Mark Twain's "My Platonic Sweetheart"
In an essay published posthumously in 1912, Mark Twain recounts his dreams of a long-lost love
- By Mark Twain
- Smithsonian.com, April 19, 2010, Subscribe
(Page 4 of 5)
“I think so. Not here much, but in the stars a good deal.”
“Is it pretty there?”
She used a couple of dream-words for “You will go with me some time and you will see.” Non-committal, as one perceives now, but I did not notice it then.
A man-of-war-bird lit on her shoulder; I put out my hand and caught it. Its feathers began to fall out, and it turned into a kitten; then the kitten’s body began to contract itself to a ball and put out hairy, long legs, and soon it was a tarantula; I was going to keep it, but it turned into a star-fish, and I threw it away. Agnes said it was not worth while to try to keep things; there was no stability about them. I suggested rocks; but she said a rock was like the rest; it wouldn’t stay. She picked up a stone, and it turned into a bat and flew away. These curious matters interested me, but that was all; they did not stir my wonder.
While we were sitting there in the Iao gorge talking, a Kanaka came along who was wrinkled and bent and white-headed, and he stopped and talked to us in the native tongue, and we understood him without trouble and answered him in his own speech. He said he was a hundred and thirty years old, and he remembered Captain Cook well, and was present when he was murdered: saw it with his own eyes, and also helped. Then he showed us his gun, which was of strange make, and he said it was his own invention and was to shoot arrows with, though one loaded it with powder and it had a percussion lock. He said it would carry a hundred miles. It seemed a reasonable statement; I had no fault to find with it, and it did not in any way surprise me. He loaded it and fired an arrow aloft, and it darted into the sky and vanished. Then he went his way, saying that the arrow would fall near us in half an hour, and would go many yards into the earth, not minding the rocks.
I took the time, and we waited, reclining upon the mossy slant at the base, of a tree, and gazing into the sky. By and by there was a hissing sound, followed by a dull impact, and Agnes uttered a groan. She said, in a series of fainting gasps:
“Take me to your arms—it passed through me—hold me to your heart—I am afraid to die—closer—closer. It is growing dark—I cannot see you. Don’t leave me—where are you? You are not gone? You will not leave me? I would not leave you.”
Then her spirit passed; she was clay in my arms.
The scene changed in an instant, and I was awake and crossing Bond Street in New York with a friend, and it was snowing hard. We had been talking, and there had been no observable gaps in the conversation. I doubt if I had made any more than two steps while I was asleep. I am satisfied that even the most elaborate and incident-crowded dream is seldom more than a few seconds in length. It would not cost me very much of a strain to believe in Mohammed’s seventy-year dream, which began when he knocked his glass over, and ended in time for him to catch it before the water was spilled.
Within a quarter of an hour I was in my quarters, undressed, ready for bed, and was jotting down my dream in my note-book. A striking thing happened now. I finished my notes, and was just going to turn out the gas when I was caught with a most strenuous gape, for it was very late and I was very drowsy. I fell asleep and dreamed again. What now follows occurred while I was asleep; and when I woke again the gape had completed itself, but not long before, I think, for I was still on my feet. I was in Athens—a city which I had not then seen, but I recognized the Parthenon from the pictures, although it had a fresh look and was in perfect repair. I passed by it and climbed a grassy hill toward a palatial sort of mansion which was built of red terra-cotta and had a spacious portico, whose roof was supported by a rank of fluted columns with Corinthian capitals. It was noonday, but I met no one. I passed into the house and entered the first room. It was very large and light, its walls were of polished and richly tinted and veined onyx, and its floor was a pictured pattern in soft colors laid in tiles. I noted the details of the furniture and the ornaments—a thing which I should not have been likely to do when awake—and they took sharp hold and remained in my memory; they are not really dim yet, and this was more than thirty years ago.
There was a person present—Agnes. I was not surprised to see her, but only glad. She was in the simple Greek costume, and her hair and eyes were different as to color from those she had had when she died in the Hawaiian Islands half an hour before, but to me she was exactly her own beautiful little self as I had always known her, and she was still fifteen, and I was seventeen once more. She was sitting on an ivory settee, crocheting something or other, and had her crewels in a shallow willow work-basket in her lap. I sat down by her and we began to chat in the usual way. I remembered her death, but the pain and the grief and the bitterness which had been so sharp and so desolating to me at the moment that it happened had wholly passed from me now, and had left not a scar. I was grateful to have her back, but there was no realizable sense that she had ever been gone, and so it did not occur to me to speak about it, and she made no reference to it herself. It may be that she had often died before, and knew that there was nothing lasting about it, and consequently nothing important enough in it to make conversation out of.
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Comments (7)
I, Mark Twain, was taking a quiet walk,when some looney man with a black box was following me, or preceding me, and hiding under a black hood. A GOOD WALK SPOILED!!!!!
Posted by Frank T Kay on October 1,2012 | 09:15 PM
I so enjoy Twain's word choices for descriptions. I write down my own dreams, and am struck, reading this, by the similarity of explaining dreams, the vagueness along with the absolute certainty of things. The general feeling of a dream is so potent.
I, too, have long admired Twain's humor, sarcasm, his right-on reflection of dogma and opinionated persons. He was such a thinking man and who understood human nature.
While I, so far, have missed out on such a wonderful carry-over dream (no pun intended) that spans years as Twain has shared here, I am aware of a relationship I have experienced that is not love but a spirit-sharing that is even deeper, calmer, stronger and unwavering than romantic love. There's nothing quite like it.
Posted by Linda Wolters Bergeron on April 17,2011 | 12:16 PM
It is really, and Mr. Twain was, modern.
Posted by Alex H. on November 20,2010 | 05:09 AM
Anyone with even a rudimentary background in the study of dreams will recognize the authenticity of Twain's narrative. The opportunity to partake of a nourishing life together (the table set with good food) was halted by the girl's stepping into the other room (her life with and obedience to her parents). As Twain discovered to his dismay, their hope of union was dead and buried when he stepped into the cemetery of her childhood home. The only way Twain's mind could cope with such a disappointment was to "carry her" with him always, and to go back to the beginning of their relationship and "start over," reliving their sweet time together in his dreams. Carl Jung would have loved this story. Thank you for bringing it to light.
Posted by Margaret Reynolds on May 5,2010 | 08:32 AM
I was deeply touched by this writing "My Platonic Sweetheart"
I am a devoted reader and long time admirer of Mark Twain and possess number of his books. I am indebted to Smithsonian for making it possible for me to read it in it's entirety. I, too, have experienced some delightful dreams from the past, but it has never occurred to me to put them in writing to share with others!
Posted by elayne Banks on May 2,2010 | 04:10 PM
most inspiring, wish i could write as well some of own musings.
Posted by f. a.leclaire on April 30,2010 | 04:08 PM
This is a wonderful and colorful piece of writing. After reading it, I couldn't help but compare some of it to a number of contemporary song lyrics from the 1960's and 1970's, when many of the composers were not only writing, but injesting many interesting mind-altering drugs. I would never accuse such a learned and respected author such as Mark Twain of that sort of behavior, but for the era or time in which this was written, it had to raise some eyebrows in possibly questioning Mr. Twain's sanity, or grip on the real world, which by interpreting this piece, he seems to prefer far less than his "Dreamland" landscape. Who could blame him? I have experienced dreams that do not in any way resemble reality, and they were very enjoyable. It is interesting how a small chance encounter with Ms. Wright became what can pass for an obsession in what remained of Mr. Twain's life and writings. While not in the grip of a so passionate and deep felt emotion myself, I have had brief interactions with people that have left remarkable and indelible impressions that I remember to this day. This writing was very enjoyable. Thank you Smithsonian for making it available.
Neil Kleinman
Anaheim, CA
Posted by Neil Kleinman on April 23,2010 | 02:01 PM