May 1, 1909 Saturday

May 1 Saturday — The New York Times reported on Sam’s latest work, Is Shakespeare Dead?

IS SHAKESPEARE DEAD?

Mark Twain has deserted the camp of the Shakespearites, and if he has not exactly committed himself to the cause of the Baconians, he comes very close to it. “Is Shakespeare Dead?” (Harpers, $1.25,) is a semi-serious consideration of the old controversy, and Ignatius Donnelly would rejoice at the arguments with which Mr. Clemens carries his points. After proving to his own satisfaction that one William Shakespeare of Stratford-on-Avon never wrote Shakespeare’s Works, for the very good reason that he could not have written them, Mark Twain concludes that perhaps Bacon did, or if Bacon did not, he could have written them if he had chosen to. All of which adds to the humor of the controversy and makes very interesting reading.

A chapter is devoted to the early experiences of Mr. Clemens with Shakespeare’s Works and the Captain of a Mississippi River steamboat. The Captain admired the works and read copious extracts, interspersed with strange and fearful commands to the youthful pilot. That was the beginning of Mark Twain’s desertion; he explains that he had to argue with the Captain, who believed implicitly in Shakespeare. Taking up the negative side, he assumed this mental attitude: “I only believed Bacon wrote Shakespeare, whereas I knew Shakespeare didn’t.” And he holds it still.

The book is a fragment of Mr. Clemens’s long-promised autobiography, and is full of the humor which has never failed him. Deep margins and an extract of twenty-one pages from another book—rather a large allowance for this small volume—give an effect of padding, but even in such meagre quantity the quality of Mark Twain’s writing is always assured of a wide welcome.

Logan G. MacPherson wrote from New Brighton, NY: “Your reception of a small book of mine two years ago was so very kind that I am asking the publishers to send to you a copy of another volume, which is just coming from the press. There was once, as you will remember, a yellow dog who was so kindly treated that he returned bringing another yellow dog with him. Really, I do not expect you to read this last production of mine, but ask only that you do me the honor to accept it as a slight token of my regard” [MTP]. Note: “Book Rec’d”; not in Gribben.

Day By Day Acknowledgment

Mark Twain Day By Day was originally a print reference, meticulously created by David Fears, who has generously made this work available, via the Center for Mark Twain Studies, as a digital edition.   

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