Mark Twain’s Working Notes

2/Widow Douglas—then who is “Miss Watson?”
Ah, she’s W D’s sister.—old spinster1
219 218—the dead man is Huck’s father.
223 the ″ ″ again
244 more about Finn—his disappearance.
270 (overflowed banks?)
273—river “pretty high yet” but maybe not overflowed.2
Let Jim say putty for “pretty” & nuvver for “never”3
[begin page 465]

Baby & barrel—350—Poetry 420 1
Remarks at a funeral2
Negro sermon—& the shouts.3
Child with rusty unloaded gun always kills.4
[begin page 468]

George Jackson (Huck)1
Shepherdsons.
Bob & Tom Grangerford 28 & 30.abt 30.
old man (Saul) Col. ″ 60
Betsy (negro) ″
old lady (Rachel) ″
Buck ″ 12–14
Emmeline (dead) ″
Charlotte (proud & grand) ″ 25
Sophia (sweet & gentle) ″ 20
HarveyHarney Shepherdson
[begin page 470]

1
DE MULE.
Negro campmeeting & sermon—“See dat sinner how he run.”1
Swell Sunday costumes of negros.2
Poor white family & cabin at woodyard in Walnut Bend. Capt. Ed. Montgomery.3
The Burning Shame boys give bill of sale of Jim. at Napoleon, Ark.4
Legend of No. 10 Earthquake.5
o
Describe Lara.6
[begin page 471]

Rich III—15¢—B.S.1 50c
2
Being in a close place, Huck boldly offers to sell Jim—the latter turns pale but dasn’t speak—secretly is supported in the trial by firm belief that Huck is incapable of betraying him.
Huck gets decent suit of jeans.
They go down a bayou into Reelfoot Lake?
Up a bayou where are alligators.
Tow-linen shirts or naked.
[begin page 472]

Let some old liar of a keel-boatman on a raft tell about the earthquake of 1811. that raised No. 10—& mak made Reelfoot Lake &c.
& about Carpenter & Mike Fink—1
& Murrell’s gang (darkly hint he belonged to it)—No. 37 & Devil’s race-track2
shabby families.
[begin page 473]

Mrs. Holliday,1
The trading scow & family.
The scow with theatre aboard.2
Ruffian burnt up in Calaboose.3
A house-raising.
Village school—they haze Huck, the first day—describe Dawsons or Miss N.’s school.4
Fire in village—buckets & “bigBig Mo.” engine & swell village fire Co.5
Dog fight—del describe in detail.
[begin page 474]

The country cotillion.
The horse-trade.
Country quilting.
Candy-pulling.
Country funeral.
Describe aunt Patsy’s house.1
& Uncle Dan, aunt Hanner, & the 90-year blind negress.2
(Jim has fever & is in concealment while Huck makes these observations.)
(Keep ’em along.)
&c. The two printers deliver temp. lectures, teach dancing, elocution, feel heads, distribute tracts, preach, fiddle, doctor (quack)3
[begin page 475]

The circus—Huck’s astonishment when the drunkard invades the ring, scuffles with clown, & ring-master, then rides & strips.1
Can’t he escape from somewhere on the elephant?
An overflowed Arkansaw town. River booms up in the night.2
[begin page 476]

on verso

Dinner manners at the tavern with a crowd.
Drunken man rides in the circus.
How funny the clown was—quote his jokes. & how the people received them—Huck envies him.
Duel with rifles. 1 written in dark blue ink
A village graveyard written in pencil
written on the verso: 6642
[begin page 477]

When did the raft pass St Louis? Is there any mention of it? Yes 1
Negro Sermons.2
Burning Shame
Do the mesmeric foolishness, with Huck & the king for performers 3
Jim sawed in two.
po’ $22-nigger will set in Heaven wid de $1500 niggers.
[begin page 478]

on verso:

Back a little, change—raft only crippled by steamer.1
written on the verso: 81–44 2
[begin page 479]

A lynching scene. 1
A wake.
Put in.
scrub race
L. A. punished her child several days for disobediencerefusing to answer? & inattention (5 yr old) then while punishing discovered it was deaf & dumb & dumb! (from scarlet fever). T It showed no reproachfulness for the whippings—kissed the punisher & showed non-comprehension of what it was all about.
[begin page 488]

Jim has wife & 2 children.—90.3
|
|
$40 from men—95.
|
|
Sid & Mary, Tom’s sister | Betsy—100
|
Aunt Polly″aunt | Shepherdson—101
|
Widow Douglas. | Grangerford—109
|
Judge Thatcher |
Duke & K—1364
|
Becky″ (or Bessie?)1 | Another ref—147. |
Miss Watson, (goggles) sister to Wd Douglas.
″ ″ ’s nigger Jim.
Jo Harper, Ben Rogers (tan yard)
Little Tommy Barnes (Page 13—old Finn supposed to2
Deacon Winn GaveSold $6000 to Judge—p. 19.)
Log raft—36 Plank raft 12 × 16.
Huck’s father in floating house—62.—64.—70.
[begin page 490]

raff1 ?
Jim— considable hund’d
Nuff’nNuffn—some’n.
kin suffin
W’y, sumfinsumf’n
(mouf. suthin
[begin page 504]
(generly × sumf’n
( sumfn
Huck says Nuther. ef
h’yer reck’n
wouldn’ didn’
W’y
Bat—
43 “Bessie” or Becky?
[begin page 491]

P. 43. (“Bessie,” or Becky?)
Reflections upon the satisfaction of being a guest at one’s own funeral & with such prime refreshments furnished free.
And bread cast returns—which it don’t & can’t, less’n you heave it upstream—you letcast your bread downstream once, & see. It can’t stem the current; so it can’t come back no more. But the widow she didn’t know no better than to believe it, & it warn’t my business to correct my betters. There’s a heap of ignorance like that, around.1
$40 for Jim—who says “told you I’d be rich agin.”2
[begin page 492]

But they hived a nigger that stole a hog.
Let Huck miss Jim—king & duke have sold him.1
Sawed in two, nearly—Huck saves him.
& Jim can be smuggled north on a ship?—no, steamboat.2
143—let ’em tell these adventures.3
Back yonder, Huck reads & tells about monarchies & kings &c. So Jim stares when he learns the rank of these 2.4
They lynch a freenigger.
Solomon with child by de hine laig
Jim cries, to think of his wife & 2 chn5
Talk among Ark family & visitors.6
—using snuff with a stick.
[begin page 493]

Takes history class among the niggers?
Join Sunday school before 4th July 1
[begin page 506]
Teaches Jim to read & write—then uses dog-messenger. Had taught him a little before.
Desperadoes ride into village shooting promiscuously.2
Huck & Tom.
House-Raising.
Beef-shooting.
Debating Society. 3
Quilting. The world of gossip th of 75 yrs ago, that lies silent, stitched into quilt by hands that long ago lost their taper & silky silkiness & eyes & face their beauty, & all gone down to dust & silence; & to indifference to all gossip.
Cadets Temperance—Masons—Oddfellows—Militia 4 added in the left margin
[begin page 494]

He must hear some Arkansas women, over their pipes & knitting (spitting from between teeth), swap reminiscences of Sister this & Brother that, & “what become of so & so?—what was his first wife’s name? Very religious people. Ride 10 or 15 m to church & tie the horses to trees.
Let em drop in ignorant remarks about monarchs in Europe, & mix them up with Biblical monarchs.
Look through notebook & turn everything in.
s’I, sh-she, s-ze, 1
[begin page 495]

Incident of crazy man whose wife been dead 23 years—chaffs him & lies to him & is sorry afterwards1
Huck exposes k & d—& that makes ’em sell Jim?
Glass eye with mark on back of it—mentioned in letter. When his trunk comes, will prove everything.
The marriage?
Man interrupts at auction.
Then true appear.
Set candle in window.
& tell them not to sigh for me.

Elaborate a supper & then knock out that reference.2
[begin page 496]

They can’t play it again—they find everybody talking about it along the river.
So they lecture, &c.1
“He don’t run everage”
interlard this & powder thrown in fire by Silas Phelps.
Farmer has bought an elephant at auction. Gives him to Tom Huck & Jim & they go about the country on him & make no end of trouble.
[begin page 497]

Tools too handy. (How’ll we get this pen to him?) in a cake, by aunt Sally.
He ain’t satisfied. Ought to be a watchman. Nonnymous note to recommend it. This when they are nearly ready.
Get tin plates for Jim
Dig a moat.
Objects because tools & everything so handy. (Spend many nights in cabin with Jim.)
Saw there, too.
3 weeks getting him out.
make the pens—Huck.
Make rope ladder, now. hiding it as they work.
Butter melts night of escape.
Ladder in pie
The dogs come in through the diggings—11.1 And themselves as ghosts. Nigger watchman faints.
Swallow the sawdust—Huck has to—& Jim. Gives them stomach ache. Blow up cabin?
aunt misses brass candlestick, shirt, sheet, flour &c (for they build the pie.) Uncle reads anonymous notes at table. added in the left margin
[begin page 498]

I fetched away a dog, part of the way—I had him by his teeth in my britches, behind.
Brass buttons
Nail in a biscuit—uncle Silas got it (cut em off.) behind)
Children bring in tin plates (with marks)
Jim must disguise in nigger woman’s dress & they in aunt S to get away. Men won’t shoot at women. Scares them away, & then coolly paddles the raft home—& explains.
Steal guns & get away under a volley of blank cartridges.
Smuggle a dirk to jim—yaghtagan—1
Uncle S wishes he would escape—if it warn’t wrong, he’d set him free—but it’s a too r gushy generosity with another man’s property.
They always take along a lunch.
Smuggle powder by Si—he throws it in kitchen fire.
[begin page 499]

They correspond through dog & marrow bone.
[begin page 500]

To fall in the dust makes a good disguise
dog-bone messenger.
Wouldn’t give a cent for an adventure that ain’t done in disguise.
[begin page 510]
Cut Jim out of cabin the back way.
Mat an accomplice.1
Notes shoved under door at night, nonnymous.
Tom shot.
3 5 unarmed but desperate men
[begin page 501]

Got an eye like a door-knob (dragonfly snake doctor) the only creatur of the bird specie that can flydart straight sideways & straight backwards.
in defference
in defferunce
to public opinion—don’t know which how to pronounce it. (He went through the motions of imprisoning Tom in defferunce
Take shirt to him in disguise.
Make pens. Jim does—their hands sore. Jim at it all night.
spider, flower mouse—rat |
grindstone missed. tin plates do1—notice it when nonnymous letter
comes. shirt. page torn |
considers a Ber-
line2 & coffin

Publish this in England & Canada & Germany the day before the first number of it appears in S Century or N.Y. Sun—that makes full copyright.1
Turn Jim into an Injun.
Then exhib him for gorilla—then wild man Arab &c., using him for 2 shows same day.
Nigger-skin (shamoi) for sale as a pat med.
Tell me some mo’ histry, Huck.
[begin page 512]

Makes calamity of so long life,
For who would fardels bear, till Birnam wood do come to Dunsinane,
But that the fear of something after death
Murders the innocent sleep,
Great Nature’s second course,
And makes us rather sling the arrows of outrageous fortune
Than fly to others that we know not of.
That is the
There lies the deep damnation of our taking off——1
Wake Duncan with thy knocking!
I would thou couldst—2
For who would bear the whips & scorns of time, the oppressor’s wrong, the proud man’s contumely, the insolence of office & the pangs which he himself might take
In the dead waste & middle of the night,3
When churchyards yawn
In customary suits of solemn black
[begin page 514]

From whose bourn no traveller returns
Breathes forth contagion on the world
Breathes forth contagion on the world—
& all the clouds &c, with th
[begin page 516] & thus the native hue of resolution
(like the poor cat ’i’ the adage,)
With this regard their currents turn awry,
& lose the NAME of action.
Tis a consummation devoutly to be wished— —sh—sh—
But soft you, the fair Ophelia!
Ope not thy ponderous & marble jaws
But get thee to a nunnery—go.