Twain appearance, performance, or publication, Scharnhorst provides an extensive tally of where it got mentioned or critiqued. In one bulky paragraph, for example, covering initial response to the pot-boiler novel Tom Sawyer, Detective, we check-list our way through the Manchester Guardian, St. James Gazette, London Bookman, London Standard, Boston Transcript, Chicago Inter Ocean, Charleston News and Courier, and on and on. He musters longer arrays for “A Double-Barrelled Detective Story” and also for Christian Science, Mark Twain’s slim and thematically scrambled volume from 1907.Though these tallies can be useful for anyone interested in the immediate impact of Mark Twain’s later writings, a temptation rises to skate over the next italicized inventory and the next, and merely marvel at the archival labor that brought them into shape. One notable exception, however, is Scharnhorst’s recovery of a seldom-mentioned ludicrous burst of controversy about Eve’s Diary when it appeared from Harpers in 1906. This flap was not about anything in the verbal text, but rather the handful of gently Pre-Raphaelite line-drawings by Lester Ralph, representing Eve as a simple nature-girl before an apple-bite brought shame about wandering in the buff. Public libraries in Massachusetts actually banned this sentimental little book on that basis—only six years before Paul Chabas’s September Morn—another innocent, stink-causing picture of a young woman outdoors undressed—and the aggressive New York Armory Show permanently shook up nudity as a subject in American visual art.Scharnhorst’s extraordinary work ethic, his admirable self-discipline, and his encyclopedic knowledge of Mark Twain’s world are in evidence everywhere in The Final Years. If there are a few moments where the narrative veers into unconvincing commentary, it’s hard to think of other big-scale studies that don’t have similar lapses, and worse. For instance, a write-off of Mark Twain’s eldest daughter Susy Clemens: “Sam and Livy’s oldest daughter, idolized by her parents and idealized in the lore about the family, was in fact a spoiled snob” (27)—a judgment that seems to be based on a few letters and comments from Susy to her family and close friends about servants and social life around the Villa Viviani in Florence in 1893. It’s worth remembering that Susy, who had been abruptly pulled out of Bryn Mawr College by her mother after one semester, was now trailing around after her parents thousands of miles from her home turf, where a single young woman could thrive and sustain friendships and perhaps even meet a life partner, and that she was tagging along from one rented place to another on a deracination that seemed endless as her youth burned by. No empathy for a predicament like that? Right here in this Mark Twain Annual, Linda Morris offers strong reasons for a measure of compassion. Also, several pages are given over without impact to refereeing the lit-crit mess of how to read Pudd’nhead Wilson, its engagements with race, personal identity, the social class, the South, and all the rest of it. The commentary here, too brief to settle anything, culminates with an unusual suggestion that this Mississippi River novel is really a kind of Western, because Wilson himself “is a type of Western hero who straddles the East and the West, mediating between order and chaos” (36), because Sam was “familiar with such tropes in Western writing as the gunfight” (36), and because “In the space behind Wilson’s house, Luigi and Judge Driscoll fight a proxy duel that triggers an inexorable chain of events” (36). But if a few assertions like these “won’t wash” in this magisterial biography, there is so much here that’s useful and durable as contributions to what we know about this extraordinary career and legacy. The Life of Mark Twain: The Final Years is certainly a book that anyone truly interested in Mark Twain and his legacy ought to read and cherish.
《马克·吐温:最后的岁月,1891-1910
尽管这些数据对任何对马克·吐温后期作品的直接影响感兴趣的人来说都是有用的,但还是有一种诱惑会让人情不自禁地浏览一份又一份斜体字的清单,而仅仅是对使它们成形的档案劳动感到惊讶。然而,一个值得注意的例外是,沙恩霍斯特在1906年哈珀斯出版社出版《夏娃日记》时,恢复了一场很少被提及的滑稽的争议。这不是关于文字上的任何东西,而是关于莱斯特·拉尔夫(Lester Ralph)的几幅拉斐尔前派的线条画,把夏娃描绘成一个单纯的自然女孩,在咬了一口苹果后,她因赤身裸体而感到羞耻。事实上,马萨诸塞州的公共图书馆在此基础上禁止了这本多愁善感的小书——就在保罗·查巴斯的《九月早晨》——另一幅无辜的、令人发臭的裸体年轻女子户外照片——六年前——而激进的纽约军械库展览永久地动摇了裸体作为美国视觉艺术主题的地位。沙恩霍斯特非凡的职业道德,令人钦佩的自律,以及他对马克·吐温世界的渊博知识,在《最后的岁月》中随处可见。如果有几个时刻,叙述变成了不令人信服的评论,很难想象其他大型研究没有类似的失误,甚至更糟。例如,马克·吐温对大女儿苏西·克莱门斯的评价是:“山姆和李维的大女儿,被父母崇拜,在家庭爱情中被理想化,实际上是一个被宠坏的势力小人。”(27)——这一评价似乎是基于苏西写给家人和密友的几封信和评论,内容是1893年佛罗伦萨维维亚尼别墅附近的仆人和社交生活。值得记住的是,苏西在布林莫尔学院(Bryn Mawr College)上了一个学期就被她的母亲突然赶了出来,现在她在离家数千英里的地方跟着父母四处奔波,在那里,一个单身的年轻女性可以茁壮成长,维持友谊,甚至可能遇到终身伴侣。随着青春的流逝,她从一个租来的地方搬到另一个租来的地方,似乎永无止境。对这样的困境没有同情心吗?就在这本马克·吐温年鉴中,琳达·莫里斯为我们提供了充分的理由来表达同情。此外,书中有几页是在毫无影响的情况下,用来评判如何解读《笨蛋威尔逊》的文学批评混乱,以及它与种族、个人身份、社会阶级、南方以及其他所有问题的关系。这里的评论太简短了,无法解决任何问题,它以一种不同寻常的暗示达到高潮,即这部关于密西西比河的小说实际上是一种西部片,因为威尔逊本人“是一种横跨东西方的西部英雄,在秩序与混乱之间进行调解”(36),因为萨姆“熟悉西部写作中的枪战等比喻”(36),因为“在威尔逊房子后面的空间里,Luigi和Driscoll法官打了一场代理人决斗,引发了一系列不可避免的事件。但是,如果像这样的一些断言在这本权威的传记中“行不通”,那么这里有很多有用的和持久的贡献,可以帮助我们了解这位非凡的职业和遗产。《马克·吐温的一生:最后的岁月》无疑是任何真正对马克·吐温及其遗产感兴趣的人都应该阅读和珍惜的一本书。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Mark Twain Annual
Mark Twain Annual LITERATURE, AMERICAN-
CiteScore
0.40
自引率
14.30%
发文量
16
期刊介绍: The Mark Twain Annual publishes articles related to Mark Twain and those who surrounded him and serves as an outlet for new scholarship as well as new pedagogical approaches. It is the official publication of the Mark Twain Circle of America, an international association of people interested in the life and work of Mark Twain. The Circle encourages interest in Mark Twain and fosters the formal presentation of ideas about the author and his work, as well as the informal exchange of information among its members.
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