1601 by Mark Twain

1601 by Mark Twain

1601 by Mark Twain

MARK TWAIN’S

[Date, 1601]

Conversation

As it was by the Social Fireside

in the Time of the Tudors

INTRODUCTION

“Born irreverent,” scrawled Mark Twain on a scratch pad, “–like all

other people I have ever known or heard of–I am hoping to remain so

while there are any reverent irreverences left to make fun of.”

–[Holograph manuscript of Samuel L. Clemens, in the collection of the

F. J. Meine]

Mark Twain was just as irreverent as he dared be, and 1601 reveals his

richest expression of sovereign contempt for overstuffed language,

genteel literature, and conventional idiocies. Later, when a magazine

editor apostrophized, “O that we had a Rabelais!” Mark impishly and

anonymously–submitted 1601; and that same editor, a praiser of Rabelais,

scathingly abused it and the sender. In this episode, as in many others,

Mark Twain, the “bad boy” of American literature, revealed his huge

delight in blasting the shams of contemporary hypocrisy. Too, there was

always the spirit of Tom Sawyer deviltry in Mark’s make-up that prompted

him, as he himself boasted, to see how much holy indignation he could

stir up in the world.

WHO WROTE 1601?

The correct and complete title of 1601, as first issued, was: [Date,

1601.] ‘Conversation, as it was by the Social Fireside, in the Time of

the Tudors.’ For many years after its anonymous first issue in 1880,

its authorship was variously conjectured and widely disputed. In Boston,

William T. Ball, one of the leading theatrical critics during the late

go’s, asserted that it was originally written by an English actor (name

not divulged) who gave it to him. Ball’s original, it was said, looked

like a newspaper strip in the way it was printed, and may indeed have

been a proof pulled in some newspaper office. In St. Louis, William

Marion Reedy, editor of the St. Louis Mirror, had seen this famous tour

de force circulated in the early 80’s in galley-proof form; he first

learned from Eugene Field that it was from the pen of Mark Twain.

“Many people,” said Reedy, “thought the thing was done by Field and

attributed, as a joke, to Mark Twain. Field had a perfect genius for

that sort of thing, as many extant specimens attest, and for that sort of

practical joke; but to my thinking the humor of the piece is too mellow

–not hard and bright and bitter–to be Eugene Field’s.” Reedy’s opinion

hits off the fundamental difference between these two great humorists;

one half suspects that Reedy was thinking of Field’s French Crisis.

But Twain first claimed his bantling from the fog of anonymity in 1906,

in a letter addressed to Mr. Charles Orr, librarian of Case Library,

Cleveland. Said Clemens , in the course of his letter, dated July 30,

1906, from Dublin, New Hampshire:

“The title of the piece is 1601. The piece is a supposititious

conversation which takes place in Queen Elizabeth’s closet in that year,

between the Queen, Ben Jonson, Beaumont, Sir Walter Raleigh, the Duchess

of Bilgewater, and one or two others, and is not, as John Hay mistakenly

supposes, a serious effort to bring back our literature and philosophy to

the sober and chaste Elizabeth’s time; if there is a decent word findable

in it, it is because I overlooked it. I hasten to assure you that it is

not printed in my published writings.”

TWITTING THE REV. JOSEPH TWICHELL

The circumstances of how 1601 came to be written have since been

officially revealed by Albert Bigelow Paine in ‘Mark Twain,

A Bibliography’ (1912), and in the publication of Mark Twain’s Notebook

(1935).

1601 was written during the summer of 1876 when the Clemens family had

retreated to Quarry Farm in Elmira County, New York. Here Mrs. Clemens

enjoyed relief from social obligations, the children romped over the

countryside, and Mark retired to his octagonal study, which, perched high

on the hill, looked out upon the valley below. It was in the famous

summer of 1876, too, that Mark was putting the finishing touches to Tom

Sawyer. Before the close of the same year he had already begun work on

‘The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn’, published in 1885. It is

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