During our week’s
absence visiting our palatial (700 sq. foot) mansion in Michiana, I have
engaged the assistance of a substitute writer.
Ladies and
gentlemen,
May I present Mr.
Samuel “Mark Twain” Clemens.
Go easy on him, will ya?
He’s no Pomerantz, but
who is?
“PRIVACY”
In this Autobiography I shall keep in mind the fact that I
am speaking from the grave. I am literally
speaking from the grave, because I shall be dead when the book issues from the
press.
I speak from the grave rather than with my living tongue,
for a good reason: I can speak thence
freely. When a man is writing a book
dealing with the pravacies of his life – a book which is to be read while he is
still alive – he shrinks from speaking his whole frank mind; all his attempts
to do it fail, he recognizes that he is trying to do a thing which is wholly
impossible to a human being.
The frankest and freest and privatest product of the human mind
and heart is a love letter; the writer gets his limitless freedom of statement
and expression from his sense that no stranger is going to see what he is
writing.
Sometimes there is a breach-of-promise case by and by; and
when he sees his letter in print it makes him cruelly uncomfortable and he
perceives that he never would have unbosomed himself to that large and honest
degree if he had known that he was writing for the public. He cannot find anything in that letter that
was not true, honest, and respect-worthy; but no matter, he would have been
very much more reserved if he had known he was writing for print.
It has seemed to me that I could be as frank and free and
unembarrassed as a love letter if I knew that what I was writing would be
exposed to no eye until I was dead, and unaware, and indifferent.
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