Sketches New and Old by Mark Twain

Good-by, friend, I must be going. I may have a good way to go to-night

–don’t know. I only know one thing for certain, and that is that I am

on the emigrant trail now, and I’ll never sleep in that crazy old

cemetery again. I will travel till I fiend respectable quarters, if I

have to hoof it to New Jersey. All the boys are going. It was decided

in public conclave, last night, to emigrate, and by the time the sun

rises there won’t be a bone left in our old habitations. Such cemeteries

may suit my surviving friends, but they do not suit the remains that have

the honor to make these remarks. My opinion is the general opinion.

If you doubt it, go and see how the departing ghosts upset things before

they started. They were almost riotous in their demonstrations of

distaste. Hello, here are some of the Bledsoes, and if you will give me

a lift with this tombstone I guess I will join company and jog along with

them–mighty respectable old family, the Bledsoes, and used to always

come out in six-horse hearses and all that sort of thing fifty years ago

when I walked these streets in daylight. Good-by, friend.”

And with his gravestone on his shoulder he joined the grisly procession,

dragging his damaged coffin after him, for notwithstanding he pressed it

upon me so earnestly, I utterly refused his hospitality. I suppose that

for as much as two hours these sad outcasts went clacking by, laden with

their dismal effects, and all that time I sat pitying them. One or two

of the youngest and least dilapidated among them inquired about midnight

trains on the railways, but the rest seemed unacquainted with that mode

of travel, and merely asked about common public roads to various towns

and cities, some of which are not on the map now,, and vanished from it

and from the earth as much as thirty years ago, and some few of them

never had existed anywhere but on maps, and private ones in real-estate

agencies at that. And they asked about the condition of the cemeteries

in these towns and cities, and about the reputation the citizens bore as

to reverence for the dead.

This whole matter interested me deeply, and likewise compelled my

sympathy for these homeless ones. And it all seeming real, and I not

knowing it was a dream, I mentioned to one shrouded wanderer an idea that

had entered my head to publish an account of this curious and very

sorrowful exodus, but said also that I could not describe it truthfully,

and just as it occurred, without seeming to trifle with a grave subject

and exhibit an irreverence for the dead that would shock and distress

their surviving friends. But this bland and stately remnant of a former

citizen leaned him far over my gate and whispered in my ear, and said:

“Do not let that disturb you. The community that can stand such

graveyards as those we are emigrating from can stand anything a body can

say about the neglected and forsaken dead that lie in them.”

At that very moment a cock crowed, and the weird procession vanished and

left not a shred or a bone behind. I awoke, and found myself lying with

my head out of the bed and “sagging” downward considerably–a position

favorable to dreaming dreams with morals in them, maybe, but not poetry.

NOTE.–The reader is assured that if the cemeteries in his town are kept

in good order, this Dream is not leveled at his town at all, but is

leveled particularly and venomously at the next town.

A TRUE STORY

REPEATED WORD FOR WORD AS I HEARD IT –[Written about 1876]

It was summer-time, and twilight. We were sitting on the porch of the

farmhouse, on the summit of the hill, and “Aunt Rachel” was sitting

respectfully below our level, on the steps-for she was our Servant, and

colored. She was of mighty frame and stature; she was sixty years old,

but her eye was undimmed and her strength unabated. She was a cheerful,

hearty soul, and it was no more trouble for her to laugh than it is for a

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