Mark Twain in Love
A chance encounter on a New Orleans dock in 1858 haunted the writer for the rest of his life
- By Ron Powers
- Illustration by Jody Hewgill
- Smithsonian magazine, May 2010, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 4)
Never mind her tender years and provincial origins; something about Laura Wright seared itself into Sam’s soul. “I could see her with perfect distinctness in the unfaded bloom of her youth,” Mark Twain went on in his Autobiography, “with her plaited tails dangling from her young head and her white summer frock puffing about in the wind of that ancient Mississippi time.”
Sam and Laura were obliged to part when the Pennsylvania backed out of the docks for its upriver voyage. Laura had given him a gold ring, Mark Twain would many years later confide to his secretary, Isabel Lyon. Only three weeks later, a catastrophe occurred, as traumatic to Sam as meeting Laura had been rhapsodic. This tragedy may have forged his need to take recourse from grief in fantasies of a healing angel. On the morning of Sunday, June 13, the Pennsylvania exploded, with tremendous loss of life. Sam was not aboard, but his younger brother, Henry, was—serving as a “mud clerk,” or boy who would go ashore, often at a mud bank, to receive or hand off freight. Sam had secured the position for his brother as a gift, hoping to offer the shy boy an exposure to Sam’s own world of riverboat adventure. It took the badly burned Henry a week to die in a makeshift Memphis hospital. Sam reached his brother and witnessed the end. The guilt-ridden letter in which he announced the news to the Clemens family amounts to a scream of primal anguish. “Long before this reaches you,” it began, “my poor Henry—my darling, my pride, my glory, my all, will have finished his blameless career, and the light of my life will have gone out in utter darkness. O, God! this is hard to bear.”
As Sam mourned his brother, Laura Wright remained fixed in Sam’s memory. He wrote letters to her, which she answered; in 1860 or so, he traveled to the family home in Warsaw to court her. Laura’s mother, no doubt suspicious of the 24-year-old riverman’s intentions toward her 16-year-old darling, may have pried into some of those letters—although years later, an aging Laura denied this to Mark Twain’s first biographer, Albert Bigelow Paine. At any rate, Mrs. Wright treated Sam with hostility; he soon stormed off in a fit of his famous temper. “The young lady has been beaten by the old one,” he wrote to his older brother Orion, “through the romantic agency of intercepted letters, and the girl still thinks I was in fault—and always will, I reckon.”
After he departed Warsaw, Clemens went so far as to consult a fortuneteller in New Orleans, one Madame Caprell, from whom he sought the lowdown on his prospects for rekindling the romance. (Clemens may have had his doubts about the existence of God, but he was a pushover for the paranormal.) Mme. Caprell “saw” Laura as “not remarkably pretty, but very intelligent...5 feet 3 inches—is slender—dark-brown hair and eyes,” a description that Clemens did not refute. “Drat the woman, she did tell the truth,” he complained to his brother Orion in an 1861 letter, after telling him that the medium had placed all blame on the mother. “But she said I would speak to Miss Laura first—and I’ll stake my last shirt on it, she missed it there.”
Thus it was Sam’s stubbornness that foreclosed any further encounter with Laura Wright. Yet they did meet, time and again, over the years, in Clemens’ dreams. And dreams, Samuel Clemens came to believe, were as real as anything in the waking world.
It is impossible to know when the Laura visitations commenced, but mention of them is strewn across the decades of Mark Twain’s writing. He thought of “Miss Laura” when he went to bed at night, he had admitted to Orion in that 1861 letter. At some point the thoughts morphed into nocturnal visions. “Saw L. Mark Write in a dream...said good bye and shook hands,” he wrote in his notebook in February 1865 from California, carefully altering her true name, as he always did. Mark Twain had already somehow discovered that the “instantly elected sweetheart” had elected someone else. “What has become of that girl of mine that got married?” he wrote in a letter to his mother, Jane Clemens, in September of 1864. “I mean Laura Wright.”
This was the period of Sam Clemens’ wild self-exile in the West, to which he had repaired with Orion to escape the Civil War. His robust drinking, alternating moods of risk-taking, pugnacity and black despair (he wrote later of placing a pistol barrel to his head but not squeezing the trigger), his crude practical jokes and his pose of flamboyance (“I am the most conceited ass in the Territory”) pointed to demons as disturbing as the prospect of death on the battlefield. Sorrow and guilt over Henry’s fate ravaged him—Mark Twain revisited the tragedy many times in his writing. As his letter to Jane Clemens shows, Laura weighed on his mind as well.
The corporal Laura weighed, that is. In her dream version, she had the opposite effect. The Platonic Sweetheart was weightless, serene: angelic, in fact—a healing angel to the troubled sleeper. “I put my arm around her waist and drew her close to me, for I loved her...my behavior seemed quite natural and right,” Mark Twain wrote in “My Platonic Sweetheart” of an early dream encounter. “She showed no surprise, no distress, no displeasure, but put an arm around my waist, and turned up her face to mine with a happy welcome in it, and when I bent down to kiss her she received the kiss as if she was expecting it.” Mark Twain continued: “The affection which I felt for her and which she manifestly felt for me was a quite simple fact; but....It was not the affection of brother and sister—it was closer than that...and it was not the love of sweethearts, for there was no fire in it. It was somewhere between the two, and was finer than either, and more exquisite, more profoundly contenting.”
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Comments (17)
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Just was looking this up trying to find a picture of Laura and looky here; the man who wrote the play "Sam and Laura" wrote this article for the Smithsonian! Thanks for writing the play giving me and giving me a fun time playing Sam!
Posted by Cyrus Crane facebook.com/CyrusCrane on October 31,2011 | 07:33 PM
To get a better feel of the times I suggest you read: "Beyond the Blue and the Gray."
It's available free online at Helium.com
Posted by Robert Burns on June 19,2011 | 09:08 PM
Somehow, I feel wonderful and disgusted at the same time. Mark Twain sounds like a very selfish man. I know his writings are top quality, but how does that relate to his personal life? Does his writings even reflect that reality? -Disgruntled English major
Posted by Catherine B on April 27,2011 | 06:43 AM
Laura M Wright was the sister of my great-grandfather, Marshall P. Wright. They were the children of Circuit Judge Foster Peletier Wright. I have heard this story all my life and am proud to see it in print. Thank you!
Posted by Dennis Charles Sutherland on December 27,2010 | 03:49 PM
CORRECTION: The Framingham Mass play is Sunday October 24 at 2pm
In addition Mr Powers will do a talk and Mark Twain-A Life book signing at Barnes and Noble in Framingham on Friday October 22 at 7pm
Posted by David Hornfischer on September 18,2010 | 03:35 PM
The exciting new play is being done on October 20th at 2pm in Massachusetts as a staged reading at the Amazing Things Arts Center in Framingham MA about 20 miles west of Boston.
Renowned storyteller Libby Franck has been cast to play Laura and the rest of the troupe is being assembled by the Amazing Theater company now (Mid August).
Web site http://www.amazingthings.org/frontpage2.asp?DC_ID=1549 begins to tell the story and more about the Amazing Things Arts Center.
The Center is working on ideas to turn this into a major event and welcomes comments and suggestions. 508 405 2787
Posted by Dave Hornfischer on August 19,2010 | 07:56 PM
My father worked as one of the last roving photographers of the Keystone View Company of Meadville PA.
During his time there he printed a photo of (Mark Twain facing left in front of a window) from their archive of negatives.
For many years it hung on our living room wall and then was given to my uncle after he had admired it.
Some years after my uncle passed away I asked my aunt if I might have it.
I kind of thought that picture may have been lost in the thousands of negatives that made up the Keystone View collection.
I was surprised to see it featured in your wonderful article on Mark Twain in the May 2010 issue.
Postscript: The photo is credited to Underwood & Underwood, Keystone View purchased their stock of negatives in the early 1900s.
Posted by Larry Lowe on June 24,2010 | 08:19 PM
How utterly divine and sadly wonderful..my heart feels wounded.
Thank you
Posted by RockyMissouri on May 25,2010 | 12:15 AM
I wonder why Elmira appealed to him?
He could have just as easily lived in Horseheads.
Posted by wsburrows on May 23,2010 | 06:45 PM
Can anybody resume the story please?
Posted by Paulo on May 17,2010 | 05:21 PM
The Samuel Clemens story here in the Bronx was that he lived for awhile at Wave Hill, today a cultural performance place and center for horticulture in Riverdale. I once mapped its trees to update its maps. The story was that Samuel Clemens kept a tree-house there for interviews with press, eventually beyond his means. Perhaps it was over litigation over "The Prince and the Pauper" later required reading in NYC. Wave Hill later had resident Arturo Toscanini, composer and conductor of the NBC Orchestra, and later the British Embassy compound. A young JFK lived in Riverdale until the market crashed and his dad moved away from investing in the "talkies" in NYC. Open to the public, it is a fine place to stand where he once sometimes stood on the ground, if not in a tree.
Posted by George Myers on May 16,2010 | 10:07 PM
In my travels I also made sure to visit Mark Twain places. We went to Elmira, NY to see his grave. I visited the Nook Farm cabin that he wrote in. In Hartford, CT we toured his lovely house. In Natchez, MS we went down to Natchez Under the Hill and I put my hand in the Mississippi. We went to Marietta, OH where his sister lived. Marietta is a lovely place. The riverboats stop there once or twice a year. In New Orleans, LA we took a river tour on the Natchez, a paddle boat which draws visitors by playing the calliope. We went to the back to watch the paddles turn and got sprayed with mist. It was lovely.
Posted by ibivi on May 13,2010 | 05:39 PM
LettersEd@si.edu
Re death of Henry Clemens:
Ron Powers wrote ( May, p80): “It took the badly burned Henry a week to die.”
Mark Twain wrote (Autobiography vol. 1, page 311) “[Doctor Peyton] told me that Henry was out of danger and would get well. Then he said, ‘At midnight these poor fellows lying here and there and all over this place will begin to mourn and mutter and lament and make outcries, and if this commotion should disturb Henry it will be bad for him; therefore ask the physicians on watch to give him an eighth of a grain of morphine, but this is not to be done unless Henry shall show signs that he is disturbed.’” “Oh, well, never mind the rest of it. The physicians on watch were young fellows hardly out of the medical college, and they made a mistake – they had no way of measuring the eighth of a grain of morphine, so they guessed at it and gave him a vast quantity heaped on the edge of a knife blade, and the fatal effects were soon apparent. I think he died about dawn, I don’t remember as to that.”
Posted by Tom Hahs on May 9,2010 | 03:38 PM
Great article. I have Mr. Powers' biography of Mark Twain and after a lifetime of enjoying Twain's work the additional insights in the biography gave me fresh inspiration to go back and explore anew works like Pudd'nhead Wilson, Life on the Mississippi and the wonderful Autobiography (edited by Charles Neider). Thank you Mr. Powers for one more look into the life and soul of the man whose "Rules Governing the Literary Arts" hangs above my desk, guiding me to never, ever write like James Fenimore Cooper.
Posted by Alan Hutcheson on May 7,2010 | 04:25 PM
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