登陆注册
15292900000024

第24章

He was generous without stint; he trusted without measure, but where his generosity was abused, or his trust betrayed, he was a fire of vengeance, a consuming flame of suspicion that no sprinkling of cool patience from others could quench; it had to burn itself out. He was eagerly and lavishly hospitable, but if a man seemed willing to batten on him, or in any way to lie down upon him, Clemens despised him unutterably. In his frenzies of resentment or suspicion he would not, and doubtless could not, listen to reason. But if between the paroxysms he were confronted with the facts he would own them, no matter how much they told against him. At one period he fancied that a certain newspaper was hounding him with biting censure and poisonous paragraphs, and he was filling himself up with wrath to be duly discharged on the editor's head. Later, he wrote me with a humorous joy in his mistake that Warner had advised him to have the paper watched for these injuries. He had done so, and how many mentions of him did I reckon he had found in three months? Just two, and they were rather indifferent than unfriendly. So the paper was acquitted, and the editor's life was spared. The wretch never knew how near he was to losing it, with incredible preliminaries of obloquy, and a subsequent devotion to lasting infamy.

His memory for favors was as good as for injuries, and he liked to return your friendliness with as loud a band of music as could be bought or bribed for the occasion. All that you had to do was to signify that you wanted his help. When my father was consul at Toronto during Arthur's administration, he fancied that his place was in danger, and he appealed to me. In turn I appealed to Clemens, bethinking myself of his friendship with Grant and Grant's friendship with Arthur. I asked him to write to Grant in my father's behalf, but No, he answered me, I must come to Hartford, and we would go on to New York together and see Grant personally. This was before, and long before, Clemens became Grant's publisher and splendid benefactor, but the men liked each other as such men could not help doing. Clemens made the appointment, and we went to find Grant in his business office, that place where his business innocence was afterward so betrayed. He was very simple and very cordial, and I was instantly the more at home with him, because his voice was the soft, rounded, Ohio River accent to which my years were earliest used from my steamboating uncles, my earliest heroes. When I stated my business he merely said, Oh no; that must not be; he would write to Mr.

Arthur; and he did so that day; and my father lived to lay down his office, when he tired of it, with no urgence from above.

It is not irrelevant to Clemens to say that Grant seemed to like finding himself in company with two literary men, one of whom at least he could make sure of, and unlike that silent man he was reputed, he talked constantly, and so far as he might he talked literature. At least he talked of John Phoenix, that delightfulest of the early Pacific Slope humorists, whom he had known under his real name of George H. Derby, when they were fellow-cadets at West Point. It was mighty pretty, as Pepys would say, to see the delicate deference Clemens paid our plain hero, and the manly respect with which he listened. While Grant talked, his luncheon was brought in from some unassuming restaurant near by, and he asked us to join him in the baked beans and coffee which were served us in a little room out of the office with about the same circumstance as at a railroad refreshment-counter. The baked beans and coffee were of about the railroad-refreshment quality; but eating them with Grant was like sitting down to baked beans and coffee with Julius Caesar, or Alexander, or some other great Plutarchan captain. One of the highest satisfactions of Clemens's often supremely satisfactory life was his relation to Grant.

It was his proud joy to tell how he found Grant about to sign a contract for his book on certainly very good terms, and said to him that he would himself publish the book and give him a percentage three times as large.

He said Grant seemed to doubt whether he could honorably withdraw from the negotiation at that point, but Clemens overbore his scruples, and it was his unparalleled privilege, his princely pleasure, to pay the author a far larger check for his work than had ever been paid to an author before. He valued even more than this splendid opportunity the sacred moments in which their business brought him into the presence of the slowly dying, heroically living man whom he was so befriending; and he told me in words which surely lost none of their simple pathos through his report how Grant described his suffering.

The prosperity, of this venture was the beginning of Clemens's adversity, for it led to excesses of enterprise which were forms of dissipation.

The young sculptor who had come back to him from Paris modelled a small bust of Grant, which Clemens multiplied in great numbers to his great loss, and the success of Grant's book tempted him to launch on publishing seas where his bark presently foundered. The first and greatest of his disasters was the Life of Pope Leo XIII, which he came to tell me of, when he had imagined it, in a sort of delirious exultation. He had no words in which to paint the magnificence of the project, or to forecast its colossal success. It would have a currency bounded only by the number of Catholics in Christendom. It would be translated into every language which was anywhere written or printed; it would be circulated literally in every country of the globe, and Clemens's book agents would carry the prospectuses and then the bound copies of the work to the ends of the whole earth. Not only would every Catholic buy it, but every Catholic must, as he was a good Catholic, as he hoped to be saved. It was a magnificent scheme, and it captivated me, as it had captivated Clemens; it dazzled us both, and neither of us saw the fatal defect in it. We did not consider how often Catholics could not read, how often when they could, they might not wish to read. The event proved that whether they could read or not the immeasurable majority did not wish to read the life of the Pope, though it was written by a dignitary of the Church and issued to the world with every sanction from the Vatican.

The failure was incredible to Clemens; his sanguine soul was utterly confounded, and soon a silence fell upon it where it had been so exuberantly jubilant.

同类推荐
  • 孝子经

    孝子经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 词选序张惠言

    词选序张惠言

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 明伦汇编人事典祸福部

    明伦汇编人事典祸福部

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • THE CYCLOPS

    THE CYCLOPS

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 小道地经

    小道地经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 母凭子贵:娘娘新入宫

    母凭子贵:娘娘新入宫

    梁左左意外穿越,好运的白得了一包银子,白生了一个儿子,还白捡了一个温润如玉的绝世好男人。谁知她这儿子来历不凡,竟是当时四国最强大的东林国皇帝的亲子。母凭子贵,左左入宫为妃。因着儿子的聪颖和像极皇帝的那张脸,左左母子成了宫中众妃怨恨的对象。“人不犯我,我不犯人,人若犯我,我必十倍还之。”她当众如是说。可是事情却远没有她想的那么简单。秦陌离,东林也是四国中最睿智、狠辣、果敢的王,意外出现的她成了他生命唯一的犹豫,让他不安却又不舍。秦梓昀,东林皇帝的同胞同貌的手足臂膀,却爱上了他最不该爱的女人。因为她,他第一次对尊敬的兄长有了怨恨。逍遥王爷不再逍遥。季君羡,她捡回家的那个温润如玉的男子,她本以为他是她最坚实的后盾和依靠,殊不知,他身后竟是她想不到的万丈深渊。兄弟阋墙,内忧外患,所有的问题都因她而起。其实她没有什么野心,只希望儿子健康,爱人平安……
  • 玫幻人生

    玫幻人生

    她错爱上不该爱的人,父亲因他而亡,家产,却被他夺走,她恨,她从他手中换取一张机票,飞往法国,遇到一个阳光正直的男人,他的出现,会让她重燃对爱情的渴望吗?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 喜欢你,放弃你

    喜欢你,放弃你

    没有一帆风顺的人生,有的只是春秋悲凉,草水萍的生活不是大起大落,只是少年时的青涩和中年时的不成熟让她内心极度挣扎,最终她如何选择呢,是那个抛弃她的少年郎还是那个给他婚姻痛苦的老公呢?
  • 老公,床上等着

    老公,床上等着

    夏颜一个医科界的神话没有人知道她的真实身份二十岁的花季她以落魄夏家大小姐夏倾颜的身份被迫嫁给了京城顾家二少顾简易。进顾家那天顾简易掐住夏倾颜的喉咙阴狠地说准备好做一个有名无实的顾家二少奶奶吧”当她被逼入绝境,一只大手伸向了她。她被抵在墙角“小舅舅别这样...”男人危险的眼眸直盯夏倾颜,“老婆,我是你老公,你忘了我们难忘的一夜了...”转身扑倒...【欢迎入坑??.??】
  • 妻非等闲

    妻非等闲

    阿索罗帝国唯一女战将——玉罗,妖娆无匹,身披帝国荣光常年征战在各个星际战场。某一天,帝国突然向她发出召回令,原因是她已到强制基因婚配年龄,必须为帝国产下优秀基因的孩子!隔月,星际网上一天消息铺天盖地而来,修罗星第一女战将在回程途中,不幸遭遇未知空间虫洞,至今下落不明!在另一时空,缩小版的玉罗,看着对面穿着古老袍服的俊美男子,用白嫩的小手拍拍胸口。“男人,你养我,我罩你,怎么样?”“谢谢,不用”玉罗挠挠下巴,眼睛一亮,继续推销自己。“男人,你看我音清体柔易推到,再过几年还能买一送一,你绝对不吃亏!”“……”
  • 大道圣

    大道圣

    我要天地为我降下亿万祥云,要众生对我膜拜尊崇,要大道向我低头俯首,我要掌控时空,穿越古今,混一宇内,达到无无,无上,无虚,不可明,不可知的神秘境界,成为超越一切时间,空间,物质,能量的大道圣.。小麦建立一个读者群,群名:大道圣书友群群号:43507373欢迎书友们加入
  • 远东的北回归线

    远东的北回归线

    这是一个极其隐秘的小圈子,它有相当严格的入伙规则。因为不够年龄的陈于珊违规加入,引起这个小圈子的激烈振荡,乃至最终瓦解。女摄影家秋秋被谋杀身亡之后,女建筑师梁筱薇才意识到杀手的下一个杀人目标就是她。躲避谋杀和调查谋杀是同时进行的。这个小圈子里的每一个人,都有被怀疑的理由,也有被排除的理由。著名心理学教授费衢文替梁筱薇解读已故女哲学家张绪英的英文小说,曲径通幽般地详尽分析杀手的阴暗心理。陈于珊的男朋友叶明杰贸然介入,使事情突然变得复杂起来,如官员丘家维面临丑闻被揭露,医生吴承安面临家庭破裂,证券商李楠也因此远走高飞。
  • 佛说太子沐魄经

    佛说太子沐魄经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 武炼太古

    武炼太古

    秦超越重生归来,发现这个世界大变。拥有前世记忆,一切天才在他面前都是废物。陨神之地、八方绝域、天地之痕,从此,整个世界开始因他狂暴。
  • 魔侠豪情传

    魔侠豪情传

    茫茫宇宙,浩瀚星辰,天下之大,谁主沉浮。一个本不该属于这里的人来到了这里,他从死亡的边缘捡回一条小命,却历经磨难改变了这里几千年的历史,成为了千古留名的圣人。“赵鸣,你这个淫贼...我要杀了你!”“不行!他是我未来的夫君,我不许你伤害他!”“臭小子,已经两招了,还剩一招。”“死赵鸣,你挑粪非得从我门口过么?臭死我了!看打。”...武侠背景融入少量玄幻题材,故事主要讲述江湖里的江湖事,每个情节都是用心安排的,没有特意灌水,各位读者大大不妨读上一读,倘若您能喜欢,希望收藏、留言,谢谢。