Mark Twain’s Speeches by Mark Twain

and shaved it down till the average is three letters and a half. I can

put one thousand and two hundred words on your page, and there’s not

another man alive that can come within two hundred of it. My page is

worth eighty-four dollars to me. It takes exactly as long to fill your

magazine page with long words as it does with short ones-four hours.

Now, then, look at the criminal injustice of this requirement of yours.

I am careful, I am economical of my time and labor. For the family’s

sake I’ve got to be so. So I never write ‘metropolis’ for seven cents,

because I can get the same money for ‘city.’ I never write ‘policeman,’

because I can get the same price for ‘cop.’ And so on and so on. I never

write ‘valetudinarian’ at all, for not even hunger and wretchedness can

humble me to the point where I will do a word like that for seven cents;

I wouldn’t do it for fifteen. Examine your obscene text, please; count

the words.”

He counted and said it was twenty-four. I asked him to count the

letters. He made it two hundred and three.

I said, “Now, I hope you see the whole size of your crime. With my

vocabulary I would make sixty words out of those two hundred and five

letters, and get four dollars and twenty cents for it; whereas for your

inhuman twenty-four I would get only one dollar and sixty-eight cents.

Ten pages of these sky-scrapers of yours would pay me only about three

hundred dollars; in my simplified vocabulary the same space and the same

labor would pay me eight hundred and forty dollars. I do not wish to

work upon this scandalous job by the piece. I want to be hired by the

year.” He coldly refused. I said:

“Then for the sake of the family, if you have no feeling for me, you

ought at least to allow me overtime on that word extemporaneousness.”

Again he coldly refused. I seldom say a harsh word to any one, but I was

not master of myself then, and I spoke right out and called him an

anisodactylous plesiosaurian conchyliaceous Ornithorhyncus, and rotten to

the heart with holoaophotal subterranean extemporaneousness. God forgive

me for that wanton crime; he lived only two hours.

From that day to this I have been a devoted and hard-working member of

the heaven-born institution, the International Association for the

Prevention of Cruelty to Authors, and now I am laboring with Carnegie’s

Simplified Committee, and with my heart in the work . . . .

Now then, let us look at this mighty question reasonably, rationally,

sanely–yes, and calmly, not excitedly. What is the real function, the

essential function, the supreme function, of language? Isn’t it merely

to convey ideas and emotions? Certainly. Then if we can do it with

words of fonetic brevity and compactness, why keep the present cumbersome

forms? But can we? Yes. I hold in my hand the proof of it. Here is a

letter written by a woman, right out of her heart of hearts. I think she

never saw a spelling-book in her life. The spelling is her own. There

isn’t a waste letter in it anywhere. It reduces the fonetics to the last

gasp–it squeezes the surplusage out of every word–there’s no spelling

that can begin with it on this planet outside of the White House. And as

for the punctuation, there isn’t any. It is all one sentence, eagerly

and breathlessly uttered, without break or pause in it anywhere. The

letter is absolutely genuine–I have the proofs of that in my possession.

I can’t stop to spell the words for you, but you can take the letter

presently and comfort your eyes with it. I will read the letter:

“Miss dear freind I took some Close into the armerry and give them to you

to Send too the suffrers out to California and i Hate to treble you but i

got to have one of them Back it was a black oll wolle Shevyott With a

jacket to Mach trimed Kind of Fancy no 38 Burst measure and palsy

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