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Mark Twain & George MacDonald:
The Salty and the Sweet
by Kathryn Lindskoog
The connection between Mark Twain and George MacDonald evidently began
in 1870, the year when 35-year-old Twain married the woman he adored,
Olivia Langdon. The newlyweds were soon reading MacDonald's latest novel,
Robert Falconer: and Twain reacted with great gusto and disgust.
In a letter to their friend Mary Mason Fairbanks, who had probably recommended
the book or given it to them, he spoke his mind on September 2, 1870.
"My! but the first half of it is superb! We just kept our pencils
going, marking brilliant & beautiful things--but there was nothing
to mark, after the middle. Up to the middle of the book we did so admire
& like Robert--& after that we began to dislike & finally
ended by despising him for a self-righteous humbug, devoured with egotism.
[Robert was a young Scot with a heart of gold--a forerunner of Gibbie,
who would be invented later.]
"I guess we hated his grandmother from the first. The author was
always telling of us her goodness, but seldom letting us see any of
it.
[At this point Livy added a note: "I did not. I liked her all
the time, her heart was all right, and what was wrong came of her education."]
"Shargar was the only character in the book who was always
welcome, & of him the author gave us just as little as possible,
& filled his empty pages with the added emptiness of that tiresome
Ericson & his dismal 'poetry'--hogwash, I call it.
"Oh, yes, & there was Dooble Sanny, an imperial character--but
of course he had to die in order to give Robert a chance to air some
of his piety, & talk like a blessed Sunday-school book with a marbled
cover to it.--
[Livy inserted "thats not correct."]
"But what on earth the author lugged in that inanity, Miss Lindsay,
for, goes clear beyond my comprehension. Page after page, & page
after page about that ineffable doughnut, & not even the poor satisfaction
that Lord Rothie ruined her, after all. Hang such a character!
[Livy added a note: "how dreadful."]
"And Miss St. John--well there never was any interest about her,
from the first. And when she concluded that the man she first loved
was small potatoes & that that big booby of an Ericson was the man
that completely filled her idea of masculine perfection I just wanted
to send her a dose of salts [to purge her] with my compliments.
"Mind you, we are not through yet--two or three chapters still
to read--& that idiot is still hunting for his father. I hoped that
as he grew to years of discretion he would eventually appreciate that
efforts of a wise Providence to get the old man out of the way (seeing
that he wasn't very eligible property, take him how you would,)--but
no, nothing would do for him, clear from juvenile stupidity up to mature
imbecility but tag around after that old bummer.
[Livy added one word: "scandalous."]
"I do just wonder what he is going to make of him now that he
is about to find him. A missionary, likely, along with Rev. De Fleuri,
& trot him around peddling sentiment to London guttersnipes while
he continues his special mission upon earth of reclaiming venerable
strumpets and exhibiting his little wonders at midnight for the astonishment
& admiration of chance strangers like the applauding Gordon."
[At this point Livy took her turn: "I would make erasures in this
letter but it is a hopeless undertaking, I should have to erase the
last three pages of it--However I know that he is rather ashamed of
it because he said that he had left plenty of room for me to say something
pleasant--
"The last part of the book we have not enjoyed as much as the
first part, but the first we did enjoy intensely-- Lovingly yours, Livy--"]
1
Mark Twain was ten years younger than George MacDonald and had waited
ten years longer to get married; so it was that when he and Livy were
newlyweds reading Robert Falconer, the MacDonalds had already been married
twenty years. Two years later these colourful couples would meet each
other.
In the fall of 1872 George MacDonald crossed the Atlantic on a Cunard
oceanliner and arrived in Boston with his wife Louisa and oldest son Greville,
for a triumphant United States lecture tour. He was the popular author
of over twenty books by this time, and he could hold an audience of two
or three thousand spellbound without any loudspeakers. He soon met Emerson,
Longfellow, Whittier, Stowe, and other prominent American authors, plus
the prolific young writer Frances Hodgson Burnett. The tour was plagued
with occasional illnesses and travel problems; therefore, the MacDonalds
greatly appreciated a five-day pre-Christmas rest "in lapsury's
luck" at the Elmira, New York, home of "the Mother-in-law
of Mark Twain," as MacDonald wrote on December 22 to his children
back in England. 2
It was only seven years after the end of the Civil War. On January 17,
1873, the MacDonalds went for the second time to hear the Jubilee Singers,
a group of freed slaves sponsored by Fisk University. The first time that
they heard these singers, George MacDonald sat with tears rolling down
his cheeks and Louisa MacDonald was chocked with a combination of tears
and laughter. On January 17, the MacDonalds stayed after the performance
to talk with the singers and to persuade them to sing in England. When
the auditorium lights went out, one of the singers called out in the dark,
"All the same colour now!" 3
On January 27, 1873, ten days after attending their second Jubilee Singers
concert, the MacDonalds visited with Livy (and possibly Mark Twain) again.
4 Because the two couples shared an admiration for
the Jubilee Singers, it seems likely that one of their topics of conversation
was that group. 5
On May 19, 1873, Mark Twain sat on the platform with other famous American
writers at a farewell benefit for George MacDonald before he returned
to England. 6
Two months later, the Clemenses were in England. On July 10, 1873, Louisa
MacDonald wrote to Livy that her garden party on the following Wednesday
afternoon, July 16, would feature a MacDonald family play called July
Jumble. Guests would include some poor and needy people, prominent
London professionals, the Twains, and the Jubilee Singers, who were now
in England on a concert tour. 7 At this time the
large MacDonald family lived at a home they called The Retreat on the
banks of the Thames in Hammersmith. 8
Although the MacDonalds were often in financial distress, this fine old
home had a garden of nearly an acre, a roadway bordered by ancient elms,
and a tulip-tree said to be the second largest in England. The family
had a portable stage that they used to set up on the lawn for performances.
On Oxford and Cambridge boat-race days friends and relatives gathered
from near and far to watch the race from the water's edge. Alfred, Lord
Tennyson attended once. 9 (After the MacDonald family
gave up The Retreat, William Morris moved in and renamed it Kelmscott.)
Twain's daughter Susy briefly described her parents' 1873 visit to England,
although she was too young to understand any of it at the time. She spoke
of her father meeting such men as Thomas Hardy, Robert Browning, and Anthony
Trollope. Then she added, "and mamma and papa were quite well acquainted
with Dr. MacDonald and family." 10 Mark Twain
quoted that passage from Susy in his autobiography and mentioned in passing
that George MacDonald was a lively talker. 11
Greville MacDonald, who had accompanied his parents on their tour in
the United States, agreed with Susy about the friendship. "The two
writers were very intimate and had discussed co-operation in a novel together,
so as to secure copyright on both sides of the Atlantic. But there were
many difficulties in the way, not chiefly [sic] those of motive and style."
12 Is it possible that the two men conceived of
a story about a white orphan boy whose friend was a good-hearted black
man? Within thirteen years they both happened to write and publish such
a story.
Mark Twain had been working on Tom Sawyer in 1873 and had put
it aside. In 1875 he took the pages out of their pigeonhole in his desk
and finished the book without any trouble. He published Tom Sawyer
in 1876.
George MacDonald was publishing one to three books every year at that
time. In 1876 he published Thomas Wingfold, Curate, a 666-page
novel, and Mark Twain owned a copy that cost $1.25. 13
Twain started Huckleberry Finn in 1876; but it bogged down, and
he took seven years to finish the first draft. He put it aside and returned
to it three or four times between 1876 and the complete first draft in
1883. Years later, he described his creative process:
As long as a book would write itself I was a faithful and interested
amanuensis and my industry did not flag; but the minute the book tried
to shift to my head the labour of contriving its situations, inventing
its adventures, and conducting its conversations I put it away and dropped
it out of my mind.... It was by accident that I found out that a book
is pretty sure to get tired along about the middle and refuse to go
on with its work until its powers and its interest should have been
refreshed by a rest and its depleted stock of raw material reinforced
by lapse of time.
It was when I had reached the middle of Tom Sawyer that I made
this invaluable find. At page 400 of my manuscript the story made a
sudden and determined halt and refused to proceed another step. Day
after day it still refused. I was disappointed, distressed and immeasurably
astonished, for I knew quite well that the tale was not finished and
I could not understand why I was not able to go on with it. The reason
was very simple -- my tank had run dry; it was empty; the stock of materials
in it was exhausted; the story could not go on without material; it
could not be wrought out of nothing.
When the manuscript had lain in the pigeon hole two years I took it
out one day and read the last chapter that I had written. It was then
that I made the great discovery that when the tank runs dry you've only
to leave it alone and it will fill up again in time, while you are asleep--also
while you are at work on other things and are quite unaware that this
unconscious and profitable cerebration is going on. There was plenty
of material now, and the book went on and finished itself without any
trouble. 14
On May 10, 1880, Mark Twain bought a new book from the J. R. Barlow bookstore
in his home city of Hartford, Connecticut: Sir Gibbie, by his British
friend George MacDonald. 15 It was in a paperback
Seaside Library Edition, and it cost twenty cents. 16
In July Twain received a bill for the book. On July 5, 1880, he paid the
twenty cents. And that long-forgotten twenty-cent purchase may have contributed
to Huckleberry Finn.
In 1881 Twain had his publisher send a copy of The Prince and the
Pauper to MacDonald as a gift. 17 In August
1882 MacDonald recommended his literary agent A. P. Watt to Mark Twain.
On September 19, 1882, Twain answered that he didn't need an agent because
he had turned his literary business over to Osgood in Boston (later known
as Houghton, Mifflin & Co.) and Chatto in London. "A book of
mine used to pay me nothing in England -- pays me two or three thousand
pounds now. Osgood sells my occasional magazine rubbish at figures which
make me blush, they are so autrocious. I perceive, after all these wasted
years, that an author ought always to be connected with a highwayman."
18
Twain had begun this letter by saying, "I'll send you the book [Life
on the Mississippi] with names in it, sure, as soon as it issues from
the press... Since I may choose, I will take the Back of the North
Wind in return, for our children's sake; they have read and re-read
their own copy so many times that it looks as if it had been through the
wars." (At the Back of the North Wind was first published
in 1871.)
On February 16, 1883, George MacDonald wrote to Mark Twain to suggest
a scheme for protection against pirating. If Twain would write brief sections
of MacDonald's forthcoming sequel to Sir Gibbie, titled Donal
Grant, both authors' names could appear on it and it would be copyrighted
in both countries. On March 9 Twain politely declined. He said that if
it were not for the pressure of his own work and his doubtfulness about
the success of collaborative efforts, he would enjoy writing "the
Great Scottish-American novel" with MacDonald, "each doing his
full half." He promised again to send MacDonald a copy of Life
on the Mississippi. 19
In the same letter, Twain thanked MacDonald "in advance for the
North Wind which is coming," and added a postscript: "The North
Wind has arrived; & Susy lost not a moment, but went to work &
ravenously devoured the whole of it once more, at a single sitting."
20
At the Back of the North Wind remained important to Twain. Susy
died in 1896. In a 1899 letter to William Dean Howells, Twain reflected
upon his successful career and then added, "All these things might
move and interest one. But how desperately more I have been moved to-night
by the thought of a little old copy in the nursery of At the Back of
the North Wind. Oh, what happy days they were when that little book
was read, and how Susy loved it!" 21
According to Alan Gribben, author of Mark Twain's Library: A Reconstruction,
this book had been such a favourite in the Twain household that his children
sometimes prevailed upon him to invent new stories about its hero, the
motherless boy called little Diamond. The benevolent North Wind gave little
Diamond a series of adventures and carried him up among the stars. She
"eventually imparts the greatest favour of all--swift and painless
death." Little Diamond's final journey was to "the country at
the back of the North Wind." 22
Similarly, in Twain's fairytale "The Five Boons of Life"
a good fairy bestowed the valuable gift of death upon an innocent little
child , after that gift had been spurned by a man who foolishly put his
trust in pleasure, love, fame, and riches. "[The child] was ignorant,"
the fairy explained, "but trusted me, asking me to choose for it."
23 There is at least a superficial resemblance between
the role of Twain's good fairy and MacDonald's North Wind.
Coleman O. Parsons suggested that At the Back of the North Wind
provided the mode of airborne conveyance employed by Mark Twain's Satan
in "The Chronicle of Young Satan." Gribben notes Parsons' idea
and claims far more: that At the Back of the North Wind was an
important inspirational source for No. 44, The Mysterious Stranger
According to Gribben, Mark Twain's Satan is a bitter and perverse transmogrification
of MacDonald's kind North Wind. 24 If The Mysterious
Stranger was influenced by North Wind, perhaps Huckleberry
Finn was influenced by Sir Gibbie. When Mark Twain declined
George MacDonald's 1883 invitation to co-author a sequel to Sir Gibbie,
perhaps he was already responding to Sir Gibbie quite differently
as he wrote Huckleberry Finn.
MacDonald's story is about a mute, barefoot, illiterate child of the
streets in a city in northeastern Scotland; his mother is dead and his
father is a miserable alcoholic. After his father dies, Gibbie is befriended
and cared for by a kind black sailor; but the sailor is brutally murdered
in Gibbie's presence. Gibbie flees the city and wanders away, living off
the land and eventually becoming a secret helper at a farm. He is especially
vulnerable because he is physically incapable of speech. After he is almost
killed by a cruel buffoon, he is informally adopted by a kind old shepherd
couple in a remote mountain cottage. He befriends the buffoon's spunky
daughter by rescuing her when she is lost on the mountainside. Later he
performs magnificently during a great flood, saving animals and people.
When Gibbie is found to be a lost baronet and heir to a fortune, he is
taken back to the city and trained to be a gentleman. Among his many good
deeds, he runs a secret lodging place for homeless people and goes to
great lengths to rescue an alcoholic friend. He graduates from college,
becomes an extraordinary philanthropist, and finally marries the girl
he loves in spite of her cruel father.
Both Sir Gibbie and Huckleberry Finn explore questions
of ethics and truth through the life of an unusually bright and unusually
unfortunate boy. Both are set in the colourful region where the author
spent his boyhood. Both were written for children as well as adults. And
they have at least twenty plot elements in common.
-
Parents: The hero is a motherless, ignorant, but good-hearted
boy who has lived with an alcoholic and criminally negligent father.
He is occasionally helped by kind women, one of whom thinks of him
as a lost lamb.
-
Talents: The boy enjoys extraordinary health, resilience,
and courage. He is a strong swimmer. Although he is illiterate when
the book opens, he learns to read once he gets the opportunity.
-
Black Man: The boy finds a kind of foster-father in a tender-hearted
black man. The relationship changes the boy's life.
-
Runaway: The boy has little sense about money, but much practical
sense about survival skills. He becomes a runaway who lives off the
land.
-
Flood: The boy is thrilled by a dramatic storm that causes
a severe river flood. Surprising objects float down the river in the
flood. The flood causes wild rabbits to perch in trees, where they
can be easily caught by boys.
-
Raft: Someone takes a remarkable journey downriver on a raft.
-
Silent Child: An adult beats a child for refusing to respond,
only to discover later that the child was physically unable to do
so.
-
Sign Language: Someone in the novel communicates regularly
by means of sign language.
-
False Piety: There is much artificial Christianity and some
false sermonising in the story.
-
Pilgrim's Progress: The boy reads repeatedly in John Bunyan's
Pilgrim's Progress.
-
Inheritance: The boy meets and loves a fine girl who is being
cheated out of her inheritance. With great effort, he restores it
to her.
-
Title Fraud: An outrageously immoral and rather humorous character
wrongly appropriates a hereditary title and demands and receives special
courtesies as a result.
-
Missing Child: The boy is futilely sought by his townspeople
as the supposed victim after a break-in by (real or imagined) murderers.
-
Forgiveness: The boy demonstrates a surprisingly tolerant
spirit toward people who have harmed him.
-
Wounded Boy: An adult shoots a boy in the calf of his leg.
-
A Trust: A boy who has usually worn rags owns money which
is held in trust for him by a stuffy professional man.
-
Murder and Alcohol: Grisly murder and chronic alcoholism are
important plot elements.
-
Superstition: The novel describes eccentric local superstitions
that some of the characters believe in.
-
Dialect: The novel makes heavy use of colourful dialect which
is appropriate to its locale, but far from standard English
-
Kind Couple: The boy finds an ideal home with a friend's relatives,
a white-haired country couple with small means and large hearts. Though
a bit vague mentally, the elderly gentleman in this home displays
admirable piety and leads devotions in a muddled but kindly way.
Literary cross-pollination is a fact of life, but so is the temptation
to make facile assumptions about sources and allusions. Some similarities
are to be expected in the popular fiction of an era, and common story
elements alone never constitute proof of direct influence. Frances Hodgson
Burnett's Little Lord Fauntleroy (1886) and Sara Crew (1888)
have elements in common with Sir Gibbie also. 25
Similarly, in my opinion Willa Cather's My Antonia (1918) has a
scene reminiscent of a scene in Burnett's Secret Garden (1911).
According to John Docherty of the George MacDonald Society, MacDonald
alludes to A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court in both
the drafts and the final version of Lilith. 26
At the very least, tracing these apparent links between authors is a pleasant
pastime, and it gives readers new occasions to talk and write about the
books they care about.
Perhaps a consensus will develop that Sir Gibbie was one of Twain's
sources for Huckleberry Finn. Walter Blair has shown that there
are many sources, 27 and fresh claims of sources
are occasionally set forth. 28 What is more certain
is that in Twain's day books for children were developing beyond the moralistic
tales of the previous generation that Twain himself had satirised, 29
although Huckleberry Finn proved to be too strong for some reviewers.
30 Whether Sir Gibbie furnished Twain with
actual themes and incidents or not, it would have provided him with the
latest example of the latitude afforded to writers of books for children
in 1880.
The similarities between Sir Gibbie and Huckleberry Finn
have no doubt been obscured by the books' great differences. Sir Gibbie
is longer and traces the life of Gibbie (Gilbert Galbraith) from the age
of eight to adult success and happy marriage. In contrast, Huck Finn is
about fourteen years of age throughout his book, which fits Twain's dictum
at the end of Tom Sawyer:
It being strictly a history of a boy, it must stop here; the story
could not go much further without becoming the history of a man. When
one writes a novel about grown people, he knows exactly where to stop--that
is, with a marriage; but when he writes of juveniles, he must stop where
best he can.
In the twentieth century Huckleberry Finn has won world acclaim
and Sir Gibbie has been consigned to near oblivion. The two factors
most responsible for Sir Gibbie's eclipse were MacDonald's sometimes
preachy, long-winded style, and a northern Scots dialect which has become
unreadable.
Although George MacDonald's immense popularity faded after his death
in 1905, some of the fifty-seven books published in his lifetime are still
beloved today. Early copies of his books sometimes sell for hundreds of
dollars. More significantly, in 1992 there were ninety-five current American
editions of books by George MacDonald listed in Books in Print.
Three of them are illustrated by Maurice Sendak, and one bears an afterword
by W. H. Auden. The most highly esteemed of all George MacDonald's books
are probably At the Back of the North Wind. The Golden Key,
The Light Princess, Lilith, Phantastes, The Princess
and Curdie, The Princess and the Goblin, and The Wise Woman.
No one claims that George MacDonald was a consistently excellent writer,
but such luminaries as G. K. Chesterton, W. H. Auden, Roger Lancelyn Green,
and C. S. Lewis have lavished praise on his mythopoeic imagination. According
to Chesterton, MacDonald was the most original thinker of his time. According
to Auden, he was the Kafka of his century. According to Green, his strange
gift set him among the very greatest story-tellers. According to C. S.
Lewis, he was a rare mythopoeic genius like Kafka or Novalis and the greatest
of them all. "I have never concealed the fact that I regarded him
as my master; indeed I fancy I have never written a book in which I did
not quote from him." 31
C. S. Lewis readily admitted that MacDonald's more realistic novels were
inferior. "Necessity made MacDonald a novelist, but few of his novels
are good and none is very good. They are best when they depart most from
the canons of novel writing... Sometimes they depart in order to come
nearer to fantasy, as in the whole character of the hero in Sir Gibbie..."
32
C.S. Lewis buffs are well aware of his enthusiasm for George MacDonald,
but few know of his enthusiasm for what he called "the divine Huckleberry."
On 6 December 1950 C.S. Lewis wrote to an American correspondent, "I
have been regaling myself on Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn.
I wonder why that man never wrote anything else on the same level. The
scene in which Huck decides to be 'good' by betraying Jim, and then finds
he can't and concludes that he is a reprobate, is unparalleled in humour,
pathos, and tenderness. And it goes down to the very depth of all moral
problems." 33
It was awful thoughts, and awful words, but they was said. And I let
them stay said; and never thought no more about reforming. I shoved
the whole things right out of my head; and said I would take up wickedness
again, which was in my line, being brung up to it, and the other waren't.
Twain's Huck Finn combines keen moral intuition with a dearth of independent
religious imagination. In contrast, MacDonald's Gibbie is not only a moral
prodigy, but also a Mozart of religious sensibility. Both Huckleberry
Finn and Sir Gibbie include humour, horror, irony, and sorrow;
but Sir Gibbie is permeated by the sweetness of George MacDonald's profound
trust in the goodness of a God with whom Mark Twain was often at war.
What might unflappable George MacDonald, an ordained Congregational preacher,
have said about Mark Twain's profound distrust in the goodness of God?
MacDonald happened to publish this line just one year after Twain published
Huckleberry Finn: "Complaint against God is far nearer to
God than indifference about him." 34 I challenge
Mark Twain lovers to locate Twain's most appropriate quotation for a salty
reply. 35
Key Dates in the Twain-MacDonald Relationship
-
1870 Samuel Clemens married Olivia Langdon. The couple read George
MacDonald's Robert Falconer. Twain objected to too much sweetness
and piety.
-
1872 George MacDonald visited the United States and met Twain.
-
1873 Mark Twain visited the MacDonalds in England.
-
1876-1883 The two authors sometimes exchanged books.
-
1880 Mark Twain bought MacDonald's new novel Sir Gibbie.
-
1883 MacDonald invited Twain to co-author the sequel to Sir Gibbie.
Twain declined; appreciated At the Back of the North Wind.
-
1885 Mark Twain published Huckleberry Finn.
-
1899 Mark Twain was deeply moved by memory of North Wind.
With thanks to Thomas Tenney, editor of The Mark Twain Journal, for
his helpful expertise.
NOTES
-
Mark Twain, Mark Twain to Mrs. Fairbanks, ed. Dixon Wecter
(San Marino, Huntington Library: 1949) 134-137. back
-
Greville MacDonald, George MacDonald and His Wife (London:
George Allen & Unwin, 1924), 432. back
-
MacDonald, 442. back
-
MacDonald, 443. back
-
Almost eighteen years later, on November 16, 1890, Mark Twain attended
a concert given by the Jubilee Singers in Asylum Hill Congregational
Church in Hartford. He recorded the song titles in his journal, and
they are listed in Mark Twain's Notebooks & Journals, Volume
III, ed. Frederick Anderson (Berkeley: University of California
Press, 1979), 593-594. back
-
MacDonald, 459. back
-
Mark Twain's Notebooks and Journals, Volume I, ed. Frederick
Anderson (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1979), 564. back
-
The MacDonalds were visited by several of their new acquaintances
from the United States. Greville MacDonald tells of a visitor who
"avowed devotion to the negro cause, brought an uneducated coloured
wife with him, and, in return for unbounded hospitality and money,
as well as literary help, swindled and insulted my father." This
account appears on page 466 of Greville's George MacDonald and
His Wife. back
-
Macdonald, 380. back
-
Mark Twain, Mark Twain's Autobiography, Volume II (New York:
Harper & Brothers, 1924), 231. George MacDonald received an honorary
doctorate from his alma mater, King's College in Aberdeen. back
-
Mark Twain's Autobiography, 232. back
-
MacDonald, 457. back
-
Alan Gribben, Mark Twain's Library: A Reconstruction (Boston:
G.K. Hall & Co., 1980), 442. back
-
Autobiography of Mark Twain, ed. Charles Neider (New York:
Harper & Row, 1959), 288-289. This passage in chapter 53 is dated
August 30, 1906. back
-
Gribben, 442. back
-
Sir Gibbie is presently available in five editions. The latest
is an abridged version by Kathryn Lindskoog, the only one to retain
all sixty-two chapters and all their content; it is illustrated by
Patrick Wynne and was released by Questar in 1992 for $4.99. An adaptation
for young readers by Michael Phillips, titled Wee Sir Gibbie of
the Highlands, was released by Bethany House in 1990 for $9.95.
The original text was re-released by Sunrise Books in 1989 for $27.50.
An abridged version by Elizabeth Yates, which omits parts of the story,
was re-released by Schocken in 1987 for $8.95. An abridged version
by Michael Phillips titled The Baronet's Song was released by Bethany
House in 1983 for $5.95. back
-
Gribben, 440. back
-
MacDonald, 458. back
-
Twain, Notebooks and Journals, Volume III, 11. back
-
Gribben, 441. back
-
Albert Bigelow Paine, Mark Twain, A Biography, Volume II (New
York: Harper & Brothers, 1912), 1074. back
-
Gribben, 440-441. back
-
First published in Harper's Weekly, July 5, 1902. back
-
Gribben, 441-442. back
-
According to Phyllis Bixler's essay "Frances Hodgson Burnett"
in American Writers for Children Before 1900, Volume 42 in
Dictionary of Literary Biography (Detroit: Gale Research, 1985),
Burnett met MacDonald when he visited New York in 1873. Burnett's
In the Closed Room (1904) invites comparison to MacDonald's At
the Back of the North Wind, and Burnett's The White People
(1917) contains what may be a fictional tribute to MacDonald. This
story is set in Scotland and features MacDonald's trademark, an ancient
library. "Much of the story depicts the narrator's growing friendship
with a writer she had long admired. Like MacDonald, the writer is
a world-renowned Scotchman who writes essays, poems, and marvellous
stories.... In the final scene the writer dies, and the narrator says
she has frequently seen him since, smiling at her. " (MacDonald
died twelve years before The White People was published), back
-
John Docherty's book about another case, George MacDonald's and Charles
Dodgson's allusions to each other in their writings, will be published
by Mellen in the summer of 1994. back
-
Mark Twain and Huck Finn. Berkeley: U of California P, 1960.
back
-
In Was Huck Finn Black? Mark Twain and African-American Voices
(New York: Oxford UP, 1993), Shelley Fisher Fishkin contends that
the germ of Huck Finn was a 1874 newspaper sketch in which Twain explored
the possibilities of using a young boy (in this case black, and younger
than Huck) as narrator. back
-
See especially "The Story of the Bad Little Boy Who Didn't Come
To Grief" (The Californian, December 23, 1865) and "The
Story of the Good Little Boy Who Did Not Prosper" (The Galaxy,
May, 1870.). back
-
Victor Fischer provides a valuable survey in "Huck Finn Reviewed:
The Reception of Huckleberry Finn in the United States, 1885-1897,"
American Literary Realism, 16 (Spring 1983), 1-57. back
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George MacDonald: An Anthology, ed. C.S. Lewis (New York:
Macmillan, 1947), 20. back
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George MacDonald: An Anthology, 17. back
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From a letter to Warfield Firor of Baltimore, Maryland. William Griffin,
C. S. Lewis: A Dramatic Life (San Francisco: Harper, 1986),
314. back
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George MacDonald: An Anthology, 126. This quotation is from
chapter 39 of What's Mine's Mine. back
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A contender is found in the third Benares chapter of Following
the Equator (1897), as from Pudd'head Wilson's New Calendar:
"True irreverence is disrespect for another man's god."
back
CONTRIBUTOR:
Kathryn Lindskoog of Orange, California (e-mail
lindskoog@compuserve.com) has taught as an adjunct at several colleges
and seminaries but is now completely housebound with advanced multiple
sclerosis. She is the author of eighteen books and dozens of articles
in a variety of journals and magazines. She also edits a newsletter called
The Lewis Legacy and has edited a series of children's classics
called Young Readers Library. In that series, her edition of George MacDonald's
Sir Gibbie won A Gold Medallion award from the Christian Booksellers
Association in 1993. Her own books since 1989 include:
Creative Writing, for People Who Can't Not Write (Zondervan Academic
Books, August 1989). College textbook meant also for individual use, recommended
in Booklist.
Fakes, Frauds & Other Malarkey (Zondervan, 1993; available
from Hope Publishing House). Overview of all kinds of deception, with
over 300 amazing stories.
Light in the Shadowlands: Protecting the Real C.S. Lewis (Questar,
1994; available from Hope Publishing House). A lively and detailed revelation
of startling truths and falsehoods about C.S. Lewis and his writings.
Finding the Landlord: A Guidebook to C. S. Lewis's Pilgrim's Regress
(Cornerstone Press Chicago, 1995). The only guide to Lewis's first Christian
book, his first book of prose, and his only book length allegory.
Light Showers (Cornerstone Press Chicago, 1996). Collected poems.
Dante's Divine Comedy: The Inferno, Journey to Joy (Mercer University
Press, 1997). An unusually clear and accurate English prose version of
this Christian classic with extensive original notes that draw on Dorothy
Sayers, C. S. Lewis, and many other commentators.
C. S. Lewis, Mere Christian (Fourth Edition, Cornerstone Press
Chicago, 1997). An updated version of the guide to C. S. Lewis and his
ideas first published in 1973.
Dante's Divine Comedy: Purgatory, Journey to Joy (Mercer University
Press, 1997). An unusually clear and accurate English prose version of
this Christian classic, with extensive original notes that draw on Dorothy
Sayers, C. S. Lewis, and many other commentators.
Journey to Narnia (Hope Publishing House, 1997). Includes the
original guide to Narnia commended by C. S. Lewis in 1957 (The Lion
of Judah in Never-Never Land), plus a detailed new guide to the seven
books for individual or group use.
This article originally appeared in The Mark Twain Journal, Vol. 30,
No. 2, Fall 1992 and is reproduced with permission.
© 1992-2001 Kathryn Lindskoog.
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