The success of the Innocents naturally
made a thrifty publisher like Bliss anxious for a
second experiment. He had begun early in the year
to talk about another book, but nothing had come of
it beyond a project or two, more or less hazy and
unpursued. Clemens at one time developed a plan
for a Noah’s Ark book, which was to detail the
cruise of the Ark in diaries kept by various members
of it-Shem, Ham, and the others. He really wrote
some of it at the time, and it was an idea he never
entirely lost track of. All along among his manuscripts
appear fragments from those ancient voyagers.
One of the earlier entries will show the style and
purpose of the undertaking. It is from Shem’s
record:
Friday: Papa’s birthday.
He is 600 years old. We celebrated it in a
big, black tent. Principal men of the tribe present.
Afterward they were shown over the ark, which
was looking desolate and empty and dreary on account
of a misunderstanding with the workmen about wages.
Methuselah was as free with his criticisms as usual,
and as voluble and familiar, which I and my brothers
do not like; for we are past our one hundredth
year and married. He still calls me Shemmy,
just as he did when I was a child of sixty. I
am still but a youth, it is true, but youth has
its feelings, and I do not like this....
Saturday: Keeping the
Sabbath.
Sunday: Papa has yielded the advance
and everybody is hard at work. The shipyard
is so crowded that the men hinder each other; everybody
hurrying or being hurried; the rush and confusion
and shouting and wrangling are astonishing to
our family, who have always been used to a quiet,
country life.
It was from this germ that in a later
day grew the diaries of Adam and Eve, though nothing
very satisfactory ever came of this preliminary attempt.
The author had faith in it, however. To Bliss
he wrote:
I mean to take plenty of time
and pains with the Noah’s Ark book;
maybe it will be several years
before it is all written, but it will
be a perfect lightning striker
when it is done.
You can have the first say (that is
plain enough) on that or any other book I may
prepare for the press, as long as you deal in a fair,
open, and honorable way with me. I do not think
you will ever find me doing otherwise with you.
I can get a book ready for you any time you want
it; but you can’t want one before this time next
year, so I have plenty of time.
Bliss was only temporarily appeased.
He realized that to get a book ready by the time he
wanted it-a book of sufficient size and importance
to maintain the pace set by the Innocents meant rather
more immediate action than his author seemed to contemplate.
Futhermore, he knew that other publishers were besieging
the author of the Innocents; a disquieting thought.
In early July, when Mr. Langdon’s condition had
temporarily improved, Bliss had come to Elmira and
proposed a book which should relate the author’s
travels and experiences in the Far West. It was
an inviting subject, and Clemens, by this time more
attracted by the idea of authorship and its rewards,
readily enough agreed to undertake the volume.
He had been offered half profits, and suggested that
the new contract be arranged upon these terms.
Bliss, figuring on a sale of 100,000 copies, proposed
seven and one-half per cent. royalty as an equivalent,
and the contract was so arranged. In after-years,
when the cost of manufacture and paper had become
greatly reduced, Clemens, with but a confused notion
of business details, believed he had been misled by
Bliss in this contract, and was bitter and resentful
accordingly. The figures remain, however, to
show that Bliss dealt fairly. Seven and one-half
per cent. of a subscription book did represent half
profits up to 100,000 copies when the contract was
drawn; but it required ten years to sell that quantity,
and in that time conditions had changed. Bliss
could hardly foresee that these things would be so,
and as he was dead when the book touched the 100,000
mark he could not explain or readjust matters, whatever
might have been his inclination.
Clemens was pleased enough with the
contract when it was made. To Orion he wrote
July 15 (1870):
Per contract I must have another six-hundred-page
book ready for my publisher January 1st, and I
only began it to-day. The subject of it is
a secret, because I may possibly change it. But
as it stands I propose to do up Nevada and California,
beginning with the trip across the country in
the stage. Have you a memorandum of the route
we took, or the names of any of the stations we
stopped at? Do you remember any of the scenes,
names, incidents, or adventures of the coach trip? for
I remember next to nothing about the matter. Jot
down a foolscap page of items for me. I wish
I could have two days’ talk with you.
I suppose I am to get the
biggest copyright this time ever paid on a
subscription book in this
country.
The work so promptly begun made little
progress. Hard days of illness and sorrow followed,
and it was not until September that it was really
under way. His natural enthusiasm over any new
undertaking possessed him. On the 4th he wrote
Bliss:
During the past week I have written
the first four chapters of the book, and I tell you
‘The Innocents Abroad’ will have to get
up early to beat it. It will be a book that will
jump straight into continental celebrity the first
month it is issued.
He prophesied a sale of 90,000 copies
during the first twelve months and declared, “I
see the capabilities of the subject.”
But further disasters, even then impending,
made continued effort impossible; the prospect of
the new book for a time became gloomy, the idea of
it less inspiring. Other plans presented themselves,
and at one time he thought of letting the Galaxy publishers
get out a volume of his sketches. In October
he wrote Bliss that he was “driveling along
tolerably fair on the book, getting off from twelve
to twenty pages of manuscript a day.” Bliss
naturally discouraged the Galaxy idea, and realizing
that the new book might be long delayed, agreed to
get out a volume of miscellany sufficiently large
and important for subscription sales. He was
doubtful of the wisdom of this plan, and when Clemens
suddenly proposed a brand-new scheme his publisher
very readily agreed to hold back the publication of
Sketches indefinitely.
The new book was to be adventures
in the diamond mines of South Africa, then newly opened
and of wide public interest. Clemens did not propose
to visit the mines himself, but to let another man
do the traveling, make the notes, and write or tell
him the story, after which Clemens would enlarge and
elaborate it in his own fashion. His adaptation
of the letters of Professor Ford, a year earlier,
had convinced him that his plan would work out successfully
on a larger scale; he fixed upon his old friend, J.
H. Riley, of Washington ["Riley-Newspaper
Correspondent.” See Sketches.] (earlier
of San Francisco), as the proper person to do the
traveling. At the end of November he wrote Bliss:
I have put my greedy hands upon the
best man in America for my purpose, and shall
start him to the diamond field in South Africa within
a fortnight at my expense... that the book will have
a perfectly beautiful sale.
He suggested that Bliss advance Riley’s
expense money, the amount to be deducted from the
first royalty returns; also he proposed an increased
royalty, probably in view of the startling splendor
of the new idea. Bliss was duly impressed, and
the agreement was finally made on a basis of eight
and one-half per cent., with an advance of royalty
sufficient to see Riley to South Africa and return.
Clemens had not yet heard from Riley
definitely when he wrote his glowing letter to Bliss.
He took it for granted that Riley, always an adventurous
sort, would go. When Riley wrote him that he felt
morally bound to the Alta, of which he was then Washington
correspondent, also in certain other directions till
the end of the session, Clemens wrote him at great
length, detailing his scheme in full and urging him
to write instantly to the Alta and others, asking
a release on the ground of being offered a rare opportunity
to improve his fortunes.
You know right well that I would not
have you depart a hair from any obligation for any
money. The boundless confidence that I have in
you is born of a conviction of your integrity in small
as well as in great things. I know plenty of
men whose integrity I would trust to here, but not
off yonder in Africa.
His proposal, in brief, to Riley was
that the latter should make the trip to Africa without
expense to himself, collect memoranda, and such diamond
mines as might be found lying about handy. Upon
his return he was to take up temporary residence in
the Clemens household until the book was finished,
after which large benefits were to accrue to everybody
concerned. In the end Riley obtained a release
from his obligations and was off for the diamond mines
and fortune.
Poor fellow! He was faithful
in his mission, and it is said that he really located
a mining claim that would have made him and his independent
for all time to come; but returning home with his precious
memoranda and the news of good fortune, he accidentally
wounded himself with a fork while eating; blood-poisoning
set in (they called it cancer then), and he was only
able to get home to die. His memoranda were never
used, his mining claim was never identified. Certainly,
death was closely associated with Mark Twain’s
fortunes during those earlier days of his married
life.
On the whole the Buffalo residence
was mainly a gloomy one; its ventures were attended
by ill-fortune. For some reason Mark Twain’s
connection with the Express, while it had given the
paper a wide reputation, had not largely increased
its subscription. Perhaps his work on it was too
varied and erratic. Nasby, who had popularized
the Toledo Blade, kept steadily to one line.
His farmer public knew always just what to expect
when their weekly edition arrived.
Clemens and his wife dreamed of a
new habitation, and new faces and surroundings.
They agreed to offer their home and his interests in
the Express for sale. They began to talk of Hartford,
where Twichell lived, and where Orion Clemens and
his wife had recently located.
Mark Twain’s new fortunes had
wrought changes in the affairs of his relatives.
Already, before his marriage, he had prospected towns
here and there with a view to finding an Eastern residence
for his mother and sister, and he had kept Orion’s
welfare always in mind. When Pamela and her daughter
came to his wedding he told them of a little city by
the name of Fredonia (New York), not far from Buffalo,
where he thought they might find a pleasant home.
“I went in there by night and
out by night,” he said, “so I saw none
of it, but I had an intelligent, attractive audience.
Prospect Fredonia and let me know what it is like.
Try to select a place where a good many funerals pass.
Ma likes funerals. If you can pick a good funeral
corner she will be happy.”
It was in her later life that Jane
Clemens had developed this particular passion.
She would consult the morning paper for any notice
of obsequies and attend those that were easy of access.
Watching the processions go by gave her a peculiar
joy. Mrs. Moffett and her daughter did go to
Fredonia immediately following the wedding. They
found it residentially attractive, and rented a house
before returning to St. Louis, a promptness that somewhat
alarmed the old lady, who did not altogether fancy
the idea of being suddenly set down in a strange house,
in a strange land, even though it would be within
hailing distance of Sam and his new wife. Perhaps
the Fredonia funerals were sufficiently numerous and
attractive, for she soon became attached to the place,
and entered into the spirit of the life there, joining
its temperance crusades, and the like, with zest and
enjoyment.
Onion remained in St. Louis, but when
Bliss established a paper called The Publisher, and
wanted an editor, he was chosen for the place, originally
offered to his brother; the latter, writing to Onion,
said:
If you take the place with an air
of perfect confidence in yourself, never once letting
anything show in your bearing but a quiet, modest,
entire, and perfect confidence in your ability to do
pretty much anything in the world, Bliss will think
you are the very man he needs; but don’t show
any shadow of timidity or unsoldierly diffidence, for
that sort of thing is fatal to advancement.
I warn you thus because you are naturally
given to knocking your pot over in this way, when
a little judicious conduct would make it boil.