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  • May 1, 1875
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The Masonic Magazine, May 1, 1875: Page 31

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    Article MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Page 1 of 1
    Article MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Page 1 of 1
    Article LOSSES. Page 1 of 1
Page 31

Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Mark Twain's Encounter With An Interviewer.

MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER .

Q . —How old are you ? A . —Nineteen , in June . Q . —Indeed , I would have taken you to be thirty-five or six . Where were you born ? A . —In Missouri . Q . —When did you begin to write ?

A . —In 183 G . Q . —AVhy , how can that be , if you are only nineteen now ? A . —I don't know . It does seem cm-ions , ' somehow . Q . —It does , indeed . Who do you

consider the most remarkable man you ever met ? A . —Aaron Burr . Q . —But you could not have met Aaron Burr , if you are only 19 years—A . —Nowif you know more about me

, than I do , what do you ask me for 1 Q . —It was ouly a suggestion , nothing more . How did you happen to meet Burr ? A . —WelL-I happened to be at his funeral one day , and he asked me to make less noise ,

and—Q . —But if you were at his funeral , he must have been dead ; and if he were dead , how could he care whether you made a noise or not ? A . —I don't know . He was always a particular kind of man that way . Q . —Still I don't understand it at all .

You say he spoke to you , and that he was dead . A . —I didn ' t say he was dead . Q . —But wasn ' t he dead ? A . —Well , some said he was , some said he wasn't .

Q . —What do you think ? A . —Oh , it was none of my business ? It wasn't any of my funeral . Q . —Did you— . However , we can never get this matter straight . Let me ask about something else . What was the date of

your birth ? A . —Monday , October 31 , 1693 . Q . —What ! Impossible ! That would make you 180 years old . How do you account for that ? A . — T don ' t account for it at all .

Q . —But you said at first you were only 19 , and now you make yourself out to be 1 SO . It is an awful discrepancy . A . —Why , have you noticed that ?

Mark Twain's Encounter With An Interviewer.

( Shaking hands . ) Many a time it has seemed to me like a discrepancy , but somehow I couldn ' t make up my mind . How quick you notice a thing ! This was but the beginning . Before that interview was over there must have been one , at least , of the race of inquirers who had his curiosity satisfied . —From the Lotus Leaves .

Losses.

LOSSES .

Upon the white sea sand There sat a pilgrim band , Telling the losses that their lives had known ; AVhile evening waned away From breezy cliff and bay 7 , And the strong tide went out with weary moan .

One spake with quivering lip Of a fair freig hted ship With all his household to the deep gone clown ; But one had a wilder woe , For a fair face long ago , Lost in the darker depths of a great town .

There were who mourned their youth AVith a most loving ruth , For its brave hopes and memories ever green ; And one upon the west Turned an eye that would not rest , For far-off hills whereon its joy had been .

Some talked of vanished gold—Some of proud honours told—Some spake of friends that were their trust no more , And one of a green grave Beside a foreign wave , That made him sit so lonely on the shore .

But when their tale was done , There spake among them one , A stranger , seeming from all sorrows free ; " Sad losses have ye met , But mine is heavier yet , For a believing heart hath gone from me . " " Alas ! " these pilgrims

said" For the living and the dead , For fortune ' s cruelty , for love ' s sure cross , For wrecks of laud and sea ; But howe'er it came to thee—Thine , stranger , is life ' s last and heaviest loss . "

“The Masonic Magazine: 1875-05-01, Page 31” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01051875/page/31/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
FREEMASONRY CONSIDERED IN ITS RELATION TO SOCIETY. Article 2
MURIEL HALSIE. Article 7
DAFFODILS. Article 12
LES MACONS INDIFFERENTS.* Article 12
OLD LONDON TAVERNS IDENTIFIED WITH MASONRY. Article 14
PADDY'S EXPERIENCE OF ' MASONRY. Article 18
POLLY RIVERS'S TRIP TE STOWSLAY CATTLE SHOW, AN' WHAT COM ON'T. * Article 19
AN ORIGINAL DISSERTATION ON PUBLIC SPEAKING. Article 22
LABOUR. Article 28
"LITTLE DAN." Article 28
Review. Article 29
MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER. Article 31
LOSSES. Article 31
A SYNOPSIS OF MASONIC PERSECUTION IN THE XVIII. CENTURY. Article 32
BE HAPPY AS YOU CAN. Article 32
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Mark Twain's Encounter With An Interviewer.

MARK TWAIN'S ENCOUNTER WITH AN INTERVIEWER .

Q . —How old are you ? A . —Nineteen , in June . Q . —Indeed , I would have taken you to be thirty-five or six . Where were you born ? A . —In Missouri . Q . —When did you begin to write ?

A . —In 183 G . Q . —AVhy , how can that be , if you are only nineteen now ? A . —I don't know . It does seem cm-ions , ' somehow . Q . —It does , indeed . Who do you

consider the most remarkable man you ever met ? A . —Aaron Burr . Q . —But you could not have met Aaron Burr , if you are only 19 years—A . —Nowif you know more about me

, than I do , what do you ask me for 1 Q . —It was ouly a suggestion , nothing more . How did you happen to meet Burr ? A . —WelL-I happened to be at his funeral one day , and he asked me to make less noise ,

and—Q . —But if you were at his funeral , he must have been dead ; and if he were dead , how could he care whether you made a noise or not ? A . —I don't know . He was always a particular kind of man that way . Q . —Still I don't understand it at all .

You say he spoke to you , and that he was dead . A . —I didn ' t say he was dead . Q . —But wasn ' t he dead ? A . —Well , some said he was , some said he wasn't .

Q . —What do you think ? A . —Oh , it was none of my business ? It wasn't any of my funeral . Q . —Did you— . However , we can never get this matter straight . Let me ask about something else . What was the date of

your birth ? A . —Monday , October 31 , 1693 . Q . —What ! Impossible ! That would make you 180 years old . How do you account for that ? A . — T don ' t account for it at all .

Q . —But you said at first you were only 19 , and now you make yourself out to be 1 SO . It is an awful discrepancy . A . —Why , have you noticed that ?

Mark Twain's Encounter With An Interviewer.

( Shaking hands . ) Many a time it has seemed to me like a discrepancy , but somehow I couldn ' t make up my mind . How quick you notice a thing ! This was but the beginning . Before that interview was over there must have been one , at least , of the race of inquirers who had his curiosity satisfied . —From the Lotus Leaves .

Losses.

LOSSES .

Upon the white sea sand There sat a pilgrim band , Telling the losses that their lives had known ; AVhile evening waned away From breezy cliff and bay 7 , And the strong tide went out with weary moan .

One spake with quivering lip Of a fair freig hted ship With all his household to the deep gone clown ; But one had a wilder woe , For a fair face long ago , Lost in the darker depths of a great town .

There were who mourned their youth AVith a most loving ruth , For its brave hopes and memories ever green ; And one upon the west Turned an eye that would not rest , For far-off hills whereon its joy had been .

Some talked of vanished gold—Some of proud honours told—Some spake of friends that were their trust no more , And one of a green grave Beside a foreign wave , That made him sit so lonely on the shore .

But when their tale was done , There spake among them one , A stranger , seeming from all sorrows free ; " Sad losses have ye met , But mine is heavier yet , For a believing heart hath gone from me . " " Alas ! " these pilgrims

said" For the living and the dead , For fortune ' s cruelty , for love ' s sure cross , For wrecks of laud and sea ; But howe'er it came to thee—Thine , stranger , is life ' s last and heaviest loss . "

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