In Defence of Harriet Shelley by Mark Twain

In Defence of Harriet Shelley by Mark Twain

In Defence of Harriet Shelley

by Mark Twain

I

I have committed sins, of course; but I have not committed enough of them

to entitle me to the punishment of reduction to the bread and water of

ordinary literature during six years when I might have been living on the

fat diet spread for the righteous in Professor Dowden’s Life of Shelley,

if I had been justly dealt with.

During these six years I have been living a life of peaceful ignorance.

I was not aware that Shelley’s first wife was unfaithful to him, and that

that was why he deserted her and wiped the stain from his sensitive honor

by entering into soiled relations with Godwin’s young daughter. This was

all new to me when I heard it lately, and was told that the proofs of it

were in this book, and that this book’s verdict is accepted in the girls’

colleges of America and its view taught in their literary classes.

In each of these six years multitudes of young people in our country have

arrived at the Shelley-reading age. Are these six multitudes

unacquainted with this life of Shelley? Perhaps they are; indeed, one

may feel pretty sure that the great bulk of them are. To these, then, I

address myself, in the hope that some account of this romantic historical

fable and the fabulist’s manner of constructing and adorning it may

interest them.

First, as to its literary style. Our negroes in America have several

ways of entertaining themselves which are not found among the whites

anywhere. Among these inventions of theirs is one which is particularly

popular with them. It is a competition in elegant deportment. They hire

a hall and bank the spectators’ seats in rising tiers along the two

sides, leaving all the middle stretch of the floor free. A cake is

provided as a prize for the winner in the competition, and a bench of

experts in deportment is appointed to award it. Sometimes there are as

many as fifty contestants, male and female, and five hundred spectators.

One at a time the contestants enter, clothed regardless of expense in

what each considers the perfection of style and taste, and walk down the

vacant central space and back again with that multitude of critical eyes

on them. All that the competitor knows of fine airs and graces he throws

into his carriage, all that he knows of seductive expression he throws

into his countenance. He may use all the helps he can devise: watch-

chain to twirl with his fingers, cane to do graceful things with, snowy

handkerchief to flourish and get artful effects out of, shiny new

stovepipe hat to assist in his courtly bows; and the colored lady may

have a fan to work up her effects with, and smile over and blush behind,

and she may add other helps, according to her judgment. When the review

by individual detail is over, a grand review of all the contestants in

procession follows, with all the airs and graces and all the bowings and

smirkings on exhibition at once, and this enables the bench of experts to

make the necessary comparisons and arrive at a verdict. The successful

competitor gets the prize which I have before mentioned, and an abundance

of applause and envy along with it. The negroes have a name for this

grave deportment-tournament; a name taken from the prize contended for.

They call it a Cakewalk.

This Shelley biography is a literary cake-walk. The ordinary forms of

speech are absent from it. All the pages, all the paragraphs, walk by

sedately, elegantly, not to say mincingly, in their Sunday-best, shiny

and sleek, perfumed, and with boutonnieres in their button-holes; it is

rare to find even a chance sentence that has forgotten to dress. If the

book wishes to tell us that Mary Godwin, child of sixteen, had known

afflictions, the fact saunters forth in this nobby outfit: “Mary was

herself not unlearned in the lore of pain”–meaning by that that she had

not always traveled on asphalt; or, as some authorities would frame it,

that she had “been there herself,” a form which, while preferable to the

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