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When Mark Twain died in 1910, he was an international
celebrity and an American institution. He was cheered at home and abroad
for his droll wit, frontier bluffness, and corn-pone wisdom. He was America's
knight errant against sham, cant, and pomposity in places high and low.
His signature white suit, shock of gray hair, walrus moustache, and omnipresent
cigar were etched in the national consciousness.
Wherever he went, he drew exuberant crowds, journalists
wheedled piquant quips, hosts vied for after-dinner remarks. He was toasted
by royalty, wooed by moguls, embraced by the intelligentsia. Andrew Carnegie
donated a thousand dollars to spread "a new Gospel of Saint Mark"
(an anti-imperialist tract). Charles Darwin kept a Twain volume on his
nightstand. William Dean Howells, a lifelong friend and esteemed arbiter
of belles lettres, dubbed him "the Lincoln of our literature."
Only a handful of intimates knew this revered creator
of Tom Sawyer, Becky Thatcher, and Huck Finn had died a bilious adversary
of the Almighty. Even today, Beelzebub isn't a part of his popular image.
In his hometown of Hannibal, Missouri, billboards, advertisements, posters,
T-shirts, mugs, and other memorabilia betray no hint of Twain's vendetta
against god. In his twilight years, Twain's volcanic pen belched ceaseless
vitriol against his Maker. Spewed into letters, notebooks, essays, dialogues,
autobiographical dictations, and sundry fragments, none of this uneven
gallimaufry was published in his lifetime. This was gospel for the future.
Marveling at the audacity of his naughtiness, he
initially reckoned the world would need five hundred
years to catch up. Later, in a flush of philanthropy, he revised the estimate
to 2006 C.E.
He had no wish to emulate the fate of Thomas Paine,
whose The Age of Reason he had read in his cub pilot days. Because Paine
openly denigrated the Bible and religion, he was skewered in pulpits across
the land. Overnight, he went from national hero to national varmint. Since
Twain liked to be liked, he opted for the better part of valor. At seventy-two,
he wrote: "I expose to the world only my trimmed and perfumed and
carefully barbered public opinions and conceal carefully, cautiously,
wisely, my private ones."
His private opinions had never been arrestingly pious.
His father, who died when Mark was twelve, was an easygoing Hannibal lawyer
and storekeeper, whom the son would later suspect of having had an agnostic
bone or two. His Presbyterian mother showed flashes of heterodoxy. In
his autobiography, Twain recalls her sympathy for Satan because he never
got to tell his side of the story. Like Tom and Huck, his alter egos,
young Twain preferred smoking, cussing, spelunking, and lollygagging to
sermons, Sunday school, and other heavy-duty moral cleansers. When he
did attend to religion, his empirical proclivities threatened orthodoxy.
After his Bible teacher had explicated the verse "Ask and ye shall
receive," Twain spent three days praying for gingerbread. When none
materialized, he filched a convenient piece. He concluded that prayer
is an inferior mode of acquisition.
As an adult, he adopted the Christianity of enlightened
liberalism, congenial with his deism. He discarded heaven and hell, the
immortality of the soul, and the divinity of Jesus Christ. From Paine,
he had imbibed the idea that religions derive their authority from spurious
claims by their founders that they had received revelations from god,
transmitted to posterity as incontrovertible holy writ. Bibles diminished
the grandeur of the "real" god by straitening "him" to the narrow
confines of parochial imaginations. The true revelation was Nature, best
apprehended through science.
As late as the 1880s, Twain could still view with
equanimity an aloof, impersonal Creator: "I do not believe in special
providences. I believe that the universe is governed by strict and immutable
laws. If one man's family is swept away by a pestilence and another man's
spared, it is only the law working: God is not interfering in that small
matter, either against the one man or in favor of the other." Though
severe, this Olympian impartiality was without caprice.
Twain was quick to embrace Darwinism. Descent of Man
became one of his favorite books. Like Darwin, Twain was skeptical of
the theological bromide that evolution is god's way of producing humans.
At various stages, the oyster, the pterodactyl, and the kangaroo, Twain
impishly surmised, had made similar assumptions about themselves. For
a time, he believed evolution operated on a teleological principle-design,
not chance. Later, he decided evolution is "a blind giant who rolls
a snowball down a hill." The direction of movement is "unpremeditated,
unforeseen, blind."
Twain touted science, reason, and logic as antidotes
to ignorance, superstition, and humbuggery of every ilk. In A Connecticut
Yankee in King Arthur's Court, the mumbo jumbo of the enchanter Merlin
is no match for the "hard unsentimental common sense" of Hank
Morgan, an enlightened technocrat pitted against medieval obscurantism.
From Andrew White's A History of the Warfare of Science with Theology
in Christendom, Twain gleaned many facts that found their way into his
own writing. Adducing evidence from geology and paleontology, White demolished
the Genesis account(s) of creation. The book reinforced Twain's conviction
that god doesn't meddle in human affairs. When Dr. Jacques Loeb proposed
that life could be created from a mixture of chemical agencies, Twain
publicly defended him against widespread skepticism in the scientific
community. Historically, Twain noted, the cognoscenti had often scoffed
at major breakthroughs. Privately, Twain hailed Robert Ingersoll, an outspoken
agnostic, as "an angelic orator and evangel of a new gospel-the gospel
of free thought."
Twain's boon companion and biographer, Albert Bigelow
Paine, described the author's delight in cosmology: "He was always
thrown into a kind of ecstasy by the unthinkable distances of space-the
supreme drama of the universe. The fact that Alpha Centauri was 25 trillions
of miles away-250 thousand times the distance of our remote sun, and that
our solar system was traveling, as a whole, toward the bright star Vega,
in the constellation of Lyra, at the rate of 42 miles a second, yet would
be thousands upon thousands of years reaching its destination, fairly
enraptured him." In Letters from the Earth, Satan gives his angelic
cohorts a tutorial on astronomy so they may be properly aghast at Jehovah's
ignorance of celestial mechanics.
Compared with the majestic pageantry of astronomical
phenomena, church creeds seemed insular, petty, and egoistic. In a letter
to Howells, Twain recounted the constricting effect of his sister-in-law's
religiosity on his brother Orion: "She is saturated to the marrow
with the most malignant form of Presbyterianism-that sort which considers
the saving of one's own paltry soul the first & supreme end &
object of life, so you see she has harried him into the church several
times, & then made religion so intolerable to him with her prayings
& Bible readings & her other & eternal pious clack-clack that
it has had the effect of harrying him out of it again."
Despite his strictures on church and Bible, Twain
long retained respect for Jesus. He told Orion: "Neither Howells
nor I believe in hell or the divinity of the Savior, but no matter, the
Savior is none the less a sacred Personage, and a man should have no desire
or disposition to refer to him lightly, profanely, or otherwise than with
the profoundest reverence." Twain always respected what he deemed
sincere expressions of moral idealism.
When Twain married the wealthy Olivia Langdon, of
Elmira, New York, in 1870, he wasn't averse to her conventional piety.
At this time, according to Howells, Twain was still "far from the
entire negation he came to at last." Livy's ardor for church, Bible
reading, and family prayers certified her virtue. Like many men of his
era, Twain believed the female aptitude for spirituality exceeded the
male's. Deferentially, he acquiesced for a while in his wife's faith.
He offered morning prayers and daily readings from Scripture. He desisted
from snide remarks about the Book. He regularly attended a church pastored
by his friend Joseph Twichell--a "progressive Christian," Twain
enthused. Temporarily, at least, he slipped comfortably into the vestments
of Christian respectability. Even after the punctilious phase of his piety
had waned, he observed an extended truce with orthodoxy.
Prior to the 1890s, Twain's criticism of religion
was more bantering than acrimonious. He poked fun at religious tracts,
pious showboats, and bombastic moralizing. "Colloquy Between a Slum
Child and a Moral Mentor" illustrates the mode. The supercilious
mentor grows increasingly dithery when the child persists in swearing
and misconstruing the nature of hell.
"I'd like to ben in that bad place them times
when I was cold, by hokey!"
"Don't swear, James. It is wicked."
"What's wicked?"
"Why, to be wicked is to do what one ought not
to do-to violate the moral ordinances provided for the regulation of our
conduct in this vale of sorrows, and for the elevation and refinement
of our social and intellectual natures."
"Gee-whilikins!"
So, what turned this amiable wag and devotee of science
into a closet Captain Ahab, storming at the inscrutable malice of the
universe and presuming God to scan?
Here, one must recur to conjecture. Whatever Twain's
overt pretensions, he evidently never relinquished an anthropomorphic
cast of thought. According to philosopher Paul Edwards ("Atheism,"
Encyclopedia of Philosophy), few Westerners do. When most adults "think
about God unself-consciously, they vaguely think of him as possessing
some kind of rather large body. The moment they assert or deny or question
such statements as 'God created the universe' or 'God will be a just judge
when we come before him,' they introduce a body into the background, if
not into the foreground, of their mental pictures." In the fundamentalist
Missouri of his youth, Twain absorbed by cultural osmosis,
if not ecclesiastical injection, the idea that god
is a merciful and just Father. No matter how much he derided the idea-and
he did so ad infinitum--some part of him continued to believe this is
the way god should be. "Twain's disbelief and his pessimism,"
noted Bigelow Paine, "were of his mind, never of his heart."
Forty years of halcyon fortune shored up the subterranean optimism.
Then, in the 1890s, his fortune changed. He was buffeted
by a series of blows from which he never recovered. Speculative investments
brought him to bankruptcy, his oldest daughter, Susy, died of meningitis,
his youngest, Jean, was diagnosed an epileptic, Livy began a slide into
lasting invalidism (she died in 1904), and Twain's own health was in eclipse.
"Having long derided the notion of special providence," said
John Tuckey, a Twain scholar, "he was now forced to consider himself
the personal victim of a scheme of providential retribution."
When the crushing afflictions were visited on him,
he reacted like an irascible Job. He struck back at the abusive Father
with his best weapon, words-feverishly, obsessively, endlessly, but never
publicly, discharged. Firing these paper bullets of the brain momentarily
eased his leaden grief.
For a time, his rancor was confined to the Old Testament
god, whom he had intellectually, but never emotionally, sloughed off.
Twain "could never quite free himself from reading the Bible with
fundamentalist passion," said Twainian Stanley Brodwin, "even
as he ridiculed it in the name of reason." Jehovah, Twain calculated,
was statistically the biggest mass murderer in history. Offended, he reflexively
slew everything in sight: "All the men, all the beasts, all the boys,
all the babies, all the women and all the girls, except those that have
not been deflowered. What this insane Father requires is blood and misery;
he is indifferent as to who furnishes it." Nothing drove Jehovah's
dudgeon higher than minor lapses in hygiene. Anyone "who pisseth
against the wall" was sure to provoke a wholesale massacre. Despite
recurrent bludgeonings, the pious persisted in conferring on the brutal
autocrat epithets of love and respect: "With a fine sarcasm we ennoble
God with the title of Father-yet we know quite well that we should hang
his style of father wherever we might catch him." "There is
only one Criminal," catechized Twain, "and it is not man."
Before long, Twain's ire extended to Jesus Christ-a.k.a.
Jehovah "after he got religion." The all-new Jehovah was not
an improvement. He had added braggadocio and deceitfulness to his repertoire
of defects. "His Old Testament self is sweetness and gentleness and
respectability compared with his earthly self. In Heaven he claims not
a single merit and hasn't one-outside of those claimed by His mouth-whereas
in the earth He claims every merit in the entire catalogue of merits,
yet practices them only now and then, penuriously." With some historical
legerdemain, Twain credited (or discredited) Jesus with the invention
of hell. This was the most egregious rascality imaginable because it deprived
the wretched human race of its lone solace, eternal death. Thus, "the
meek and gentle Savior was a thousand times crueler than ever he was in
the Old Testament."
Eventually, Twain's odium encompassed the stolid Designer
of the deists. He, too, was destitute of morals. As the author of natural
law, he was culpable for the thousand shocks flesh is heir to. Twain was
stupefied by "the all-comprehensive malice which could patiently
descend to the contriving of elaborate tortures for the meanest and pitifulest
of creatures." The effectiveness of the traps, pitfalls, and gins,
Twain mused, in no way depended on obtrusive intervention: "He could
invent the tortures and set in motion the laws and machinery which should
continue them through all time without his supervision, then turn His
attention elsewhere and trouble himself no further about the matter."
The cosmic Watchmaker could install automatic detonating devices. This
absentee knavery was worse than Jehovah's in-your-face immediacy.
Twain's anger was aggravated by the supposition that
god, were he genially disposed, could eliminate all unhappiness, yet sadistically
declines to do so. Twain ridiculed the moral axiom that suffering builds
character. He thought it more apt to destroy than to edify. He inverted
Alexander Pope's cheery maxim that "whatever is, is right."
Since god is malevolent, Twain reasoned, whatever is, is wrong. Twain
obsessively documented the wrongness: "The day we are born he begins
to persecute us. Even our littleness, our innocence, our helplessness
cannot move him to any pity, any gentleness. Day after day, week after
week, month after month, the wanton torture goes on." Twain frequently
chanted litanies of ailments: "Pain, pain, pain-in the teeth, in
the stomach, in the bowels; disease follows disease: measles, croup, whooping
cough, mumps, colic, scarlet fever, ague, tonsillitis, diphtheria--there
is no end to the list." In sum, the paragon of animals "is but
a basket of festering offal provided for the support and entertainment
of swarming armies commissioned to rot him and destroy him, each army
equipped with a special detail of the work."
Twain oft rehearsed the ubiquitous malignity of the
fly. God gives it its orders: "Depart into the uttermost corners
of the earth, and diligently do your appointed work. Persecute the sick
child; settle upon its eyes, its face, its hands, and gnaw and pester
and sting; worry and fret and madden the worn and tired mother who watches
by the child, and who humbly prays for mercy and relief with the pathetic
faith of the deceived and unteachable." He goes on for another four-hundred
words.
In a fragmentary Twain fable, a monkey, hearing god
praised, mumbles: "My praise is that we have not two of him."
Twain couldn't imagine himself as heartless as he supposed god to be:
"I often put a dog on the fire and hold him down with the tongs,
and enjoy his yelps and moans and strugglings and supplications [in reality,
Twain was kind to animals], but with a man it would be different. I think
that in the long run, if his wife and babies, who had not harmed me, should
come crying and pleading, I couldn't stand it; I know I should forgive
him and let him go, even if he had violated a monastery:" In general,
people are "better, kinder, gentler, more to be respected, honored,
and esteemed" than the deity they ostensibly revere.
Viewing Satan as a heroic rebel against the real Archfiend,
Twain came to identify with the fallen cherub and often used him as a
mouthpiece. In "That Day in Eden," Satan commiserates with the
fallen Adam and Eve, baffled by god's punishment: "Poor ignorant
things, the command of refrain had meant nothing to them, they were but
children, and could not understand untried things and verbal abstractions
which stood for matters outside of their little world and their narrow
experience." In Letters from the Earth, Satan says, "The only
person responsible for the couple's offence escaped, and not only escaped
but became the executioner of the innocent."
Twain deprecated the Moral Sense (he always capitalized
it), a legacy of the mythic Fall, as the source of immorality. By allowing
humans to distinguish good and bad, its sole effect was to tempt and to
enable humans to do evil. Without it, we would live in a state of idyllic
innocence, unafflicted by conscience. With it, we are inferior to the
creatures, spared the accursed faculty: "Whenever I look at the other
animals and realize that whatever they do is blameless, I envy them the
dignity of their estate, its purity and its loftiness, and recognize that
the Moral Sense is a thoroughly disastrous thing."
Twain was like a lapsed Calvinist in a universe divested
of grace. Deprived of free will, proximately by temperament and circumstance,
but ultimately by god, humans were servile mechanisms doomed to enact,
generation after generation, to the last syllable of time, the deeds god
had contrived, foreseen, and appointed to each.
Mentally, Twain dwelt in an absurd universe where
human automatons trick themselves into believing they are autonomous.
All the while, the cosmic Puppet Master is pulling the strings: "Man
is a poor joke-the poorest that was ever conceived-an April-fool joke,
played by a malicious urchin Creator with nothing better to waste his
time upon." As programmed mechanism, "man is not to blame for
what he is." He "didn't make himself and he has no control over
himself." Only "unthinking fools" believe they have "an
obligation to God and owe Him thanks, reverence, and worship."
His own perfervid blasphemies were part of the appointed
absurdity. Occasionally, Twain sought refuge in solipsism. After his wife's
death, he wrote Joseph Twichell: "There is nothing. There is no God
and no universe, there is only empty space, and in it a lost and homeless
and wandering and companionless and indestructible Thought. And I am that
thought. And God, and the Universe, and Time, and Life, and Death, and
Joy and Sorrow and Pain only a grotesque and brutal dream, evolved from
the frantic imagination of that same Thought."
In his grief and despair, Twain arrived at an endgame
of utter nihilism.
An Atheistic observer might be tempted to descry in
Twain's fate an exemplum on the perils of anthropomorphic theism. I'll
resist. At the end, for Mark Twain, nothing short of death would do. Informed
that two old acquaintances had died, he groused: "They get all the good
stuff." He had been stretched out on the rack of the world too long. Fame,
Love, Riches, Pleasure-these, he wrote, were life's false gifts. Death
was the only true boon.
The End
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