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+Project Gutenberg's The Letters of Ambrose Bierce, by Ambrose Bierce
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+ With a Memoir by George Sterling
+
+Author: Ambrose Bierce
+
+Editor: Bertha Clark Pope
+
+Release Date: May 25, 2011 [EBook #36218]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LETTERS OF AMBROSE BIERCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Melissa McDaniel and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note:
+
+ The two introductory sections, "The Introduction," and
+ "A Memoir of Ambrose Bierce," were originally printed
+ in italics with non-italicized text used for emphasis.
+ This convention has been reversed for ease of reading the
+ e-text.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original
+ document have been preserved.
+
+
+
+
+ The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ The
+ Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+
+ EDITED BY
+ BERTHA CLARK POPE
+
+ WITH A MEMOIR BY
+ GEORGE STERLING
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO
+ THE BOOK CLUB OF CALIFORNIA
+ 1922
+
+
+In reproducing these letters we have followed as nearly as possible
+the original manuscripts. This inevitably has caused a certain lack of
+uniformity throughout the volume, as in the case of the names of
+magazines and newspapers, which are sometimes italicized and sometimes
+in quotation marks.--THE EDITOR.
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY THE CALIFORNIA BOOK CLUB
+
+
+
+
+ The Introduction
+
+ by BERTHA CLARK POPE
+
+
+"The question that starts to the lips of ninety-nine readers out of a
+hundred," says Arnold Bennett, in a review in the London _NEW AGE_ in
+1909, "even the best informed, will assuredly be: 'Who is Ambrose
+Bierce?' I scarcely know, but I will say that among what I may term
+'underground reputations' that of Ambrose Bierce is perhaps the most
+striking example. You may wander for years through literary circles
+and never meet anybody who has heard of Ambrose Bierce, and then you
+may hear some erudite student whisper in an awed voice: 'Ambrose
+Bierce is the greatest living prose writer.' I have heard such an
+opinion expressed."
+
+Bierce himself shows his recognition of the "underground" quality of
+his reputation in a letter to George Sterling: "How many times, and
+during a period of how many years must one's unexplainable obscurity
+be pointed out to constitute fame? Not knowing, I am almost disposed
+to consider myself the most famous of authors. I have pretty nearly
+ceased to be 'discovered,' but my notoriety as an obscurian may be
+said to be worldwide and everlasting."
+
+Anything which would throw light on such a figure, at once obscure
+and famous, is valuable. These letters of Ambrose Bierce, here printed
+for the first time, are therefore of unusual interest. They are the
+informal literary work--the term is used advisedly--of a man esteemed
+great by a small but acutely critical group, read enthusiastically by
+a somewhat larger number to whom critical examination of what they
+read seldom occurs, and ignored by the vast majority of readers; a man
+at once more hated and more adored than any on the Pacific Coast; a
+man not ten years off the scene yet already become a tradition and a
+legend; whose life, no less than his death, held elements of mystery,
+baffling contradictions, problems for puzzled conjecture, motives and
+meanings not vouchsafed to outsiders.
+
+Were Ambrose Bierce as well known as he deserves to be, the
+introduction to these letters could be slight; we should not have to
+stop to inquire who he was and what he did. As it is, we must.
+
+Ambrose Bierce, the son of Marcus Aurelius and Laura (Sherwood)
+Bierce, born in Meiggs County, Ohio, June 24, 1842, was at the
+outbreak of the Civil War a youth without formal education, but with a
+mind already trained. "My father was a poor farmer," he once said to a
+friend, "and could give me no general education, but he had a good
+library, and to his books I owe all that I have." He promptly
+volunteered in 1861 and served throughout the war. Twice, at the risk
+of his life, he rescued wounded companions from the battlefield, and
+at Kenesaw Mountain was himself severely wounded in the head. He was
+brevetted Major for distinguished services; but in after life never
+permitted the title to be used in addressing him. There is a story
+that when the war was over he tossed up a coin to determine what
+should be his career. Whatever the determining auguries, he came at
+once to San Francisco to join his favorite brother Albert--there were
+ten brothers and sisters to choose from--and for a short time worked
+with him in the Mint; he soon began writing paragraphs for the
+weeklies, particularly the _ARGONAUT_ and the _NEWS LETTER_.
+
+"I was a slovenly writer in those days," he observes in a letter forty
+years later, "though enough better than my neighbors to have attracted
+my own attention. My knowledge of English was imperfect 'a whole lot.'
+Indeed, my intellectual status (whatever it may be, and God knows it's
+enough to make me blush) was of slow growth--as was my moral. I mean,
+I had not literary sincerity." Apparently, attention other than his
+own was attracted, for he was presently editing the _NEWS LETTER_.
+
+In 1872 he went to London and for four years was on the staff of
+_FUN_. In London Bierce found congenial and stimulating associates.
+The great man of his circle was George Augustus Sala, "one of the most
+skilful, finished journalists ever known," a keen satiric wit, and the
+author of a ballad of which it is said that Swift might have been
+proud. Another notable figure was Tom Hood the younger, mordantly
+humorous. The satiric style in journalism was popular then; and
+"personal" journals were so personal that one "Jimmy" Davis, editor of
+the _CUCKOO_ and the _BAT_ successively, found it healthful to remain
+some years in exile in France. Bierce contributed to several of these
+and to _FIGARO_, the editor of which was James Mortimer. To this
+gentleman Bierce owed what he designated as the distinction of being
+"probably the only American journalist who was ever employed by an
+Empress in so congenial a pursuit as the pursuit of another
+journalist." This other journalist was M. Henri Rochefort, communard,
+formerly editor of _LA LANTERNE_ in Paris, in which he had made
+incessant war upon the Empire and all its personnel, particularly the
+Empress. When, an exile, Rochefort announced his intention of renewing
+_LA LANTERNE_ in London, the exiled Empress circumvented him by
+secretly copyrighting the title, _THE LANTERN_, and proceeding to
+publish a periodical under that name with the purpose of undermining
+his influence. Two numbers were enough; M. Rochefort fled to Belgium.
+Bierce said that in "the field of chromatic journalism" it was the
+finest thing that ever came from a press, but of the literary
+excellence of the twelve pages he felt less qualified for judgment as
+he had written every line.
+
+This was in 1874. Two years earlier, under his journalistic pseudonym
+of "Dod Grile," he had published his first books--two small volumes,
+largely made up of his articles in the San Francisco _NEWS LETTER_,
+called _The Fiend's Delight_, and _Nuggets And Dust Panned Out In
+California_. Now, he used the same pseudonym on the title-page of a
+third volume, _Cobwebs from an Empty Skull_. The _Cobwebs_ were
+selections from his work in _FUN_--satirical tales and fables, often
+inspired by weird old woodcuts given him by the editors with the
+request that he write something to fit. His journalistic associates
+praised these volumes liberally, and a more distinguished admirer was
+Gladstone, who, discovering the _Cobwebs_ in a second-hand bookshop,
+voiced his delight in their cleverness, and by his praise gave a
+certain currency to Bierce's name among the London elect. But despite
+so distinguished a sponsor, the books remained generally unknown.
+
+Congenial tasks and association with the brilliant journalists of the
+day did not prevent Bierce from being undeniably hard up at times. In
+1876 he returned to San Francisco, where he remained for twenty-one
+years, save for a brief but eventful career as general manager of a
+mining company near Deadwood, South Dakota. All this time he got his
+living by writing special articles--for the _WASP_, a weekly whose
+general temper may be accurately surmised from its name, and,
+beginning in 1886, for the _EXAMINER_, in which he conducted every
+Sunday on the editorial page a department to which he gave the title
+he had used for a similar column in _THE LANTERN_--_Prattle_. A partial
+explanation of a mode of feeling and a choice of themes which Bierce
+developed more and more, ultimately to the practical exclusion of all
+others, is to be found in the particular phase through which
+California journalism was just then passing.
+
+In the evolution of the comic spirit the lowest stage, that of delight
+in inflicting pain on others, is clearly manifest in savages, small
+boys, and early American journalism. It was exhibited in all parts of
+America--Mark Twain gives a vivid example in his _Journalistic Wild
+Oats_ of what it was in Tennessee--but with particular intensity in
+San Francisco. As a community, San Francisco exalted personal courage,
+directness of encounter, straight and effective shooting. The social
+group was so small and so homogeneous that any news of importance
+would be well known before it could be reported, set up in type,
+printed, and circulated. It was isolated by so great distances from
+the rest of the world that for years no pretense was made of
+furnishing adequate news from the outside. So the newspapers came to
+rely on other sorts of interest. They were pamphlets for the
+dissemination of the opinions of the groups controlling them, and
+weapons for doing battle, if need be, for those opinions. And there
+was abundant occasion: municipal affairs were corrupt, courts weak or
+venal, or both. Editors and readers enjoyed a good fight; they also
+wanted humorous entertainment; they happily combined the two. In the
+creative dawn of 1847 when the foundations of the journalistic earth
+were laid and those two morning stars, the _CALIFORNIAN_ of Monterey
+and the _CALIFORNIA STAR_ of San Francisco, sang together, we find the
+editors attacking the community generally, and each other
+particularly, with the utmost ferocity, laying about them right and
+left with verbal broad-axes, crow-bars, and such other weapons as
+might be immediately at hand. The _CALIFORNIA STAR'S_ introduction to
+the public of what would, in our less direct day, be known as its
+"esteemed contemporary" is typical:
+
+ "We have received two late numbers of the _CALIFORNIAN_, a dim,
+ dirty little paper printed in Monterey on the worn-out materials
+ of one of the old California _WAR PRESSES_. It is published and
+ edited by Walter Colton and Robert Semple, the one a _WHINING
+ SYCOPHANT_, and the other an _OVER-GROWN LICK-SPITTLE_. At the
+ top of one of the papers we find the words 'please exchange.'
+ This would be considered in almost any other country a bare-faced
+ attempt to swindle us. We should consider it so now were it not
+ for the peculiar situation of our country which induces us to do
+ a great deal for others in order for them to do us a little
+ good.... We have concluded to give our paper to them this year,
+ so as to afford them some insight into the manner in which a
+ Republican newspaper should be conducted. They appear now to be
+ awfully verdant."
+
+Down through the seventies and eighties the tradition persisted,
+newspapers being bought and read, as a historian of journalism
+asserts, not so much for news as to see who was getting "lambasted"
+that day. It is not strange, then, that journals of redoubtable
+pugnacity were popular, or that editors favored writers who were
+likely to excel in the gladiatorial style. It is significant that
+public praise first came to Bierce through his articles in the caustic
+_NEWS LETTER_, widely read on the Pacific Coast during the seventies.
+Once launched in this line, he became locally famous for his fierce
+and witty articles in the _ARGONAUNT_ and the _WASP_, and for many
+years his column _Prattle_ in the _EXAMINER_ was, in the words of Mr.
+Bailey Millard, "the most wickedly clever, the most audaciously
+personal, and the most eagerly devoured column of _causerie_ that ever
+was printed in this country."
+
+In 1896 Bierce was sent to Washington to fight, through the Hearst
+newspapers, the "refunding bill" which Collis P. Huntington was trying
+to get passed, releasing his Central Pacific Railroad from its
+obligations to the government. A year later he went again to
+Washington, where he remained during the rest of his journalistic
+career, as correspondent for the New York _AMERICAN_, conducting also
+for some years a department in the _COSMOPOLITAN_.
+
+Much of Bierce's best work was done in those years in San Francisco.
+Through the columns of the _WASP_ and the _EXAMINER_ his wit played
+free; he wielded an extraordinary influence; his trenchant criticism
+made and unmade reputations--literary and otherwise. But this to
+Bierce was mostly "journalism, a thing so low that it cannot be
+mentioned in the same breath with literature." His real interest lay
+elsewhere. Throughout the early eighties he devoted himself to writing
+stories; all were rejected by the magazine editors to whom he offered
+them. When finally in 1890 he gathered these stories together into
+book form and offered them to the leading publishers of the country,
+they too, would have none of them. "These men," writes Mr. Bailey
+Millard, "admitted the purity of his diction and the magic of his
+haunting power, but the stories were regarded as revolting."
+
+At last, in 1891, his first book of stories, _Tales of Soldiers and
+Civilians_, saw the reluctant light of day. It had this for foreword:
+
+ "Denied existence by the chief publishing houses of the country,
+ this book owes itself to Mr. E. L. G. Steele, merchant, of this
+ city, [San Francisco]. In attesting Mr. Steele's faith in his
+ judgment and his friend, it will serve its author's main and best
+ ambition."
+
+There is Biercean pugnacity in these words; the author flings down the
+gauntlet with a confident gesture. But it cannot be said that anything
+much happened to discomfit the publishing houses of little faith.
+Apparently, Bierce had thought to appeal past the dull and unjust
+verdict of such lower courts to the higher tribunal of the critics and
+possibly an elect group of general readers who might be expected to
+recognize and welcome something rare. But judgment was scarcely
+reversed. Only a few critics were discerning, and the book had no
+vogue. When _The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter_ was published by F.
+J. Schulte and Company, Chicago, the next year, and _Can Such Things
+Be_ by The Cassell Publishing Company, the year following, a few
+enthusiastic critics could find no words strong enough to describe
+Bierce's vivid imagination, his uncanny divination of atavistic
+terrors in man's consciousness, his chiseled perfection of style; but
+the critics who disapproved had even more trouble in finding words
+strong enough for their purposes and, as before, there was no general
+appreciation.
+
+For the next twenty years Ambrose Bierce was a prolific writer but,
+whatever the reason, no further volumes of stories from his pen were
+presented to the world. _Black Beetles in Amber_, a collection of
+satiric verse, had appeared the same year as _The Monk and the
+Hangman's Daughter_; then for seven years, with the exception of a
+republication by G. P. Putnam's Sons of _Tales of Soldiers and
+Civilians_ under the title, _In the Midst of Life_, no books by
+Bierce. In 1899 appeared _Fantastic Fables_; in 1903 _Shapes of Clay_,
+more satiric verse; in 1906 _The Cynic's Word Book_, a dictionary of
+wicked epigrams; in 1909 _Write it Right_, a blacklist of literary
+faults, and _The Shadow on the Dial_, a collection of essays covering,
+to quote from the preface of S. O. Howes, "a wide range of subjects,
+embracing among other things, government, dreams, writers of dialect
+and dogs"--Mr. Howes might have heightened his crescendo by adding
+"emancipated woman"; and finally--1909 to 1912--_The Collected Works
+of Ambrose Bierce_, containing all his work previously published in
+book form, save the two last mentioned, and much more besides, all
+collected and edited by Bierce himself.
+
+On October 2, 1913, Ambrose Bierce, having settled his business
+affairs, left Washington for a trip through the southern states,
+declaring in letters his purpose of going into Mexico and later on to
+South America. The fullest account of his trip and his plans is
+afforded by a newspaper clipping he sent his niece in a letter dated
+November 6, 1913; through the commonplaceness of the reportorial
+vocabulary shines out the vivid personality that was making its final
+exit:
+
+ "Traveling over the same ground that he had covered with General
+ Hazen's brigade during the Civil War, Ambrose Bierce, famed
+ writer and noted critic, has arrived in New Orleans. Not that
+ this city was one of the places figuring in his campaigns, for he
+ was here after and not during the war. He has come to New Orleans
+ in a haphazard, fancy-free way, making a trip toward Mexico. The
+ places that he has visited on the way down have become famous in
+ song and story--places where the greatest battles were fought,
+ where the moon shone at night on the burial corps, and where in
+ day the sun shone bright on polished bayonets and the smoke
+ drifted upward from the cannon mouths.
+
+ "For Mr. Bierce was at Chickamauga; he was at Shiloh; at
+ Murfreesboro; Kenesaw Mountain, Franklin and Nashville. And then
+ when wounded during the Atlanta campaign he was invalided home.
+ He 'has never amounted to much since then,' he said Saturday. But
+ his stories of the great struggle, living as deathless
+ characterizations of the bloody episodes, stand for what he 'has
+ amounted to since then.'
+
+ "Perhaps it was in mourning for the dead over whose battlefields
+ he has been wending his way toward New Orleans that Mr. Bierce
+ was dressed in black. From head to foot he was attired in this
+ color, except where the white cuffs and collar and shirt front
+ showed through. He even carried a walking cane, black as ebony
+ and unrelieved by gold or silver. But his eyes, blue and piercing
+ as when they strove to see through the smoke at Chickamauga,
+ retained all the fire of the indomitable fighter.
+
+ "'I'm on my way to Mexico, because I like the game,' he said, 'I
+ like the fighting; I want to see it. And then I don't think
+ Americans are as oppressed there as they say they are, and I want
+ to get at the true facts of the case. Of course, I'm not going
+ into the country if I find it unsafe for Americans to be there,
+ but I want to take a trip diagonally across from northeast to
+ southwest by horseback, and then take ship for South America, go
+ over the Andes and across that continent, if possible, and come
+ back to America again.
+
+ "'There is no family that I have to take care of; I've retired
+ from writing and I'm going to take a rest. No, my trip isn't for
+ local color. I've retired just the same as a merchant or business
+ man retires. I'm leaving the field for the younger authors.'
+
+ "An inquisitive question was interjected as to whether Mr. Bierce
+ had acquired a competency only from his writings, but he did not
+ take offense.
+
+ "'My wants are few, and modest,' he said, 'and my royalties give
+ me quite enough to live on. There isn't much that I need, and I
+ spend my time in quiet travel. For the last five years I haven't
+ done any writing. Don't you think that after a man has worked as
+ long as I have that he deserves a rest? But perhaps after I have
+ rested I might work some more--I can't tell, there are so many
+ things--' and the straightforward blue eyes took on a faraway
+ look, 'there are so many things that might happen between now and
+ when I come back. My trip might take several years, and I'm an
+ old man now.'
+
+ "Except for the thick, snow-white hair no one would think him
+ old. His hands are steady, and he stands up straight and
+ tall--perhaps six feet."
+
+In December of that same year the last letter he is known to have
+written was received by his daughter. It is dated from Chihuahua, and
+mentions casually that he has attached himself unofficially to a
+division of Villa's army, and speaks of a prospective advance on
+Ojinaga. No further word has ever come from or of Ambrose Bierce.
+Whether illness overtook him, then an old man of seventy-one, and
+death suddenly, or whether, preferring to go foaming over a precipice
+rather than to straggle out in sandy deltas, he deliberately went
+where he knew death was, no one can say. His last letters, dauntless,
+grave, tender, do not say, though they suggest much. "You must try to
+forgive my obstinacy in not 'perishing' where I am," he wrote as he
+left Washington. "I want to be where something worth while is going
+on, or where nothing whatever is going on." "Good-bye--if you hear of
+my being stood up against a Mexican stone wall and shot to rags please
+know that I think that a pretty good way to depart this life. It beats
+old age, disease, or falling down the cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in
+Mexico--ah, that is euthanasia!" Whatever end Ambrose Bierce found in
+Mexico, the lines of George Sterling well express what must have been
+his attitude in meeting it:
+
+ "Dream you he was afraid to live?
+ Dream you he was afraid to die?
+ Or that, a suppliant of the sky,
+ He begged the gods to keep or give?
+ Not thus the shadow-maker stood,
+ Whose scrutiny dissolved so well
+ Our thin mirage of Heaven or Hell--
+ The doubtful evil, dubious good....
+
+ "If now his name be with the dead,
+ And where the gaunt agaves flow'r,
+ The vulture and the wolf devour
+ The lion-heart, the lion-head,
+ Be sure that heart and head were laid
+ In wisdom down, content to die;
+ Be sure he faced the Starless Sky
+ Unduped, unmurmuring, unafraid."
+
+In any consideration of the work of Ambrose Bierce, a central question
+must be why it contains so much that is trivial or ephemeral. Another
+question facing every critic of Bierce, is why the fundamentally
+original point of view, the clarity of workmanship of his best
+things--mainly stories--did not win him immediate and general
+recognition.
+
+A partial answer to both questions is to be found in a certain discord
+between Bierce and his setting. Bierce, paradoxically, combined the
+bizarre in substance, the severely restrained and compressed in form.
+An ironic mask covered a deep-seated sensibility; but sensibility and
+irony were alike subject to an uncompromising truthfulness; he would
+have given deep-throated acclaim to Clough's
+
+ "But play no tricks upon thy soul, O man,
+ Let truth be truth, and life the thing it can."
+
+He had the aristocrat's contempt for mass feeling, a selectiveness
+carried so far that he instinctively chose for themes the picked
+person and experience, the one decisive moment of crisis. He viewed
+his characters not in relation to other men and in normal activities;
+he isolated them--often amid abnormalities.
+
+All this was in sharp contrast to the literary fashion obtaining when
+he dipped his pen to try his luck as a creative artist. The most
+popular novelist of the day was Dickens; the most popular poet,
+Tennyson. Neither looked straight at life; both veiled it: one in
+benevolence, the other in beauty. Direct and painful verities were
+best tolerated by the reading public when exhibited as instances of
+the workings of natural law. The spectator of the macrocosm in action
+could stomach the wanton destruction of a given human atom; one so
+privileged could and did excuse the Creator for small mistakes like
+harrying Hetty Sorrell to the gallow's foot, because of the conviction
+that, taking the Universe by and large, "He was a good fellow, and
+'twould all be well." This benevolent optimism was the offspring of a
+strange pair, evangelicism and evolution; and in the minds of the
+great public whom Bierce, under other circumstances and with a
+slightly different mixture of qualities in himself, might have
+conquered, it became a large, soft insincerity that demanded "happy
+endings," a profuse broadness of treatment prohibitive of harsh
+simplicity, a swathing of elemental emotion in gentility or moral
+edification.
+
+But to Bierce's mind, "noble and nude and antique," this mid-Victorian
+draping and bedecking of "unpleasant truths" was abhorrent. Absolutely
+direct and unafraid--not only in his personal relations but, what is
+more rare, in his thinking--he regarded easy optimism, sure that God
+is in his heaven with consequently good effects upon the world, as
+blindness, and the hopefulness that demanded always the "happy
+ending," as silly. In many significant passages Bierce's attitude is
+the ironic one of Voltaire: "'Had not Pangloss got himself hanged,'
+replied Candide, 'he would have given us most excellent advice in this
+emergency; for he was a profound philosopher.'" Bierce did not fear to
+bring in disconcerting evidence that _a priori_ reasoning may prove a
+not infallible guide, that causes do not always produce the effects
+complacently pre-argued, and that the notion of this as the best of
+all possible worlds is sometimes beside the point.
+
+The themes permitted by such an attitude were certain to displease
+the readers of that period. In _Tales of Soldiers and Civilians_, his
+first book of stories, he looks squarely and grimly at one much
+bedecked subject of the time--war; not the fine gay gallantry of war,
+the music and the marching and the romantic episodes; but the ghastly
+horror of it; through his vivid, dramatic passages beats a hatred of
+war, not merely "unrighteous" war, but all war, the more disquieting
+because never allowed to become articulate. With bitter but beautiful
+truth he brings each tale to its tragic close, always with one last
+turn of the screw, one unexpected horror more. And in this book--note
+the solemn implication of the title he later gave it, _In the Midst of
+Life_--as well as in the next, _Can Such Things Be_, is still another
+subject which Bierce alone in his generation seemed unafraid to
+consider curiously: "Death, in warfare and in the horrid guise of the
+supernatural, was painted over and over. Man's terror in the face of
+death gave the artist his cue for his wonderful physical and
+psychologic microscopics. You could not pin this work down as realism,
+or as romance; it was the greatest human drama--the conflict between
+life and death--fused through genius. Not Zola, in the endless pages
+of his _Debâcle_, not the great Tolstoi in his great _War and Peace_
+had ever painted war, horrid war, more faithfully than any of the
+stories of this book; not Maupassant had invented out of war's
+terrible truths more dramatically imagined plots.... There painted an
+artist who had seen the thing itself, and being a genius, had made it
+an art still greater.
+
+Death of the young, the beautiful, the brave, was the closing note of
+every line of the ten stories of war in this book. The brilliant,
+spectacular death that came to such senseless bravery as Tennyson
+hymned for the music-hall intelligence in his _Charge of the Light
+Brigade_; the vision-starting, slow, soul-drugging death by hanging;
+the multiplied, comprehensible death that makes rivers near
+battlefields run red; the death that comes by sheer terror; death
+actual and imagined--every sort of death was on these pages, so
+painted as to make Pierre Loti's _Book of Pity and Death_ seem but
+feeble fumbling."
+
+Now death by the mid-Victorian was considered almost as undesirable an
+element in society as sex itself. Both must be passed over in silence
+or presented decently draped. In the eighties any writer who dealt
+unabashed with death was regarded as an unpleasant person.
+"Revolting!" cried the critics when they read Bierce's _Chickamauga_
+and _The Affair at Coulter's Notch_.
+
+Bierce's style, too, by its very fineness, alienated his public.
+Superior, keen, perfect in detail, finite, compressed--such was his
+manner in the free and easy, prolix, rambling, multitudinous
+nineteenth century.
+
+Bierce himself knew that although it is always the fashion to jeer at
+fashion, its rule is absolute for all that, whether it be fashion in
+boots or books.
+
+"A correspondent of mine," he wrote in 1887 in his _EXAMINER_ column,
+"a well-known and clever writer, appears surprised because I do not
+like the work of Robert Louis Stevenson. I am equally hurt to know
+that he does. If he was ever a boy he knows that the year is
+divided, not into seasons and months, as is vulgarly supposed, but
+into 'top time,' 'marble time,' 'kite time,' et cetera, and woe to the
+boy who ignores the unwritten calendar, amusing himself according to
+the dictates of an irresponsible conscience. I venture to remind my
+correspondent that a somewhat similar system obtains in matters of
+literature--a word which I beg him to observe means fiction. There
+are, for illustration--or rather, there were--James time, Howells
+time, Crawford time, Russell time and Conway time, each epoch--named
+for the immortal novelist of the time being--lasting, generally
+speaking, as much as a year.... All the more rigorous is the law of
+observance. It is not permitted to admire Jones in Smith time. I must
+point out to my heedless correspondent that this is not Stevenson
+time--that was last year." It was decidedly not Bierce time when
+Bierce's stories appeared.
+
+And there was in him no compromise--or so he thought. "A great
+artist," he wrote to George Sterling, "is superior to his world and
+his time, or at least to his parish and his day." His practical
+application of that belief is shown in a letter to a magazine editor
+who had just rejected a satire he had submitted:
+
+"Even _you_ ask for literature--if my stories are literature, as you
+are good enough to imply. (By the way, all the leading publishers of
+the country turned down that book until they saw it published without
+them by a merchant in San Francisco and another sort of publishers in
+London, Leipsig and Paris.) Well, you wouldn't do a thing to one of my
+stories!
+
+"No, thank you; if I have to write rot, I prefer to do it for the
+newspapers, which make no false pretenses and are frankly rotten, and
+in which the badness of a bad thing escapes detection or is forgotten
+as soon as it is cold.
+
+"I know how to write a story (of 'happy ending' sort) for magazine
+readers for whom literature is too good, but I will not do so, so long
+as stealing is more honorable and interesting. I have offered you ...
+the best that I am able to make; and now you must excuse me." In these
+two utterances we have some clue to the secret of his having ceased,
+in 1893, to publish stories. Vigorously refusing to yield in the
+slightest degree to the public so far as his stories were concerned,
+he abandoned his best field of creative effort and became almost
+exclusively a "columnist" and a satirist; he put his world to rout,
+and left his "parish and his day" resplendently the victors.
+
+All this must not be taken to mean that the "form and pressure of the
+time" put into Bierce what was not there. Even in his creative work he
+had a satiric bent; his early training and associations, too, had been
+in journalistic satire. Under any circumstances he undoubtedly would
+have written satire--columns of it for his daily bread, books of it
+for self-expression; but under more favorable circumstances he would
+have kept on writing other sort of books as well. Lovers of literature
+may well lament that Bierce's insistence on going his way and the
+demands of his "parish" forced him to overdevelop one power to the
+almost complete paralysis of another and a perhaps finer.
+
+As a satirist Bierce was the best America has produced, perhaps the
+best since Voltaire. But when he confined himself to "exploring the
+ways of hate as a form of creative energy," it was with a hurt in his
+soul, and with some intellectual and spiritual confusion. There
+resulted a kink in his nature, a contradiction that appears
+repeatedly, not only in his life, but in his writings. A striking
+instance is found in his article _To Train a Writer_:
+
+ "He should, for example, forget that he is an American and
+ remember that he is a man. He should be neither Christian nor
+ Jew, nor Buddhist, nor Mahometan, nor Snake Worshiper. To local
+ standards of right and wrong he should be civilly indifferent. In
+ the virtues, so-called, he should discern only the rough notes of
+ a general expediency; in fixed moral principles only time-saving
+ predecisions of cases not yet before the court of conscience.
+ Happiness should disclose itself to his enlarging intelligence as
+ the end and purpose of life; art and love as the only means to
+ happiness. He should free himself of all doctrines, theories,
+ etiquettes, politics, simplifying his life and mind, attaining
+ clarity with breadth and unity with height. To him a continent
+ should not seem wide nor a century long. And it would be needful
+ that he know and have an ever-present consciousness that this is
+ a world of fools and rogues, blind with superstition, tormented
+ with envy, consumed with vanity, selfish, false, cruel, cursed
+ with illusions--frothing mad!"
+
+Up to that last sentence Ambrose Bierce beholds this world as one
+where tolerance, breadth of view, simplicity of life and mind, clear
+thinking, are at most attainable, at least worthy of the effort to
+attain; he regards life as purposive, as having happiness for its end,
+and art and love as the means to that good end. But suddenly the
+string from which he has been evoking these broad harmonies snaps with
+a snarl. All is evil and hopeless--"frothing mad." Both views cannot
+be held simultaneously by the same mind. Which was the real belief of
+Ambrose Bierce? The former, it seems clear. But he has been hired to
+be a satirist.
+
+On the original fabric of Bierce's mind the satiric strand has
+encroached more than the design allows. There results not only
+considerable obliteration of the main design, but confusion in the
+substituted one. For it is significant that much of the work of Bierce
+seems to be that of what he would have called a futilitarian, that he
+seldom seems able to find a suitable field for his satire, a foeman
+worthy of such perfect steel as he brings to the encounter; he fights
+on all fields, on both sides, against all comers; ubiquitous,
+indiscriminate, he is as one who screams in pain at his own futility,
+one who "might be heard," as he says of our civilization, "from afar
+in space as a scolding and a riot." That Bierce would have spent so
+much of his superb power on the trivial and the ephemeral, breaking
+magnificent vials of wrath on Oakland nobodies, preserving
+insignificant black beetles in the amber of his art, is not merely, as
+it has long been, cause of amazement to the critics; it is cause of
+laughter to the gods, and of weeping among Bierce's true admirers.
+
+Some may argue that Bierce's failure to attain international or even
+national fame cannot be ascribed solely to a lack of concord between
+the man and his time and to the consequent reaction in him. It is true
+that in Bierce's work is a sort of paucity--not a mere lack of
+printed pages, but of the fulness of creative activity that makes
+Byron, for example, though vulgar and casual, a literary mountain
+peak. Bierce has but few themes, few moods; his literary river runs
+clear and sparkling, but confined--a narrow current, not the opulent
+stream that waters wide plains of thought and feeling. Nor has Bierce
+the power to weave individual entities and situations into a broad
+pattern of existence, which is the distinguishing mark of such writers
+as Thackeray, Balzac, and Tolstoi among the great dead, and Bennett
+and Wells among the lesser living. Bierce's interest does not lie in
+the group experience nor even in the experience of the individual
+through a long period. His unit of time is the minute, not the month.
+It is significant that he never wrote a novel--unless _The Monk and
+the Hangman's Daughter_ be reckoned one--and that he held remarkable
+views of the novel as a literary form, witness this passage from
+_Prattle_, written in 1887:
+
+ "English novelists are not great because the English novel is
+ dead--deader than Queen Anne at her deadest. The vein is worked
+ out. It was a thin one and did not 'go down.' A single century
+ from the time when Richardson sank the discovery shaft it had
+ already begun to 'pinch out.' The miners of today have abandoned
+ it altogether to search for 'pockets,' and some of the best of
+ them are merely 'chloriding the dumps.' To expect another good
+ novel in English is to expect the gold to 'grow' again."
+
+It may well be that at the bottom of this sweeping condemnation was an
+instinctive recognition of his own lack of constructive power on a
+large scale.
+
+But an artist, like a nation, should be judged not by what he cannot
+do, but by what he can. That Bierce could not paint the large canvas
+does not make him negligible or even inconsiderable. He is by no means
+a second-rate writer; he is a first-rate writer who could not
+consistently show his first-rateness.
+
+When he did show his first-rateness, what is it? In all his best work
+there is originality, a rare and precious idiosyncracy; his point of
+view, his themes are rich with it. Above all writers Bierce can
+present--brilliantly present--startling fragments of life, carved out
+from attendant circumstance; isolated problems of character and
+action; sharply bitten etchings of individual men under momentary
+stresses and in bizarre situations. Through his prodigious emotional
+perceptivity he has the power of feeling and making us feel some
+strange, perverse accident of fate, destructive of the individual--of
+making us feel it to be real and terrible. This is not an easy thing
+to do. De Maupassant said that men were killed every year in Paris by
+the falling of tiles from the roof, but if he got rid of a principal
+character in that way, he should be hooted at. Bierce can make us
+accept as valid and tragic events more odd than the one de Maupassant
+had to reject. "In the line of the startling,--half Poe, half
+Merimee--he cannot have many superiors," says Arnold Bennett.... "A
+story like _An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge_--well, Edgar Allan Poe
+might have deigned to sign it. And that is something.
+
+"He possesses a remarkable style--what Kipling's would have been had
+Kipling been born with any significance of the word 'art'--and a quite
+strangely remarkable perception of beauty. There is a feeling for
+landscape in _A Horseman in the Sky_ which recalls the exquisite
+opening of that indifferent novel, _Les Frères Zemganno_ by Edmond de
+Goncourt, and which no English novelist except Thomas Hardy, and
+possibly Charles Marriott, could match." The feeling for landscape
+which Bennett notes is but one part of a greater power--the power to
+make concrete and visible, action, person, place. Bierce's
+descriptions of Civil War battles in his _Bits of Autobiography_ are
+the best descriptions of battle ever written. He lays out the field
+with map-like clearness, marshals men and events with precision and
+economy, but his account never becomes exposition--it is drama. Real
+battles move swiftly; accounts make them seem labored and slow. What
+narrator save Bierce can convey the sense of their being lightly
+swift, and, again and again the shock of surprise the event itself
+must have given?
+
+This could not be were it not for his verbal restraint. In his
+descriptions is no welter of adjectives and adverbs; strong exact
+nouns and verbs do the work, and this means that the veritable object
+and action are brought forward, not qualifying talk around and about
+them. And this, again, could not be were it not for what is, beyond
+all others, his greatest quality--absolute precision. "I sometimes
+think," he once wrote playfully about letters of his having been
+misunderstood, "I sometimes think that I am the only man in the world
+who understands the meaning of the written word. Or the only one who
+does not." A reader of Ambrose Bierce comes almost to believe that not
+till now has he found a writer who understands--completely--the
+meaning of the written word. He has the power to bring out new
+meanings in well-worn words, so setting them as to evoke brilliant
+significances never before revealed. He gives to one phrase the
+beauty, the compressed suggestion of a poem; his titles--_Black
+Beetles in Amber_, _Ashes of the Beacon_, _Cobwebs from an Empty
+Skull_ are masterpieces in miniature. That he should have a gift of
+coining striking words naturally follows: in his later years he has
+fallen into his "anecdotage," a certain Socialist is the greatest
+"futilitarian" of them all, "femininies"--and so on infinitely. Often
+the smaller the Biercean gem, the more exquisite the workmanship. One
+word has all the sparkle of an epigram.
+
+In such skill Ambrose Bierce is not surpassed by any writer, ancient
+or modern; it gives him rank among the few masters who afford that
+highest form of intellectual delight, the immediate recognition of a
+clear idea perfectly set forth in fitting words--wit's twin brother,
+evoking that rare joy, the sudden, secret laughter of the mind. So
+much for Bierce the artist; the man is found in these letters. If
+further clue to the real nature of Ambrose Bierce were needed it is to
+be found in a conversation he had in his later years with a young
+girl: "You must be very proud, Mr. Bierce, of all your books and your
+fame?" "No," he answered rather sadly, "you will come to know that all
+that is worth while in life is the love you have had for a few people
+near to you."
+
+
+
+
+ A Memoir of Ambrose Bierce
+
+ by GEORGE STERLING
+
+
+Though from boyhood a lover of tales of the terrible, it was not until
+my twenty-second year that I heard of Ambrose Bierce, I having then
+been for ten months a resident of Oakland, California. But in the fall
+of the year 1891 my friend Roosevelt Johnson, newly arrived from our
+town of birth, Sag Harbor, New York, asked me if I were acquainted
+with his work, adding that he had been told that Bierce was the author
+of stories not inferior in awesomeness to the most terrible of Poe's.
+
+We made inquiry and found that Bierce had for several years been
+writing columns of critical comment, satirically named _Prattle_, for
+the editorial page of the Sunday _EXAMINER_, of San Francisco. As my
+uncle, of whose household I had been for nearly a year a member, did
+not subscribe to that journal, I had unfortunately overlooked these
+weekly contributions to the wit and sanity of our western
+literature--an omission for which we partially consoled ourselves by
+subsequently reading with great eagerness each installment of
+_Prattle_ as it appeared. But, so far as his short stories were
+concerned, we had to content ourselves with the assurance of a
+neighbor that "they'd scare an owl off a tombstone."
+
+However, later in the autumn, while making a pilgrimage to the home of
+our greatly worshipped Joaquin Miller, we became acquainted with
+Albert, an elder brother of Bierce's, a man who was to be one of my
+dearest of friends to the day of his death, in March, 1914. From him
+we obtained much to gratify our not unnatural curiosity as to this
+mysterious being, who, from his isolation on a lonely mountain above
+the Napa Valley, scattered weekly thunderbolts on the fool, the
+pretender, and the knave, and cast ridicule or censure on many that
+sat in the seats of the mighty. For none, however socially or
+financially powerful, was safe from the stab of that aculeate pen, the
+venom of whose ink is to gleam vividly from the pages of literature
+for centuries yet to come.
+
+For Bierce is of the immortals. That fact, known, I think, to him, and
+seeming then more and more evident to some of his admirers, has become
+plainly apparent to anyone who can appraise the matter with eyes that
+see beyond the flimsy artifices that bulk so large and so briefly in
+the literary arena. Bierce was a sculptor who wrought in hardest
+crystal.
+
+I was not to be so fortunate as to become acquainted with him until
+after the publication of his first volume of short stories, entitled
+_Tales of Soldiers and Civilians_. That mild title gives scant
+indication of the terrors that await the unwarned reader. I recall
+that I hung fascinated over the book, unable to lay it down until the
+last of its printed dooms had become an imperishable portion of the
+memory. The tales are told with a calmness and reserve that make most
+of Poe's seem somewhat boyish and melodramatic by comparison. The
+greatest of them seems to me to be _An Occurrence at Owl Creek
+Bridge_, though I am perennially charmed by the weird beauty of _An
+Inhabitant of Carcosa_, a tale of unique and unforgettable quality.
+
+Bierce, born in Ohio in 1842, came to San Francisco soon after the
+close of the Civil War. It is amusing to learn that he was one of a
+family of eleven children, male and female, the Christian name of each
+of whom began with the letter "A!" Obtaining employment at first in
+the United States Mint, whither Albert, always his favorite brother,
+had preceded him, he soon gravitated to journalism, doing his first
+work on the San Francisco _NEWS LETTER_. His brother once told me that
+he (Ambrose) had from boyhood been eager to become a writer and was
+expectant of success at that pursuit.
+
+Isolated from most men by the exalted and austere habit of his
+thought, Bierce finally suffered a corresponding exile of the body,
+and was forced to live in high altitudes, which of necessity are
+lonely. This latter banishment was on account of chronic and utterly
+incurable asthma, an ailment contracted in what might almost be termed
+a characteristic manner. Bierce had no fear of the dead folk and their
+marble city. From occasional strollings by night in Laurel Hill
+Cemetery, in San Francisco, his spirit "drank repose," and was able to
+attain a serenity in which the cares of daytime existence faded to
+nothingness. It was on one of those strolls that he elected to lie for
+awhile in the moonlight on a flat tombstone, and awakening late in the
+night, found himself thoroughly chilled, and a subsequent victim of
+the disease that was to cast so dark a shadow over his following
+years. For his sufferings from asthma were terrible, arising often to
+a height that required that he be put under the influence of
+chloroform.
+
+So afflicted, he found visits to the lowlands a thing not to be
+indulged in with impunity. For many years such trips terminated
+invariably in a severe attack of his ailment, and he was driven back
+to his heights shaken and harassed. But he found such visits both
+necessary and pleasant on occasion, and it was during one that he made
+in the summer of 1892 that I first made his acquaintance, while he was
+temporarily a guest at his brother Albert's camp on a rocky,
+laurel-covered knoll on the eastern shore of Lake Temescal, a spot now
+crossed by the tracks of the Oakland, Antioch and Eastern Railway.
+
+I am not likely to forget his first night among us. A tent being, for
+his ailment, insufficiently ventilated, he decided to sleep by the
+campfire, and I, carried away by my youthful hero-worship, must
+partially gratify it by occupying the side of the fire opposite to
+him. I had a comfortable cot in my tent, and was unaccustomed at the
+time to sleeping on the ground, the consequence being that I awoke at
+least every half-hour. But awake as often as I might, always I found
+Bierce lying on his back in the dim light of the embers, his gaze
+fixed on the stars of the zenith. I shall not forget the gaze of those
+eyes, the most piercingly blue, under yellow shaggy brows, that I have
+ever seen.
+
+After that, I saw him at his brother's home in Berkeley, at irregular
+intervals, and once paid him a visit at his own temporary home at
+Skylands, above Wrights, in Santa Clara County, whither he had moved
+from Howell Mountain, in Napa County. It was on this visit that I was
+emboldened to ask his opinion on certain verses of mine, the ambition
+to become a poet having infected me at the scandalously mature age of
+twenty-six. He was hospitable to my wish, and I was fortunate enough
+to be his pupil almost to the year of his going forth from among us.
+During the greater part of that time he was a resident of Washington,
+D. C., whither he had gone in behalf of the San Francisco _EXAMINER_,
+to aid in defeating (as was successfully accomplished) the Funding
+Bill proposed by the Southern Pacific Company. It was on this occasion
+that he electrified the Senate's committee by repeatedly refusing to
+shake the hand of the proponent of that measure, no less formidable an
+individual than Collis P. Huntington.
+
+For Bierce carried into actual practice his convictions on ethical
+matters. Secure in his own self-respect, and valuing his friendship or
+approval to a high degree, he refused to make, as he put it, "a harlot
+of his friendship." Indeed, he once told me that it was his rule, on
+subsequently discovering the unworth of a person to whom a less
+fastidious friend had without previous warning introduced him, to
+write a letter to that person and assure him that he regarded the
+introduction as a mistake, and that the twain were thenceforth to
+"meet as strangers!" He also once informed me that he did not care
+to be introduced to persons whom he had criticized, or was about to
+criticize, in print. "I might get to like the beggar," was his
+comment, "and then I'd have one less pelt in my collection."
+
+In his criticism of my own work, he seldom used more than suggestion,
+realizing, no doubt, the sensitiveness of the tyro in poetry. It has
+been hinted to me that he laid, as it were, a hand of ice on my
+youthful enthusiasms, but that, to such extent as it may be true, was,
+I think, a good thing for a pupil of the art, youth being apt to gush
+and become over-sentimental. Most poets would give much to be able to
+obliterate some of their earlier work, and he must have saved me a
+major portion of such putative embarrassment. Reviewing the
+manuscripts that bear his marginal counsels, I can now see that such
+suggestions were all "indicated," though at the time I dissented from
+some of them. It was one of his tenets that a critic should "keep his
+heart out of his head" (to use his own words), when sitting in
+judgment on the work of writers whom he knew and liked. But I cannot
+but think that he was guilty of sad violations of that rule,
+especially in my own case.
+
+Bierce lived many years in Washington before making a visit to his old
+home. That happened in 1910, in which year he visited me at Carmel,
+and we afterwards camped for several weeks together with his brother
+and nephew, in Yosemite. I grew to know him better in those days, and
+he found us hospitable, in the main degree, to his view of things,
+socialism being the only issue on which we were not in accord. It
+led to many warm arguments, which, as usual, conduced nowhere but to
+the suspicion that truth in such matters was mainly a question of
+taste.
+
+I saw him again in the summer of 1911, which he spent at Sag Harbor.
+We were much on the water, guests of my uncle in his power-yacht "La
+Mascotte II." He was a devotee of canoeing, and made many trips on the
+warm and shallow bays of eastern Long Island, which he seemed to
+prefer to the less spacious reaches of the Potomac. He revisited
+California in the fall of the next year, a trip on which we saw him
+for the last time. An excursion to the Grand Canyon was occasionally
+proposed, but nothing came of it, nor did he consent to be again my
+guest at Carmel, on the rather surprising excuse that the village
+contained too many anarchists! And in November, 1913, I received my
+last letter from him, he being then in Laredo, Texas, about to cross
+the border into warring Mexico.
+
+Why he should have gone forth on so hazardous an enterprise is for the
+most part a matter of conjecture. It may have been in the spirit of
+adventure, or out of boredom, or he may not, even, have been jesting
+when he wrote to an intimate friend that, ashamed of having lived so
+long, and not caring to end his life by his own hand, he was going
+across the border and let the Mexicans perform for him that service.
+But he wrote to others that he purposed to extend his pilgrimage as
+far as South America, to cross the Andes, and return to New York by
+way of a steamer from Buenos Ayres. At any rate, we know, from letters
+written during the winter months, that he had unofficially attached
+himself to a section of Villa's army, even taking an active part in
+the fighting. He was heard from until the close of 1913; after that
+date the mist closes in upon his trail, and we are left to surmise
+what we may. Many rumors as to his fate have come out of Mexico, one
+of them even placing him in the trenches of Flanders. These rumors
+have been, so far as possible, investigated: all end in nothing. The
+only one that seems in the least degree illuminative is the tale
+brought by a veteran reporter from the City of Mexico, and published
+in the San Francisco _BULLETIN_. It is the story of a soldier in
+Villa's army, one of a detachment that captured, near the village of
+Icamole, an ammunition train of the Carranzistas. One of the prisoners
+was a sturdy, white-haired, ruddy-faced Gringo, who, according to the
+tale, went before the firing squad with an Indian muleteer, as sole
+companion in misfortune. The description of the manner--indifferent,
+even contemptuous--with which the white-haired man met his death seems
+so characteristic of Bierce that one would almost be inclined to give
+credence to the tale, impossible though it may be of verification. But
+the date of the tragedy being given as late in 1915, it seems
+incredible that Bierce could have escaped observation for so long a
+period, with so many persons in Mexico eager to know of his fate. It
+is far more likely that he met his death at the hands of a roving band
+of outlaws or guerrilla soldiery.
+
+I have had often in mind the vision of his capture by such a squad,
+their discovery of the considerable amount of gold coin that he was
+known to carry on his person, and his immediate condemnation and
+execution as a spy in order that they might retain possession of the
+booty. Naturally, such proceedings would not have been reported, from
+fear of the necessity of sharing with those "higher up." And so the
+veil would have remained drawn, and impenetrable to vision. Through
+the efforts of the War Department, all United States Consuls were
+questioned as to Bierce's possible departure from the country; all
+Americans visiting or residing in Mexico were begged for
+information--even prospectors. But the story of the reporter is the
+sole one that seems partially credible. To such darkness did so
+shining and fearless a soul go forth.
+
+It is now over eight years since that disappearance, and though the
+likelihood of his existence in the flesh seems faint indeed, the storm
+of detraction and obloquy that he always insisted would follow his
+demise has never broken, is not even on the horizon. Instead, he seems
+to be remembered with tolerance by even those whom he visited with a
+chastening pen. Each year of darkness but makes the star of his fame
+increase and brighten, but we have, I think, no full conception as yet
+of his greatness, no adequate realization of how wide and permanent a
+fame he has won. It is significant that some of the discerning admire
+him for one phase of his work, some for another. For instance, the
+clear-headed H. L. Mencken acclaims him as the first wit of America,
+but will have none of his tales; while others, somewhat disconcerted
+by the cynicism pervading much of his wit, place him among the
+foremost exponents of the art of the short story. Others again prefer
+his humor (for he was humorist as well as wit), and yet others like
+most the force, clarity and keen insight of his innumerable essays and
+briefer comments on mundane affairs. Personally, I have always
+regarded Poe's _Fall of the House of Usher_ as our greatest tale;
+close to that come, in my opinion, at least a dozen of Bierce's
+stories, whether of the soldier or civilian. He has himself stated in
+_Prattle_: "I am not a poet." And yet he wrote poetry, on occasion, of
+a high order, his _Invocation_ being one of the noblest poems in the
+tongue. Some of his satirical verse seems to me as terrible in its
+withering invective as any that has been written by classic satirists,
+not excepting Juvenal and Swift. Like the victims of their merciless
+pens, his, too, will be forgiven and forgotten. Today no one knows,
+nor cares, whether or not those long-dead offenders gave just offense.
+The grave has closed over accuser and accused, and the only thing that
+matters is that a great mind was permitted to function. One may smile
+or sigh over the satire, but one must also realize that even the
+satirist had his own weaknesses, and could have been as savagely
+attacked by a mentality as keen as his own. Men as a whole will never
+greatly care for satire, each recognizing, true enough, glimpses of
+himself in the invective, but sensing as well its fundamental bias and
+cruelty. However, Bierce thought best of himself as a satirist.
+
+Naturally, Bierce carried his wit and humor into his immediate human
+relationships. I best recall an occasion, when, in my first year of
+acquaintance with him, we were both guests at the home of the painter,
+J. H. E. Partington. It happened that a bowl of nasturtiums adorned
+the center table, and having been taught by Father Tabb, the poet, to
+relish that flower, I managed to consume most of them before the close
+of the evening, knowing there were plenty more to be had in the garden
+outside. Someone at last remarked: "Why, George has eaten all the
+nasturtiums! Go out and bring some more." At which Bierce dryly and
+justly remarked: "No--bring some thistles!" It is an indication,
+however, of his real kindness of heart that, observing my confusion,
+he afterwards apologized to me for what he termed a thoughtless jest.
+It was, nevertheless, well deserved.
+
+I recall even more distinctly a scene of another setting. This
+concerns itself with Bierce's son, Leigh, then a youth in the early
+twenties. At the time (_circa_ 1894) I was a brother lodger with them
+in an Oakland apartment house. Young Bierce had contracted a liaison
+with a girl of his own age, and his father, determined to end the
+affair, had appointed an hour for discussion of the matter. The youth
+entered his father's rooms defiant and resolute: within an hour he
+appeared weeping, and cried out to me, waiting for him in his own
+room: "My father is a greater man than Christ! He has suffered more
+than Christ!" And the affair of the heart was promptly terminated.
+
+One conversant with Bierce only as a controversionalist and _censor
+morum_ was, almost of necessity, constrained to imagine him a
+misanthrope, a soured and cynical recluse. Only when one was
+privileged to see him among his intimates could one obtain glimpses of
+his true nature, which was considerate, generous, even affectionate.
+Only the waving of the red flag of Socialism could rouse in him what
+seemed to us others a certain savageness of intolerance. Needless to
+say, we did not often invoke it, for he was an ill man with whom to
+bandy words. It was my hope, at one time, to involve him and Jack
+London in a controversy on the subject, but London declined the oral
+encounter, preferring one with the written word. Nothing came of the
+plan, which is a pity, as each was a supreme exponent of his point of
+view. Bierce subsequently attended one of the midsummer encampments of
+the Bohemian Club, of which he was once the secretary, in their
+redwood grove near the Russian river. Hearing that London was present,
+he asked why they had not been mutually introduced, and I was forced
+to tell him that I feared that they'd be, verbally, at each other's
+throats, within an hour. "Nonsense!" exclaimed Bierce. "Bring him
+around! I'll treat him like a Dutch Uncle." He kept his word, and
+seemed as much attracted to London as London was to him. But I was
+always ill at ease when they were conversing. I do not think the two
+men ever met again.
+
+Bierce was the cleanest man, personally, of whom I have
+knowledge--almost fanatically so, if such a thing be possible. Even
+during our weeks of camping in the Yosemite, he would spend two hours
+on his morning toilet in the privacy of his tent. His nephew always
+insisted that the time was devoted to shaving himself from face to
+foot! He was also a most modest man, and I still recall his decided
+objections to my bathing attire when at the swimming-pool of the
+Bohemian Club, in the Russian River. Compared to many of those
+visible, it seemed more than adequate; but he had another opinion of
+it. He was a good, even an eminent, tankard-man, and retained a clear
+judgment under any amount of potations. He preferred wine (especially
+a dry _vin du pays_, usually a sauterne) to "hard likker," in this
+respect differing in taste from his elder brother. In the days when I
+first made his acquaintance, I was accustomed to roam the hills beyond
+Oakland and Berkeley from Cordonices Creek to Leona Heights, in
+company with Albert Bierce, his son Carlton, R. L. ("Dick")
+Partington, Leigh Bierce (Ambrose's surviving son) and other youths.
+On such occasions I sometimes hid a superfluous bottle of port or
+sherry in a convenient spot, and Bierce, afterwards accompanying us on
+several such outings, pretended to believe that I had such flagons
+concealed under each bush or rock in the reach and breadth of the
+hills, and would, to carry out the jest, hunt zealously in such
+recesses. I could wish that he were less often unsuccessful in the
+search, now that he has had "the coal-black wine" to drink.
+
+Though an appreciable portion of his satire hints at misanthropy,
+Bierce, while profoundly a pessimist, was, by his own confession to
+me, "a lover of his country and his fellowmen," and was ever ready to
+proffer assistance in the time of need and sympathy in the hour of
+sorrow. His was a great and tender heart, and giving of it greatly, he
+expected, or rather hoped for, a return as great. It may have been
+by reason of the frustration of such hopes that he so often broke with
+old and, despite his doubts, appreciative friends. His brother Albert
+once told me that he (Ambrose) had never been "quite the same," after
+the wound in the head that he received in the battle of Kenesaw
+Mountain, but had a tendency to become easily offended and to show
+that resentment. Such estrangements as he and his friends suffered are
+not, therefore, matters on which one should sit in judgment. It is sad
+to know that he went so gladly from life, grieved and disappointed.
+But the white flame of Art that he tended for nearly half a century
+was never permitted to grow faint nor smoky, and it burned to the last
+with a pure brilliance. Perhaps, he bore witness to what he had found
+most admirable and enduring in life in the following words, the
+conclusion of the finest of his essays:
+
+"Literature and art are about all that the world really cares for in
+the end; those who make them are not without justification in
+regarding themselves as masters in the House of Life and all others as
+their servitors. In the babble and clamor, the pranks and antics of
+its countless incapables, the tremendous dignity of the profession of
+letters is overlooked; but when, casting a retrospective eye into 'the
+dark backward and abysm of time' to where beyond these voices is the
+peace of desolation, we note the majesty of the few immortals and
+compare them with the pygmy figures of their contemporary kings,
+warriors and men of action generally--when across the silent
+battle-fields and hushed _fora_ where the dull destinies of nations
+were determined, nobody cares how, we hear
+
+ like ocean on a western beach
+ The surge and thunder of the Odyssey,
+
+then we appraise literature at its true value, and how little worth
+while seems all else with which Man is pleased to occupy his fussy
+soul and futile hands!"
+
+
+
+
+ The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ July 31, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+You will not, I hope, mind my saying that the first part of your
+letter was so pleasing that it almost solved the disappointment
+created by the other part. For _that_ is a bit discouraging. Let me
+explain.
+
+You receive my suggestion about trying your hand * * * at writing,
+with assent and apparently pleasure. But, alas, not for love of the
+art, but for the purpose of helping God repair his botchwork world.
+You want to "reform things," poor girl--to rise and lay about you,
+slaying monsters and liberating captive maids. You would "help to
+alter for the better the position of working-women." You would be a
+missionary--and the rest of it. Perhaps I shall not make myself
+understood when I say that this discourages me; that in such aims
+(worthy as they are) I would do nothing to assist you; that such
+ambitions are not only impracticable but incompatible with the spirit
+that gives success in art; that such ends are a prostitution of art;
+that "helpful" writing is dull reading. If you had had more experience
+of life I should regard what you say as entirely conclusive against
+your possession of any talent of a literary kind. But you are so young
+and untaught in that way--and I have the testimony of little
+felicities and purely literary touches (apparently unconscious) in
+your letters--perhaps your unschooled heart and hope should not be
+held as having spoken the conclusive word. But surely, my child--as
+surely as anything in mathematics--Art will laurel no brow having a
+divided allegiance. Love the world as much as you will, but serve it
+otherwise. The best service you can perform by writing is to write
+well with no care for anything but that. Plant and water and let God
+give the increase if he will, and to whom it shall please him.
+
+Suppose your father were to "help working-women" by painting no
+pictures but such (of their ugly surroundings, say) as would incite
+them to help themselves, or others to help them. Suppose you should
+play no music but such as--but I need go no further. Literature (I
+don't mean journalism) is an _art_;--it is not a form of benevolence.
+It has nothing to do with "reform," and when used as a means of reform
+suffers accordingly and justly. Unless you can _feel_ that way I
+cannot advise you to meddle with it.
+
+It would be dishonest in me to accept your praise for what I wrote of
+the Homestead Works quarrel--unless you should praise it for being
+well written and true. I have no sympathies with that savage fight
+between the two kinds of rascals, and no desire to assist
+either--except to better hearts and manners. The love of truth is good
+enough motive for me when I write of my fellowmen. I like many things
+in this world and a few persons--I like you, for example; but after
+they are served I have no love to waste upon the irreclaimable mass of
+brutality that we know as "mankind." Compassion, yes--I am sincerely
+sorry that they are brutes.
+
+Yes, I wrote the article "The Human Liver." Your criticism is
+erroneous. My opportunities of knowing women's feelings toward Mrs.
+Grundy are better than yours. They hate her with a horrible
+antipathy; but they cower all the same. The fact that they are a part
+of her mitigates neither their hatred nor their fear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After next Monday I shall probably be in St. Helena, but if you will
+be so good as still to write to me please address me here until I
+apprise you of my removal; for I shall intercept my letters at St.
+Helena, wherever addressed. And maybe you will write before Monday. I
+need not say how pleasant it is for me to hear from you. And I shall
+want to know what you think of what I say about your "spirit of
+reform."
+
+How I should have liked to pass that Sunday in camp with you all. And
+to-day--I wonder if you are there to-day. I feel a peculiar affection
+for that place.
+
+Please give my love to all your people, and forgive my intolerably
+long letters--or retaliate in kind.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ August 15, 1892.]
+
+I KNOW, DEAR BLANCHE, of the disagreement among men as to the nature
+and aims of literature; and the subject is too "long" to discuss. I
+will only say that it seems to me that men holding Tolstoi's view are
+not properly literary men (that is to say, artists) at all. They are
+"missionaries," who, in their zeal to lay about them, do not scruple
+to seize any weapon that they can lay their hands on; they would grab
+a crucifix to beat a dog. The dog is well beaten, no doubt (which
+makes him a worse dog than he was before) but note the condition of
+the crucifix! The work of these men is better, of course, than the
+work of men of truer art and inferior brains; but always you see the
+possibilities--possibilities to _them_--which they have missed or
+consciously sacrificed to their fad. And after all they do no good.
+The world does not wish to be helped. The poor wish only to be rich,
+which is impossible, not to be better. They would like to be rich in
+order to be worse, generally speaking. And your working woman (also
+generally speaking) does not wish to be virtuous; despite her
+insincere deprecation she would not let the existing system be altered
+if she could help it. Individual men and women can be assisted; and
+happily some are worthy of assistance. No _class_ of mankind, no
+tribe, no nation is worth the sacrifice of one good man or woman; for
+not only is their average worth low, but they like it that way; and in
+trying to help them you fail to help the good individuals. Your
+family, your immediate friends, will give you scope enough for all
+your benevolence. I must include your _self_.
+
+In timely illustration of some of this is an article by Ingersoll in
+the current _North American Review_--I shall send it you. It will be
+nothing new to you; the fate of the philanthropist who gives out of
+his brain and heart instead of his pocket--having nothing in that--is
+already known to you. It serves him richly right, too, for his low
+taste in loving. He who dilutes, spreads, subdivides, the love which
+naturally _all_ belongs to his family and friends (if they are good)
+should not complain of non-appreciation. Love those, help those, whom
+from personal knowledge you know to be worthy. To love and help others
+is treason to _them_. But, bless my soul! I did not mean to say all
+this.
+
+But while you seem clear as to your own art, you seem undecided as to
+the one you wish to take up. I know the strength and sweetness of the
+illusions (that is, _de_lusions) that you are required to forego. I
+know the abysmal ignorance of the world and human character which,
+as a girl, you necessarily have. I know the charm that inheres in the
+beckoning of the Britomarts, as they lean out of their dream to
+persuade you to be as like them as is compatible with the fact that
+you exist. But I believe, too, that if you are set thinking--not
+reading--you will find the light.
+
+You ask me of journalism. It is so low a thing that it _may_ be
+legitimately used as a means of reform or a means of anything deemed
+worth accomplishing. It is not an art; art, except in the greatest
+moderation, is damaging to it. The man who can write well must not
+write as well as he can; the others may, of course. Journalism has
+many purposes, and the people's welfare _may_ be one of them; though
+that is not the purpose-in-chief, by much.
+
+I don't mind your irony about my looking upon the unfortunate as
+merely "literary material." It is true in so far as I consider them
+_with reference to literature_. Possibly I might be willing to help
+them otherwise--as your father might be willing to help a beggar with
+money, who is not picturesque enough to go into a picture. As you
+might be willing to give a tramp a dinner, yet unwilling to play "The
+Sweet Bye-and-Bye," or "Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay," to tickle his ear.
+
+You call me "master." Well, it is pleasant to think of you as a pupil,
+but--you know the young squire had to watch his arms all night before
+the day of his accolade and investiture with knighthood. I think I'll
+ask you to contemplate yours a little longer before donning them--not
+by way of penance but instruction and consecration. When you are quite
+sure of the nature of your _call_ to write--quite sure that it is
+_not_ the voice of "duty"--then let me do you such slight, poor
+service as my limitations and the injunctions of circumstance
+permit. In a few ways I can help you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Since coming here I have been ill all the time, but it seems my duty
+to remain as long as there is a hope that I _can_ remain. If I get
+free from my disorder and the fear of it I shall go down to San
+Francisco some day and then try to see your people and mine. Perhaps
+you would help me to find my brother's new house--if he is living in
+it.
+
+With sincere regards to all your family, I am most truly your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Your letters are very pleasing to me. I think it nice of you to write
+them.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ August 17, 1892.]
+
+DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+It was not that I forgot to mail you the magazine that I mentioned; I
+could not find it; but now I send it.
+
+My health is bad again, and I fear that I shall have to abandon my
+experiment of living here, and go back to the mountain--or some
+mountain. But not directly.
+
+You asked me what books would be useful to you--I'm assuming that
+you've repented your sacrilegious attitude toward literature, and will
+endeavor to thrust your pretty head into the crown of martyrdom
+otherwise. I may mention a few from time to time as they occur to me.
+There is a little book entitled (I think) simply "English
+Composition." It is by Prof. John Nichol--elementary, in a few places
+erroneous, but on the whole rather better than the ruck of books on
+the same subject.
+
+Read those of Landor's "Imaginary Conversations" which relate to
+literature.
+
+Read Longinus, Herbert Spencer on Style, Pope's "Essay on Criticism"
+(don't groan--the detractors of Pope are not always to have things
+their own way), Lucian on the writing of history--though you need not
+write history. Read poor old obsolete Kames' notions; some of them are
+not half bad. Read Burke "On the Sublime and Beautiful."
+
+Read--but that will do at present. And as you read don't forget that
+the rules of the literary art are deduced from the work of the masters
+who wrote in ignorance of them or in unconsciousness of them. That
+fixes their value; it is secondary to that of _natural_
+qualifications. None the less, it is considerable. Doubtless you have
+read many--perhaps most--of these things, but to read them with a view
+to profit _as a writer_ may be different. If I could get to San
+Francisco I could dig out of those artificial memories, the catalogues
+of the libraries, a lot of titles additional--and get you the books,
+too. But I've a bad memory, and am out of the Book Belt.
+
+I wish you would write some little thing and send it me for
+examination. I shall not judge it harshly, for this I _know_: the good
+writer (supposing him to be born to the trade) is not made by reading,
+but by observing and experiencing. You have lived so little, seen so
+little, that your range will necessarily be narrow, but within its
+lines I know no reason why you should not do good work. But it is all
+conjectural--you may fail. Would it hurt if I should tell you that I
+thought you had failed? Your absolute and complete failure would not
+affect in the slightest my admiration of your intellect. I have always
+half suspected that it is only second rate minds, and minds below the
+second rate, that hold their cleverness by so precarious a tenure that
+they can detach it for display in words.
+
+ God bless you,
+ A. B.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ August 28, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I positively shall not bore you with an interminated screed this time.
+But I thought you might like to know that I have recovered my health,
+and hope to be able to remain here for a few months at least. And if I
+remain well long enough to make me reckless I shall visit your town
+some day, and maybe ask your mother to command you to let me drive you
+to Berkeley. It makes me almost sad to think of the camp at the lake
+being abandoned.
+
+So you liked my remarks on the "labor question." That is nice of you,
+but aren't you afraid your praise will get me into the disastrous
+literary habit of writing for some _one_ pair of eyes?--your eyes? Or
+in resisting the temptation I may go too far in the opposite error.
+But you do not see that it is "Art for Art's sake"--hateful phrase!
+Certainly not, it is not Art at all. Do you forget the distinction I
+pointed out between journalism and literature? Do you not remember
+that I told you that the former was of so little value that it might
+be used for anything? My newspaper work is in _no_ sense literature.
+It is nothing, and only becomes something when I give it the very use
+to which I would put nothing literary. (Of course I refer to my
+editorial and topical work.)
+
+If you want to learn to write that kind of thing, so as to do good
+with it, you've an easy task. _Only_ it is not worth learning and the
+good that you can do with it is not worth doing. But literature--the
+desire to do good with _that_ will not help you to your means. It is
+not a sufficient incentive. The Muse will not meet you if you have any
+work for her to do. Of course I sometimes like to do good--who does
+not? And sometimes I am glad that access to a great number of minds
+every week gives me an opportunity. But, thank Heaven, I don't make
+a business of it, nor use in it a tool so delicate as to be ruined by
+the service.
+
+Please do not hesitate to send me anything that you may be willing to
+write. If you try to make it perfect before you let me see it, it will
+never come. My remarks about the kind of mind which holds its thoughts
+and feelings by so precarious a tenure that they are detachable for
+use by others were not made with a forethought of your failure.
+
+Mr. Harte of the New England Magazine seems to want me to know his
+work (I asked to) and sends me a lot of it cut from the magazine. I
+pass it on to you, and most of it is just and true.
+
+But I'm making another long letter.
+
+I wish I were not an infidel--so that I could say: "God bless you,"
+and mean it literally. I wish there _were_ a God to bless you, and
+that He had nothing else to do.
+
+Please let me hear from you. Sincerely,
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ September 28, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I have been waiting for a full hour of leisure to write you a letter,
+but I shall never get it, and so I'll write you anyhow. Come to think
+of it, there is nothing to say--nothing that _needs_ be said, rather,
+for there is always so much that one would like to say to you, best
+and most patient of _sayees_.
+
+I'm sending you and your father copies of my book. Not that I think
+you (either of you) will care for that sort of thing, but merely
+because your father is my co-sinner in making the book, and you in
+sitting by and diverting my mind from the proof-sheets of a part of
+it. Your part, therefore, in the work is the typographical errors. So
+you are in literature in spite of yourself.
+
+I appreciate what you write of my girl. She is the best of girls to
+me, but God knoweth I'm not a proper person to direct her way of life.
+However, it will not be for long. A dear friend of mine--the widow of
+another dear friend--in London wants her, and means to come out here
+next spring and try to persuade me to let her have her--for a time at
+least. It is likely that I shall. My friend is wealthy, childless and
+devoted to both my children. I wish that in the meantime she (the
+girl) could have the advantage of association with _you_.
+
+Please say to your father that I have his verses, which I promise
+myself pleasure in reading.
+
+_You_ appear to have given up your ambition to "write things." I'm
+sorry, for "lots" of reasons--not the least being the selfish one that
+I fear I shall be deprived of a reason for writing you long dull
+letters. Won't you _play_ at writing things?
+
+My (and Danziger's) book, "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter," is to
+be out next month. The Publisher--I like to write it with a reverent
+capital letter--is unprofessional enough to tell me that he regards it
+as the very best piece of English composition that he ever saw, and he
+means to make the world know it. Now let the great English classics
+hide their diminished heads and pale their ineffectual fires!
+
+So you begin to suspect that books do not give you the truth of life
+and character. Well, that suspicion is the beginning of wisdom, and,
+so far as it goes, a preliminary qualification for writing--books. Men
+and women are certainly not what books represent them to be, nor what
+_they_ represent--and sometimes believe--themselves to be. They are
+better, they are worse, and far more interesting.
+
+With best regards to all your people, and in the hope that we may
+frequently hear from you, I am very sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Both the children send their _love_ to you. And they mean just that.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ October 6, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I send you by this mail the current _New England Magazine_--merely
+because I have it by me and have read all of it that I shall have
+leisure to read. Maybe it will entertain you for an idle hour.
+
+I have so far recovered my health that I hope to do a little
+pot-boiling to-morrow. (Is that properly written with a hyphen?--for
+the life o' me I can't say, just at this moment. There is a story of
+an old actor who having played one part half his life had to cut out
+the name of the person he represented wherever it occurred in his
+lines: he could never remember which syllable to accent.) My illness
+was only asthma, which, unluckily, does not kill me and so should not
+alarm my friends.
+
+Dr. Danziger writes that he has ordered your father's sketch sent me.
+And I've ordered a large number of extra impressions of it--if it is
+still on the stone. So you see I like it.
+
+Let me hear from you and about you.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+ I enclose Bib.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ October 7, 1892.]
+
+DEAR MR. PARTINGTON,
+
+I've been too ill all the week to write you of your manuscripts, or
+even read them understandingly.
+
+I think "Honest Andrew's Prayer" far and away the best. _It_ is
+witty--the others hardly more than earnest, and not, in my judgment,
+altogether fair. But then you know you and I would hardly be likely
+to agree on a point of that kind,--I refuse my sympathies in some
+directions where I extend my sympathy--if that is intelligible. You, I
+think, have broader sympathies than mine--are not only sorry for the
+Homestead strikers (for example) but approve them. I do not. But we
+are one in detesting their oppressor, the smug-wump, Carnegie.
+
+If you had not sent "Honest Andrew's Prayer" elsewhere I should try to
+place it here. It is so good that I hope to see it in print. If it is
+rejected please let me have it again if the incident is not then
+ancient history.
+
+I'm glad you like some things in my book. But you should not condemn
+me for debasing my poetry with abuse; you should commend me for
+elevating my abuse with a little poetry, here and there. I am not a
+poet, but an abuser--that makes all the difference. It is "how you
+look at it."
+
+But I'm still too ill to write. With best regards to all your family,
+I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I've been reading your pamphlet on Art Education. You write best when
+you write most seriously--and your best is very good.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ October 15, 1892.]
+
+DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I send you this picture in exchange for the one that you have--I'm
+"redeeming" all those with these. But I asked you to return that a
+long time ago. Please say if you like this; to me it looks like a
+dude. But I hate the other--the style of it.
+
+It is very good of your father to take so much trouble as to go over
+and work on that stone. I want the pictures--lithographs--only for
+economy: so that when persons for whom I do not particularly care want
+pictures of me I need not bankrupt myself in orders to the
+photographer. And I do not like photographs anyhow. How long, O Lord,
+how long am I to wait for that sketch of _you_?
+
+My dear girl, I do not see that folk like your father and me have any
+just cause of complaint against an unappreciative world; nobody
+compels us to make things that the world does not want. We merely
+choose to because the pay, _plus_ the satisfaction, exceeds the pay
+alone that we get from work that the world does want. Then where is
+our grievance? We get what we prefer when we do good work; for the
+lesser wage we do easier work. It has never seemed to me that the
+"unappreciated genius" had a good case to go into court with, and I
+think he should be promptly non-suited. Inspiration from Heaven is all
+very fine--the mandate of an attitude or an instinct is good; but when
+A works for B, yet insists on taking his orders from C, what can he
+expect? So don't distress your good little heart with compassion--not
+for me, at least; whenever I tire of pot-boiling, wood-chopping is
+open to me, and a thousand other honest and profitable employments.
+
+I have noted Gertrude's picture in the Examiner with a peculiar
+interest. That girl has a bushel of brains, and her father and brother
+have to look out for her or she will leave them out of sight. I would
+suggest as a measure of precaution against so monstrous a perversion
+of natural order that she have her eyes put out. The subjection of
+women must be maintained.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bib and Leigh send love to you. Leigh, I think, is expecting Carlt.
+I've permitted Leigh to join the band again, and he is very peacocky
+in his uniform. God bless you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ November 6, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I am glad you will consent to tolerate the new photograph--all my
+other friends are desperately delighted with it. I prefer your
+tolerance.
+
+But I don't like to hear that you have been "ill and blue"; that is a
+condition which seems more naturally to appertain to me. For, after
+all, whatever cause you may have for "blueness," you can always
+recollect that you are _you_, and find a wholesome satisfaction in
+your identity; whereas I, alas, am _I_!
+
+I'm sure you performed your part of that concert creditably despite
+the ailing wrist, and wish that I might have added myself to your
+triumph.
+
+I have been very ill again but hope to get away from here (back to my
+mountain) before it is time for another attack from my friend the
+enemy. I shall expect to see you there sometime when my brother and
+his wife come up. They would hardly dare to come without you.
+
+No, I did not read the criticism you mention--in the _Saturday
+Review_. Shall send you all the _Saturdays_ that I get if you will
+have them. Anyhow, they will amuse (and sometimes disgust) your
+father.
+
+I have awful arrears of correspondence, as usual.
+
+The children send love. They had a pleasant visit with Carlt, and we
+hope he will come again.
+
+May God be very good to you and put it into your heart to write to
+your uncle often.
+
+Please give my best respects to all Partingtons, jointly and
+severally.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ November 29, 1892.]
+
+DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Only just a word to say that I have repented of my assent to your
+well-meant proposal for your father to write of _me_. If there is
+anything in my work in letters that engages his interest, or in my
+_literary_ history--that is well enough, and I shall not mind. But
+"biography" in the other sense is distasteful to me. I never read
+biographical "stuff" of other writers--of course you know "stuff" is
+literary slang for "matter"--and think it "beside the question."
+Moreover, it is distinctly mischievous to letters. It throws no light
+on one's work, but on the contrary "darkens counsel." The only reason
+that posterity judges work with some slight approach to accuracy is
+that posterity knows less, and cares less, about the author's
+personality. It considers his work as impartially as if it had found
+it lying on the ground with no footprints about it and no initials on
+its linen.
+
+My brother is not "fully cognizant" of my history, anyhow--not of the
+part that is interesting.
+
+So, on the whole, I'll ask that it be not done. It was only my wish to
+please that made me consent. That wish is no weaker now, but I would
+rather please otherwise.
+
+I trust that you arrived safe and well, and that your memory of those
+few stormy days is not altogether disagreeable. Sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ December 25, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Returning here from the city this morning, I find your letter. And I
+had not replied to your last one before that! But _that_ was because I
+hoped to see you at your home. I was unable to do so--I saw no one
+(but Richard) whom I really wanted to see, and had not an hour
+unoccupied by work or "business" until this morning. And then--it was
+Christmas, and my right to act as skeleton at anybody's feast by even
+so much as a brief call was not clear. I hope my brother will be as
+forgiving as I know you will be.
+
+When I went down I was just recovering from as severe an attack of
+illness as I ever had in my life. Please consider unsaid all that I
+have said in praise of this mountain, its air, water, and everything
+that is its.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was uncommonly nice of Hume to entertain so good an opinion of me;
+if you had seen him a few days later you would have found a different
+state of affairs, probably; for I had been exhausting relays of vials
+of wrath upon him for delinquent diligence in securing copyright for
+my little story--whereby it is uncopyrighted. I ought to add that he
+has tried to make reparation, and is apparently contrite to the limit
+of his penitential capacity.
+
+No, there was no other foundation for the little story than its
+obvious naturalness and consistency with the sentiments "appropriate
+to the season." When Christendom is guzzling and gorging and clowning
+it has not time to cease being cruel; all it can do is to augment its
+hypocrisy a trifle.
+
+Please don't lash yourself and do various penances any more for your
+part in the plaguing of poor Russell; he is quite forgotten in the
+superior affliction sent upon James Whitcomb Riley. _That_ seems a
+matter of genuine public concern, if I may judge by what I heard in
+town (and I heard little else) and by my letters and "esteemed"
+(though testy) "contemporaries." Dear, dear, how sensitive people are
+becoming!
+
+Richard has promised me the Blanchescape that I have so patiently
+waited for while you were practicing the art of looking pretty in
+preparation for the sitting, so now I am happy. I shall put you
+opposite Joaquin Miller, who is now framed and glazed in good shape. I
+have also your father's sketch of me--that is, I got it and left it in
+San Francisco to be cleaned if possible; it was in a most unregenerate
+state of dirt and grease.
+
+Seeing Harry Bigelow's article in the _Wave_ on women who write (and
+it's unpleasantly near to the truth of the matter) I feel almost
+reconciled to the failure of my gorgeous dream of making a writer of
+_you_. I wonder if you would have eschewed the harmless, necessary tub
+and danced upon the broken bones of the innocuous toothbrush. Fancy
+you with sable nails and a soiled cheek, uttering to the day what God
+taught in the night! Let us be thankful that the peril is past.
+
+The next time I go to "the Bay" I shall go to 1019 _first_.
+
+God bless you for a good girl.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[First part of this letter missing.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I know Blackburn Harte has a weakness for the proletariat of
+letters * * * and doubtless thinks Riley good _because_ he is "of the
+people," peoply. But he will have to endure me as well as he can. You
+ask my opinion of Burns. He has not, I think, been translated into
+English, and I do not (that is, I can but _will_ not) read that
+gibberish. I read Burns once--that was once too many times; but
+happily it was before I knew any better, and so my time, being
+worthless, was not wasted.
+
+I wish you could be up here this beautiful weather. But I dare say it
+would rain if you came. In truth, it is "thickening" a trifle just
+because of my wish. And I wish I _had_ given you, for your father,
+all the facts of my biography from the cradle--downward. When you come
+again I shall, if you still want them. For I'm worried half to death
+with requests for them, and when I refuse am no doubt considered surly
+or worse. And my refusal no longer serves, for the biography men are
+beginning to write my history from imagination. So the next time I see
+you I shall give you (orally) that "history of a crime," my life.
+Then, if your father is still in the notion, he can write it from your
+notes, and I can answer all future inquiries by enclosing his article.
+
+Do you know?--you will, I think, be glad to know--that I have many
+more offers for stories at good prices, than I have the health to
+accept. (For I am less nearly well than I have told you.) Even the
+_Examiner_ has "waked up" (I woke it up) to the situation, and now
+pays me $20 a thousand words; and my latest offer from New York is
+$50.
+
+I hardly know why I tell you this unless it is because you tell me of
+any good fortune that comes to your people, and because you seem to
+take an interest in my affairs such as nobody else does in just the
+same unobjectionable and, in fact, agreeable way. I wish you were my
+"real, sure-enough" niece. But in that case I should expect you to
+pass all your time at Howell Mountain, with your uncle and cousin.
+Then I should teach you to write, and you could expound to me the
+principles underlying the art of being the best girl in the world.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ January 4, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Not hearing from [you] after writing you last week, I fear you are
+ill--may I not know? I am myself ill, as I feared. On Thursday last I
+was taken violently ill indeed, and have but just got about. In
+truth, I'm hardly able to write you, but as I have to go to work on
+Friday, _sure_, I may as well practice a little on you. And the
+weather up here is Paradisaical. Leigh and I took a walk this morning
+in the woods. We scared up a wild deer, but I did not feel able to run
+it down and present you with its antlers.
+
+I hope you are well, that you are all well. And I hope Heaven will put
+it into your good brother's heart to send me that picture of the
+sister who is so much too good for him--or anybody.
+
+In the meantime, and always, God bless you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+My boy (who has been an angel of goodness to me in my illness) sends
+his love to you and all your people.
+
+
+[Angwin, Cal.,
+ January 14, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+You see the matter is this way. You can't come up here and go back the
+same day--at least that would give you but about an hour here. You
+must remain over night. Now I put it to you--how do you think I'd feel
+if you came and remained over night and I, having work to do, should
+have to leave you to your own devices, mooning about a place that has
+nobody to talk to? When a fellow comes a long way to see me I want to
+see a good deal of him, however _he_ may feel about it. It is not the
+same as if he lived in the same bailiwick and "dropped in." That is
+why, in the present state of my health and work, I ask all my friends
+to give me as long notice of their coming as possible. I'm sure you'll
+say I am right, inasmuch as certain work if undertaken must be done by
+the time agreed upon.
+
+My relations with Danziger are peculiar--as any one's relations with
+him must be. In the matter of which you wished to speak I could say
+nothing. For this I must ask you to believe there are reasons. It
+would not have been fair not to let you know, before coming, that I
+would not talk of him.
+
+I thought, though, that you would probably come up to-day if I wrote
+you. Well, I should like you to come and pass a week with me. But if
+you come for a day I naturally want it to be an "off" day with me.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ January 23, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I should have written you sooner; it has been ten whole days since the
+date of your last letter. But I have not been in the mood of letter
+writing, and am prepared for maledictions from all my neglected
+friends but you. My health is better. Yesterday I returned from
+Napa, where I passed twenty-six hours, buried, most of the time, in
+fog; but apparently it has not harmed me. The weather here remains
+heavenly. * * *
+
+If I grow better in health I shall in time feel able to extend my next
+foray into the Lowlands as far as Oakland and Berkeley.
+
+Here are some fronds of maiden-hair fern that I have just brought in.
+The first wild flowers of the season are beginning to venture out and
+the manzanitas are a sight to see.
+
+With warmest regards to all your people, I am, as ever, your most
+unworthy uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ February 5, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+What an admirable reporter you would be! Your account of the meeting
+with Miller in the restaurant and of the "entertainment" are amusing
+no end. * * * By the way, I observe a trooly offle "attack" on me in
+the Oakland _Times_ of the 3rd (I think) * * * (I know of course it
+means me--I always know that when they pull out of their glowing minds
+that old roasted chestnut about "tearing down" but not "building
+up"--that is to say, effacing one imposture without giving them
+another in place of it.) The amusing part of the business is that he
+points a contrast between me and Realf (God knows there's unlikeness
+enough) quite unconscious of the fact that it is I and no other who
+have "built up" Realf's reputation as a poet--published his work, and
+paid him for it, when nobody else would have it; repeatedly pointed
+out its greatness, and when he left that magnificent crown of sonnets
+behind him protested that posterity would know California better by
+the incident of his death than otherwise--not a soul, until now,
+concurring in my view of the verses. Believe me, my trade is not
+without its humorous side.
+
+Leigh and I went down to the waterfall yesterday. It was almost
+grand--greater than I had ever seen it--and I took the liberty to wish
+that you might see it in that state. My wish must have communicated
+itself, somehow, though imperfectly, to Leigh, for as I was indulging
+it he expressed the same wish with regard to Richard.
+
+I wish too that you might be here to-day to see the swirls of snow. It
+is falling rapidly, and I'm thinking that this letter will make its
+way down the mountain to-morrow morning through a foot or two of it.
+Unluckily, it has a nasty way of turning to rain.
+
+My health is very good now, and Leigh and I take long walks. And after
+the rains we look for Indian arrow-heads in the plowed fields and on
+the gravel bars of the creek. My collection is now great; but I fear I
+shall tire of the fad before completing it. One in the country must
+have a fad or die of dejection and oxidation of the faculties. How
+happy is he who can make a fad of his work!
+
+By the way, my New York publishers (The United States Book Company)
+have failed, owing me a pot of money, of which I shall probably get
+nothing. I'm beginning to cherish an impertinent curiosity to know
+what Heaven means to do to me next. If your function as one of the
+angels gives you a knowledge of such matters please betray your trust
+and tell me where I'm to be hit, and how hard.
+
+But this is an intolerable deal of letter.
+
+With best regards to all good Partingtons--and I think there are no
+others--I remain your affectionate uncle by adoption,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Leigh has brought in some manzanita blooms which I shall try to
+enclose. But they'll be badly smashed.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ February 14, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I thank you many times for the picture, which is a monstrous good
+picture, whatever its shortcomings as a portrait may be. On the
+authority of the great art critic, Leigh Bierce, I am emboldened to
+pronounce some of the work in it equal to Gribayedoff at his best; and
+that, according to the g. a. c. aforesaid, is to exhaust eulogium.
+But--it isn't altogether the Blanche that I know, as I know her. Maybe
+it is the hat--I should prefer you hatless, and so less at the mercy
+of capricious fortune. Suppose hats were to "go out"--I tremble to
+think of what would happen to that gorgeous superstructure which now
+looks so beautiful. O, well, when I come down I shall drag you to the
+hateful photographer and get something that looks quite like you--and
+has no other value.
+
+And I mean to "see Oakland and die" pretty soon. I have not dared go
+when the weather was bad. It promises well now, but I am to have
+visitors next Sunday, so must stay at home. God and the weather bureau
+willing, you may be bothered with me the Saturday or Sunday after. We
+shall see.
+
+I hope your father concurs in my remarks on picture "borders"--I did
+not think of him until the remarks had been written, or I should have
+assured myself of his practice before venturing to utter my mind o'
+the matter. If it were not for him and Gertrude and the _Wave_ I
+should snarl again, anent "half-tones," which I abhor. Hume tried to
+get me to admire his illustrations, but I would not, so far as the
+process is concerned, and bluntly told him he would not get your
+father's best work that way.
+
+If you were to visit the Mountain now I should be able to show you a
+redwood forest (newly discovered) and a picturesque gulch to match.
+
+The wild flowers are beginning to put up their heads to look for you,
+and my collection of Indian antiquities is yearning to have you see
+it.
+
+Please convey my thanks to Richard for the picture--the girlscape--and
+my best regards to your father and all the others.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ February 21, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I'm very sorry indeed that I cannot be in Oakland Thursday evening to
+see you "in your glory," arrayed, doubtless, like a lily of the field.
+However glorious you may be in public, though, I fancy I should like
+you better as you used to be out at camp.
+
+Well, I mean to see you on Saturday afternoon if you are at home, and
+think I shall ask you to be my guide to Grizzlyville; for surely I
+shall never be able to find the wonderful new house alone. So if your
+mamma will let you go out there with me I promise to return you to her
+instead of running away with you. And, possibly, weather permitting,
+we can arrange for a Sunday in the redwoods or on the hills. Or don't
+your folks go out any more o' Sundays?
+
+Please give my thanks to your mother for the kind invitation to put up
+at your house; but I fear that would be impossible. I shall have to be
+where people can call on me--and such a disreputable crowd as my
+friends are would ruin the Partingtonian reputation for
+respectability. In your new neighborhood you will all be very
+proper--which you could hardly be with a procession of pirates and
+vagrants pulling at your door-bell.
+
+So--if God is good--I shall call on you Saturday afternoon. In the
+meantime and always be thou happy--thou and thine. Your unworthy
+uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ March 18, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+It is good to have your letters again. If you will not let me teach
+you my trade of writing stories it is right that you practice your own
+of writing letters. You are mistress of that. Byron's letters to Moore
+are dull in comparison with yours to me. Some allowance, doubtless,
+must be made for my greater need of your letters than of Byron's. For,
+truth to tell, I've been a trifle dispirited and noncontent. In that
+mood I peremptorily resigned from the _Examiner_, for one thing--and
+permitted myself to be coaxed back by Hearst, for another. My other
+follies I shall not tell you. * * *
+
+We had six inches of snow up here and it has rained steadily ever
+since--more than a week. And the fog is of superior opacity--quite
+peerless that way. It is still raining and fogging. Do you wonder that
+your unworthy uncle has come perilously and alarmingly near to
+loneliness? Yet I have the companionship, at meals, of one of your
+excellent sex, from San Francisco. * * *
+
+Truly, I should like to attend one of your at-homes, but I fear it
+must be a long time before I venture down there again. But when this
+brumous visitation is past I can _look_ down, and that assists the
+imagination to picture you all in your happy (I hope) home. But if
+that woolly wolf, Joaquin Miller, doesn't keep outside the fold I
+_shall_ come down and club him soundly. I quite agree with your mother
+that his flattery will spoil you. You said I would spoil Phyllis, and
+now, you bad girl, you wish to be spoiled yourself. Well, you can't
+eat four Millerine oranges.--My love to all your family.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ March 26, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+I am very glad indeed to get the good account of Leigh that you give
+me. I've feared that he might be rather a bore to you, but you make me
+easy on that score. Also I am pleased that you think he has a
+sufficient "gift" to do something in the only direction in which he
+seems to care to go.
+
+He is anxious to take the place at the _Examiner_, and his uncle
+thinks that would be best--if they will give it him. I'm a little
+reluctant for many reasons, but there are considerations--some of them
+going to the matter of character and disposition--which point to that
+as the best arrangement. The boy needs discipline, control, and work.
+He needs to learn by experience that life is not all beer and
+skittles. Of course you can't quite know him as I do. As to his
+earning anything on the _Examiner_ or elsewhere, that cuts no
+figure--he'll spend everything he can get his fingers on anyhow; but I
+feel that he ought to have the advantage of a struggle for existence
+where the grass is short and the soil stony.
+
+Well, I shall let him live down there somehow, and see what can be
+done with him. There's a lot of good in him, and a lot of the other
+thing, naturally.
+
+I hope Hume has, or will, put you in authority in the _Post_ and give
+you a decent salary. He seems quite enthusiastic about the _Post_
+and--about you.
+
+With sincere regards to Mrs. Partington and all the Partingtonettes, I
+am very truly yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ April 10, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+If you are undertaking to teach my kid (which, unless it is entirely
+agreeable to you, you must not do) I hope you will regard him as a
+pupil whose tuition is to be paid for like any other pupil. And you
+should, I think, name the price. Will you kindly do so?
+
+Another thing. Leigh tells me you paid him for something he did for
+the _Wave_. That is not right. While you let him work with you, and
+under you, his work belongs to you--is a part of yours. I mean the
+work that he does in your shop for the _Wave_.
+
+I don't wish to feel that you are bothering with him for nothing--will
+you not tell me your notion of what I should pay you?
+
+I fancy you'll be on the _Examiner_ pretty soon--if you wish.
+
+With best regards to your family I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ April 10, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+As I was writing to your father I was, of course, strongly impressed
+with a sense of _you_; for you are an intrusive kind of creature,
+coming into one's consciousness in the most lawless way--Phyllis-like.
+(Phyllis is my "type and example" of lawlessness, albeit I'm devoted
+to her--a Phyllistine, as it were.)
+
+Leigh sends me a notice (before the event) of your concert. I hope it
+was successful. Was it?
+
+It rains or snows here all the time, and the mountain struggles in
+vain to put on its bravery of leaf and flower. When this kind of thing
+stops I'm going to put in an application for you to come up and get
+your bad impressions of the place effaced. It is insupportable that my
+earthly paradise exist in your memory as a "bad eminence," like
+Satan's primacy.
+
+I'm sending you the _New England Magazine_--perhaps I have sent it
+already--and a _Harper's Weekly_ with a story by Mrs. * * *, who is a
+sort of pupil of mine. She used to do bad work--does now sometimes;
+but she will do great work by-and-by.
+
+I wish you had not got that notion that you cannot learn to write. You
+see I'd like you to do _some_ art work that I can understand and
+enjoy. I wonder why it is that no note or combination of notes can be
+struck out of a piano that will touch me--give me an emotion of any
+kind. It is not wholly due to my ignorance and bad ear, for other
+instruments--the violin, organ, zither, guitar, etc., sometimes affect
+me profoundly. Come, read me the riddle if you know. What have I done
+that I should be inaccessible to your music? I know it is good; I can
+hear that it is, but not feel that it is. Therefore to me it is not.
+
+Now that, you will confess, is a woeful state--"most tolerable and not
+to be endured." Will you not cultivate some art within the scope of my
+capacity? Do you think you could learn to walk on a wire (if it lay on
+the ground)? Can you not ride three horses at once if they are
+suitably dead? Or swallow swords? Really, you should have some way to
+entertain your uncle.
+
+True, you can talk, but you never get the chance; I always "have the
+floor." Clearly you must learn to write, and I mean to get Miller to
+teach you how to be a poet.
+
+I hope you will write occasionally to me,--letter-writing is an art
+that you do excel in--as I in "appreciation" of your excellence in it.
+
+Do you see my boy? I hope he is good, and diligent in his work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You must write to me or I shall withdraw my avuncular relation to you.
+
+With good will to all your people--particularly Phyllis--I am
+sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin, Calif.,
+ April 16, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+I think you wrong. On your own principle, laid down in your letter,
+that "every man has a right to the full value of his labor"--pardon
+me, good Englishman, I meant "laboUr"--you have a right to your wage
+for the labo_u_r of teaching Leigh. And what work would _he_ get to do
+but for you?
+
+I can't hold you and inject shekels into your pocket, but if the voice
+of remonstrance has authority to enter at your ear without a ticket I
+pray you to show it hospitality.
+
+Leigh doubtless likes to see his work in print, but I hope you will
+not let him put anything out until it is as good as he can make
+it--nor then if it is not good _enough_. And that whether he signs it
+or not. I have talked to him about the relation of conscience to
+lab-work, but I don't know if my talk all came out at the other ear.
+
+O--that bad joke o' mine. Where do you and Richard expect to go when
+death do you part? You were neither of you present that night on the
+dam, nor did I know either of you. Blanche, thank God, retains the
+old-time reverence for truth: it was to her that I said it. Richard
+evidently dreamed it, and you--you've been believing that confounded
+_Wave_! Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ April 18, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I take a few moments from work to write you in order (mainly) to say
+that your letter of March 31st did not go astray, as you seem to
+fear--though why _you_ should care if it did I can't conjecture. The
+loss to me--that is probably what would touch your compassionate
+heart.
+
+So you _will_ try to write. That is a good girl. I'm almost sure you
+can--not, of course, all at once, but by-and-by. And if not, what
+matter? You are not of the sort, I am sure, who would go on despite
+everything, determined to succeed by dint of determining to succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are blessed with the most amiable of all conceivable weathers up
+here, and the wild flowers are putting up their heads everywhere to
+look for you. Lying in their graves last autumn, they overheard
+(_under_heard) your promise to come in the spring, and it has
+stimulated and cheered them to a vigorous growth.
+
+I'm sending you some more papers. Don't think yourself obliged to read
+all the stuff I send you--_I_ don't read it.
+
+Condole with me--I have just lost another publisher--by failure.
+Schulte, of Chicago, publisher of "The Monk" etc., has "gone under," I
+hear. Danziger and I have not had a cent from him. I put out three
+books in a year, and lo! each one brings down a publisher's gray hair
+in sorrow to the grave! for Langton, of "Black Beetles," came to
+grief--that is how Danziger got involved. "O that mine enemy would
+_publish_ one of my books!"
+
+I am glad to hear of your success at your concert. If I could have
+reached you you should have had the biggest basket of pretty
+vegetables that was ever handed over the footlights. I'm sure you
+merited it all--what do you _not_ merit?
+
+Your father gives me good accounts of my boy. He _must_ be doing well,
+I think, by the way he neglects all my commissions.
+
+Enclosed you will find my contribution to the Partington art gallery,
+with an autograph letter from the artist. You can hang them in any
+light you please and show them to Richard. He will doubtless be
+pleased to note how the latent genius of his boss has burst into
+bloom.
+
+I have been wading in the creek this afternoon for pure love of it;
+the gravel looked so clean under the water. I was for the moment at
+least ten years younger than your father. To whom, and to all the rest
+of your people, my sincere regards, Your uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin, Cala.,
+ April 26, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I accept your sympathy for my misfortunes in publishing. It serves me
+right (I don't mean the sympathy does) for publishing. I should have
+known that if a publisher cannot beat an author otherwise, or is too
+honest to do so, he will do it by failing. Once in London a publisher
+gave me a check dated two days ahead, and then (the only thing he
+could do to make the check worthless)--ate a pork pie and died. That
+was the late John Camden Hotten, to whose business and virtues my
+present London publishers, Chatto and Windus, have succeeded. They
+have not failed, and they refuse pork pie, but they deliberately
+altered the title of my book.
+
+All this for your encouragement in "learning to write." Writing books
+is a noble profession; it has not a shade of selfishness in
+it--nothing worse than conceit.
+
+O yes, you shall have your big basket of flowers if ever I catch you
+playing in public. I wish I could give you the carnations,
+lilies-of-the-valley, violets, and first-of-the-season sweet peas now
+on my table. They came from down near you--which fact they are trying
+triumphantly and as hard as they can to relate in fragrance.
+
+I trust your mother is well of her cold--that you are all well and
+happy, and that Phyllis will not forget me. And may the good Lord
+bless you regularly every hour of every day for your merit, and every
+minute of every hour as a special and particular favor to Your uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Berkeley,
+ October 2, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I accept with pleasure your evidence that the Piano is not as black as
+I have painted, albeit the logical inference is that I'm pretty black
+myself. Indubitably I'm "in outer darkness," and can only say to you:
+"Lead, kindly light." Thank you for the funny article on the luxury
+question--from the funny source. But you really must not expect me
+to answer it, nor show you wherein it is "wrong." I cannot discern the
+expediency of you having any "views" at all in those matters--even
+correct ones. If I could have my way you should think of more
+profitable things than the (conceded) "wrongness" of a world which is
+the habitat of a wrongheaded and wronghearted race of irreclaimable
+savages. * * * When woman "broadens her sympathies" they become
+annular. Don't.
+
+Cosgrave came over yesterday for a "stroll," but as he had a dinner
+engagement to keep before going home, he was in gorgeous gear. So I
+kindly hoisted him atop of Grizzly Peak and sent him back across the
+Bay in a condition impossible to describe, save by the aid of a wet
+dishclout for illustration.
+
+Please ask your father when and where he wants me to sit for the
+portrait. If that picture is not sold, and ever comes into my
+possession, I shall propose to swap it for yours. I have always wanted
+to lay thievish hands on that, and would even like to come by it
+honestly. But what under the sun would I do with either that or mine?
+Fancy me packing large paintings about to country hotels and places of
+last resort!
+
+Leigh is living with me now. Poor chap, the death of his aunt has made
+him an orphan. I feel a profound compassion for any one whom an
+untoward fate compels to live with _me_. However, such a one is sure
+to be a good deal alone, which is a mitigation.
+
+With good wishes for all your people, I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Berkeley,
+ December 27, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I'm sending you (by way of pretext for writing you) a magazine that I
+asked Richard to take to you last evening, but which he forgot.
+There's an illustrated article on gargoyles and the like, which will
+interest you. Some of the creatures are delicious--more so than I had
+the sense to perceive when I saw them alive on Notre Dame.
+
+I want to thank you too for the beautiful muffler before I take to my
+willow chair, happy in the prospect of death. For at this hour, 10:35
+p. m., I "have on" a very promising case of asthma. If I come out of
+it decently alive in a week or so I shall go over to your house and
+see the finished portrait if it is "still there," like the flag in our
+national anthem.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Oakland,
+ July 31, 1894.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+If you are not utterly devoured by mosquitoes perhaps you'll go to the
+postoffice and get this. In that hope I write, not without a strong
+sense of the existence of the clerks in the Dead Letter Office at
+Washington.
+
+I hope you are (despite the mosquitoes) having "heaps" of rest and
+happiness. As to me, I have only just recovered sufficiently to be
+out, and "improved the occasion" by going to San Francisco yesterday
+and returning on the 11:15 boat. I saw Richard, and he seemed quite
+solemn at the thought of the dispersal of his family to the four
+winds.
+
+I have a joyous letter from Leigh dated "on the road," nearing
+Yosemite. He has been passing through the storied land of Bret Harte,
+and is permeated with a sense of its beauty and romance. When shall
+you return? May I hope, then, to see you?
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. Here are things that I cut out for memoranda. On second thought
+_I_ know all that; so send them to you for the betterment of your mind
+and heart.
+
+ B.
+
+
+[San Jose,
+ October 17, 1894.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Your kindly note was among a number which I put into my pocket at the
+postoffice and forgot until last evening when I returned from Oakland.
+(I dared remain up there only a few hours, and the visit did me no
+good.)
+
+Of course I should have known that your good heart would prompt the
+wish to hear from your patient, but I fear I was a trifle misanthropic
+all last week, and indisposed to communicate with my species.
+
+I came here on Monday of last week, and the change has done me good. I
+have no asthma and am slowly getting back my strength.
+
+Leigh and Ina Peterson passed Sunday with me, and Leigh recounted his
+adventures in the mountains. I had been greatly worried about him; it
+seems there was abundant reason. The next time he comes I wish he
+would bring you. It is lovely down here. Perhaps you and Katie can
+come some time, and I'll drive you all over the valley--if you care to
+drive.
+
+If I continue well I shall remain here or hereabout; if not I don't
+know where I shall go. Probably into the Santa Cruz mountains or to
+Gilroy. If I could have my way I'd live at Piedmont.
+
+Do you know I lost Pin the Reptile? I brought him along in my bicycle
+bag (I came the latter half of the way bike-back) and the ungrateful
+scoundrel wormed himself out and took to the weeds just before we got
+to San Jose. So I've nothing to lavish my second-childhoodish
+affection upon--nothing but just myself.
+
+My permanent address is Oakland, as usual, but _you_ may address me
+here at San Jose if you will be so good as to address me anywhere.
+Please do, and tell me of your triumphs and trials at the Conservatory
+of Music. I do fervently hope it may prove a means of prosperity to
+you, for, behold, you are The Only Girl in the World Who Merits
+Prosperity!
+
+Please give my friendly regards to your people; and so--Heaven be good
+to you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[San Jose,
+ October 28, 1894.]
+
+O, BEST OF POETS,
+
+How have you the heart to point out what you deem an imperfection in
+those lines. Upon my soul, I swear they are faultless, and "moonlight"
+is henceforth and forever a rhyme to "delight." Also, likewise,
+moreover and furthermore, a ---- is henceforth ----; and ---- are
+forever ----; and to ---- shall be ----; and so forth. You have
+established new canons of literary criticism--more liberal ones--and
+death to the wretch who does not accept them! Ah, I always knew you
+were a revolutionist.
+
+Yes, I am in better health, worse luck! For I miss the beef-teaing
+expeditions more than you can by trying.
+
+By the way, if you again encounter your fellow practitioner, Mrs.
+Hirshberg, please tell her what has become of her patient, and that I
+remember her gratefully.
+
+It is not uninteresting to me to hear of your progress in your art,
+albeit I am debarred from entrance into the temple where it is
+worshiped. After all, art finds its best usefulness in its reaction
+upon the character; and in that work I can trace your proficiency in
+the art that you love. As you become a better artist you grow a nicer
+girl, and if your music does not cause my tympana to move themselves
+aright, yet the niceness is not without its effect upon the soul o'
+me. So I'm not so _very_ inert a clod, after all.
+
+No, Leigh has not infected me with the exploring fad. I exhausted my
+capacity in that way years before I had the advantage of his
+acquaintance and the contagion of his example. But I don't like to
+think of that miserable mountain sitting there and grinning in the
+consciousness of having beaten the Bierce family.
+
+So--apropos of my brother--_I_ am "odd" after a certain fashion! My
+child, that is blasphemy. You grow hardier every day of your life, and
+you'll end as a full colonel yet, and challenge Man to mortal combat
+in true Stetsonian style. Know thy place, thou atom!
+
+Speaking of colonels reminds me that one of the most eminent of the
+group had the assurance to write me, asking for an "audience" to
+consult about a benefit that she--_she!_--is getting up for my friend
+Miss * * *, a glorious writer and eccentric old maid whom you do not
+know. * * * evidently wants more notoriety and proposes to shine by
+Miss * * * light. I was compelled to lower the temperature of the
+situation with a letter curtly courteous. Not even to assist Miss * * *
+shall my name be mixed up with those of that gang. But of course all
+that does not amuse you.
+
+I wish I could have a chat with you. I speak to nobody but my
+chambermaid and the waiter at my restaurant. By the time I see you I
+shall have lost the art of speech altogether and shall communicate
+with you by the sign language.
+
+God be good to you and move you to write to me sometimes.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[First part of this letter missing.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may, I think, expect my assistance in choosing between (or among)
+your suitors next month, early. I propose to try living in Oakland
+again for a short time beginning about then. But I shall have much to
+do the first few days--possibly in settling my earthly affairs for it
+is my determination to be hanged for killing all those suitors. That
+seems to me the simplest way of disembarrassing you. As to me--it is
+the "line of least resistance"--unless they fight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So you have been ill. You must not be ill, my child--it disturbs my
+Marcus Aurelian tranquillity, and is most selfishly inconsiderate of
+you.
+
+Mourn with me: the golden leaves of my poplars are now underwheel. I
+sigh for the perennial eucalyptus leaf of Piedmont.
+
+I hope you are all well. Sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[San Jose,
+ November 20, 1894.]
+
+Since writing you yesterday, dear Blanche, I have observed that the
+benefit to * * * is not abandoned--it is to occur in the evening of
+the 26th, at Golden Gate Hall, San Francisco. I recall your kind offer
+to act for me in any way that I might wish to assist Miss * * *. Now,
+I will not have my name connected with anything that the * * * woman
+and her sister-in-evidence may do for their own glorification, but I
+enclose a Wells, Fargo & Co. money order for all the money I can
+presently afford--wherewith you may do as you will; buy tickets, or
+hand it to the treasurer in your own name. I know Miss * * * must be
+awfully needy to accept a benefit--you have no idea how sensitive and
+suspicious and difficult she is. She is almost impossible. But there
+are countless exactions on my lean purse, and I must do the rest with
+my pen. So--I thank you.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[18 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 1, 1901.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+This is just a hasty note to acknowledge receipt of your letter and
+the poems. I hope to reach those pretty soon and give them the
+attention which I am sure they will prove to merit--which I cannot do
+now. By the way, I wonder why most of you youngsters so persistently
+tackle the sonnet. For the same reason, I suppose, that a fellow
+always wants to make his first appearance on the stage in the rôle of
+"Hamlet." It is just the holy cheek of you.
+
+Yes, Leigh prospers fairly well, and I--well, I don't know if it is
+prosperity; it is a pretty good time.
+
+I suppose I shall have to write to that old scoundrel Grizzly,[1] to
+give him my new address, though I supposed he had it; and the old one
+would do, anyhow. Now that his cub has returned he probably doesn't
+care for the other plantigrades of his kind.
+
+[1] Albert Bierce.
+
+Thank you for telling me so much about some of our companions and
+companionesses of the long ago. I fear that not all my heart was in my
+baggage when I came over here. There's a bit of it, for example, out
+there by that little lake in the hills.
+
+So I may have a photograph of one of your pretty sisters. Why, of
+course I want it--I want the entire five of them; their pictures, I
+mean. If you had been a nice fellow you would have let me know them
+long ago. And how about that other pretty girl, your infinitely better
+half? You might sneak into the envelope a little portrait of _her_,
+lest I forget, lest I forget. But I've not yet forgotten.
+
+The new century's best blessings to the both o' you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--In your studies of poetry have you dipped into Stedman's new
+"American Anthology"? It is the most notable collection of American
+verse that has been made--on the whole, a book worth having. In saying
+so I rather pride myself on my magnanimity; for of course I don't
+think he has done as well by me as he might have done. That, I
+suppose, is what every one thinks who happens to be alive to think it.
+So I try to be in the fashion.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[18 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 19, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I've been a long while getting to your verses, but there were many
+reasons--including a broken rib. They are pretty good verses, with
+here and there _very_ good lines. I'd a strong temptation to steal one
+or two for my "Passing Show," but I knew what an avalanche of verses
+it would bring down upon me from other poets--as every mention of a
+new book loads my mail with new books for a month.
+
+If I ventured to advise you I should recommend to you the simple,
+ordinary meters and forms native to our language.
+
+I await the photograph of the pretty sister--don't fancy I've
+forgotten.
+
+It is 1 a. m. and I'm about to drink your health in a glass of
+Riesling and eat it in a pâte.
+
+My love to Grizzly if you ever see him. Yours ever,
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 23, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR DOYLE,
+
+Your letter of the 16th has just come and as I am waiting at my office
+(where I seldom go) I shall amuse myself by replying "to onct." See
+here, I don't purpose that your attack on poor Morrow's book shall
+become a "continuous performance," nor even an "annual ceremony." It
+is not "rot." It is not "filthy." It does not "suggest bed-pans,"--at
+least it did not to me, and I'll wager something that Morrow never
+thought of them. Observe and consider: If his hero and heroine had
+been man and wife, the bed-pan would have been there, just the same;
+yet you would not have thought of it. Every reader would have been
+touched by the husband's devotion. A physician has to do with many
+unpleasant things; whom do his ministrations disgust? A trained nurse
+lives in an atmosphere of bed-pans--to whom is her presence or work
+suggestive of them? I'm thinking of the heroic Father Damien and his
+lepers; do you dwell upon the rotting limbs and foul distortions of
+his unhappy charges? Is not his voluntary martyrdom one of the sanest,
+cleanest, most elevating memories in all history? Then it is _not_ the
+bed-pan necessity that disgusts you; it is something else. It is the
+fact that the hero of the story, being neither physician, articled
+nurse, nor certificated husband, nevertheless performed _their_ work.
+He ministered to the helpless in a natural way without authority from
+church or college, quite irregular and improper and all that. My noble
+critic, there speaks in your blood the Untamed Philistine. You were
+not caught young enough. You came into letters and art with all your
+beastly conventionalities in full mastery of you. Take a purge. Forget
+that there are Philistines. Forget that they have put their abominable
+pantalettes upon the legs of Nature. Forget that their code of
+morality and manners (it stinks worse than a bed-pan) does _not_ exist
+in the serene altitude of great art, toward which you have set your
+toes and into which I want you to climb. I know about this thing. I,
+too, tried to rise with all that dead weight dragging at my feet.
+Well, I could not--now I could if I cared to. In my mind I do. It is
+not freedom of act--not freedom of living, for which I contend, but
+freedom of thought, of mind, of spirit; the freedom to see in the
+horrible laws, prejudices, custom, conventionalities of the multitude,
+something good for them, but of no value to you _in your art._ In your
+life and conduct defer to as much of it as you will (you'll find it
+convenient to defer to a whole lot), but in your mind and art let not
+the Philistine enter, nor even speak a word through the keyhole. My
+own chief objection to Morrow's story is (as I apprised him) its
+unnaturalness. He did not dare to follow the logical course of his
+narrative. He was too cowardly (or had too keen an eye upon his market
+of prudes) to make hero and heroine join in the holy bonds of
+_bed_lock, as they naturally, inevitably and rightly would have done
+long before she was able to be about. I daresay that, too, would have
+seemed to you "filthy," without the parson and his fee. When you
+analyze your objection to the story (as I have tried to do for you)
+you will find that it all crystallizes into that--the absence of the
+parson. I don't envy you your view of the matter, and I really don't
+think you greatly enjoy it yourself. I forgot to say: Suppose they had
+been two men, two partners in hunting, mining, or exploring, as
+frequently occurs. Would the bed-pan suggestion have come to you? Did
+it come to you when you read of the slow, but not uniform, starvation
+of Greeley's party in the arctic? Of course not. Then it is a matter,
+not of bed-pans, but of sex-exposure (unauthorized by the church), of
+prudery--of that artificial thing, the "sense of shame," of which the
+great Greeks knew nothing; of which the great Japanese know nothing;
+of which Art knows nothing. Dear Doctor, do you really put trousers on
+your piano-legs? Does your indecent intimacy with your mirror make you
+blush?
+
+There, there's the person whom I've been waiting for (I'm to take her
+to dinner, and I'm not married to even so much of her as her little
+toe) has come; and until you offend again, you are immune from the
+switch. May all your brother Philistines have to "Kiss the place to
+make it well."
+
+Pan is dead! Long live Bed-Pan!
+
+ Yours ever,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ February 17, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I send back the poems, with a few suggestions. You grow great so
+rapidly that I shall not much longer dare to touch your work. I mean
+that.
+
+Your criticisms of Stedman's Anthology are just. But equally just ones
+can be made of any anthology. None of them can suit any one. I fancy
+Stedman did not try to "live up" to his standard, but to make
+_representative_, though not always the _best_, selections. It would
+hardly do to leave out Whitman, for example. _We_ may not like him;
+thank God, we don't; but many others--the big fellows too--do; and in
+England he is thought great. And then Stedman has the bad luck to know
+a lot of poets personally--many bad poets. Put yourself in his place.
+Would you leave out me if you honestly thought my work bad?
+
+In any compilation we will all miss some of our favorites--and find
+some of the public's favorites. You miss from Whittier "Joseph
+Sturge"--I the sonnet "Forgiveness," and so forth. Alas, there is no
+universal standard!
+
+Thank you for the photographs. Miss * * * is a pretty girl, truly, and
+has the posing instinct as well. She has the place of honor on my
+mantel. * * * But what scurvy knave has put the stage-crime into her
+mind? If you know that life as I do you will prefer that she die, poor
+girl.
+
+It is no trouble, but a pleasure, to go over your verses--I am as
+proud of your talent as if I'd made it.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+[over]
+
+About the rhymes in a sonnet:
+
+ "Regular", or "English" Modern
+ Italian form form English
+ (Petrarch): (Shakspear's): 1
+ 1 1 2
+ 2 2 2
+ 2 1 1
+ 1 2 1
+ 1 3 2
+ 2 4 2
+ 2 3 1
+ 1 4 Two or three
+ 3 5 rhymes; any
+ 4 6 arrangement
+ 5 5
+ 3 6
+ 4 7
+ 5 7
+
+There are good reasons for preferring the regular Italian form created
+by Petrarch--who knew a thing or two; and sometimes good reasons for
+another arrangement--of the sestet rhymes. If one should sacrifice a
+great thought to be like Petrarch one would not resemble him.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 2, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I am sending to the "Journal" your splendid poem on Memorial Day. Of
+course I can't say what will be its fate. I am not even personally
+acquainted with the editor of the department to which it goes. But if
+he has not the brains to like it he is to send it back and I'll try to
+place it elsewhere. It is great--great!--the loftiest note that you
+have struck and _held_.
+
+Maybe I owe you a lot of letters. I don't know--my correspondence all
+in arrears and I've not the heart to take it up.
+
+Thank you for your kind words of sympathy.[2] I'm hit harder than any
+one can guess from the known facts--am a bit broken and gone gray of
+it all.
+
+[2] Concerning the death of his son Leigh.
+
+But I remember you asked the title of a book of synonyms. It is
+"Roget's Thesaurus," a good and useful book.
+
+The other poems I will look up soon and consider. I've made no
+alterations in the "Memorial Day" except to insert the omitted stanza.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ May 9, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I send the poems with suggestions. There's naught to say about 'em
+that I've not said of your other work. Your "growth in grace" (and
+other poetic qualities) is something wonderful. You are leaving my
+other "pupils" so far behind that they are no longer "in it."
+Seriously, you "promise" better than any of the new men in our
+literature--and perform better than all but Markham in his lucid
+intervals, alas, too rare.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ May 22, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I enclose a proof of the poem[3]--all marked up. The poem was offered
+to the Journal, but to the wrong editor. I would not offer it to him
+in whose department it could be used, for he once turned down some
+admirable verses of my friend Scheffauer which I sent him. I'm glad
+the Journal is _not_ to have it, for it now goes into the Washington
+Post--and the Post into the best houses here and elsewhere--a good,
+clean, unyellow paper. I'll send you some copies with the poem.
+
+[3] "Memorial Day."
+
+I think my marks are intelligible--I mean my _re_marks. Perhaps you'll
+not approve all, or anything, that I did to the poem; I'll only ask
+you to endure. When you publish in covers you can restore to the
+original draft if you like. I had not time (after my return from New
+York) to get your approval and did the best and the least I could.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My love to your pretty wife and sister. Let me know how hard you hate
+me for monkeying with your sacred lines.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Yes, your poem recalled my "Invocation" as I read it; but it is
+better, and not too much like--hardly like at all except in the
+"political" part. Both, in that, are characterized, I think, by decent
+restraint. How * * * would, at those places, have ranted and chewed
+soap!--a superior quality of soap, I confess.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[1825 Nineteenth St., N. W., Washington, D. C.,
+ June 30, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I am glad my few words of commendation were not unpleasing to you. I
+meant them all and more. You ought to have praise, seeing that it is
+all you got. The "Post," like most other newspapers, "don't pay for
+poetry." What a damning confession! It means that the public is as
+insensible to poetry as a pig to--well, to poetry. To any sane mind
+such a poem as yours is worth more than all the other contents of a
+newspaper for a year.
+
+I've not found time to consider your "bit of blank" yet--at least not
+as carefully as it probably merits.
+
+My relations with the present editor of the Examiner are not
+unfriendly, I hope, but they are too slight to justify me in
+suggesting anything to him, or even drawing his attention to anything.
+I hoped you would be sufficiently "enterprising" to get your poem into
+the paper if you cared to have it there. I wrote Dr. Doyle about you.
+He is a dear fellow and you should know each other. As to Scheffauer,
+he is another. If you want him to see your poem why not send it to
+him? But the last I heard he was very ill. I'm rather anxious to hear
+more about him.
+
+It was natural to enclose the stamps, but I won't have it so--so
+there! as the women say.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[1825 Nineteenth St., N. W., Washington, D. C.,
+ July 15, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+Here is the bit of blank. When are we to see the book? Needless
+question--when you can spare the money to pay for publication, I
+suppose, if by that time you are ambitious to achieve public
+inattention. That's my notion of encouragement--I like to cheer up the
+young author as he sets his face toward "the peaks of song."
+
+Say, that photograph of the pretty sister--the one with a downward
+slope of the eyes--is all faded out. That is a real misfortune: it
+reduces the sum of human happiness hereabout. Can't you have one done
+in fast colors and let me have it? The other is all right, but that is
+not the one that I like the better for my wall. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 16, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I enclose the poems with a few suggestions. They require little
+criticism of the sort that would be "helpful." As to their merit I
+think them good, but not great. I suppose you do not expect to write
+great things every time. Yet in the body of your letter (of Oct. 22)
+you do write greatly--and say that the work is "egoistic" and
+"unprintable." If it[4] were addressed to another person than myself I
+should say that it is "printable" exceedingly. Call it what you will,
+but let me tell you it will probably be long before you write anything
+better than some--many--of these stanzas.
+
+[4] "Dedication" poem to Ambrose Bierce.
+
+You ask if you have correctly answered your own questions. Yes; in
+four lines of your running comment:
+
+"I suppose that I'd do the greater good in the long run by making my
+work as good poetry as possible."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course I deplore your tendency to dalliance with the demagogic
+muse. I hope you will not set your feet in the dirty paths--leading
+nowhither--of social and political "reform".... I hope you will not
+follow * * * in making a sale of your poet's birthright for a mess of
+"popularity." If you do I shall have to part company with you, as I
+have done with him and at least _one_ of his betters, for I draw the
+line at demagogues and anarchists, however gifted and however
+beloved.
+
+Let the "poor" alone--they are oppressed by nobody but God. Nobody
+hates them, nobody despises. "The rich" love them a deal better than
+they love one another. But I'll not go into these matters; your own
+good sense must be your salvation if you are saved. I recognise the
+temptations of environment: you are of San Francisco, the paradise of
+ignorance, anarchy and general yellowness. Still, a poet is not
+altogether the creature of his place and time--at least not of his
+to-day and his parish.
+
+By the way, you say that * * * is your only associate that knows
+anything of literature. She is a dear girl, but look out for her; she
+will make you an anarchist if she can, and persuade you to kill a
+President or two every fine morning. I warrant you she can pronounce
+the name of McKinley's assassin to the ultimate zed, and has a little
+graven image of him next her heart.
+
+Yes, you can republish the Memorial Day poem without the _Post's_
+consent--could do so in "book form" even if the _Post_ had copyrighted
+it, which it did not do. I think the courts have held that in
+purchasing work for publication in his newspaper or magazine the
+editor acquires no right in it, _except for that purpose_. Even if he
+copyright it that is only to protect him from other newspapers or
+magazines; the right to publish in a book remains with the author.
+Better ask a lawyer though--preferably without letting him know
+whether you are an editor or an author.
+
+I ought to have answered (as well as able) these questions before, but
+I have been ill and worried, and have written few letters, and even
+done little work, and that only of the pot-boiling sort.
+
+My daughter has recovered and returned to Los Angeles.
+
+Please thank Miss * * * for the beautiful photographs--I mean for
+being so beautiful as to "take" them, for doubtless I owe their
+possession to you.
+
+I wrote Doyle about you and he cordially praised your work as
+incomparably superior to his own and asked that you visit him. He's a
+lovable fellow and you'd not regret going to Santa Cruz and boozing
+with him.
+
+Thank you for the picture of Grizzly and the cub of him.
+
+Sincerely yours, with best regards to the pretty ever-so-much-better
+half of you,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. * * * * * * * * * * *
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 15, 1902.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+Where are you going to stop?--I mean at what stage of development? I
+presume you have not a "whole lot" of poems really writ, and have not
+been feeding them to me, the least good first, and not in the order of
+their production. So it must be that you are advancing at a stupendous
+rate. This last[5] beats any and all that went before--or I am
+bewitched and befuddled. I dare not trust myself to say what I think
+of it. In manner it is great, but the greatness of the theme!--that is
+beyond anything.
+
+[5] "The Testimony of the Suns."
+
+It is a new field, the broadest yet discovered. To paraphrase
+Coleridge,
+
+ You are the first that ever burst
+ Into that silent [unknown] sea--
+
+a silent sea _because_ no one else has burst into it in full song.
+True, there have been short incursions across the "border," but only
+by way of episode. The tremendous phenomena of Astronomy have never
+had adequate poetic treatment, their meaning adequate expression. You
+must make it your own domain. You shall be the poet of the skies,
+the prophet of the suns. Don't fiddle-faddle with such infinitesimal
+and tiresome trivialities as (for example) the immemorial squabbles of
+"rich" and "poor" on this "mote in the sun-beam." (Both "classes,"
+when you come to that, are about equally disgusting and
+unworthy--there's not a pin's moral difference between them.) Let them
+cheat and pick pockets and cut throats to the satisfaction of their
+base instincts, but do thou regard them not. Moreover, by that great
+law of change which you so clearly discern, there can be no permanent
+composition of their nasty strife. "Settle" it how they will--another
+beat of the pendulum and all is as before; and ere another, Man will
+again be savage, sitting on his naked haunches and gnawing raw bones.
+
+Yes, circumstances make the "rich" what they are. And circumstances
+make the poor what _they_ are. I have known both, long and well. The
+rich--_while_ rich--are a trifle better. There's nothing like poverty
+to nurture badness. But in this country there are no such "classes" as
+"rich" and "poor": as a rule, the wealthy man of to-day was a poor
+devil yesterday; the poor devils of to-day have an equal chance to be
+rich to-morrow--or would have if they had equal brains and providence.
+The system that gives them the chance is not an oppressive one. Under
+a really oppressive system a salesman in a village grocery could not
+have risen to a salary of one million dollars a year because he was
+worth it to his employers, as Schwab has done. True, some men get rich
+by dishonesty, but the poor commonly cheat as hard as they can and
+remain poor--thereby escaping observation and censure. The moral
+difference between cheating to the limit of a small opportunity and
+cheating to the limit of a great one is to me indiscernable. The
+workman who "skimps his work" is just as much a rascal as the
+"director" who corners a crop.
+
+As to "Socialism." I am something of a Socialist myself; that is, I
+think that the principle, which has always coexisted with competition,
+each safeguarding the other, may be advantageously extended. But those
+who rail against "the competitive system," and think they suffer from
+it, really suffer from their own unthrift and incapacity. For the
+competent and provident it is an ideally perfect system. As the other
+fellows are not of those who effect permanent reforms, or reforms of
+any kind, pure Socialism is the dream of a dream.
+
+But why do I write all this. One's opinions on such matters are
+unaffected by reason and instance; they are born of feeling and
+temperament. There is a Socialist diathesis, as there is an Anarchist
+diathesis. Could you teach a bulldog to retrieve, or a sheep to fetch
+and carry? Could you make a "born artist" comprehend a syllogism? As
+easily persuade a poet that black is not whatever color he loves.
+Somebody has defined poetry as "glorious nonsense." It is not an
+altogether false definition, albeit I consider poetry the flower and
+fruit of speech and would rather write gloriously than sensibly. But
+if poets saw things as they are they would write no more poetry.
+
+Nevertheless, I venture to ask you: _Can't_ you see in the prosperity
+of the strong and the adversity of the weak a part of that great
+beneficent law, "the survival of the fittest"? Don't you see that such
+evils as inhere in "the competitive system" are evils only to
+individuals, but blessings to the race by gradually weeding out the
+incompetent and their progeny?
+
+I've done, i' faith. Be any kind of 'ist or 'er that you will, but
+don't let it get into your ink. Nobody is calling you to deliver your
+land from Error's chain. What we want of you is poetry, not politics.
+And if you care for fame just have the goodness to consider if any
+"champion of the poor" has ever obtained it. From the earliest days
+down to Massanielo, Jack Cade and Eugene Debs the leaders and prophets
+of "the masses" have been held unworthy. And with reason too, however
+much injustice is mixed in with the right of it. Eventually the most
+conscientious, popular and successful "demagogue" comes into a
+heritage of infamy. The most brilliant gifts cannot save him. That
+will be the fate of Edwin Markham if he does not come out o' that, and
+it will be the fate of George Sterling if he will not be warned.
+
+You think that "the main product of that system" (the "competitive")
+"is the love of money." What a case of the cart before the horse! The
+love of money is not the product, but the root, of the system--not the
+effect, but the cause. When one man desires to be better off than
+another he competes with him. You can abolish the system when you can
+abolish the desire--when you can make man as Nature did _not_ make
+him, content to be as poor as the poorest. Do away with the desire to
+excel and you may set up your Socialism at once. But what kind of a
+race of sloths and slugs will you have?
+
+But, bless me, I shall _never_ have done if I say all that comes to
+me.
+
+Why, of course my remarks about * * * were facetious--playful. She
+really is an anarchist, and her sympathies are with criminals, whom
+she considers the "product" of the laws, but--well, she inherited the
+diathesis and can no more help it than she can the color of her pretty
+eyes. But she is a child--and except in so far as her convictions
+make her impossible they do not count. She would not hurt a fly--not
+even if, like the toad, it had a precious jewel in its head that it
+did not work for. But I am speaking of the * * * that _I_ knew. If I
+did not know that the anarchist leopard's spots "will wash," your
+words would make me think that she might have changed. It does not
+matter what women think, if thinking it may be called, and * * * will
+never be other than lovable.
+
+Lest you have _not_ a copy of the verses addressed to me I enclose one
+that I made myself. Of course their publication could not be otherwise
+than pleasing to me if you care to do it. You need not fear the
+"splendid weight" expression, and so forth--there is nothing
+"conceited" in the poem. As it was addressed to me, I have not
+criticised it--I _can't_. And I guess it needs no criticism.
+
+I fear for the other two-thirds of this latest poem. If you descend
+from Arcturus to Earth, from your nebulae to your neighbors, from Life
+to lives, from the measureless immensities of space to the petty
+passions of us poor insects, won't you incur the peril of anti-climax?
+I doubt if you can touch the "human interest" after those high themes
+without an awful tumble. I should be sorry to see the poem "peter
+out," or "soak in." It would be as if Goethe had let his "Prologue in
+Heaven" expire in a coon song. You have reached the "heights of dream"
+all right, but how are you to stay there to the end? By the way, you
+must perfect yourself in Astronomy, or rather get a general knowledge
+of it, which I fear you lack. Be sure about the pronunciation of
+astronomical names.
+
+I have read some of Jack London's work and think it clever. Of
+Whitaker I never before heard, I fear. If London wants to criticise
+your "Star poem" what's the objection? I should not think, though,
+from his eulogism of * * *, that he is very critical. * * *
+
+Where are you to place Browning? Among thinkers. In his younger days,
+when he wrote in English, he stood among the poets. I remember writing
+once--of the thinker: "There's nothing more obscure than Browning
+except blacking." I'll stand to that.
+
+No, don't take the trouble to send me a copy of these verses: I expect
+to see them in a book pretty soon. * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours, AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 31, 1902.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I am glad to know that you too have a good opinion of that poem.[6]
+One should know about one's own work. Most writers think their work
+good, but good writers know it. Pardon me if I underrated your
+astronomical knowledge. My belief was based on your use of those
+names. I never met with the spelling "Betelgeux"; and even if it is
+correct and picturesque I'd not use it if I were you, for it does not
+quite speak itself, and you can't afford to jolt the reader's
+attention from your thought to a matter of pronunciation. In my
+student days we, I am sure, were taught to say Procy´on. I don't think
+I've heard it pronounced since, and I've no authority at hand. If you
+are satisfied with Pro´cyon I suppose it is that. But your
+pronunciation was Aldeb´aran or your meter very crazy indeed. I asked
+(with an interrogation point) if it were not Aldeba´ran--and I think
+it is. Fomalhaut I don't know about; I thought it French and
+masculine. In that case it would, I suppose, be "ho," not "hote."
+
+[6] "The Testimony of the Suns."
+
+Don't cut out that stanza, even if "clime" doesn't seem to me to have
+anything to do with duration. The stanza is good enough to stand a
+blemish.
+
+"Ye stand rebuked by suns who claim"--I was wrong in substituting
+"that" for "who," not observing that it would make it ambiguous. I
+merely yielded to a favorite impulse: to say "that" instead of "who,"
+and did not count the cost.
+
+Don't cut out _any_ stanza--if you can't perfect them let them go
+imperfect.
+
+ "Without or genesis or end."
+ "Devoid of birth, devoid of end."
+
+These are not so good as
+
+"Without beginning, without end";--I submit them to suggest a way to
+overcome that identical rhyme. All you have to do is get rid of the
+second "without." I should not like "impend."
+
+Yes, I vote for Orion's _sword_ of suns. "Cimetar" sounds better, but
+it is more specific--less generic. It is modern--or, rather, less
+ancient than "sword," and makes one think of Turkey and the Holy Land.
+But "sword"--there were swords before Homer. And I don't think the man
+who named this constellation ever saw a curved blade. And yet, and
+yet--"cimetar of suns" is "mighty catchin'."
+
+No, indeed, I could not object to your considering the heavens in a
+state of war. I have sometimes fancied I could hear the rush and roar
+of it. Why, a few months ago I began a sonnet thus:
+
+ "Not as two erring spheres together grind,
+ With monstrous ruin, in the vast of space,
+ Destruction born of that malign embrace--
+ Their hapless peoples all to death consigned--" etc.
+
+I've been a star-gazer all my life--from my habit of being "out late,"
+I guess; and the things have always seemed to me _alive_.
+
+The change in the verses _ad meum_, from "_thy_ clearer light" to
+"_the_ clearer light" may have been made modestly or inadvertently--I
+don't recollect. It is, of course, no improvement and you may do as
+you please. I'm uniformly inadvertent, but intermittently modest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A class of stuff that I can't (without "trouble in the office") write
+my own way I will not write at all. So I'm writing very little of
+anything but nonsense. * * *
+
+With best regards to Mrs. Sterling and Miss Marian I am
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Leigh died a year ago this morning. I wish I could stop counting the
+days.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 15, 1902.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+All right--I only wanted you to be _sure_ about those names of stars;
+it would never do to be less than sure.
+
+After all our talk (made by me) I guess that stanza would better stand
+as first written. "Clime"--climate--connotes temperature, weather, and
+so forth, in ordinary speech, but a poet may make his own definitions,
+I suppose, and compel the reader to study them out and accept them.
+
+Your misgiving regarding your inability to reach so high a plane again
+as in this poem is amusing, but has an element of the pathetic. It
+certainly is a misfortune for a writer to do his _best_ work early;
+but I fancy you'd better trust your genius and do its bidding whenever
+the monkey chooses to bite. "The Lord will provide." Of course you
+have read Stockton's story "His Wife's Deceased Sister." But Stockton
+gets on very well, despite "The Lady or the Tiger." I've a notion that
+you'll find other tragedies among the stars if earth doesn't supply
+you with high enough themes.
+
+Will I write a preface for the book? Why, yes, if you think me
+competent. Emerson commands us to "hitch our wagon to a star?" and,
+egad! here's a whole constellation--a universe--of stars to draw mine!
+It makes me blink to think of it.
+
+O yes, I'd like well enough to "leave the Journal," but--
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ July 10, 1902.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+If rejection wounded, all writers would bleed at every pore.
+Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done. Of course I shall be glad
+to go over your entire body of work again and make suggestions if any
+occur to me. It will be no trouble--I could not be more profitably
+employed than in critically reading you, nor more agreeably.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course your star poem has one defect--if it is a defect--that
+limits the circle of understanding and admiring readers--its lack of
+"_human_ interest." We human insects, as a rule, care for nothing but
+ourselves, and think that is best which most closely touches such
+emotions and sentiments as grow out of our relations, the one with
+another. I don't share the preference, and a few others do not,
+believing that there are things more interesting than men and women.
+The Heavens, for example. But who knows, or cares anything about
+them--even knows the name of a single constellation? Hardly any one
+but the professional astronomers--and there are not enough of them to
+buy your books and give you fame. I should be sorry not to have that
+poem published--sorry if you did not write more of the kind. But while
+it may impress and dazzle "the many" it will not win them. They want
+you to finger their heart-strings and pull the cord that works their
+arms and legs. So you must finger and pull--too.
+
+The Château Yquem came all right, and is good. Thank you for
+it--albeit I'm sorry you feel that you must do things like that. It is
+very conventional and, I fear, "proper." However, I remember that you
+used to do so when you could not by any stretch of imagination have
+felt that you were under an "obligation." So I guess it is all
+right--just your way of reminding me of the old days. Anyhow, the wine
+is so much better than my own that I've never a scruple when drinking
+it.
+
+Has "Maid Marian" a photograph of me?--I don't remember. If not I'll
+send her one; I've just had some printed from a negative five or six
+years old. I've renounced the photograph habit, as one renounces other
+habits when age has made them ridiculous--or impossible.
+
+Send me the typewritten book when you have it complete.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ August 19, 1902.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I suppose you are in Seattle, but this letter will keep till your
+return.
+
+I am delighted to know that I am to have "the book" so soon, and will
+give it my best attention and (if you still desire) some prefatory
+lines. Think out a good title and I shall myself be hospitable to any
+suggestion of my dæmon in the matter. He has given me nothing for the
+star poem yet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You'll "learn in suffering what you teach in song," all right; but let
+us hope the song will be the richer for it. It _will_ be. For that
+reason I never altogether "pity the sorrows" of a writer--knowing they
+are good for him. He needs them in his business. I suspect you must
+have shed a tear or two since I knew you.
+
+I'm sending you a photograph, but you did not tell me if Maid Marian
+the Superb already has one--that's what I asked you, and if you don't
+answer I shall ask her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I am fairly well, and, though not "happy," content. But I'm
+dreadfully sorry about Peterson.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I am about to break up my present establishment and don't know where
+my next will be. Better address me "Care N. Y. American and Journal
+Bureau, Washington, D. C."
+
+You see I'm still chained to the oar of yellow journalism, but it is a
+rather light servitude.
+
+
+[Address me at 1321 Yale Street, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 20, 1902.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I fancy you must fear by this time that I did not get the poems, but I
+did. I'll get at them, doubtless, after awhile, though a good deal of
+manuscript--including a couple of novels!--is ahead of them; and one
+published book of bad poems awaits a particular condemnation.
+
+I'm a little embarrassed about the preface which I'm to write. I fear
+you must forego the preface or I the dedication. That kind of
+"coöperation" doesn't seem in very good taste: it smacks of "mutual
+admiration" in the bad sense, and the reviewers would probably call it
+"log-rolling." Of course it doesn't matter too much what the reviewers
+say, but it matters a lot what the intelligent readers think; and your
+book will have no others. I really shouldn't like to write the preface
+of a book dedicated to me, though I did not think of that at first.
+
+The difficulty could be easily removed by _not_ dedicating the book to
+me were it not that that would sacrifice the noble poem with my name
+atop of it. That poem is itself sufficiently dedicatory if printed by
+itself in the forepages of the book and labeled "Dedication--To
+Ambrose Bierce." I'm sure that vanity has nothing to do, or little to
+do, with my good opinion of the verses. And, after all, they _show_
+that I have said _to you_ all that I could say to the reader in your
+praise and encouragement. What do you think?
+
+As to dedicating individual poems to other fellows, I have not the
+slightest hesitancy in advising you against it. The practice smacks of
+the amateur and is never, I think, pleasing to anybody but the person
+so honored. The custom has fallen into "innocuous desuetude" and there
+appears to be no call for its revival. Pay off your obligations (if
+such there be) otherwise. You may put it this way if you like: The
+whole book being dedicated to me, no part of it _can_ be dedicated to
+another. Or this way: Secure in my exalted position I don't purpose
+sharing the throne with rival (and inferior) claimants. They be gam
+doodled!
+
+Seriously--but I guess it is serious enough as it stands. It occurs to
+me that in saying: "no part of it _can_ be dedicated to another" I
+might be understood as meaning: "no part of it _must_ be," etc. No; I
+mean only that the dedication to another would contradict the
+dedication to me. The two things are (as a matter of fact)
+incompatible.
+
+Well, if you think a short preface by me preferable to the verses with
+my name, all right; I will cheerfully write it, and that will leave
+you free to honor your other friends if you care to. But those are
+great lines, and implying, as they do, all that a set preface could
+say, it seems to me that they ought to stand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Maid Marian shall have the photograph.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[1321 Yale Street, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 1, 1903.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+You are a brick. You shall do as you will. My chief reluctance is that
+if it become known, or _when_ it becomes known, there may ensue a
+suspicion of my honesty in praising you and _your_ book; for critics
+and readers are not likely to look into the matter of dates. For your
+sake I should be sorry to have it thought that my commendation was
+only a log-rolling incident; for myself, I should care nothing about
+it. This eel is accustomed to skinning.
+
+It is not the least pleasing of my reflections that my friends have
+always liked my work--or me--well enough to want to publish my books
+at their own expense. Everything that I have written could go to the
+public that way if I would consent. In the two instances in which I
+did consent they got their money back all right, and I do not doubt
+that it will be so in this; for if I did not think there was at least
+a little profit in a book of mine I should not offer it to a
+publisher. "Shapes of Clay" _ought_ to be published in California,
+and it would have been long ago if I had not been so lazy and so
+indisposed to dicker with the publishers. Properly advertised--which
+no book of mine ever has been--it should sell there if nowhere else.
+Why, then, do _I_ not put up the money? Well, for one reason, I've
+none to put up. Do you care for the other reasons?
+
+But I must make this a condition. If there is a loss, _I_ am to bear
+it. To that end I shall expect an exact accounting from your Mr. Wood,
+and the percentage that Scheff. purposes having him pay to me is to go
+to you. The copyright is to be mine, but nothing else until you are
+entirely recouped. But all this I will arrange with Scheff., who, I
+take it, is to attend to the business end of the matter, with, of
+course, your assent to the arrangements that he makes.
+
+I shall write Scheff. to-day to go ahead and make his contract with
+Mr. Wood on these lines. Scheff. appears not to know who the "angel"
+in the case is, and he need not, unless, or until, you want him to.
+
+I've a pretty letter from Maid Marian in acknowledgment of the
+photograph. I shall send one to Mrs. Sterling at once, in the sure and
+certain hope of getting another. It is good of her to remember my
+existence, considering that your scoundrelly monopoly of her permitted
+us to meet so seldom. I go in for a heavy tax on married men who live
+with their wives.
+
+"She holds no truce with Death _or_ Peace" means that with _one_ of
+them she holds no truce; "nor" makes it mean that she holds no truce
+with _either_. The misuse of "or" (its use to mean "nor") is nearly
+everybody's upsetting sin. So common is it that "nor" instead usually
+sounds harsh.
+
+I omitted the verses on "Puck," not because Bunner is dead, but
+because his work is dead too, and the verses appear to lack intrinsic
+merit to stand alone. I shall perhaps omit a few more when I get the
+proofs (I wish you could see the bushels I've left out already) and
+add a few serious ones.
+
+I'm glad no end that you and Scheff. have met. I'm fond of the boy and
+he likes me, I think. He too has a book of verses on the ways, and I
+hope for it a successful launching. I've been through it all; some of
+it is great in the matter of thews and brawn; some fine.
+
+Pardon the typewriter; I wanted a copy of this letter.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The New York "American" Bureau, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 13, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+It is good to hear from you again and to know that the book is so
+nearly complete as to be in the hands of the publishers. I dare say
+they will not have it, and you'll have to get it out at your own
+expense. When it comes to that I shall hope to be of service to you,
+as you have been to me.
+
+So you like Scheff. Yes, he is a good boy and a good friend. I wish
+you had met our friend Dr. Doyle, who has now gone the long, lone
+journey. It has made a difference to me, but that matters little, for
+the time is short in which to grieve. I shall soon be going his way.
+
+No, I shall not put anything about the * * * person into "Shapes of
+Clay." His offence demands another kind of punishment, and until I
+meet him he goes unpunished. I once went to San Francisco to punish
+him (but that was in hot blood) but * * * of "The Wave" told me the
+man was a hopeless invalid, suffering from locomotor ataxia. I have
+always believed that until I got your letter and one from Scheff. Is
+it not so?--or _was_ it not? If not he has good reason to think me a
+coward, for his offence was what men are killed for; but of course
+one does not kill a helpless person, no matter what the offence is.
+If * * * lied to me I am most anxious to know it; he has always
+professed himself a devoted friend.
+
+The passage that you quote from Jack London strikes me as good. I
+don't dislike the word "penetrate"--rather like it. It is in frequent
+use regarding exploration and discovery. But I think you right about
+"rippling"; it is too lively a word to be outfitted with such an
+adjective as "melancholy." I see London has an excellent article in
+"The Critic" on "The Terrible and Tragic in Fiction." He knows how to
+think a bit.
+
+What do I think of Cowley-Brown and his "Goosequill"? I did not know
+that he had revived it; it died several years ago. I never met him,
+but in both Chicago and London (where he had "The Philistine," or "The
+Anti-Philistine," I do not at the moment remember which) he was most
+kind to me and my work. In one number of his magazine--the London
+one--he had four of my stories and a long article about me which
+called the blushes to my maiden cheek like the reflection of a red
+rose in the petal of a violet. Naturally I think well of Cowley-Brown.
+
+You make me sad to think of the long leagues and the monstrous
+convexity of the earth separating me from your camp in the redwoods.
+There are few things that I would rather do than join that party; and
+I'd be the last to strike my tent and sling my swag. Alas, it cannot
+be--not this year. My outings are limited to short runs along this
+coast. I was about to set out on one this morning; and wrote a hasty
+note to Scheff in consequence of my preparations. In five hours I was
+suffering from asthma, and am now confined to my room. But for eight
+months of the year here I am immune--as I never was out there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You will have to prepare yourself to endure a good deal of praise when
+that book is out. One does not mind when one gets accustomed to it. It
+neither pleases nor bores; you will have just no feeling about it at
+all. But if you really care for _my_ praise I hope you have quoted a
+bit of it at the head of those dedicatory verses, as I suggested. That
+will give them a _raison d'être_.
+
+With best regards to Mrs. Sterling and Katie I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--If not too much trouble you may remind Dick Partington and wife
+that I continue to exist and to remember them pleasantly.
+
+
+[N. Y. "American" Bureau, Washington, D. C.,
+ [July, 1903].]
+
+DEAR SCHEFF:
+
+I got the proofs yesterday, and am returning them by this mail. The
+"report of progress" is every way satisfactory, and I don't doubt that
+a neat job is being done.
+
+The correction that you made is approved. I should have wanted and
+expected you to make many corrections and suggestions, but that I have
+had a purpose in making this book--namely, that it should represent my
+work at its average. In pursuance of this notion I was not hospitable
+even to suggestions, and have retained much work that I did not myself
+particularly approve; some of it trivial. You know I have always been
+addicted to trifling, and no book from which trivialities were
+excluded would fairly represent me.
+
+I could not commend this notion in another. In your work and
+Sterling's I have striven hard to help you to come as near to
+perfection as we could, because perfection is what you and he want,
+and as young writers ought to want, the character of your work being
+higher than mine. I reached my literary level long ago, and seeing
+that it is not a high one there would seem to be a certain
+affectation, even a certain dishonesty, in making it seem higher than
+it is by republication of my best only. Of course I have not carried
+out this plan so consistently as to make the book dull: I had to "draw
+the line" at that.
+
+I say all this because I don't want you and Sterling to think that I
+disdain assistance: I simply decided beforehand not to avail myself of
+its obvious advantages. You would have done as much for the book in
+one way as you have done in another.
+
+I'll have to ask you to suggest that Mr. Wood have a man go over all
+the matter in the book, and see that none of the pieces are
+duplicated, as I fear they are. Reading the titles will not be enough:
+I might have given the same piece two titles. It will be necessary to
+compare first lines, I think. That will be drudgery which I'll not ask
+you to undertake: some of Wood's men, or some of the printer's men,
+will do it as well; it is in the line of their work.
+
+The "Dies Irae" is the most earnest and sincere of religious poems; my
+travesty of it is mere solemn fooling, which fact is "given away" in
+the prose introduction, where I speak of my version being of possible
+service in the church! The travesty is not altogether unfair--it was
+inevitably suggested by the author's obvious inaccessibility to humor
+and logic--a peculiarity that is, however, observable in all religious
+literature, for it is a fundamental necessity to the religious mind.
+Without logic and a sense of the ludicrous a man is religious as
+certainly as without webbed feet a bird has the land habit.
+
+It is funny, but I am a "whole lot" more interested in seeing your
+cover of the book than my contents of it. I don't at all doubt--since
+you dared undertake it--that your great conception will find a fit
+interpreter in your hand; so my feeling is not anxiety. It is just
+interest--pure interest in what is above my powers, but in which _you_
+can work. By the way, Keller, of the old "Wasp" was _not_ the best of
+its cartoonists. The best--the best of _all_ cartoonists if he had not
+died at eighteen--was another German, named Barkhaus. I have all his
+work and have long cherished a wish to republish it with the needed
+explanatory text--much of it being "local" and "transient." Some day,
+perhaps--most likely not. But Barkhaus was a giant.
+
+How I envy you! There are few things that would please me so well as
+to "drop in" on you folks in Sterling's camp. Honestly, I think all
+that prevents is the (to me) killing journey by rail. And two months
+would be required, going and returning by sea. But the rail trip
+across the continent always gives me a horrible case of asthma, which
+lasts for weeks. I shall never take _that_ journey again if I can
+avoid it. What times you and they will have about the campfire and the
+table! I feel like an exile, though I fear I don't look and act the
+part.
+
+I did not make the little excursion I was about to take when I wrote
+you recently. Almost as I posted the letter I was taken ill and have
+not been well since.
+
+Poor Doyle! how thoughtful of him to provide for the destruction of my
+letters! But I fear Mrs. Doyle found some of them queer reading--if
+she read them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Great Scott! if ever they begin to publish mine there will be a
+circus! For of course the women will be the chief sinners,
+and--well, they have material a-plenty; they can make many volumes,
+and your poor dead friend will have so bad a reputation that you'll
+swear you never knew him. I dare say, though, you have sometimes been
+indiscreet, too. _My_ besetting sin has been in writing to my girl
+friends as if they were sweethearts--the which they'll doubtless not
+be slow to affirm. The fact that they write to me in the same way will
+be no defense; for when I'm worm's meat I can't present the proof--and
+wouldn't if I could. Maybe it won't matter--if I don't turn in my
+grave and so bother the worms.
+
+As Doyle's "literary executor" I fear your duties will be light: he
+probably did not leave much manuscript. I judge from his letters that
+he was despondent about his work and the narrow acceptance that it
+had. So I assume that he did not leave much more than the book of
+poems, which no publisher would (or will) take.
+
+You are about to encounter the same stupid indifference of the
+public--so is Sterling. I'm sure of Sterling, but don't quite know how
+it will affect _you_. You're a pretty sturdy fellow, physically and
+mentally, but this _may_ hurt horribly. I pray that it do not, and
+could give you--perhaps have given you--a thousand reasons why it
+_should_ not. You are still young and your fame may come while you
+live; but you must not expect it now, and doubtless do not. To me, and
+I hope to you, the approval of one person who knows is sweeter than
+the acclaim of ten thousand who do not--whose acclaim, indeed, I would
+rather not have. If you do not _feel_ this in every fibre of your
+brain and heart, try to learn to feel it--practice feeling it, as one
+practices some athletic feat necessary to health and strength.
+
+Thank you very much for the photograph. You are growing too
+infernally handsome to be permitted to go about unchained. If I had
+your "advantages" of youth and comeliness I'd go to the sheriff and
+ask him to lock me up. That would be the honorable thing for you to
+do, if you don't mind. God be with you--but inattentive.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Aurora, Preston Co., West Virginia,
+ August 15, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I fear that among the various cares incident to my departure from
+Washington I forgot, or neglected, to acknowledge the Joaquin Miller
+book that you kindly sent me. I was glad to have it. It has all his
+characteristic merits and demerits--among the latter, his interminable
+prolixity, the thinness of the thought, his endless repetition of
+favorite words and phrases, many of them from his other poems, his
+mispronunciation, his occasional flashes of prose, and so forth.
+
+Scheff tells me his book is out and mine nearly out. But what of
+yours? I do fear me it never will be out if you rely upon its
+"acceptance" by any American publisher. If it meets with no favor
+among the publisher tribe we must nevertheless get it out; and you
+will of course let me do what I can. That is only tit for tat. But
+tell me about it.
+
+I dare say Scheff, who is clever at getting letters out of me--the
+scamp!--has told you of my being up here atop of the Alleghenies, and
+why I _am_ here. I'm having a rather good time. * * * Can you fancy me
+playing croquet, cards, lawn--no, thank God, I've escaped lawn tennis
+and golf! In respect of other things, though, I'm a glittering
+specimen of the Summer Old Man.
+
+Did _you_ have a good time in the redwoods?
+
+Please present my compliments to Madame (and Mademoiselle) Sterling.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Aurora, West Virginia,
+ September 8, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I return the verses with a few suggestions.
+
+I'm sorry your time for poetry is so brief. But take your pencil and
+figure out how much you would write in thirty years (I hope you'll
+live that long) at, say, six lines a day. You'll be surprised by the
+result--and encouraged. Remember that 50,000 words make a fairly long
+book.
+
+You make me shudder when you say you are reading the "Prattle" of
+years. I haven't it and should hardly dare to read it if I had. There
+is so much in it to deplore--so much that is not wise--so much that
+was the expression of a mood or a whim--so much was not altogether
+sincere--so many half-truths, and so forth. Make allowances, I beg,
+and where you cannot, just forgive.
+
+Scheff has mentioned his great desire that you join the Bohemian Club.
+I know he wants me to advise you to do so. So I'm between two fires
+and would rather not advise at all. There are advantages (obvious
+enough) in belonging; and to one of your age and well grounded in
+sobriety and self-restraint generally, the disadvantages are not so
+great as to a youngster like Scheff. (Of course he is not so young as
+he seems to me; but he is younger by a few years and a whole lot of
+thought than you.)
+
+The trouble with that kind of club--with any club--is the temptation
+to waste of time and money; and the danger of the drink habit. If one
+is proof against these a club is all right. I belong to one myself in
+Washington, and at one time came pretty near to "running" it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I don't think Scheff's view of Kipling just. He asked me about
+putting that skit in the book. It _was_ his view and, that being so, I
+could see no reason for suppressing it in deference to those who do
+not hold it. I like free speech, though I'd not accord it to my
+enemies if I were Dictator. I should not think it for the good of the
+State to let * * * write verses, for example. The modern fad Tolerance
+does not charm me, but since it is all the go I'm willing that my
+friends should have their fling.
+
+I dare say Scheff is unconscious of Kipling's paternity in the fine
+line in "Back, back to Nature":
+
+ "Loudly to the shore cries the surf upon the sea."
+
+But turn to "The Last Chanty," in "The Seven Seas," fill your ears
+with it and you'll write just such a line yourself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+God be decent to you, old man.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Aurora, West Virginia,
+ September 12, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I have yours of the 5th. Before now you have mine of _some_ date.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm glad you like London; I've heard he is a fine fellow and have read
+one of his books--"The Son of the Wolf," I think is the title--and it
+seemed clever work mostly. The general impression that remains with me
+is that it is always winter and always night in Alaska.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+* * * will probably be glad to sell his scrap-book later, to get
+bread. He can't make a living out of the labor unions alone. I wish he
+were not a demgagoue and would not, as poor Doyle put it, go a-whoring
+after their Muse. When he returns to truth and poetry I'll receive him
+back into favor and he may kick me if he wants to.
+
+No, I can't tell you how to get "Prattle"; if I could I'd not be
+without it myself. You ask me when I began it in the "Examiner." Soon
+after Hearst got the paper--I don't know the date--they can tell you
+at the office and will show you the bound volumes.
+
+I have the bound volumes of the "Argonaut" and "Wasp" during the years
+when I was connected with them, but my work in the "Examiner" (and
+previously in the "News Letter" and the London "Fun" and "Figaro" and
+other papers) I kept only in a haphazard and imperfect way.
+
+I don't recollect giving Scheff any "epigram" on woman or anything
+else. So I can't send it to you. I amuse myself occasionally with that
+sort of thing in the "Journal" ("American") and suppose Hearst's other
+papers copy them, but the "environment" is uncongenial and
+uninspiring.
+
+Do I think extracts from "Prattle" would sell? I don't think anything
+of mine will sell. I could make a dozen books of the stuff that I have
+"saved up"--have a few ready for publication now--but all is vanity so
+far as profitable publication is concerned. Publishers want nothing
+from me but novels--and I'll die first.
+
+Who is * * *--and why? It is good of London to defend me against him.
+I fancy all you fellows have a-plenty of defending me to do, though
+truly it is hardly worth while. All my life I have been hated and
+slandered by all manner of persons except good and intelligent ones;
+and I don't greatly mind. I knew in the beginning what I had to
+expect, and I know now that, like spanking, it hurts (sometimes) but
+does not harm. And the same malevolence that has surrounded my life
+will surround my memory if I am remembered. Just run over in your mind
+the names of men who have told the truth about their unworthy fellows
+and about human nature "as it was given them to see it." They are
+the bogie-men of history. None of them has escaped vilification. Can
+poor little I hope for anything better? When you strike you are
+struck. The world is a skunk, but it has rights; among them that of
+retaliation. Yes, you deceive yourself if you think the little fellows
+of letters "like" you, or rather if you think they will like you when
+they know how big you are. They will lie awake nights to invent new
+lies about you and new means of spreading them without detection. But
+you have your revenge: in a few years they'll all be dead--just the
+same as if you had killed them. Better yet, you'll be dead yourself.
+So--you have my entire philosophy in two words: "Nothing matters."
+
+Reverting to Scheff. What he has to fear (if he cares) is not
+incompetent criticism, but public indifference. That does not bite,
+but poets are an ambitious folk and like the limelight and the center
+of the stage. Maybe Scheff is different, as I know you are. Try to
+make him so if he isn't. * * * Wise poets write for one another. If
+the public happens to take notice, well and good. Sometimes it
+does--and then the wise poet would a blacksmith be. But this screed is
+becoming an essay.
+
+Please give my love to all good Sterlings--those by birth and those by
+marriage. * * *
+
+My friends have returned to Washington, and I'm having great times
+climbing peaks (they are knobs) and exploring gulches and cañons--for
+which these people have no names--poor things. My dreamland is still
+unrevisited. They found a Confederate soldier over there the other
+day, with his rifle alongside. I'm going over to beg his pardon.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.
+ [Postmarked October 12, 1903.]]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I have Jack London's books--the one from you and the one from him. I
+thank you and shall find the time to read them. I've been back but a
+few days and find a brace of dozen of books "intitualed" "Shapes of
+Clay." That the splendid work done by Scheff and Wood and your other
+associates in your labor of love is most gratifying to me should "go
+without saying." Surely _I_ am most fortunate in having so good
+friends to care for my interests. Still, there will be an aching void
+in the heart of me until _your_ book is in evidence. Honest, I feel
+more satisfaction in the work of you and Scheff than in my own. It is
+through you two that I expect my best fame. And how generously you
+accord it!--unlike certain others of my "pupils," whom I have assisted
+far more than I did you.
+
+My trip through the mountains has done my health good--and my heart
+too. It was a "sentimental journey" in a different sense from
+Sterne's. Do you know, George, the charm of a new emotion? Of course
+you do, but at my age I had thought it impossible. Well, I had it
+repeatedly. Bedad, I think of going again into my old "theatre of
+war," and setting up a cabin there and living the few days that remain
+to me in meditation and sentimentalizing. But I should like you to be
+near enough to come up some Saturday night with some'at to drink.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[N. Y. Journal Office, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 21, 1903.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I'm indebted to you for two letters--awfully good ones. In the last
+you tell me that your health is better, and I can see for myself that
+your spirits are. This you attribute to exercise, correctly, no doubt.
+You need a lot of the open air--we all do. I can give myself
+hypochondria in forty-eight hours by staying in-doors. The sedentary
+life and abstracted contemplation of one's own navel are good for
+Oriental gods only. We spirits of a purer fire need sunlight and the
+hills. My own recent wanderings afoot and horseback in the mountains
+did me more good than a sermon. And you have "the hills back of
+Oakland"! God, what would I not give to help you range them, the dear
+old things! Why, I know every square foot of them from Walnut Creek to
+Niles Cañon. Of course they swarm with ghosts, as do all places out
+there, even the streets of San Francisco; but I and my ghosts always
+get on well together. With the female ones my relations are sometimes
+a bit better than they were with the dear creatures when they lived.
+
+I guess I did not acknowledge the splendidly bound "Shapes" that you
+kindly sent, nor the Jack London books. Much thanks.
+
+I'm pleased to know that Wood expects to sell the whole edition of my
+book, but am myself not confident of that.
+
+So we are to have your book soon. Good, but I don't like your
+indifference to its outward and visible aspect. Some of my own books
+have offended, and continue to offend, in that way. At best a book is
+not too beautiful; at worst it is hideous. Be advised a bit by Scheff
+in this matter; his taste seems to me admirable and I'm well pleased
+by his work on the "Shapes"; even his covers, which I'm sorry to learn
+do not please Wood, appear to me excellent. I approved the design
+before he executed it--in fact chose it from several that he
+submitted. Its only fault seems to me too much gold leaf, but that is
+a fault "on the right side." In that and all the rest of the work
+(except my own) experts here are delighted. I gave him an absolutely
+free hand and am glad I did. I don't like the ragged leaves, but he
+does not either, on second thought. The public--the reading public--I
+fear does, just now.
+
+I'll get at your new verses in a few days. It will be, as always it
+is, a pleasure to go over them.
+
+About "Prattle." I should think you might get help in that matter from
+Oscar T. Schuck, 2916 Laguna St. He used to suffer from "Prattle" a
+good deal, but is very friendly, and the obtaining it would be in the
+line of his present business.
+
+How did you happen to hit on Markham's greatest two lines--but I need
+not ask that--from "The Wharf of Dreams"?
+
+Well, I wish I could think that those lines of mine in "Geotheos" were
+worthy to be mentioned with Keats' "magic casements" and Coleridge's
+"woman wailing for her demon lover." But I don't think any lines of
+anybody are. I laugh at myself to remember that Geotheos, never before
+in print I believe, was written for E. L. G. Steele to read before a
+"young ladies' seminary" somewhere in the cow counties! Like a man of
+sense he didn't read it. I don't share your regret that I have not
+devoted myself to serious poetry. I don't think of myself as a poet,
+but as a satirist; so I'm entitled to credit for what little gold
+there may be in the mud I throw. But if I professed gold-throwing, the
+mud which I should surely mix with the missiles would count against
+me. Besides, I've a preference for being the first man in a village,
+rather than the second man in Rome. Poetry is a ladder on which there
+is now no room at the top--unless you and Scheff throw down some of
+the chaps occupying the upper rung. It looks as if you might, but I
+could not. When old Homer, Shakspeare and that crowd--building
+better than Ozymandias--say: "Look on my works, ye mighty, and
+despair!" I, considering myself specially addressed, despair. The
+challenge of the wits does not alarm me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to your problems in grammar.
+
+If you say: "There is no hope _or_ fear" you say that _one_ of them
+does not exist. In saying: "There is no hope _nor_ fear" you say that
+_both_ do not exist--which is what you mean.
+
+"Not to weary you, I shall say that I fetched the book from his
+cabin." Whether that is preferable to "I will say" depends on just
+what is meant; both are grammatical. The "shall" merely indicates an
+intention to say; the "will" implies a certain shade of concession in
+saying it.
+
+It is no trouble to answer such questions, _nor_ to do anything else
+to please you. I only hope I make it clear.
+
+I don't know if all my "Journal" work gets into the "Examiner," for I
+don't see all the issues of either paper. I'm not writing much anyhow.
+They don't seem to want much from me, and their weekly check is about
+all that I want from them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I don't know any better poem of Kipling than "The Last Chanty."
+Did you see what stuff of his Prof. Harry Thurston Peck, the Hearst
+outfit's special literary censor, chose for a particular commendation
+the other day? Yet Peck is a scholar, a professor of Latin and a
+writer of merited distinction. Excepting the ability to write poetry,
+the ability to understand it is, I think, the rarest of intellectual
+gifts. Let us thank "whatever gods may be" that we have it, if we
+haven't so very much else.
+
+I've a lovely birch stick a-seasoning for you--cut it up in the
+Alleghanies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ October 29, 1903.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I return the verses--with apology for tardiness. I've been "full up"
+with cares.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I would not change "Religion" to "Dogma" (if I were you) for all "the
+pious monks of St. Bernard." Once you begin to make concessions to the
+feelings of this person or that there is no place to stop and you may
+as well hang up the lyre. Besides, Dogma does not "seek"; it just
+impudently declares something to have been found. However, it is a
+small matter--nothing can destroy the excellence of the verses. I only
+want to warn you against yielding to a temptation which will assail
+you all your life--the temptation to "edit" your thought for somebody
+whom it may pain. Be true to Truth and let all stand from under.
+
+Yes, I think the quatrain that you wrote in Col. Eng's book good
+enough to go in your own. But I'd keep "discerning," instead of
+substituting "revering." In art discernment _carries_ reverence.
+
+_Of course_ I expect to say something of Scheff's book, but in no
+paper with which I have a present connection can I regularly "review"
+it. Hearst's papers would give it incomparably the widest publicity,
+but they don't want "reviews" from me. They have Millard, who has
+already reviewed it--right well too--and Prof. Peck--who possibly
+might review it if it were sent to him. "Prof. Harry Thurston Peck,
+care of 'The American,' New York City." Mention it to Scheff. I'm
+trying to find out what I can do.
+
+I'm greatly pleased to observe your ability to estimate the relative
+value of your own poems--a rare faculty. "To Imagination" is, _I_
+think, the best of all your short ones.
+
+I'm impatient for the book. It, too, I shall hope to write something
+about. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Navarre Hotel and Importation Co., Seventh Avenue and 38th St.,
+ New York,
+ December 26, 1903.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+A thousand cares have prevented my writing to you--and Scheff. And
+this is to be a "busy day." But I want to say that I've not been
+unmindful of your kindness in sending the book--which has hardly left
+my pocket since I got it. And I've read nothing in it more than once,
+excepting the "Testimony." _That_ I've studied, line by line--and
+"precept by precept"--finding in it always "something rich and
+strange." It is greater than I knew; it is the greatest "ever"!
+
+I'm saying a few words about it in tomorrow's "American"--would that I
+had a better place for what I say and more freedom of saying. But they
+don't want, and won't have, "book reviews" from me; probably because I
+will not undertake to assist their advertising publishers. So I have
+to disguise my remarks and work up to them as parts of another topic.
+In this case I have availed myself of my favorite "horrible example,"
+Jim Riley, who ought to be proud to be mentioned on the same page with
+you. After all, the remarks may not appear; I have the _littlest_
+editor that ever blue-penciled whatever he thought particularly dear
+to the writer. I'm here for only a few days, I hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I want to say that you seem to me greatest when you have the greatest
+subject--not flowers, women and all that,--but something above the
+flower-and-woman belt--something that you see from altitudes from
+which _they_ are unseen and unsmelled. Your poetry is incomparable
+with that of our other poets, but your thought, philosophy,--that is
+greater yet. But I'm writing this at a desk in the reading room of a
+hotel; when I get home I'll write you again.
+
+I'm concerned about your health, of which I get bad reports. Can't you
+go to the mesas of New Mexico and round up cattle for a year or
+two--or do anything that will permit, or compel, you to sleep
+out-of-doors under your favorite stars--something that will _not_
+permit you to enter a house for even ten minutes? You say no. Well,
+some day you'll _have_ to--when it is too late--like Peterson, my
+friend Charley Kaufman and so many others, who might be living if they
+had gone into that country in time and been willing to make the
+sacrifice when it would have done good. You can go _now_ as well as
+_then_; and if now you'll come back well, if then, you'll not only
+sacrifice your salary, "prospects," and so forth, but lose your life
+as well. I _know_ that kind of life would cure you. I've talked with
+dozens of men whom it did cure.
+
+You'll die of consumption if you don't. Twenty-odd years ago I was
+writing articles on the out-of-doors treatment for consumption.
+Now--only just now--the physicians are doing the same, and
+establishing out-of-door sanitaria for consumption.
+
+You'll say you haven't consumption. I don't say that you have. But you
+will have if you listen to yourself saying: "I can't do it." * * *
+
+Pardon me, my friend, for this rough advice as to your personal
+affairs: I am greatly concerned about you. Your life is precious to me
+and to the world. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 8, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Thank you so much for the books and the inscription--which (as do all
+other words of praise) affects me with a sad sense of my shortcomings
+as writer and man. Things of that kind from too partial friends point
+out to me with a disquieting significance what I ought to be; and the
+contrast with what I am hurts. Maybe you feel enough that way
+sometimes to understand. You are still young enough to profit by the
+pain; _my_ character is made--_my_ opportunities are gone. But it does
+not greatly matter--nothing does. I have some little testimony from
+you and Scheff and others that I have not lived altogether in vain,
+and I know that I have greater satisfaction in my slight connection
+with your and their work than in my own. Also a better claim to the
+attention and consideration of my fellow-men.
+
+Never mind about the "slow sale" of my book; I did not expect it to be
+otherwise, and my only regret grows out of the fear that some one may
+lose money by the venture. _It is not to be you._ You know I am still
+a little "in the dark" as to what _you_ have really done in the
+matter. I wish you would tell me if any of your own money went into
+it. The contract with Wood is all right; it was drawn according to my
+instructions and I shall not even accept the small royalty allowed me
+if anybody is to be "out." If _you_ are to be out I shall not only not
+accept the royalty, but shall reimburse you to the last cent. Do you
+mind telling me about all that? In any case don't "buy out Wood" and
+don't pay out anything for advertising nor for anything else.
+
+The silence of the reviewers does not trouble me, any more than it
+would you. Their praise of my other books never, apparently, did me
+any good. No book published in this country ever received higher
+praise from higher sources than my first collection of yarns. But the
+book was never a "seller," and doubtless never will be. That _I_ like
+it fairly well is enough. You and I do not write books to sell; we
+write--or rather publish--just because we like to. We've no right to
+expect a profit from fun.
+
+It is odd and amusing that you could have supposed that I had any
+other reason for not writing to you than a fixed habit of
+procrastination, some preoccupation with my small affairs and a very
+burdensome correspondence. Probably you _could_ give me a grievance by
+trying hard, but if you ever are conscious of not having tried you may
+be sure that I haven't the grievance.
+
+I should have supposed that the author of "Viverols" and several
+excellent monographs on fish would have understood your poems. (O no;
+I don't mean that your Muse is a mermaid.) Perhaps he did, but you
+know how temperate of words men of science are by habit. Did you send
+a book to Garrett Serviss? I should like to know what he thinks of the
+"Testimony." As to Joaquin, it is his detestable habit, as it was
+Longfellow's, to praise all poetry submitted to him, and he said of
+Madge Morris's coyote poem the identical thing that he says of your
+work. Sorry to disillusionize you, but it is so.
+
+As to your health. You give me great comfort. * * * But it was not only
+from Scheff that I had bad accounts of you and "your cough." Scheff,
+indeed, has been reticent in the matter, but evidently anxious; and
+you yourself have written despondently and "forecasted" an early
+passing away. If nothing is the matter with you and your lungs some of
+your friends are poor observers. I'm happy to have your testimony, and
+beg to withdraw my project for your recovery. You whet my appetite for
+that new poem. The lines
+
+ "The blue-eyed vampire, sated at her feast,
+ Smiles bloodily against the leprous moon"
+
+give me the shivers. Gee! they're awful! Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 5, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You should not be irritated by the "conspiracy of silence" about me on
+the part of the "Call," the "Argonaut" and other papers. Really my
+enemies are under no obligation to return good for evil; I fear I
+should not respect them if they did. * * *, his head still sore from
+my many beatings of that "distracted globe," would be a comic figure
+stammering his sense of my merit and directing attention to the
+excellence of the literary wares on my shelf.
+
+As to the pig of a public, its indifference to a diet of pearls--_our_
+pearls--was not unknown to me, and truly it does not trouble me
+anywhere except in the pocket. _That_ pig, too, is not much beholden
+to me, who have pounded the snout of it all my life. Why should it
+assist in the rite? Its indifference to _your_ work constitutes a new
+provocation and calls for added whacks, but not its indifference to
+mine.
+
+The Ashton Stevens interview was charming. His finding you and Scheff
+together seems too idyllic to be true--I thought it a fake. He put in
+quite enough--too much--about me. As to Joaquin's hack at me--why,
+that was magnanimity itself in one who, like most of us, does not
+offset blame against praise, subtract the latter from the former and
+find matter for thanks in the remainder. You know "what fools we
+mortals be"; criticism that is not all honey is all vinegar. Nobody
+has more delighted than I in pointing out the greatness of Joaquin's
+great work; but nobody than I has more austerely condemned * * *,
+his vanity and the general humbugery that makes his prose so
+insupportable. Joaquin is a good fellow, all the same, and you should
+not demand of him impossible virtues and a reach of reasonableness
+that is alien to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have the books you kindly sent and have planted two or three in what
+I think fertile soil which I hope will produce a small crop of
+appreciation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And the poem![7] I hardly know how to speak of it. No poem in English
+of equal length has so bewildering a wealth of imagination. Not
+Spenser himself has flung such a profusion of jewels into so small a
+casket. Why, man, it takes away the breath! I've read and reread--read
+it for the expression and read it for the thought (always when I speak
+of the "thought" in your work I mean the meaning--which is another
+thing) and I shall read it many times more. And pretty soon I'll get
+at it with my red ink and see if I can suggest anything worth your
+attention. I fear not.
+
+[7] "A Wine of Wizardry."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+["New York American" Office, Washington, D. C.,
+ February 29, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I wrote you yesterday. Since then I have been rereading your letter. I
+wish you would not say so much about what I have done for you, and how
+much it was worth to you, and all that. I should be sorry to think
+that I did not do a little for you--I tried to. But, my boy, you
+should know that I don't keep that kind of service _on sale_.
+Moreover, I'm amply repaid by what _you_ have done for _me_--I mean
+with your pen. Do you suppose _I_ do not value such things? Does it
+seem reasonable to think me unpleasured by those magnificent
+dedicatory verses in your book? Is it nothing to me to be called
+"Master" by such as you? Is my nature so cold that I have no pride in
+such a pupil? There is no obligation in the matter--certainly none
+that can be suffered to satisfy itself out of your pocket.
+
+You greatly overestimate the sums I spend in "charity." I sometimes
+help some poor devil of an unfortunate over the rough places, but not
+to the extent that you seem to suppose. I couldn't--I've too many
+regular, constant, _legitimate_ demands on me. Those, mostly, are what
+keep me poor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Maybe you think it odd that I've not said a word in print about any of
+your work except the "Testimony." It is not that I don't appreciate
+the minor poems--I do. But I don't like to scatter; I prefer to hammer
+on a single nail--to push one button until someone hears the bell.
+When the "Wine" is published I'll have another poem that is not only
+great, but striking--notable--to work on. However good, or even great,
+a short poem with such a title as "Poesy," "Music," "To a Lily," "A
+White Rose," and so forth, cannot be got into public attention. Some
+longer and more notable work, of the grander manner, may _carry_ it,
+but of itself it will not go. Even a bookful of its kind will not. Not
+till you're famous.
+
+Your letter regarding your brother (who has not turned up) was
+needless--I could be of no assistance in procuring him employment.
+I've tried so often to procure it for others, and so vainly, that
+nobody could persuade me to try any more. I'm not fond of the
+character of suppliant, nor of being "turned down" by the little men
+who run this Government. Of course I'm not in favor with this
+Administration, not only because of my connection with Democratic
+newspapers, but because, also, I sometimes venture to dissent
+openly from the doctrine of the divinity of those in high
+station--particularly Teddy.
+
+I'm sorry you find your place in the office intolerable. That is "the
+common lot of all" who work for others. I have chafed under the yoke
+for many years--a heavier yoke, I think, than yours. It does not fit
+my neck anywhere. Some day perhaps you and I will live on adjoining
+ranches in the mountains--or in adjoining caves--"the world
+forgetting, by the world forgot." I have really been on the point of
+hermitizing lately, but I guess I'll have to continue to live like a
+reasonable human being a little longer until I can release myself with
+a conscience void of offense to my creditors and dependents. But "the
+call of the wild" sounds, even in my dreams.
+
+You ask me if you should write in "A Wine of Wizardry" vein, or in
+that of "The Testimony of the Suns." Both. I don't know in which you
+have succeeded the better. And I don't know anyone who has succeeded
+better in either. To succeed in both is a marvelous performance. You
+may say that the one is fancy, the other imagination, which is true,
+but not the whole truth. The "Wine" has as true imagination as the
+other, and fancy into the bargain. I like your grandiose manner, and I
+like the other as well. In terms of another art I may say--rear great
+towers and domes. Carve, also, friezes. But I'd not bother to cut
+single finials and small decorations. However exquisite the
+workmanship, they are not worth your present attention. If you were a
+painter (as, considering your wonderful sense of color, you doubtless
+could have been) your large canvases would be your best.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I don't care if that satire of Josephare refers to me or not; it was
+good. He may jump on me if he wants to--I don't mind. All I ask is
+that he do it well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I passed yesterday with Percival Pollard, viewing the burnt district
+of Baltimore. He's a queer duck whom I like, and he likes your work.
+I'm sending you a copy of "The Papyrus," with his "rehabilitation" of
+the odious Oscar Wilde. Wilde's work is all right, but what can one do
+with the work of one whose name one cannot speak before women?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 19, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+The "belatedness" of your letter only made _me_ fear that _I_ had
+offended _you_. Odd that we should have such views of each other's
+sensitiveness.
+
+About Wood. No doubt that he is doing all that he can, but--well, he
+is not a publisher. For example: He sent forty or fifty "Shapes" here.
+They lie behind a counter at the bookseller's--not even _on_ the
+counter. There are probably not a dozen persons of my acquaintance in
+Washington who know that I ever wrote a book. Now _how_ are even these
+to know about _that_ book? The bookseller does not advertise the books
+he has on sale and the public does not go rummaging behind his
+counters. A publisher's methods are a bit different, naturally.
+
+Only for your interest I should not care if my books sold or not; they
+exist and will not be destroyed; every book will eventually get to
+_somebody_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It seems to be a matter for you to determine--whether Wood continues
+to try to sell the book or it is put in other hands if he is ever
+tired of it. Remember, I don't care a rap what happens to the book
+except as a means of reimbursing you; I want no money and I want no
+glory. If you and Wood can agree, do in all things as you please.
+
+I return Wood's letters; they show what I knew before: that the public
+and the librarians would not buy that book. Let us discuss this matter
+no more, but at some time in the future you tell me how much you are
+out of pocket.
+
+_Your_ book shows that a fellow can get a good deal of glory with very
+little profit. You are now famous--at least on the Pacific Coast; but
+I fancy you are not any "for'arder" in the matter of wealth than you
+were before. I too have some reputation--a little wider, as yet, than
+yours. Well, my work sells tremendously--in Mr. Hearst's newspapers,
+at the price of a small fraction of one cent! Offered by itself, in
+one-dollar and two-dollar lots, it tempts nobody to fall over his own
+feet in the rush to buy. A great trade, this of ours!
+
+I note with interest the "notices" you send. The one by Monahan is
+amusing with its gabble about your "science." To most men, as to him,
+a mention of the stars suggests astronomy, with its telescopes,
+spectroscopes and so forth. Therefore it is "scientific." To tell such
+men that there is nothing of science in your poem would puzzle them
+greatly.
+
+I don't think poor Lang meant to do anything but his best and
+honestest. He is a rather clever and rather small fellow and not to be
+blamed for the limitations of his insight. I have repeatedly pointed
+out in print that it requires genius to discern genius at first hand.
+Lang has written almost the best, if not quite the best, sonnet in the
+language--yet he is no genius.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why, of course--why should you not help the poor devil, * * *; I used
+to help him myself--introduced him to the public and labored to
+instruct him. Then--but it is unspeakable and so is he. He will bite
+your hand if you feed him, but I think I'd throw a crust to him
+myself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I don't agree with you about Homer, nor "stand for" your implied
+view that narrative poetry is not "pure poetry." Poetry seems to me to
+speak with a thousand voices--"a various language." The miners have a
+saying: "Gold is where you find it." So is poetry; I'm expecting to
+find it some fine day in the price list of a grocery store. I fancy
+_you_ could put it there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to Goethe, the more you read him, the better you will love Heine.
+
+Thank you for "A Wine of Wizardry"--amended. It seems to me that the
+fake dictum of "Merlin-sage" (I don't quite perceive the necessity of
+the hyphen) is better than the hackneyed Scriptural quotation. It is
+odd, but my recollection is that it was the "sick enchantress" who
+cried "unto Betelgeuse a mystic word." Was it not so in the copy that
+I first had, or do I think so merely because the cry of one is more
+lone and awful than the cry of a number?
+
+I am still of the belief that the poem should have at least a few
+breaks in it, for I find myself as well as the public more or less--I,
+doubtless, less than the public--indisposed to tackle solid columns
+of either verse or prose. I told you this poem "took away one's
+breath,"--give a fellow, can't you, a chance to recover it now and
+again.
+
+ "Space to breathe, how short soever."
+
+Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done, on earth as it is in San
+Francisco. Sincerely yours, AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 11, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+To begin at the beginning, I shall of course be pleased to meet
+Josephare if he come this way; if only to try to solve the problem of
+what is in a fellow who started so badly and in so short a time was
+running well, with a prospect of winning "a place." Byron, you know,
+was the same way and Tennyson not so different. Still their start was
+not so bad as Josephare's. I freely confess that I thought him a fool.
+It is "one on me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I wonder if a London house would publish "Shapes of Clay."
+Occasionally a little discussion about me breaks out in the London
+press, blazes up for a little while and "goes up in smoke." I enclose
+some evidences of the latest one--which you may return if you remember
+to do so. The letter of "a deeply disappointed man" was one of
+rollicking humor suggested by some articles of Barr about me and a
+private intimation from him that I should publish some more books in
+London.
+
+Yes, I've dropped "The Passing Show" again, for the same old
+reason--wouldn't stand the censorship of my editor. I'm writing for
+the daily issues of The American, mainly, and, as a rule, anonymously.
+It's "dead easy" work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is all right--that "cry unto Betelgeuse"; the "sick enchantress"
+passage is good enough without it. I like the added lines of the poem.
+Here's another criticism: The "Without" and "Within," beginning the
+first and third lines, respectively, _seem_ to be antithetic, when
+they are not, the latter having the sense of "into," which I think
+might, for clearness, be substituted for it without a displeasing
+break of the metre--a trochee for an iambus.
+
+Why should I not try "The Atlantic" with this poem?--if you have not
+already done so. I could write a brief note about it, saying what
+_you_ could not say, and possibly winning attention to the work. If
+you say so I will. It is impossible to imagine a magazine editor
+rejecting that amazing poem. I have read it at least twenty times with
+ever increasing admiration.
+
+Your book, by the way, is still my constant companion--I carry it in
+my pocket and read it over and over, in the street cars and
+everywhere. _All_ the poems are good, though the "Testimony" and
+"Memorial Day" are supreme--the one in grandeur, the other in feeling.
+
+I send you a criticism in a manuscript letter from a friend who
+complains of your "obscurity," as many have the candor to do. It
+requires candor to do that, for the fault is in the critic's
+understanding. Still, one who understands Shakspeare and Milton is not
+without standing as a complaining witness in the court of literature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My favorite translation of Homer is that of Pope, of whom it is the
+present fashion to speak disparagingly, as it is of Byron. I know all
+that can be said against them, and say _some_ of it myself, but I wish
+their detractors had a little of their brains. I know too that Pope's
+translations of The Iliad and The Odyssey are rather paraphrases than
+translations. But I love them just the same, while wondering (with
+you, doubtless) what so profoundly affected Keats when he "heard
+Chapman speak out loud and bold." Whatever it was, it gave us what
+Coleridge pronounced the best sonnet in our language; and Lang's
+admiration of Homer has given us at least the next best. Of course
+there must be something in poems that produce poems--in a poet whom
+most poets confess their king. I hold (with Poe) that there is no such
+thing as a _long_ poem--a poem of the length of an Epic. It must
+consist of poetic passages connected by _recitativo_, to use an opera
+word; but it is perhaps better for that. If the writer cannot write
+"sustained" poetry the reader probably could not read it. Anyhow, I
+vote for Homer.
+
+I am passing well, but shall soon seek the mountains, though I hope to
+be here when Scheff points his prow this way. Would that you were
+sailing with him!
+
+I've been hearing all about all of you, for Eva Crawford has been
+among you "takin' notes," and Eva's piquant comments on what and whom
+she sees are delicious reading. I should suppose that _you_ would
+appreciate Eva--most persons don't. She is the best letter writer of
+her sex--who are all good letter writers--and she is much beside. I
+may venture to whisper that you'd find her estimate of your work and
+personality "not altogether displeasing."
+
+Now that I'm about such matters, I shall enclose a note to my friend
+Dr. Robertson, who runs an insanery at Livermore and is an interesting
+fellow with a ditto family and a library that will make you pea-green
+with envy. Go out and see him some day and take Scheff, or any friend,
+along--he wants to know you. You won't mind the facts that he thinks
+all poetry the secretion of a diseased brain, and that the only
+reason he doesn't think all brains (except his own) diseased is the
+circumstance that not all secrete poetry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seriously, he is a good fellow and full of various knowledges that
+most of us wot not of.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ June 14, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have a letter from * * *, who is in St. Louis, to which his progress
+has been more leisurely than I liked, considering that I am remaining
+away from my mountains only to meet him. However, he intimates an
+intention to come in a week. I wish you were with him.
+
+I am sending the W. of W. to Scribner's, as you suggest, and if it is
+not taken shall try the other mags in the order of your preference.
+But it's funny that you--_you_--should prefer the "popular" magazines
+and wish the work "illustrated." Be assured the illustrations will
+shock you if you get them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I understand what you say about being bored by the persons whom your
+work in letters brings about your feet. The most _contented_ years of
+my life lately were the two or three that I passed here before
+Washington folk found out that I was an author. The fact has leaked
+out, and although not a soul of them buys and reads my books some of
+them bore me insupportably with their ignorant compliments and
+unwelcome attentions. I fancy I'll have to "move on."
+
+Tell Maid Marian to use gloves when modeling, or the clay will enter
+into her soul through her fingers and she become herself a Shape of
+Clay. My notion is that she should work in a paste made of
+ashes-of-roses moistened with nectar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. Does it bore you that I like you to know my friends? Professor
+* * *'s widow (and daughter) are very dear to me. She knows about you,
+and I've written her that I'd ask you to call on her. You'll like them
+all right, but I have another purpose. I want to know how they
+prosper; and they are a little reticent about that. Maybe you could
+ascertain indirectly by seeing how they live. I asked Grizzly to do
+this but of course he didn't, the shaggy brute that he is.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Haines' Falls, Greene Co., N. Y.,
+ August 4, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I haven't written a letter, except on business, since leaving
+Washington, June 30--no, not since Scheff's arrival there. I now
+return to earth, and my first call is on you.
+
+You'll be glad to know that I'm having a good time here in the
+Catskills. I shall not go back so long as I can find an open hotel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I should like to hear from you about our--or rather your--set in
+California, and especially about _you_. Do you still dally with the
+Muse? Enclosed you will find two damning evidences of additional
+incapacity. _Harper's_ now have "A Wine of Wizardry," and they too
+will indubitably turn it down. I shall then try _The Atlantic_, where
+it should have gone in the first place; and I almost expect its
+acceptance.
+
+I'm not working much--just loafing on my cottage porch; mixing an
+occasional cocktail; infesting the forests, knife in hand, in pursuit
+of the yellow-birch sapling that furnishes forth the walking stick
+like yours; and so forth. I knocked off work altogether for a month
+when Scheff came, and should like to do so for _you_. Are you never
+going to visit the scenes of your youth?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is awfully sad--that latest visit of Death to the heart and home of
+poor Katie Peterson. Will you kindly assure her of my sympathy?
+
+Love to all the Piedmontese. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Haines' Falls, Greene Co., N. Y.,
+ August 27, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+First, thank you for the knife and the distinction of membership in
+the Ancient and Honorable Order of Knifers. I have made little use of
+the blades and other appliances, but the corkscrew is in constant use.
+
+I'm enclosing a little missive from the editor of _Harper's_. Please
+reserve these things awhile and sometime I may ask them of you to
+"point a moral or adorn a tale" about that poem. If we can't get it
+published I'd like to write for some friendly periodical a review of
+an unpublished poem, with copious extracts and a brief history of it.
+I think that would be unique.
+
+I find the pictures of Marian interesting, but have the self-denial to
+keep only one of them--the prettiest one of course. Your own is rather
+solemn, but it will do for the title page of the Testimony, which is
+still my favorite reading.
+
+Scheff showed me your verses on Katie's baby, and Katie has since sent
+them. They are very tender and beautiful. I would not willingly spare
+any of your "personal" poems--least of all, naturally, the one
+personal to me. Your success with them is exceptional. Yet the habit
+of writing them is perilous, as the many failures of great poets
+attest--Milton, for example, in his lines to Syriack Skinner, his
+lines to a baby that died a-bornin' and so forth. The reason is
+obvious, and you have yourself, with sure finger, pointed it out:
+
+ "Remiss the ministry they bear
+ Who serve her with divided heart;
+ She stands reluctant to impart
+ Her strength to purpose, end, or care."
+
+When one is intent upon pleasing some mortal, one is less intent upon
+pleasing the immortal Muse. All this is said only by way of admonition
+for the future, not in criticism of the past. I'm a sinner myself in
+that way, but then I'm not a saint in any way, so my example doesn't
+count.
+
+I don't mind * * * calling me a "dignified old gentleman"--indeed,
+that is what I have long aspired to be, but have succeeded only in the
+presence of strangers, and not always then. * * *
+
+(I forgot to say that your poem is now in the hands of the editor of
+the Atlantic.)
+
+Your determination to "boom" me almost frightens me. Great Scott!
+you've no notion of the magnitude of the task you undertake; the
+labors of Hercules were as nothing to it. Seriously, don't make any
+enemies that way; it is not worth while. And you don't know how
+comfortable I am in my obscurity. It is like being in "the shadow of a
+great rock in a weary land."
+
+How goes the no sale of Shapes of Clay? I am slowly saving up a bit of
+money to recoup your friendly outlay. That's a new thing for me to
+do--the saving, I mean--and I rather enjoy the sensation. If it
+results in making a miser of me you will have to answer for it to
+many a worthy complainant.
+
+Get thee behind me, Satan!--it is not possible for me to go to
+California yet. For one thing, my health is better here in the East; I
+have utterly escaped asthma this summer, and summer is my only "sickly
+season" here. In California I had the thing at any time o' year--even
+at Wright's. But it is my hope to end my days out there.
+
+I don't think Millard was too hard on Kipling; it was no "unconscious"
+plagiarism; just a "straight steal."
+
+About Prentice Mulford. I knew him but slightly and used to make mild
+fun of him as "Dismal Jimmy." That expressed my notion of his
+character and work, which was mostly prose platitudes. I saw him last
+in London, a member of the Joaquin Miller-Charles Warren
+Stoddard-Olive Harper outfit at 11 Museum Street, Bloomsbury Square.
+He married there a fool girl named Josie--forget her other name--with
+whom I think he lived awhile in hell, then freed himself, and some
+years afterward returned to this country and was found dead one
+morning in a boat at Sag Harbor. Peace to the soul of him. No, he was
+not a faker, but a conscientious fellow who mistook his vocation.
+
+My friends have returned to Washington, but I expect to remain here a
+few weeks yet, infesting the woods, devastating the mountain larders,
+supervising the sunsets and guiding the stars in their courses. Then
+to New York, and finally to Washington. Please get busy with that fame
+o' yours so as to have the wealth to come and help me loaf.
+
+I hope you don't mind the typewriter--_I_ don't.
+
+Convey my love to all the sweet ladies of your entourage and make my
+compliments also to the Gang. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ October 5, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your latest was dated Sept. 10. I got it while alone in the mountains,
+but since then I have been in New York City and at West Point
+and--here. New York is too strenuous for me; it gets on my nerves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Please don't persuade me to come to California--I mean don't _try_ to,
+for I can't, and it hurts a little to say nay. There's a big bit of my
+heart there, but--O never mind the reasons; some of them would not
+look well on paper. One of them I don't mind telling; I would not live
+in a state under union labor rule. There is still one place where the
+honest American laboring man is not permitted to cut throats and strip
+bodies of women at his own sweet will. That is the District of
+Columbia.
+
+I am anxious to read Lilith; please complete it.
+
+I have another note of rejection for you. It is from * * *. Knowing
+that you will not bank on what he says about the Metropolitan, I
+enclose it. I've acted on his advising and sent the poem. It is about
+time for it to come back. Then I shall try the other magazines until
+the list is exhausted.
+
+Did I return your Jinks verses? I know I read them and meant to send
+them back, but my correspondence and my papers are in such hopeless
+disorder that I'm all at sea on these matters. For aught I know I may
+have elaborately "answered" the letter that I think myself to be
+answering now. I liked the verses very temperately, not madly.
+
+Of course you are right about the magazine editors not knowing poetry
+when they see it. But who does? I have not known more than a
+half-dozen persons in America that did, and none of them edited a
+magazine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I did not write the "Urus-Agricola-Acetes stuff," though it was
+written _for_ me and, I believe, at my suggestion. The author was
+"Jimmy" Bowman, of whose death I wrote a sonnet which is in Black
+Beetles. He and I used to have a lot of fun devising literary
+mischiefs, fighting sham battles with each other and so forth. He was
+a clever chap and a good judge of whiskey.
+
+Yes, in The Cynic's Dictionary I did "jump from A to M." I had
+previously done the stuff in various papers as far as M, then lost the
+beginning. So in resuming I re-did that part (quite differently, of
+course) in order to have the thing complete if I should want to make a
+book of it. I guess the Examiner isn't running much of it, nor much of
+anything of mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I like your love of Keats and the early Coleridge.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The N. Y. American Office, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 12, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR DAVIS,
+
+The "bad eminence" of turning down Sterling's great poem is one that
+you will have to share with some of your esteemed fellow
+magazinists--for examples, the editors of the Atlantic, Harper's,
+Scribner's, The Century, and now the Metropolitan, all of the élite.
+All of these gentlemen, I believe, profess, as you do not, to know
+literature when they see it, and to deal in it.
+
+Well I profess to deal in it in a small way, and if Sterling will let
+me I propose some day to ask judgment between them and me.
+
+Even _you_ ask for literature--if my stories are literature, as you
+are good enough to imply. (By the way, all the leading publishers of
+the country turned down that book until they saw it published without
+them by a merchant in San Francisco and another sort of publishers in
+London, Leipzig and Paris.) Well, you wouldn't do a thing to one of my
+stories!
+
+No, thank you; if I have to write rot, I prefer to do it for the
+newspapers, which make no false pretences and are frankly rotten, and
+in which the badness of a bad thing escapes detection or is forgotten
+as soon as it is cold.
+
+I know how to write a story (of the "happy ending" sort) for magazine
+readers for whom literature is too good, but I will not do so so long
+as stealing is more honorable and interesting.
+
+I've offered you the best stuff to be had--Sterling's poem--and the
+best that I am able to make; and now you must excuse me. I do not
+doubt that you really think that you would take "the kind of fiction
+that made 'Soldiers and Civilians' the most readable book of its kind
+in this country," and it is nice of you to put it that way; but
+neither do I doubt that you would find the story sent a different kind
+of fiction and, like the satire which you return to me, "out of the
+question." An editor who has a preformed opinion of the kind of stuff
+that he is going to get will always be disappointed with the stuff
+that he does get.
+
+I know this from my early experience as an editor--before I learned
+that what I needed was, not any particular kind of stuff, but just the
+stuff of a particular kind of writer.
+
+All this without any feeling, and only by way of explaining why I must
+ask you to excuse me.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 6, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I got and read that fool thing in the August Critic. I found in
+it nothing worse than stupidity--no malice. Doubtless you have not
+sounded the deeper deeps of stupidity in critics, and so are driven to
+other motives to explain their unearthly errors. I know from my own
+experience of long ago how hard it is to accept abominable criticism,
+obviously (to the criticee) unfair, without attributing a personal
+mean motive; but the attribution is nearly always erroneous, even in
+the case of a writer with so many personal enemies as I. You will do
+well to avoid that weakness of the tyro. * * * has the infirmity in an
+apparently chronic form. Poets, by reason of the sensibilities that
+_make_ them poets, are peculiarly liable to it. I can't see any
+evidence that the poor devil of the Critic knew better.
+
+The Wine of Wizardry is at present at the Booklovers'. It should have
+come back ere this, but don't you draw any happy augury from that: I'm
+sure they'll turn it down, and am damning them in advance.
+
+I had a postal from * * * a few days ago. He was in Paris. I've
+written him only once, explaining by drawing his attention to the fact
+that one's reluctance to write a letter increases in the ratio of the
+square of the distance it has to go. I don't know why that is so, but
+it is--at least in my case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I'm in perfect health, barring a bit of insomnia at times, and
+enjoy life as much as I ever did--except when in love and the love
+prospering; that is to say, when it was new.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 8, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+This is the worst yet! This jobbernowl seems to think "The Wine of
+Wizardry" a story. It should "arrive" and be "dramatic"--the
+denouement being, I suppose, a particularly exciting example of the
+"happy ending."
+
+My dear fellow, I'm positively ashamed to throw your pearls before any
+more of these swine, and I humbly ask your pardon for having done it
+at all. I guess the "Wine" will have to await the publication of your
+next book.
+
+But I'd like to keep this fellow's note if you will kindly let me have
+it. Sometime, when the poem is published, I shall paste it into a
+little scrap book, with all the notes of rejection, and then if I know
+a man or two capable of appreciating the humor of the thing I can make
+merry over it with them.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ My permanent address,
+ February 18, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+It's a long time since the date of your latest letter, but I've been
+doing two men's work for many weeks and have actually not found the
+leisure to write to my friends. As it is the first time that I've
+worked really hard for several years I ought not to complain, and
+don't. But I hope it will end with this session of Congress.
+
+I think I did not thank you for the additional copies of your new
+book--the new edition. I wish it contained the new poem, "A Wine of
+Wizardry." I've given up trying to get it into anything. I related my
+failure to Mackay, of "Success," and he asked to be permitted to see
+it. "No," I replied, "you too would probably turn it down, and I will
+take no chances of losing the respect that I have for you." And I'd
+not show it to him. He declared his intention of getting it,
+though--which was just what I wanted him to do. But I dare say he
+didn't.
+
+Yes, you sent me "The Sea Wolf." My opinion of it? Certainly--or a
+part of it. It is a most disagreeable book, as a whole. London has a
+pretty bad style and no sense of proportion. The story is a perfect
+welter of disagreeable incidents. Two or three (of the kind) would
+have sufficed to _show_ the character of the man Larsen; and his own
+self-revealings by word of mouth would have "done the rest." Many of
+these incidents, too, are impossible--such as that of a man mounting a
+ladder with a dozen other men--more or less--hanging to his leg, and
+the hero's work of rerigging a wreck and getting it off a beach where
+it had stuck for weeks, and so forth. The "love" element, with its
+absurd suppressions and impossible proprieties, is awful. I confess to
+an overwhelming contempt for both the sexless lovers.
+
+Now as to the merits. It is a rattling good story in one way;
+something is "going on" all the time--not always what one would wish,
+but _something_. One does not go to sleep over the book. But the great
+thing--and it is among the greatest of things--is that tremendous
+creation, Wolf Larsen. If that is not a permanent addition to
+literature, it is at least a permanent figure in the memory of the
+reader. You "can't lose" Wolf Larsen. He will be with you to the end.
+So it does not really matter how London has hammered him into you. You
+may quarrel with the methods, but the result is almost incomparable.
+The hewing out and setting up of such a figure is enough for a man to
+do in one life-time. I have hardly words to impart my good judgment of
+_that_ work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That is a pretty picture of Phyllis as Cleopatra--whom I think you
+used to call "the angel child"--as the Furies were called Eumenides.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm enclosing a review of your book in the St. Louis "Mirror," a paper
+always kindly disposed toward our little group of gifted obscurians. I
+thought you might not have seen it; and it is worth seeing. Percival
+Pollard sends it me; and to him we owe our recognition by the
+"Mirror."
+
+I hope you prosper apace. I mean mentally and spiritually; all other
+prosperity is trash.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 17, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've reached your letter on my file. I wonder that I did, for truly
+I'm doing a lot of work--mostly of the pot-boiler, newspaper sort,
+some compiling of future--probably _very_ future--books and a little
+for posterity.
+
+Valentine has not returned the "Wine of Wizardry," but I shall tell
+him to in a few days and will then try it on the magazines you
+mention. If that fails I can see no objection to offering it to the
+English periodicals.
+
+I don't know about Mackay. He has a trifle of mine which he was going
+to run months ago. He didn't and I asked it back. He returned it and
+begged that it go back to him for immediate publication. It went back,
+but publication did not ensue. In many other ways he has been
+exceedingly kind. Guess he can't always have his way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I read that other book to the bitter end--the "Arthur Sterling" thing.
+He is the most disagreeable character in fiction, though Marie
+Bashkirtseff and Mary McLean in real life could give him cards and
+spades. Fancy a poet, or any kind of writer, whom it hurts to think!
+What the devil are his agonies all about--his writhings and twistings
+and foaming at all his mouths? What would a poem by an intellectual
+epileptic like that be? Happily the author spares us quotation. I
+suppose there are Arthur Sterlings among the little fellows, but if
+genius is not serenity, fortitude and reasonableness I don't know what
+it is. One cannot even imagine Shakespeare or Goethe bleeding over his
+work and howling when "in the fell clutch of circumstance." The great
+ones are figured in my mind as ever smiling--a little sadly at times,
+perhaps, but always with conscious inaccessibility to the pinpricking
+little Titans that would storm their Olympus armed with ineffectual
+disasters and pop-gun misfortunes. Fancy a fellow wanting, like Arthur
+Sterling, to be supported by his fellows in order that he may write
+what they don't want to read! Even Jack London would gag at such
+Socialism as _that_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm going to pass a summer month or two with the Pollards, at
+Saybrook, Conn. How I wish you could be of the party. But I suppose
+you'll be chicken-ranching then, and happy enough where you are. I
+wish you joy of the venture and, although I fear it means a meagre
+living, it will probably be more satisfactory than doubling over a
+desk in your uncle's office. The very name Carmel Bay is enchanting.
+I've a notion I shall see that ranch some day. I don't quite recognize
+the "filtered-through-the-emasculated-minds-of-about-six-fools"
+article from which you say I quote--don't remember it, nor remember
+quoting from it.
+
+I don't wonder at your surprise at my high estimate of Longfellow in a
+certain article. It is higher than my permanent one. I was thinking
+(while writing for a newspaper, recollect) rather of his fame than of
+his genius--I had to have a literary equivalent to Washington or
+Lincoln. Still, we must not forget that Longfellow wrote "Chrysaor"
+and, in narrative poetry (which you don't care for) "Robert of
+Sicily." Must one be judged by his average, or may he be judged, on
+occasion, by his highest? He is strongest who can lift the greatest
+weight, not he who habitually lifts lesser ones.
+
+As to your queries. So far as I know, Realf _did_ write his great
+sonnets on the night of his death. Anyhow, they were found with the
+body. Your recollection that I said they were written before he came
+to the Coast is faulty. Some of his other things were in print when he
+submitted them to me (and took pay for them) as new; but not the "De
+Mortuis."
+
+I got the lines about the echoes (I _think_ they go this way:
+
+ "the loon
+ Laughed, and the echoes, huddling in affright,
+ Like Odin's hounds went baying down the night")
+
+from a poem entitled, I think, "The Washers of the Shroud." I found it
+in the "Atlantic," in the summer of 1864, while at home from the war
+suffering from a wound, and--disgraceful fact!--have never seen nor
+heard of it since. If the magazine was a current number, as I suppose,
+it should be easy to find the poem. If you look it up tell me about
+it. I don't even know the author--had once a vague impression that it
+was Lowell but don't know.
+
+The compound "mulolatry," which I made in "Ashes of the Beacon," would
+not, of course, be allowable in composition altogether serious. I used
+it because I could not at the moment think of the right word,
+"gyneolatry," or "gynecolatry," according as you make use of the
+nominative or the accusative. I once made "caniolatry" for a similar
+reason--just laziness. It's not nice to do things o' that kind, even
+in newspapers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I had intended to write you something of "beesness," but time is up
+and it must wait. This letter is insupportably long already.
+
+My love to Carrie and Katie. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ May 16, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Bailey Millard is editor of "The Cosmopolitan Magazine," which Mr.
+Hearst has bought. I met him in New York two weeks ago. He had just
+arrived and learning from Hearst that I was in town looked me up. I
+had just recommended him to Hearst as editor. He had intended him for
+associate editor. I think that will give you a chance, such as it is.
+Millard dined with me and I told him the adventures of "A Wine of
+Wizardry." I shall send it to him as soon as he has warmed his seat,
+unless you would prefer to send it yourself. He already knows my whole
+good opinion of it, and he shares my good opinion of you.
+
+I suppose you are at your new ranch, but I shall address this letter
+as usual.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If you hear of my drowning know that it is the natural (and desirable)
+result of the canoe habit. I've a dandy canoe and am tempting fate and
+alarming my friends by frequenting, not the margin of the upper river,
+but the broad reaches below town, where the wind has miles and miles
+of sweep and kicks up a most exhilarating combobbery. If I escape I'm
+going to send my boat up to Saybrook, Connecticut, and navigate Long
+Island Sound.
+
+Are you near enough to the sea to do a bit of boating now and then?
+When I visit you I shall want to bring my canoe.
+
+I've nearly given up my newspaper work, but shall do something each
+month for the Magazine. Have not done much yet--have not been in the
+mind. Death has been striking pretty close to me again, and you know
+how that upsets a fellow.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ June 16, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm your debtor for two good long letters. You err in thinking your
+letters, of whatever length and frequency, can be otherwise than
+delightful to me.
+
+No, you had not before sent me Upton Sinclair's article explaining why
+American literature is "bourgeois." It is amusingly grotesque. The
+political and economical situation has about as much to do with it as
+have the direction of our rivers and the prevailing color of our hair.
+But it is of the nature of the faddist (and of all faddists the ultra
+socialist is the most untamed by sense) to see in everything his
+hobby, with its name writ large. He is the humorist of observers. When
+Sinclair transiently forgets his gospel of the impossible he can see
+well enough.
+
+I note what you say of * * * and know that he did not use to like me,
+though I doubt if he ever had any antipathy to you. Six or eight years
+ago I tackled him on a particularly mean fling that he had made at me
+while I was absent from California. (I think I had not met him
+before.) I told him, rather coarsely, what I thought of the matter. He
+candidly confessed himself in the wrong, expressed regret and has
+ever since, so far as I know, been just and even generous to me. I
+think him sincere now, and enclose a letter which seems to show it.
+You may return it if you will--I send it mainly because it concerns
+your poem. The trouble--our trouble--with * * * is that he has
+voluntarily entered into slavery to the traditions and theories of the
+magazine trade, which, like those of all trades, are the product of
+small men. The big man makes his success by ignoring them. Your
+estimate of * * * I'm not disposed to quarrel with, but do think him
+pretty square.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bless you, don't take the trouble to go through the Iliad and Odyssey
+to pick out the poetical parts. I grant you they are brief and
+infrequent--I mean in the translation. I hold, with Poe, that there
+are no long poems--only bursts of poetry in long spinnings of metrical
+prose. But even the "recitativo" of the translated Grecian poets has a
+charm to one that it may not have to another. I doubt if anyone who
+has always loved "the glory that was Greece"--who has been always in
+love with its jocund deities, and so forth, can say accurately just
+how much of his joy in Homer (for example) is due to love of poetry,
+and how much to a renewal of mental youth and young illusions. Some
+part of the delight that we get from verse defies analysis and
+classification. Only a man without a memory (and memories) could say
+just what pleased him in poetry and be sure that it was the poetry
+only. For example, I never read the opening lines of the Pope
+Iliad--and I don't need the book for much of the first few hundred, I
+guess--without seeming to be on a sunny green hill on a cold windy
+day, with the bluest of skies above me and billows of pasture below,
+running to a clean-cut horizon. There's nothing in the text
+warranting that illusion, which is nevertheless to me a _part_ of the
+Iliad; a most charming part, too. It all comes of my having first read
+the thing under such conditions at the age of about ten. I _remember_
+that; but how many times I must be powerfully affected by the poets
+_without_ remembering why. If a fellow could cut out all that
+extrinsic interest he would be a fool to do so. But he would be a
+better critic.
+
+You ought to be happy in the contemplation of a natural, wholesome
+life at Carmel Bay--the "prospect pleases," surely. But I fear, I
+fear. Maybe you can get a newspaper connection that will bring you in
+a small income without compelling you to do violence to your literary
+conscience. I doubt if you can get your living out of the ground. But
+I shall watch the experiment with sympathetic interest, for it
+"appeals" to me. I'm a trifle jaded with age and the urban life, and
+maybe if you can succeed in that other sort of thing I could.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to * * * the Superb. Isn't Sag Harbor somewhere near Saybrook,
+Connecticut, at the mouth of the river of that name? I'm going there
+for a month with Percival Pollard. Shall leave here about the first of
+July. If Sag Harbor is easily accessible from there, and * * * would
+care to see me, I'll go and call on her. * * * But maybe I'd fall in
+love with her and, being now (alas) eligible, just marry her
+alive!--or be turned down by her, to the unspeakable wrecking of my
+peace! I'm only a youth--63 on the 24th of this month--and it would be
+too bad if I got started wrong in life. But really I don't know about
+the good taste of being jocular about * * *. I'm sure she must be a
+serious enough maiden, with the sun of a declining race yellow on her
+hair. Eva Crawford thinks her most lovable--and Eva has a clear,
+considering eye upon you all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm going to send up my canoe to Saybrook and challenge the rollers of
+the Sound. Don't you fear--I'm an expert canoeist from boyhood. * * *
+
+ Sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 3, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have at last the letter that I was waiting for--didn't answer the
+other, for one of mine was on the way to you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You need not worry yourself about your part of the business. You have
+acted "mighty white," as was to have been expected of you; and, caring
+little for any other feature of the matter, I'm grateful to you for
+giving my pessimism and growing disbelief in human disinterestedness a
+sound wholesome thwack on the mazzard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I was sorry to whack London, for whom, in his character as
+author, I have a high admiration, and in that of publicist and
+reformer a deep contempt. Even if he had been a personal friend, I
+should have whacked him, and doubtless much harder. I'm not one of
+those who give their friends carte blanche to sin. If my friend
+dishonors himself he dishonors me; if he makes a fool of himself he
+makes a fool of me--which another cannot do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Your description of your new environment, in your other letter, makes
+me "homesick" to see it. I cordially congratulate you and Mrs.
+Sterling on having the sense to do what I have always been too
+indolent to do--namely as you please. Guess I've been always too busy
+"warming both hands before the fire of life." And now, when
+
+ "It sinks and I am ready to depart,"
+
+I find that the damned fire was in _me_ and ought to have been
+quenched with a dash of cold sense. I'm having my canoe decked and
+yawl-rigged for deep water and live in the hope of being drowned
+according to the dictates of my conscience.
+
+By way of proving my power of self-restraint I'm going to stop this
+screed with a whole page unused.
+
+ Sincerely yours, as ever,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 3, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I don't know why I've not written to you--that is, I don't know why
+God made me what I have the misfortune to be: a sufferer from
+procrastination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have read Mary Austin's book with unexpected interest. It is
+pleasing exceedingly. You may not know that I'm familiar with the
+_kind_ of country she writes of, and reading the book was like
+traversing it again. But the best of her is her style. That is
+delicious. It has a slight "tang" of archaism--just enough to suggest
+"lucent sirups tinct with cinnamon," or the "spice and balm" of
+Miller's sea-winds. And what a knack at observation she has! Nothing
+escapes her eye. Tell me about her. What else has she written? What is
+she going to write? If she is still young she will do great work; if
+not--well, she _has_ done it in that book. But she'll have to hammer
+and hammer again and again before the world will hear and heed.
+
+As to me I'm pot-boiling. My stuff in the N. Y. American (I presume
+that the part of it that you see is in the Examiner) is mere piffle,
+written without effort, purpose or care. My department in the
+Cosmopolitan is a failure, as I told Millard it would be. It is
+impossible to write topical stuff for a magazine. How can one discuss
+with heart or inspiration a thing that happens two months or so before
+one's comments on it will be read? The venture and the title were
+Hearst's notion, but the title so handicaps me that I can do nothing
+right. I shall drop it.
+
+I've done three little stories for the March number (they may be
+postponed) that are ghastly enough to make a pig squeal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 12, 1906.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+First, about the "Wine," I dislike the "privately printed" racket. Can
+you let the matter wait a little longer? Neale has the poem, and Neale
+is just now inaccessible to letters, somewhere in the South in the
+interest of his magazine-that-is-to-be. I called when in New York, but
+he had flown and I've been unable to reach him; but he is due here on
+the 23rd. Then if his mag is going to hold fire, or if he doesn't want
+the poem for it, let Robertson or Josephare have a hack at it.
+
+Barr is amusing. I don't care to have a copy of his remarks.
+
+About the pirating of my stories. That is a matter for Chatto and
+Windus, who bought the English copyright of the book from which that
+one story came. I dare say, though, the publication was done by
+arrangement with them. Anyhow my interests are not involved.
+
+I was greatly interested in your account of Mrs. Austin. She's a
+clever woman and should write a good novel--if there is such a thing
+as a good novel. I won't read novels.
+
+Yes, the "Cosmopolitan" cat-story is Leigh's and is to be credited to
+him if ever published in covers. I fathered it as the only way to get
+it published at all. Of course I had to rewrite it; it was very crude
+and too horrible. A story may be terrible, but must not be
+horrible--there is a difference. I found the manuscript among his
+papers.
+
+It is disagreeable to think of the estrangement between * * * and his
+family. Doubtless the trouble arises from his being married. Yes, it
+is funny, his taking his toddy along with you old soakers. I remember
+he used to kick at my having wine in camp and at your having a bottle
+hidden away in the bushes.
+
+I had seen that group of you and Joaquin and Stoddard and laughed at
+your lifelike impersonation of the Drowsy Demon.
+
+I passed the first half of last month in New York. Went there for a
+dinner and stayed to twelve. Sam Davis and Homer Davenport were of the
+party.
+
+Sam was here for a few days--but maybe you don't know Sam. He's a
+brother to Bob, who swears you got your Dante-like solemnity of
+countenance by coming into his office when he was editing a newspaper.
+
+You are not to think I have thrown * * * over. There are only two or
+three matters of seriousness between us and they cannot profitably be
+discussed in letters, so they must wait until he and I meet if we ever
+do. I shall mention them to no one else and I don't suppose he will to
+anyone but me. Apart from these--well, our correspondence was
+disagreeable, so the obvious thing to do was to put an end to it. To
+unlike a friend is not an easy thing to do, and I've not attempted to
+do it.
+
+Of course I approve the new lines in the "Wine" and if Neale or
+anybody else will have the poem I shall insert them in their place.
+That "screaming thing" stays with one almost as does "the blue-eyed
+vampire," and is not only visible, as is she, but audible as well. If
+you go on adding lines to the poem I shall not so sharply deplore our
+failure to get it into print. As Mark Twain says: "Every time you draw
+you fill."
+
+The "Night in Heaven" is fine work in the grand style and its swing is
+haunting when one gets it. I get a jolt or two in the reading, but I
+dare say you purposely contrived them and I can't say they hurt. Of
+course the rhythm recalls Kipling's "The Last Chanty" (I'm not sure I
+spell the word correctly--if there's a correct way) but that is
+nothing. Nobody has the copyright of any possible metre or rhythm in
+English prosody. It has been long since anybody was "first." When are
+you coming to Washington to sail in my canoe?
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 5, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've been in New York again but am slowly recovering. I saw Neale. He
+assures me that the magazine will surely materialize about June, and
+he wants the poem, "A Wine of Wizardry," with an introduction by me. I
+think he means it; if so that will give it greater publicity than what
+you have in mind, even if the mag eventually fail. Magazines if well
+advertised usually sell several hundred thousand of the first issue;
+the trick is to keep them going. Munsey's "Scrap Book" disposed of a
+half-million. * * *
+
+* * * was to start for a few weeks in California about now. I hope
+you will see him. He is not a bad lot when convinced that one respects
+him. He has been treated pretty badly in this neck o' the woods, as is
+every Western man who breaks into this realm of smugwumps.
+
+My benediction upon Carmelites all and singular--if any are all.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Doubleday, Page & Co. are to publish my "Cynic's Dictionary."
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 20, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I write in the hope that you are alive and the fear that you are
+wrecked.[8]
+
+[8] The San Francisco earthquake and fire had occurred April 18, 1906.
+
+Please let me know if I can help--I need not say how glad I shall be
+to do so. "Help" would go with this were I sure about you and the
+post-office. It's a mighty bad business and one does not need to own
+property out there to be "hit hard" by it. One needs only to have
+friends there.
+
+We are helpless here, so far as the telegraph is concerned--shall not
+be able to get anything on the wires for many days, all private
+dispatches being refused.
+
+Pray God you and yours may be all right. Of course anything that you
+may be able to tell me of my friends will be gratefully received.
+Sincerely yours, AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 6, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your letter relieves me greatly. I had begun to fear that you had
+"gone before." Thank you very much for your news of our friends. I had
+already heard from Eva Croffie. Also from Grizzly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thank you for Mr. Eddy's review of "Shapes." But he is misinformed
+about poor Flora Shearer. Of course I helped her--who would not help a
+good friend in adversity? But she went to Scotland to a brother long
+ago, and at this time I do not know if she is living or dead.
+
+But here am I forgetting (momentarily) that awful wiping out of San
+Francisco. It "hit" me pretty hard in many ways--mostly indirectly,
+through my friends. I had rather hoped to have to "put up" for you and
+your gang, and am a trifle disappointed to know that you are all
+right--except the chimneys. I'm glad that tidal wave did not come, but
+don't you think you'd better have a canoe ready? You could keep it on
+your veranda stacked with provisions and whiskey.
+
+My letter from Ursus (written during the conflagration) expresses a
+keen solicitude for the Farallones, as the fire was working westward.
+
+If this letter is a little disconnected and incoherent know, O King,
+that I have just returned from a dinner in Atlantic City, N. J. I saw
+Markham there, also Bob Davis, Sam Moffett, Homer Davenport, Bob
+Mackay and other San Franciscans. (Can there be a San Franciscan when
+there is no San Francisco? I don't want to go back. Doubtless the new
+San Francisco--while it lasts--will be a finer town than the old, but
+it will not be _my_ San Francisco and I don't want to see it. It has
+for many years been, to me, full of ghosts. Now it is itself a ghost.)
+
+I return the sonnets. Destruction of "Town Talk" has doubtless saved
+you from having the one on me turned down. Dear old fellow, don't take
+the trouble to defend my memory when--or at least until--
+
+ "I am fled
+ From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell."
+
+I'm not letting my enemies' attitude trouble me at all. On the
+contrary, I'm rather sorry for them and their insomnia--lying awake o'
+nights to think out new and needful lies about me, while I sleep
+sweetly. O, it is all right, truly.
+
+No, I never had any row (nor much acquaintance) with Mark Twain--met
+him but two or three times. Once with Stoddard in London. I think
+pretty well of him, but doubt if he cared for me and can't, at the
+moment, think of any reason why he _should_ have cared for me.
+
+"The Cynic's Dictionary" is a-printing. I shall have to call it
+something else, for the publishers tell me there is a "Cynic's
+Dictionary" already out. I dare say the author took more than my
+title--the stuff has been a rich mine for a plagiarist for many a
+year. They (the publishers) won't have "The Devil's Dictionary." Here
+in the East the Devil is a sacred personage (the Fourth Person of the
+Trinity, as an Irishman might say) and his name must not be taken in
+vain.
+
+No, "The Testimony of the Suns" has not "palled" on me. I still read
+it and still think it one of the world's greatest poems.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Well, God be wi' ye and spare the shack at Carmel,
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ June 11, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your poem, "A Dream of Fear" was so good before that it needed no
+improvement, though I'm glad to observe that you have "the passion for
+perfection." Sure--you shall have your word "colossal" applied to a
+thing of two dimensions, an you will.
+
+I have no objection to the publication of that sonnet on me. It may
+give my enemies a transient feeling that is disagreeable, and if I can
+do that without taking any trouble in the matter myself it is worth
+doing. I think they must have renewed their activity, to have provoked
+you so--got up a new and fascinating lie, probably. Thank you for
+putting your good right leg into action themward.
+
+What a "settlement" you have collected about you at Carmel! All manner
+of cranks and curios, to whom I feel myself drawn by affinity. Still I
+suppose I shall not go. I should have to see the new San
+Francisco--when it has foolishly been built--and I'd rather not. One
+does not care to look upon either the mutilated face of one's mashed
+friend or an upstart imposter bearing his name. No, _my_ San Francisco
+is gone and I'll have no other.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You are wrong about Gorky--he has none of the "artist" in him. He is
+not only a peasant, but an anarchist and an advocate of
+assassination--by others; like most of his tribe, he doesn't care to
+take the risk himself. His "career" in this country has been that of a
+yellow dog. Hearst's newspapers and * * * are the only friends that
+remain to him of all those that acclaimed him when he landed. And all
+the sturdy lying of the former cannot rehabilitate him. It isn't
+merely the woman matter. You'd understand if you were on this side of
+the country. I was myself a dupe in the matter. He had expressed high
+admiration of my books (in an interview in Russia) and when his
+Government released him from prison I cabled him congratulations. O,
+my!
+
+Yes, I've observed the obviously lying estimates of the San Franciscan
+dead; also that there was no earthquake--just a fire; also the
+determination to "beat" the insurance companies. Insurance is a hog
+game, and if they (the companies) can be beaten out of their dishonest
+gains by superior dishonesty I have no objection; but in my judgment
+they are neither legally nor morally liable for the half that is
+claimed of them. Those of them that took no earthquake risks don't owe
+a cent.
+
+Please don't send * * *'s verses to me if you can decently decline. I
+should be sorry to find them bad, and my loathing of the Whitmaniacal
+"form" is as deep as yours. Perhaps I should find them good otherwise,
+but the probability is so small that I don't want to take the chance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've just finished reading the first proofs of "The Cynic's Word
+Book," which Doubleday, Page & Co. are to bring out in October. My
+dealings with them have been most pleasant and one of them whom I met
+the other day at Atlantic City seems a fine fellow.
+
+I think I told you that S. O. Howes, of Galveston, Texas, is compiling
+a book of essays and sich from some of my stuff that I sent him. I've
+left the selection entirely to him and presented him with the profits
+if there be any. He'll probably not even find a publisher. He has the
+work about half done. By the way, he is an enthusiastic admirer of
+you. For that I like him, and for much else.
+
+I mean to stay here all summer if I die for it, as I probably shall.
+Luck and love to you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 20, 1906.]
+
+DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+I am more sorry than I can say to be unable to send you the copy of
+the Builder's Review that you kindly sent _me_. But before receiving
+your note I had, in my own interest, searched high and low for it, in
+vain. Somebody stole it from my table. I especially valued it after
+the catastrophe, but should have been doubly pleased to have it for
+you.
+
+It was indeed a rough deal you San Franciscans got. I had always
+expected to go back to the good old town some day, but I have no
+desire to see the new town, if there is to be one. I fear the fire
+consumed even the ghosts that used to meet me at every street
+corner--ghosts of dear dead friends, oh, so many of them!
+
+Please accept my sympathy for your losses. I too am a "sufferer," a
+whole edition of my latest book, plates and all, having gone up in
+smoke and many of my friends being now in the "dependent class." It
+hit us all pretty hard, I guess, wherever we happened to be.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C,
+ August 11, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If your neighbor Carmelites are really "normal" and respectable I'm
+sorry for you. They will surely (remaining cold sober themselves)
+drive you to drink. Their sort affects _me_ that way. God bless the
+crank and the curio!--what would life in this desert be without its
+mullahs and its dervishes? A matter of merchants and camel drivers--no
+one to laugh with and at.
+
+Did you see Gorky's estimate of us in "Appleton's"? Having been a few
+weeks in the land, whose language he knows not a word of, he knows (by
+intuition of genius and a wee-bit help from Gaylord Wilshire and his
+gang) all about us, and tells it in generalities of vituperation as
+applicable to one country as to another. He's a dandy bomb-thrower,
+but he handles the stink-pot only indifferently well. He should write
+(for "The Cosmopolitan") on "The Treason of God."
+
+Sorry you didn't like my remarks in that fool "symposium." If I said
+enough to make it clear that I don't care a damn for any of the
+matters touched upon, nor for the fellows who _do_ care, I satisfied
+my wish. It was not intended to be an "argument" at all--at least not
+on my part; I don't argue with babes and sucklings. Hunter is a
+decentish fellow, for a dreamer, but the Hillquit person is a
+humorless anarchist. When I complimented him on the beauty of his neck
+and expressed the hope of putting a nice, new rope about it he nearly
+strangled on the brandy that I was putting down it at the hotel bar.
+And it wasn't with merriment. His anarchist sentiments were all cut
+out.
+
+I'm not familiar with the poetry of William Vaughan Moody. Can you
+"put me on"?
+
+I'm sending you an odd thing by Eugene Wood, of Niagara Falls, where I
+met him two or three years ago. I'm sure you will appreciate it. The
+poor chap died the other day and might appropriately--as he doubtless
+will--lie in a neglected grave. You may return the book when you have
+read it enough. I'm confident you never heard of it.
+
+Enclosed is your sonnet, with a few suggestions of no importance. I
+had not space on it to say that the superfluity of superlatives noted,
+is accentuated by the words "west" and "quest" immediately following,
+making a lot of "ests." The verses are pleasing, but if any villain
+prefer them to "In Extremis" may he bite himself with a Snake!
+
+If you'll send me that shuddery thing on Fear--with the "clangor of
+ascending chains" line--and one or two others that you'd care to have
+in a magazine, I'll try them on Maxwell. I suspect he will fall dead
+in the reading, or possibly dislocate the jaw of him with a yawn, but
+even so you will not have written in vain.
+
+Have you tried anything on "Munsey"? Bob Davis is the editor, and we
+talked you over at dinner (where would you could have been). I think
+he values my judgment a little. * * *
+
+I wish I could be blown upon by your Carmel sea-breeze; the weather
+here is wicked! I don't even canoe.
+
+My "Cynic" book is due in October. Shall send it to you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 28, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Both your letters at hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Be a "magazine poet" all you can--that is the shortest road to
+recognition, and all our greater poets have travelled it. You need not
+compromise with your conscience, however, by writing "magazine
+poetry." You couldn't.
+
+What's your objection to * * *? I don't observe that it is greatly
+worse than others of its class. But a fellow who has for nigh upon
+twenty years written for yellow newspapers can't be expected to say
+much that's edifying on that subject. So I dare say I'm wrong in my
+advice about the _kind_ of swine for your pearls. There are probably
+more than the two kinds of pigs--live ones and dead ones.
+
+Yes, I'm a colonel--in Pennsylvania Avenue. In the neighborhood of my
+tenement I'm a Mister. At my club I'm a major--which is my real title
+by an act of Congress. I suppressed it in California, but couldn't
+here, where I run with the military gang.
+
+You need not blackguard your poem, "A Visitor," though I could wish
+you had not chosen blank verse. That form seems to me suitable (in
+serious verse) only to lofty, not lowly, themes. Anyhow, I always
+expect something pretty high when I begin an unknown poem in blank.
+Moreover, it is not your best "medium." Your splendid poem, "Music,"
+does not wholly commend itself to me for that reason. May I say that
+it is a little sing-songy--the lines monotonously alike in their
+caesural pauses and some of their other features?
+
+By the way, I'd like to see what you could do in more unsimple meters
+than the ones that you handle so well. The wish came to me the other
+day in reading Lanier's "The Marshes of Glynn" and some of his other
+work. Lanier did not often equal his master, Swinburne, in getting the
+most out of the method, but he did well in the poem mentioned. Maybe
+you could manage the dangerous thing. It would be worth doing and is,
+therefore, worth trying.
+
+Thank you for the Moody book, which I will return. He pleaseth me
+greatly and I could already fill pages with analyses of him for the
+reasons therefore. But for you to say that he has _you_
+"skinned"--that is magnanimity. An excellent thing in poets, I grant
+you, and a rare one. There is something about him and his book in the
+current "Atlantic," by May Sinclair, who, I dare say, has never heard
+of _you_. Unlike you, she thinks his dramatic work the best of what he
+does. I've not seen that. To be the best it must be mighty good.
+
+Yes, poor White's poetry is all you say--and worse, but, faith! he
+"had it in him." What struck me was his candid apotheosis of piracy on
+the high seas. I'd hate the fellow who hadn't some sneaking sympathy
+with that--as Goethe confessed to some sympathy with every vice.
+Nobody'll ever hear of White, but (pray observe, ambitious bard!) he
+isn't caring. How wise are the dead!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My friend Howes, of Galveston, has, I think, nearly finished compiling
+his book of essaylets from my stuff. Neale has definitely decided to
+bring out "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter." He has the plates of
+my two luckless Putnam books, and is figuring on my "complete works,"
+to be published by subscription. I doubt if he will undertake it right
+away.
+
+_Au reste_, I'm in good health and am growing old not altogether
+disgracefully.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington,
+ October 30, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm pained by your comments on my book. I always feel that way when
+praised--"just plunged in a gulf of dark despair" to think that I took
+no more trouble to make the commendation truer. I shall try harder
+with the Howes book.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I can't supply the missing link between pages 101 and 102 of the "Word
+Book," having destroyed the copy and proofs. Supply it yourself.
+
+You err: the book is getting me a little glory, but that will be
+all--it will have no sale, for it has no slang, no "dialect" and no
+grinning through a horse-collar. By the, way, please send me any
+"notices" of it that you may chance to see out there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've done a ghost story for the January "Cosmopolitan," which I think
+pretty well of. That's all I've done for more than two months.
+
+I return your poem and the Moody book. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington,
+ December 5, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your letter of Nov. 28 has just come to my breakfast table. It is the
+better part of the repast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, my dictionary will not sell. I so assured the publishers.
+
+I lunched with Neale the other day--he comes down here once a month.
+His magazine (I think he is to call it "The Southerner," or something
+like that) will not get out this month, as he expected it to. And for
+an ominous reason: He had relied largely on Southern writers, and
+finds that they can't write! He assures me that it _will_ appear this
+winter and asked me not to withdraw your poem and my remarks on it
+unless you asked it. So I did not.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In your character of bookseller carrying a stock of my books you have
+a new interest. May Heaven promote you to publisher!
+
+Thank you for the Moody books--which I'll return soon. "The Masque of
+Judgment" has some great work in its final pages--quite as great as
+anything in Faust. The passages that you marked are good too, but some
+of them barely miss being entirely satisfying. It would trouble you to
+find many such passages in the other book, which is, moreover, not
+distinguished for clarity. I found myself frequently prompted to ask
+the author: "What the devil are you driving at?"
+
+I'm going to finish this letter at home where there is less talk of
+the relative military strength of Japan and San Francisco and the
+latter power's newest and most grievous affliction, Teddy Roosevelt.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. Guess the letter is finished.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 27, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I suppose I owe you letters and letters--but you don't particularly
+like to write letters yourself, so you'll understand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hanging before me is a water-color of a bit of Carmel Beach, by Chris
+Jorgensen, for which I blew in fifty dollars the other day. He had a
+fine exhibition of his Californian work here. I wanted to buy it all,
+but compromised with my desire by buying what I could. The picture has
+a sentimental value to me, apart from its artistic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am to see Neale in a few days and shall try to learn definitely when
+his magazine is to come out--if he knows. If he does not I'll withdraw
+your poem. Next month he is to republish "The Monk and the Hangman's
+Daughter," with a new preface which somebody will not relish. I'll
+send you a copy. The Howes book is on its travels among the
+publishers, and so, doubtless, will long continue.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ February 5, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Our letters "crossed"--a thing that "happens" oftener than not in my
+correspondence, when neither person has written for a long time. I
+have drawn some interesting inferences from this fact, but have no
+time now to state them. Indeed, I have no time to do anything but send
+you the stuff on the battle of Shiloh concerning which you inquire.
+
+I should write it a little differently now, but it may entertain you
+as it is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Washington,
+ February 21, 1907]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+If you desert Carmel I shall destroy my Jorgensen picture, build a
+bungalow in the Catskills and cut out California forever. (Those are
+the footprints of my damned canary, who will neither write himself nor
+let me write. Just now he is perched on my shoulder, awaiting the
+command to sing--then he will deafen me with a song without sense. O
+he's a poet all right.)
+
+I entirely approve your allegiance to Mammon. If I'd had brains enough
+to make a decision like that I could now, at 65, have the leisure to
+make a good book or two before I go to the waste-dump. * * * Get
+yourself a fat bank account--there's no such friend as a bank account,
+and the greatest book is a check-book; "You may lay to that!" as one
+of Stevenson's pirates puts it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, sir, your boss will not bring you East next June; or if he does
+you will not come to Washington. How do I know? I don't know how I
+know, but concerning all (and they are many) who were to come from
+California to see me I have never once failed in my forecast of their
+coming or not coming. Even in the case of * * *, although I wrote to
+you, and to her, as if I expected her, I _said_ to one of my friends:
+"She will not come." I don't think it's a gift of divination--it just
+happens, somehow. Yours is not a very good example, for you have not
+said you were coming, "sure."
+
+So your colony of high-brows is re-establishing itself at the old
+stand--Piedmont. * * * But Piedmont--it must be in the heart of
+Oakland. I could no longer shoot rabbits in the gulch back of it and
+sleep under a tree to shoot more in the morning. Nor could I traverse
+that long ridge with various girls. I dare say there's a boulevard
+running the length of it,
+
+ "A palace and a prison on each hand."
+
+If I could stop you from reading that volume of old "Argonauts" I'd do
+so, but I suppose an injunction would not "lie." Yes, I was a slovenly
+writer in those days, though enough better than my neighbors to have
+attracted my own attention. My knowledge of English was imperfect "a
+whole lot." Indeed, my intellectual status (whatever it may be, and
+God knows it's enough to make me blush) was of slow growth--as was my
+moral. I mean, I had not literary sincerity.
+
+Yes, I wrote of Swinburne the distasteful words that you quote. But
+they were not altogether untrue. He used to set my teeth on
+edge--could _not_ stand still a minute, and kept you looking for the
+string that worked his legs and arms. And he had a weak face that gave
+you the memory of chinlessness. But I have long renounced the views
+that I once held about his poetry--held, or thought I held. I don't
+remember, though, if it was as lately as '78 that I held them.
+
+You write of Miss Dawson. Did she survive the 'quake? And do you know
+about her? Not a word of her has reached me. Notwithstanding your
+imported nightingale (upon which I think you should be made to pay a
+stiff duty) your Ina Coolbrith poem is so good that I want to keep it
+if you have another copy. I find no amendable faults in it. * * *
+
+The fellow that told you that I was an editor of "The Cosmopolitan"
+has an impediment in his veracity. I simply write for it, * * *, and
+the less of my stuff the editor uses the better I'm pleased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O, you ask about the "Ursus-Aborn-Gorgias-Agrestis-Polyglot" stuff. It
+was written by James F. ("Jimmie") Bowman--long dead. (See a pretty
+bad sonnet on page 94, "Shapes of Clay.") My only part in the matter
+was to suggest the papers and discuss them with him over many mugs of
+beer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+By the way, Neale says he gets almost enough inquiries for my books
+(from San Francisco) to justify him in republishing them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That's all--and, as George Augustus Sala wrote of a chew of tobacco as
+the price of a certain lady's favors, "God knows it's enough!"
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 23, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have your letter of the 13th. The enclosed slip from the Pacific
+Monthly (thank you for it) is amusing. Yes, * * * is an insufferable
+pedant, but I don't at all mind his pedantry. Any critic is welcome to
+whack me all he likes if he will append to his remarks (as * * * had
+the thoughtfulness to do) my definition of "Critic" from the "Word
+Book."
+
+Please don't bother to write me when the spirit does not move you
+thereto. You and I don't need to write to each other for any other
+reason than that we want to. As to coming East, abstain, O, abstain
+from promises, lest you resemble all my other friends out there, who
+promise always and never come. It would be delightful to see you here,
+but I know how those things arrange themselves without reference to
+our desires. We do as we must, not as we will.
+
+I think that uncle of yours must be a mighty fine fellow. Be good to
+him and don't kick at his service, even when you feel the chain. It
+beats poetry for nothing a year.
+
+Did you get the "Shiloh" article? I sent it to you. I sent it also to
+Paul Elder & Co. (New York branch) for their book of "Western
+Classics," and hope it will meet their need. They wanted something,
+and it seemed to me as good, with a little revision, as any of my
+stuff that I control. Do you think it would be wise to offer them for
+republication "In the Midst of Life"? It is now "out of print" and on
+my hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm glad of your commendation of my "Cosmopolitan" stuff. They don't
+give me much of a "show"--the editor doesn't love me personally as he
+should, and lets me do only enough to avert from himself the attention
+of Mr. Hearst and that gentleman's interference with the mutual
+admiration game as played in the "Cosmopolitan" office. As I'm rather
+fond of light work I'm not shrieking.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You don't speak of getting the book that I sent, "The Monk and the
+Hangman's Daughter"--new edition. 'Tisn't as good as the old. * * *
+
+I'm boating again. How I should like to put out my prow on Monterey
+Bay.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 8, 1907.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Your letter, with the yerba buena and the spray of redwood, came like
+a breeze from the hills. And the photographs are most pleasing. I note
+that Sloot's moustache is decently white at last, as becomes a fellow
+of his years. I dare say his hair is white too, but I can't see under
+his hat. And I think he never removes it. That backyard of yours is a
+wonder, but I sadly miss the appropriate ash-heaps, tin cans, old
+packing-boxes, and so forth. And that palm in front of the
+house--gracious, how she's grown! Well, it has been more than a day
+growing, and I've not watched it attentively.
+
+I hope you'll have a good time in Yosemite, but Sloots is an idiot not
+to go with you--nineteen days is as long as anybody would want to stay
+there.
+
+I saw a little of Phyllis Partington in New York. She told me much of
+you and seems to be fond of you. That is very intelligent of her,
+don't you think?
+
+No, I shall not wait until I'm rich before visiting you. I've no
+intention of being rich, but do mean to visit you--some day. Probably
+when Grizzly has visited _me_. Love to you all.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 25, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So * * * showed you his article on me. He showed it to me also, and
+some of it amused me mightily, though I didn't tell him so. That
+picture of me as a grouchy and disappointed old man occupying the
+entire cave of Adullam is particularly humorous, and so poetic that I
+would not for the world "cut it out." * * * seems incapable (like a
+good many others) of estimating success in other terms than those of
+popularity. He gives a rather better clew to his own character than to
+mine. The old man is fairly well pleased with the way that he has
+played the game, and with his share of the stakes, thank'ee.
+
+I note with satisfaction _your_ satisfaction with my article on you
+and your poem. I'll correct the quotation about the "timid
+sapphires"--don't know how I happened to leave out the best part of
+it. But I left out the line about "harlot's blood" because I didn't
+(and don't) think a magazine would "stand for it" if I called the
+editor's attention to it. You don't know what magazines are if you
+haven't tested them. However, I'll try it on Chamberlain if you like.
+And I'll put in "twilight of the year" too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's pleasing to know that you've "cut out" your clerical work if you
+can live without it. Now for some great poetry! Carmel has a
+fascination for me too--because of your letters. If I did not fear
+illness--a return of my old complaint--I'd set out for it at once.
+I've nothing to do that would prevent--about two day's work a month.
+But I'd never set foot in San Francisco. Of all the Sodoms and
+Gomorrahs in our modern world it is the worst. There are not ten
+righteous (and courageous) men there. It needs another quake, another
+whiff of fire, and--more than all else--a steady tradewind of
+grapeshot. When * * * gets done blackguarding New York (as it
+deserves) and has shaken the dung of San Francisco from his feet I'm
+going to "sick him onto" that moral penal colony of the world. * * *
+
+I've two "books" seeking existence in New York--the Howes book and
+some satires. Guess they are cocks that will not fight.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I was sixty-five yesterday.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ July 11, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've just finished reading proofs of my stuff about you and your poem.
+Chamberlain, as I apprised you, has it slated for September. But for
+that month also he has slated a longish spook story of mine, besides
+my regular stuff. Not seeing how he can run it all in one issue, I
+have asked him to run your poem (with my remarks) and hold the spook
+yarn till some other time. I _hope_ he'll do so, but if he doesn't,
+don't think it my fault. An editor never does as one wants him to. I
+inserted in my article another quotation or two, and restored some
+lines that I had cut out of the quotations to save space.
+
+It's grilling hot here--I envy you your Carmel.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I guess several of your good letters are unanswered, as are many
+others of other correspondents. I've been gadding a good deal
+lately--to New York principally. When I want a royal good time I go to
+New York; and I get it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to Miller being "about the same age" as I, why, no. The rascal is
+long past seventy, although nine or ten years ago he wrote from Alaska
+that he was "in the middle fifties." I've known him for nearly thirty
+years and he can't fool me with his youthful airs and tales. May he
+live long and repent.
+
+Thank you for taking the trouble to send Conan Doyle's opinion of me.
+No, it doesn't turn my head; I can show you dozens of "appreciations"
+from greater and more famous men. I return it to you corrected--as he
+really wrote it. Here it is:
+
+"Praise from Sir Hugo is praise indeed." In "Through the Magic Door,"
+an exceedingly able article on short stories that have interested him,
+Conan Doyle pays the following well-deserved tribute to Ambrose
+Bierce, whose wonderful short stories have so often been praised in
+these columns: "Talking of weird American stories, have you ever read
+any of the works of Ambrose Bierce? I have one of his books before me,
+'In the Midst of Life.' This man (has)[9] had a flavor quite his own,
+and (is)[9] was a great artist. It is not cheerful reading, but it
+leaves its mark upon you, and that is the proof of good work."
+
+[9] Crossed out by A. B.
+
+Thank you also for the Jacobs story, which I will read. As a
+_humorist_ he is no great thing.
+
+I've not read your Bohemian play to a finish yet, * * *. By the way,
+I've always wondered why they did not "put on" Comus. Properly done it
+would be great woodland stuff. Read it with a view to that and see if
+I'm not right. And then persuade them to "stage it" next year.
+
+I'm being awfully pressed to return to California. No San Francisco
+for me, but Carmel sounds good. For about how much could I get ground
+and build a bungalow--for one? That's a pretty indefinite question;
+but then the will to go is a little hazy at present. It consists, as
+yet, only of the element of desire. * * *
+
+The "Cosmopolitan," with your poem, has not come to hand but is nearly
+due--I'm a little impatient--eager to see the particular kind of
+outrage Chamberlain's artist has wrought upon it. He (C.) asked for
+your address the other day; so he will doubtless send you a check.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now please go to work at "Lilith"; it's bound to be great stuff, for
+you'll have to imagine it all. I'm sorry that anybody ever invented
+Lilith; it makes her too much of an historical character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The other half of the Devil's Dictionary" is in the fluid state--not
+even liquid. And so, doubtless, it will remain.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ September 7, 1907.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm awfully glad that you don't mind Chamberlain's yellow nonsense in
+coupling Ella's name with yours. But when you read her natural opinion
+of your work you'll acquit her of complicity in the indignity. I'm
+sending a few things from Hearst's newspapers--written by the
+slangers, dialecters and platitudinarians of the staff, and by some of
+the swine among the readers.
+
+Note the deliberate and repeated lying of Brisbane in quoting me as
+saying the "Wine" is "the greatest poem ever written in America." Note
+his dishonesty in confessing that he has commendatory letters, yet not
+publishing a single one of them. But the end is not yet--my inning is
+to come, in the magazine. Chamberlain (who professes an enthusiastic
+admiration of the poem) promises me a free hand in replying to these
+ignorant asses. If he does not give it to me I quit. I've writ a
+paragraph or two for the November number (too late now for the
+October) by way of warning them what they'll get when December comes.
+So you see you must patiently endure the befouling till then.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Did you notice in the last line of the "Wine" that I restored the word
+"smile" from your earlier draft of the verses? In one of your later (I
+don't remember if in the last) you had it "sigh." That was wrong;
+"smile" seems to me infinitely better as a definition of the poet's
+attitude toward his dreams. So, considering that I had a choice, I
+chose it. Hope you approve.
+
+I am serious in wishing a place in Carmel as a port of refuge from the
+storms of age. I don't know that I shall ever live there, but should
+like to feel that I can if I want to. Next summer I hope to go out
+there and spy out the land, and if I then "have the price" (without
+sacrificing any of my favorite stocks) I shall buy. I don't care for
+the grub question--should like to try the simple life, for I have
+already two gouty finger points as a result of the other kind of life.
+(Of course if they all get that way I shan't mind, for I love
+uniformity.) Probably if I attempted to live in Carmel I should have
+asthma again, from which I have long been free.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 9, 1907.]
+
+MY DEAR MORROW,
+
+Whether you "prosper" or not I'm glad you write instead of teaching. I
+have done a bit of teaching myself, but as the tuition was gratuitous
+I could pick my pupils; so it was a labor of love. I'm pretty well
+satisfied with the results.
+
+No, I'm not "toiling" much now. I've written all I care to, and having
+a pretty easy berth (writing for The Cosmopolitan only, and having no
+connection with Mr. Hearst's newspapers) am content.
+
+I have observed your story in Success, but as I never never (sic) read
+serials shall await its publication in covers before making a meal of
+it.
+
+You seem to be living at the old place in Vallejo Street, so I judge
+that it was spared by the fire. I had some pretty good times in that
+house, not only with you and Mrs. Morrow (to whom my love, please) but
+with the dear Hogan girls. Poor Flodie! she is nearly a sole survivor
+now. I wonder if she ever thinks of us.
+
+I hear from California frequently through a little group of
+interesting folk who foregather at Carmel--whither I shall perhaps
+stray some day and there leave my bones. Meantime, I am fairly happy
+here.
+
+I wish you would add yourself to the Carmel crowd. You would be a
+congenial member of the gang and would find them worth while. You must
+know George Sterling: he is the high panjandrum and a gorgeously good
+fellow. Go get thee a bungalow at Carmel, which is indubitably the
+charmingest place in the State. As to San Francisco, with its
+labor-union government, its thieves and other impossibilities, I could
+not be drawn into it by a team of behemoths. But California--ah, I
+dare not permit myself to remember it. Yet this Eastern country is not
+without charm. And my health is good here, as it never was there.
+Nothing ails me but age, which brings its own cure.
+
+God keep thee!--go and live at Carmel.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 29, 1907.]
+
+JAMES D. BLAKE, ESQ.,
+
+DEAR SIR:
+
+It is a matter of no great importance to me, but the republication of
+the foolish books that you mention would not be agreeable to me. They
+have no kind of merit or interest. One of them, "The Fiend's Delight,"
+was published against my protest; the utmost concession that the
+compiler and publisher (the late John Camden Hatten, London) would
+make was to let me edit his collection of my stuff and write a
+preface. You would pretty surely lose money on any of them.
+
+If you care to republish anything of mine you would, I think, do
+better with "Black Beetles in Amber," or "Shapes of Clay." The former
+sold well, and the latter would, I think, have done equally well if
+the earthquake-and-fire had not destroyed it, including the plates.
+Nearly all of both books were sold in San Francisco, and the sold, as
+well as the unsold, copies--I mean the unsold copies of the
+latter--perished in the fire. There is much inquiry for them (mainly
+from those who lost them) and I am told that they bring fancy prices.
+You probably know about that better than I.
+
+I should be glad to entertain proposals from you for their
+republication--in San Francisco--and should not be exacting as to
+royalties, and so forth.
+
+But the other books are "youthful indiscretions" and are "better
+dead."
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 28,1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Please send me a copy of the new edition of "The Testimony." I
+borrowed one of the first edition to give away, and want to replace
+it. Did you add the "Wine" to it? I'd not leave off the indefinite
+article from the title of that; it seems to dignify the tipple
+by hinting that it was no ordinary tope. It may have been
+witch-fermented.
+
+I don't "dislike" the line: "So terribly that brilliance shall
+enhance"; it seems merely less admirable than the others. Why didn't I
+tell you so? I could not tell you _all_ I thought of the poem--for
+another example, how I loved the lines:
+
+ "Where Dawn upon a pansy's breast hath laid
+ A single tear, and _whence the wind hath flown
+ And left a silence_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm returning you, under another cover (as the ceremonial slangers
+say) some letters that have come to me and that I have answered. I
+have a lot more, most of them abusive, I guess, that I'll dig out
+later. But the most pleasing ones I can't send, for I sent them to
+Brisbane on his promise to publish them, which the liar did not, nor
+has he had the decency to return them. I'm hardly sorry, for it gave
+me good reason to call him a peasant and a beast of the field. I'm
+always grateful for the chance to prod somebody.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I detest the "limited edition" and "autograph copies" plan of
+publication, but for the sake of Howes, who has done a tremendous lot
+of good work on my book, have assented to Blake's proposal in all
+things and hope to be able to laugh at this brilliant example of the
+"irony of fate." I've refused to profit in any way by the book. I want
+Howes to "break even" for his labor.
+
+By the way, Pollard and I had a good time in Galveston, and on the
+way I took in some of my old battlefields. At Galveston they nearly
+killed me with hospitality--so nearly that Pollard fled. I returned
+via Key West and Florida.
+
+You'll probably see Howes next Summer--I've persuaded him to go West
+and renounce the bookworm habit for some other folly. Be good to him;
+he is a capital fellow in his odd, amusing way.
+
+I didn't know there was an American edition of "The Fiends' Delight."
+Who published it and when?
+
+Congratulations on acceptance of "Tasso and Leonora." But I wouldn't
+do much in blank verse if I were you. It betrays you (somehow) into
+mere straightaway expression, and seems to repress in you the glorious
+abundance of imagery and metaphor that enriches your rhyme-work. This
+is not a criticism, particularly, of "Tasso," which is good enough for
+anybody, but--well, it's just _so_.
+
+I'm not doing much. My stuff in the Cosmo. comes last, and when
+advertisements crowd some of it is left off. Most of it gets in later
+(for of course I don't replace it with more work) but it is sadly
+antiquated. My checks, though, are always up to date.
+
+ Sincerely[10] yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+[10] I can almost say "sinecurely."
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 19, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have just come upon a letter of yours that I got at Galveston and (I
+fear) did not acknowledge. But I've written you since, so I fancy all
+is well.
+
+You mention that sonnet that Chamberlain asked for. You should not
+have let him have it--it was, as you say, the kind of stuff that
+magazines like. Nay, it was even better. But I wish you'd sent it
+elsewhere. You owed it to me not to let the Cosmopolitan's readers
+see anything of yours (for awhile, at least) that was less than
+_great_. Something as great as the sonnet that you sent to McClure's
+was what the circumstances called for.
+
+"And strict concern of relativity"--O bother! that's not poetry. It's
+the slang of philosophy.
+
+I am still awaiting my copy of the new "Testimony." That's why I'm
+scolding.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 18, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR LORA,
+
+I'm an age acknowledging your letter; but then you'd have been an age
+writing it if you had not done it for "Sloots." And the other day I
+had one from him, written in his own improper person.
+
+I think it abominable that he and Carlt have to work so hard--at
+_their_ age--and I quite agree with George Sterling that Carlt ought
+to go to Carmel and grow potatoes. I'd like to do that myself, but
+for the fact that so many objectionable persons frequent the place:
+* * *, * * * and the like. I'm hoping, however, that the ocean will
+swallow * * * and be unable to throw him up.
+
+I trust you'll let Sloots "retire" at seventy, which is really quite
+well along in life toward the years of discretion and the age of
+consent. But when he is retired I know that he will bury himself in
+the redwoods and never look upon the face of man again. That, too, I
+should rather like to do myself--for a few months.
+
+I've laid out a lot of work for myself this season, and doubt if I
+shall get to California, as I had hoped. So I shall never, never see
+you. But you might send me a photograph.
+
+God be with you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ July 11, 1908.]
+
+N.B. If you follow the pages you'll be able to make _some_ sense of
+this screed.
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I am sorry to learn that you have not been able to break your
+commercial chains, since you wish to, though I don't at all know that
+they are bad for you. I've railed at mine all my life, but don't
+remember that I ever made any good use of leisure when I had
+it--unless the mere "having a good time" is such. I remember once
+writing that one's career, or usefulness, was about ended when one
+thought less about how best to do his work than about the hardship of
+having to do it. I might have said the hardship of having so little
+leisure to do it. As I grow older I see more and more clearly the
+advantages of disadvantage, the splendid urge of adverse conditions,
+the uplifting effect of repression. And I'm ashamed to note how little
+_I_ profited by them. I wasn't the right kind, that is all; but I
+indulge the hope that _you_ are.
+
+No I don't think it of any use, your trying to keep * * * and me
+friends. But don't let that interfere with your regard for him if you
+have it. We are not required to share one another's feelings in such
+matters. I should not expect you to like my friends nor hate my
+enemies if they seemed to you different from what they seem to me; nor
+would I necessarily follow _your_ lead. For example, I loathe your
+friend * * * and expect his safe return because the ocean will refuse
+to swallow him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I congratulate you on the Gilder acceptance of your sonnet, and on
+publication of the "Tasso to Leonora." I don't think it your best work
+by much--don't think any of your blank verse as good as most of your
+rhyme--but it's not a thing to need apology.
+
+Certainly, I shall be pleased to see Hopper. Give me his address, and
+when I go to New York--this month or the next--I'll look him up. I
+think well of Hopper and trust that he will not turn out to be an 'ist
+of some kind, as most writers and artists do. That is because they are
+good feelers and poor thinkers. It is the emotional element in them,
+not the logical, that makes them writers and artists. They have, as a
+rule, sensibility and no sense. Except the _big_ fellows.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Neale has in hand already three volumes of the "Collected Works," and
+will have two more in about a month; and all (I hope) this year. I'm
+revising all the stuff and cutting it about a good deal, taking from
+one book stuff for another, and so forth. If Neale gets enough
+subscriptions he will put out all the ten volumes next year; if not I
+shall probably not be "here" to see the final one issued.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Glad you think better of my part in the Hunter-Hillquit "symposium."
+_I_ think I did very well considering, first, that I didn't care a
+damn about the matter; second, that I knew nothing of the men I was to
+meet, nor what we were to talk about, whereas they came cocked and
+primed for the fray; and, third, that the whole scheme was to make a
+Socialist holiday at my expense. Of all 'ists the Socialist is perhaps
+the damnedest fool for (in this country) he is merely the cat that
+pulls chestnuts from the fire for the Anarchist. His part of the
+business is to talk away the country's attention while the Anarchist
+places the bomb. In some countries Socialism is clean, but not in
+this. And everywhere the Socialist is a dreamer and futilitarian.
+
+But I guess I'll call a halt on this letter, the product of an idle
+hour in garrulous old age.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ August 7, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+Your note inquiring about "Ashes of the Beacon" interests me. You
+mention it as a "pamphlet." I have no knowledge of its having appeared
+otherwise than as an article in the Sunday edition of the "N. Y.
+American"--I do not recall the date. If it has been published as a
+pamphlet, or in any other form, separately--that is by itself--I
+should like "awfully" to know by whom, if _you_ know.
+
+I should be pleased to send it to you--in the "American"--if I had a
+copy of the issue containing it, but I have not. It will be included
+in Vol. I of my "Collected Works," to be published by the Neale
+Publishing Company, N. Y. That volume will be published probably early
+next year.
+
+But the work is to be in ten or twelve costly volumes, and sold by
+subscription only. That buries it fathoms deep so far as the public is
+concerned.
+
+Regretting my inability to assist you, I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ August 14, 1908.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I am amused by your attitude toward the spaced sonnet, and by the
+docility of Gilder. If I had been your editor I guess you'd have got
+back your sonnets. I never liked the space. If the work naturally
+divides itself into two parts, as it should, the space is needless; if
+not, it is worse than that. The space was the invention of printers of
+a comparatively recent period, neither Petrarch nor Dante (as Gilder
+points out) knew of it. Every magazine has its own _system_ of
+printing, and Gilder's good-natured compliance with your wish, or
+rather demand, shows him to be a better fellow, though not a better
+poet, than I have thought him to be. As a victory of author over
+editor, the incident pleases.
+
+I've not yet been in New York, but expect to go soon. I shall be glad
+to meet Hopper if he is there.
+
+Thank you for the article from "Town Talk." It suggests this question:
+How many times, and covering a period of how many years, must one's
+unexplainable obscurity be pointed out to constitute fame? Not
+knowing, I am almost disposed to consider myself the most famous of
+authors. I have pretty nearly ceased to be "discovered," but my
+notoriety as an obscurian may be said to be worldwide and apparently
+everlasting.
+
+The trouble, I fancy, is with our vocabulary--the lack of a word
+meaning something intermediate between "popular" and "obscure"--and
+the ignorance of writers as to the reading of readers. I seldom meet a
+person of education who is not acquainted with some of my work; my
+clipping bureau's bills were so heavy that I had to discontinue my
+patronage, and Blake tells me that he sells my books at one hundred
+dollars a set. Rather amusing all this to one so widely unknown.
+
+I sometimes wonder what you think of Scheff's new book. Does it
+perform the promise of the others? In the dedicatory poem it seems to
+me that it does, and in some others. As a good Socialist you are bound
+to like _that_ poem because of its political-economic-views. I like it
+despite them.
+
+ "The dome of the Capitol roars
+ With the shouts of the Caesars of crime"
+
+is great poetry, but it is not true. I am rather familiar with what
+goes on in the Capitol--not through the muck-rakers, who pass a few
+days here "investigating," and then look into their pockets and write,
+but through years of personal observation and personal acquaintance
+with the men observed. There are no Caesars of crime, but about a
+dozen rascals, all told, mostly very small fellows; I can name them
+all. They are without power or influence enough to count in the scheme
+of legislation. The really dangerous and mischievous chaps are the
+demagogues, friends of the pee-pul. And they do all the "shouting."
+Compared with the Congress of our forefathers, the Congress of to-day
+is as a flock of angels to an executive body of the Western Federation
+of Miners.
+
+When I showed the "dome" to * * * (who had been reading his own
+magazine) the tears came into his voice, and I guess his eyes, as he
+lamented the decay of civic virtue, "the treason of the Senate," and
+the rest of it. He was so affected that I hastened to brace him up
+with whiskey. He, too, was "squirming" about "other persons'
+troubles," and with about as good reason as you.
+
+I think "the present system" is not "frightful." It is all right--a
+natural outgrowth of human needs, limitations and capacities, instinct
+with possibilities of growth in goodness, elastic, and progressively
+better. Why don't you study humanity as you do the suns--not from the
+viewpoint of time, but from that of eternity. The middle ages were
+yesterday, Rome and Greece the day before. The individual man is
+nothing, as a single star is nothing. If this earth were to take fire
+you would smile to think how little it mattered in the scheme of the
+universe; all the wailing of the egoist mob would not affect you. Then
+why do you squirm at the minute catastrophe of a few thousands or
+millions of pismires crushed under the wheels of evolution. Must the
+new heavens and the new earth of prophecy and science come in _your_
+little instant of life in order that you may not go howling and
+damning with Jack London up and down the earth that we happen to have?
+Nay, nay, read history to get the long, large view--to learn to think
+in centuries and cycles. Keep your eyes off your neighbors and fix
+them on the nations. What poetry we shall have when you get, and give
+us, The Testimony of the Races!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I peg away at compilation and revision. I'm cutting-about my stuff a
+good deal--changing things from one book to another, adding,
+subtracting and dividing. Five volumes are ready, and Neale is engaged
+in a "prospectus" which he says will make me blush. I'll send it to
+you when he has it ready.
+
+Gertrude Atherton is sending me picture-postals of Berchtesgaden and
+other scenes of "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter." She found all
+the places "exactly as described"--the lakes, mountains, St.
+Bartolomae, the cliff-meadow where the edelweiss grows, and so forth.
+The photographs are naturally very interesting to me.
+
+ Good night.
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ September 12, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+Thank you for your good wishes for the "Collected Works"--an
+advertisement of which--with many blushes!--I enclose.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--The "ad" is not sent in the hope that you will be so foolish as
+to subscribe--merely to "show" you. The "edition de luxe" business is
+not at all to my taste--I should prefer a popular edition at a
+possible price.
+
+
+[New York,
+ November 6, 1908.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your letter has just been forwarded from Washington. I'm here for a
+few days only--"few days and full of trouble," as the Scripture hath
+it. The "trouble" is mainly owling, dining and booze. I'll not attempt
+an answer to your letter till I get home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm going to read Hopper's book, and if it doesn't show him to be a
+* * * or a * * * I'll call on him. If it does I won't. I'm getting
+pretty particular in my old age; the muck-rakers, blood-boilers and
+little brothers-of-the-bad are not congenial.
+
+By the way, why do you speak of my "caning" you. I did not suppose
+that _you_ had joined the innumerable caravan of those who find
+something sarcastic or malicious in my good natured raillery in
+careless controversy. If I choose to smile in ink at your
+inconsistency in weeping for the woes of individual "others"--meaning
+other _humans_--while you, of course, don't give a damn for the
+thousands of lives that you crush out every time you set down your
+foot, or eat a berry, why shouldn't _I_ do so? One can't always
+remember to stick to trifles, even in writing a letter. Put on your
+skin, old man, I may want to poke about with my finger again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 11, 1908.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm still working at my book. Seven volumes are completed and I've
+read the proofs of Vol. I.
+
+Your account of the "movement" to free the oppressed and downtrodden
+river from the tyranny of the sand-bar tickled me in my lonesome rib.
+Surely no colony of reformers ever engaged in a more characteristic
+crusade against the Established Order and Intolerable Conditions. I
+can almost hear you patting yourselves on your aching backs as you
+contemplated your encouraging success in beating Nature and promoting
+the Cause. I believe that if I'd been there my cold heart and
+indurated mind would have caught the contagion of the Great
+Reform. Anyhow, I should have appreciated the sunset which
+(characteristically) intervened in the interest of Things as They Are.
+I feel sure that whenever you Socialers shall have found a way to make
+the earth stop "turning over and over like a man in bed" (as Joaquin
+might say) you will accomplish all the reforms that you have at heart.
+All that you need is plenty of time--a few kalpas, more or less, of
+uninterrupted daylight. Meantime I await your new book with impatience
+and expectation.
+
+I have photographs of my brother's shack in the redwoods and feel
+strongly drawn in that direction--since, as you fully infer, Carmel is
+barred. Probably, though, I shall continue in the complicated life of
+cities while I last.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 9, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've been reading your book--re-reading most of it--"every little
+while." I don't know that it is better than your first, but to say
+that it is as good is praise enough. You know what I like most in it,
+but there are some things that you _don't_ know I like. For an
+example, "Night in Heaven." It Kipples a bit, but it is great. But I'm
+not going to bore you with a catalogue of titles. The book is _all_
+good. No, not (in my judgment) all, for it contains lines and words
+that I found objectionable in the manuscript, and time has not
+reconciled me to them. Your retention of them, shows, however, that
+you agree with me in thinking that you have passed your 'prentice
+period and need no further criticism. So I welcome them.
+
+I take it that the cover design is Scheff's--perhaps because it is so
+good, for the little cuss is clever that way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I rather like your defence of Jack London--not that I think it valid,
+but because I like loyalty to a friend whom one does not believe to be
+bad. (The "thick-and-thin" loyalty never commended itself to me; it is
+too dog-like.) I fail, however, to catch the note of penitence in
+London's narratives of his underlife, and my charge of literary
+stealing was not based on his primeval man book, "Before Adam."
+
+As to * * *, as he is not more than a long-range or short-acquaintance
+friend of yours, I'll say that I would not believe him under oath on
+his deathbed. * * * The truth is, none of these howlers knows the
+difference between a million and a thousand nor between truth and
+falsehood. I could give you instances of their lying about matters
+here at the capital that would make even your hair stand on end. It is
+not only that they are all liars--they are mere children; they don't
+know anything and don't care to, nor, for prosperity in their
+specialties, need to. Veracity would be a disqualification; if they
+confined themselves to facts they would not get a hearing. * * * is
+the nastiest futilitarian of the gang.
+
+It is not the purpose of these gentlemen that I find so very
+objectionable, but the foul means that they employ to accomplish it. I
+would be a good deal of a Socialist myself if they had not made the
+word (and the thing) stink.
+
+Don't imagine that I'll not "enter Carmel" if I come out there. I'll
+visit you till you're sick of me. But I'd not _live_ there and be
+"identified" with it, as the newspapers would say. I'm warned by
+Hawthorne and Brook Farm.
+
+I'm still working--a little more leisurely--on my books. But I begin
+to feel the call of New York on the tympani of my blood globules. I
+must go there occasionally, or I should die of intellectual torpor.
+* * * "O Lord how long?"--this letter. O well, you need not give it
+the slightest attention; there's nothing, I think, that requires a
+reply, nor merits one.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 6, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Did you see Markham's review of the "Wine" in "The N. Y. American"?
+Pretty fair, but--if a metrical composition full of poetry is not a
+poem what is it? And I wonder what he calls Kubla Khan, which has a
+beginning but neither middle nor end. And how about The Faerie Queene
+for absence of "unity"? Guess I'll ask him.
+
+Isn't it funny what happens to critics who would mark out meters and
+bounds for the Muse--denying the name "poem," for example, to a work
+because it is not like some other work, or like one that is in the
+minds of them?
+
+I hope you are prosperous and happy and that I shall sometimes hear
+from you.
+
+Howes writes me that the "Lone Hand"--Sydney--has been commending you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ October 9, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I return the poems with a few random comments and suggestions.
+
+I'm a little alarmed lest you take too seriously my preference of your
+rhyme to your blank--especially when I recall your "Music" and "The
+Spirit of Beauty." Perhaps I should have said only that you are not so
+_likely_ to write well in blank. (I think always of "Tasso to
+Leonora," which I cannot learn to like.) Doubtless I have too great
+fondness for _great_ lines--_your_ great lines--and they occur less
+frequently in your blank verse than in your rhyme--most frequently in
+your quatrains, those of sonnets included. Don't swear off
+blank--except as you do drink--but study it more. It's "an hellish
+thing."
+
+It looks as if I _might_ go to California sooner than I had intended.
+My health has been wretched all summer. I need a sea voyage--one _via_
+Panama would be just the thing. So if the cool weather of autumn do
+not restore me I shall not await spring here. But I'm already somewhat
+better. If I had been at sea I should have escaped the Cook-Peary
+controversy. We talk nothing but arctic matters here--I enclose my
+contribution to its horrors.
+
+I'm getting many a good lambasting for my book of essays. Also a sop
+of honey now and then. It's all the same to me; I don't worry about
+what my contemporaries think of me. I made 'em think of _you_--that's
+glory enough for one. And the squirrels in the public parks think me
+the finest fellow in the world. They know what I have in every pocket.
+Critics don't know that--nor nearly so much.
+
+Advice to a young author: Cultivate the good opinion of squirrels.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ November 1, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+European criticism of your _bête noir_, old Leopold, is entitled to
+attention; American (of him or any other king) is not. It looks as if
+the wretch may be guilty of indifference.
+
+In condemning as "revolutionary" the two-rhyme sestet, I think I could
+not have been altogether solemn, for (1) I'm something of a
+revolutionist myself regarding the sonnet, having frequently expressed
+the view that its accepted forms--even the number of lines--were
+purely arbitrary; (2) I find I've written several two-rhyme sestets
+myself, and (3), like yours, my ear has difficulty in catching the
+rhyme effect in a-b-c, a-b-c. The rhyme is delayed till the end of the
+fourth line--as it is in the quatrain (not of the sonnet) with
+unrhyming first and third lines--a form of which I think all my
+multitude of verse supplies no example. I confess, though, that I did
+not know that Petrarch had made so frequent use of the 2-rhyme sestet.
+
+I learn a little all the time; some of my old notions of poetry seem
+to me now erroneous, even absurd. So I _may_ have been at one time a
+stickler for the "regular" three-rhymer. Even now it pleases my ear
+well enow if the three are not so arranged as to elude it. I'm sorry
+if I misled you. You'd better 'fess up to your young friend, as I do
+to you--if I really was serious.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course I should be glad to see Dick, but don't expect to. They
+never come, and it has long been my habit to ignore every "declaration
+of intention."
+
+I'm greatly pleased to know that you too like those lines of Markham
+that you quote from the "Wharf of Dreams." I've repeatedly told him
+that that sonnet was his greatest work, and those were its greatest
+lines. By the way, my young poet, Loveman, sends me a letter from
+Markham, asking for a poem or two for a book, "The Younger Choir,"
+that he (M.) is editing. Loveman will be delighted by your good
+opinion of "Pierrot"--which still another magazine has returned to me.
+Guess I'll have to give it up.
+
+I'm sending you a booklet on loose locutions. It is vilely gotten
+up--had to be so to sell for twenty-five cents, the price that I
+favored. I just noted down these things as I found them in my reading,
+or remembered them, until I had four hundred. Then I took about fifty
+from other books, and boiled down the needful damnation. Maybe I have
+done too much boiling down--making the stuff "thick and slab." If
+there is another edition I shall do a little bettering.
+
+I should like some of those mussels, and, please God, shall help you
+cull them next summer. But the abalone--as a Christian comestible he
+is a stranger to me and the tooth o' me.
+
+I think you have had some correspondence with my friend Howes of
+Galveston. Well, here he is "in his habit as he lives." Of the two
+figures in the picture Howes is the one on top.[11] Good night.
+
+[11] Howes was riding on a burro.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 29, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Here are your fine verses--I have been too busy to write to you
+before. In truth, I've worked harder now for more than a year than I
+ever shall again--and the work will bring me nor gain nor glory. Well,
+I shall take a rest pretty soon, partly in California. I thank you for
+the picture card. I have succumbed to the post-card fashion myself.
+
+As to some points in your letter.
+
+I've no recollection of advising young authors to "leave all heart and
+sentiment out of their work." If I did the context would probably show
+that it was because their time might better be given to perfect
+themselves in form, against the day when their hearts would be less
+wild and their sentiments truer. You know it has always been my belief
+that one cannot be trusted to feel until one has learned to think--and
+few youngsters have learned to do that. Was it not Dr. Holmes who
+advised a young writer to cut out every passage that he thought
+particularly good? He'd be sure to think the beautiful and sentimental
+passages the best, would he not? * * *
+
+If you mean to write really "vituperative" sonnets (why sonnets?) let
+me tell you _one_ secret of success--name your victim and his offense.
+To do otherwise is to fire blank cartridges--to waste your words in
+air--to club a vacuum. At least your satire must be so personally
+applicable that there can be no mistake as to the victim's identity.
+Otherwise he is no victim--just a spectator like all others. And that
+brings us to Watson. His caddishness consisted, not in satirizing a
+woman, which is legitimate, but, first, in doing so without sufficient
+reason, and, second, in saying orally (on the safe side of the
+Atlantic) what he apparently did not dare say in the verses. * * *
+
+I'm enclosing something that will tickle you I hope--"The Ballade of
+the Goodly Fere." The author's[12] father, who is something in the Mint
+in Philadelphia, sent me several of his son's poems that were not
+good; but at last came this--in manuscript, like the others. Before I
+could do anything with it--meanwhile wearing out the paper and the
+patience of my friends by reading it at them--the old man asked it
+back rather peremptorily. I reluctantly sent it, with a letter of high
+praise. The author had "placed" it in London, where it has made a heap
+of talk.
+
+[12] Ezra Pound.
+
+It has plenty of faults besides its monotonous rhyme scheme; but tell
+me what you think of it.
+
+God willing, we shall eat Carmel mussels and abalones in May or June.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 7, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+My plan is to leave here before April first, pass a few days in New
+York and then sail for Colon. If I find the canal work on the Isthmus
+interesting I may skip a steamer from Panama to see it. I've no notion
+how long it will take to reach San Francisco, and know nothing of the
+steamers and their schedules on the Pacific side.
+
+I shall of course want to see Grizzly first--that is to say, he will
+naturally expect me to. But if you can pull him down to Carmel about
+the time of my arrival (I shall write you the date of my sailing from
+New York) I would gladly come there. Carlt, whom I can see at once on
+arriving, can tell me where he (Grizzly) is. * * *
+
+I don't think you rightly value "The Goodly Fere." Of course no ballad
+written to-day can be entirely good, for it must be an imitation; it
+is now an unnatural form, whereas it was once a natural one. We are
+no longer a primitive people, and a primitive people's forms and
+methods are not ours. Nevertheless, this seems to me an admirable
+ballad, as it is given a modern to write ballads. And I think you
+overlook the best line:
+
+ "The hounds of the crimson sky gave tongue."
+
+The poem is complete as I sent it, and I think it stops right where
+and as it should--
+
+ "I ha' seen him eat o' the honey comb
+ Sin' they nailed him to the tree."
+
+The current "Literary Digest" has some queer things about (and by)
+Pound, and "Current Literature" reprints the "Fere" with all the
+wrinkles ironed out of it--making a "capon priest" of it.
+
+Fo' de Lawd's sake! don't apologise for not subscribing for my
+"Works." If you did subscribe I should suspect that you were "no
+friend o' mine"--it would remove you from that gang and put you in a
+class by yourself. Surely you can not think I care who buys or does
+not buy my books. The man who expects anything more than lip-service
+from his friends is a very young man. There are, for example, a
+half-dozen Californians (all loud admirers of Ambrose Bierce) editing
+magazines and newspapers here in the East. Every man Jack of them has
+turned me down. They will do everything for me but enable me to live.
+Friends be damned!--strangers are the chaps for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've given away my beautiful sailing canoe and shall never again live
+a life on the ocean wave--unless you have boats at Carmel.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ Easter Sunday.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Here's a letter from Loveman, with a kindly reference to you--that's
+why I send it.
+
+I'm to pull out of here next Wednesday, the 30th, but don't know just
+when I shall sail from New York--apparently when there are no more
+dinners to eat in that town and no more friends to visit. May God in
+His infinite mercy lessen the number of both. I should get into your
+neck o' woods early in May. Till then God be with you instead.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Easter Sunday.
+
+[Why couldn't He stay put?]
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 29, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm "all packed up," even my pens; for to-morrow I go to New
+York--whence I shall write you before embarking.
+
+Neale seems pleased by your "permission to print," as Congressmen say
+who can't make a speech yet want one in the Record, for home
+consumption.
+
+ Sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Guerneville, Cal.,
+ May 24, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+You will probably have learned of my arrival--this is my first leisure
+to apprise you.
+
+I took Carlt and Lora and came directly up here--where we all hope to
+see you before I see Carmel. Lora remains here for the week, perhaps
+longer, and Carlt is to come up again on Saturday. Of course you do
+not need an invitation to come whenever you feel like it.
+
+I had a pleasant enough voyage and have pretty nearly got the "slosh"
+of the sea out of my ears and its heave out of my bones.
+
+A bushel of letters awaits attention, besides a pair of lizards that I
+have undertaken to domesticate. So good morning.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Key Route Inn, Oakland,
+ June 25, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+You'll observe that I acted on your suggestion, and am "here."
+
+Your little sisters are most gracious to me, despite my candid
+confession that I extorted your note of introduction by violence and
+intimidation.
+
+Baloo[13] and his cubs went on to Guerneville the day of their return
+from Carmel. But I saw them.
+
+[13] Albert Bierce.
+
+I'm deep in work, and shall be for a few weeks; then I shall be off to
+Carmel for a lungful of sea air and a bellyful of abalones and
+mussels.
+
+I suppose you'll be going to the Midsummer Jinks. Fail not to stop
+over here--I don't feel that I have really seen you yet.
+
+With best regards to Carrie.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Laguna Vista, Oakland,
+ Sunday, July 24, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Supposing you to have gone home, I write to send the poem. Of course
+it is a good poem. But I begin to want to hear your larger voice
+again. I want to see you standing tall on the heights--above the
+flower-belt and the bird-belt. I want to hear,
+
+ "like Ocean on a western beach,
+ The surge and thunder of the Odyssey,"
+
+as you _Odyssate_.
+
+I _think_ I met that dog * * * to-day, and as it was a choice between
+kicking him and avoiding him I chose the more prudent course.
+
+I've not seen your little sisters--they seem to have tired of me. Why
+not?--I have tired of myself.
+
+Fail not to let me know when to expect you for the Guerneville trip.
+* * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Laguna Vista,
+ October 20, 1910.]
+
+I go back to the Inn on Saturday.
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+It is long since I read the Book of Job, but if I thought it better
+than your addition to it I should not sleep until I had read it
+again--and again. Such a superb Who's Who in the Universe! Not a
+Homeric hero in the imminence of a personal encounter ever did so fine
+bragging. I hope you will let it into your next book, if only to show
+that the "inspired" scribes of the Old Testament are not immatchable
+by modern genius. You know the Jews regard them, not as prophets, in
+our sense, but merely as poets--and the Jews ought to know something
+of their own literature.
+
+I fear I shall not be able to go to Carmel while you're a widow--I've
+tangled myself up with engagements again. Moreover, I'm just back from
+the St. Helena cemetery, and for a few days shall be too blue for
+companionship.
+
+"Shifted" is better, I think (in poetry) than "joggled." You say you
+"don't like working." Then write a short story. That's work, but
+you'd like it--or so I think. Poetry is the highest of arts, but why
+be a specialist?
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ November 11, 1910.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+It is nice to hear from you and learn that despite my rude and
+intolerant ways you manage to slip in a little affection for me--you
+and the rest of the folk. And really I think I left a little piece of
+my heart out there--mostly in Berkeley. It is funny, by the way, that
+in falling out of love with most of my old sweethearts and
+semi-sweethearts I should fall _in_ love with my own niece. It is
+positively scandalous!
+
+I return Sloot's letter. It gave me a bit of a shock to have him say
+that he would probably never see me again. Of course that is true, but
+I had not thought of it just that way--had not permitted myself to, I
+suppose. And, after all, if things go as I'm hoping they will,
+Montesano will take me in again some day before he seems likely to
+leave it. We four may see the Grand Cañon together yet. I'd like to
+lay my bones thereabout.
+
+The garments that you persuaded me were mine are not. They are
+probably Sterling's, and he has probably damned me for stealing them.
+I don't care; he has no right to dress like the "filthy rich." Hasn't
+he any "class consciousness"? However, I am going to send them back to
+you by express. I'll mail you the paid receipt; so don't pay the
+charge that the company is sure to make. They charged me again for the
+two packages that you paid for, and got away with the money from the
+Secretary of my club, where they were delivered. I had to get it back
+from the delivery man at the cannon's mouth--34 calibre.
+
+With love to Carlt and Sloots,
+
+ Affectionately yours,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ November 14, 1910.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You asked me about the relative interest of Yosemite and the Grand
+Cañon. It is not easy to compare them, they are so different. In
+Yosemite only the magnitudes are unfamiliar; in the Cañon nothing is
+familiar--at least, nothing would be familiar to you, though I have
+seen something like it on the upper Yellowstone. The "color scheme" is
+astounding--almost incredible, as is the "architecture." As to
+magnitudes, Yosemite is nowhere. From points on the rim of the Cañon
+you can see fifty, maybe a hundred, miles of it. And it is never twice
+alike. Nobody can describe it. Of course you must see it sometime. I
+wish our Yosemite party could meet there, but probably we never will;
+it is a long way from here, and not quite next door to Berkeley and
+Carmel.
+
+I've just got settled in my same old tenement house, the Olympia, but
+the club is my best address.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ November 29, 1910.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Thank you very much for the work that you are doing for me in
+photography and china. I know it is great work. But take your time
+about it.
+
+I hope you all had a good Thanksgiving at Upshack. (That is my name
+for Sloots' place. It will be understood by anyone that has walked to
+it from Montesano, carrying a basket of grub on a hot day.)
+
+I trust Sterling got his waistcoat and trousers in time to appear at
+his uncle's dinner in other outer garments than a steelpen coat. * * *
+I am glad you like (or like to have) the books. You would have had all
+my books when published if I had supposed that you cared for them, or
+even knew about them. I am now encouraged to hope that some day you
+and Carlt and Sloots may be given the light to see the truth at the
+heart of my "views" (which I have expounded for half a century) and
+will cease to ally yourselves with what is most hateful to me,
+socially and politically. I shall then feel (in my grave) that
+perhaps, after all, I knew how to write. Meantime, run after your
+false fool gods until you are tired; I shall not believe that your
+hearts are really in the chase, for they are pretty good hearts, and
+those of your gods are nests of nastiness and heavens of hate.
+
+Now I feel better, and shall drink a toddy to the tardy time when
+those whom I love shall not think me a perverted intelligence; when
+they shall not affirm my intellect and despise its work--confess my
+superior understanding and condemn all its fundamental conclusions.
+Then we will be a happy family--you and Carlt in the flesh and Sloots
+and I in our bones.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My health is excellent in this other and better world than California.
+
+God bless you.
+
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 22, 1910.]
+
+DEAR CARLT,
+
+You had indeed "something worth writing about"--not only the effect
+of the impenitent mushroom, but the final and disastrous overthrow of
+that ancient superstition, Sloots' infallibility as a mushroomer. As I
+had expected to be at that dinner, I suppose I should think myself to
+have had "a narrow escape." Still, I wish I could have taken my chance
+with the rest of you.
+
+How would you like three weeks of nipping cold weather, with a foot of
+snow? That's what has been going on here. Say, tell Sloots that the
+front footprints of a rabbit-track
+
+[Illustration: Rabbit tracks]
+
+are made by the animal's hind feet, straddling his forelegs. Could he
+have learned that important fact in California, except by hearsay?
+Observe (therefore) the superiority of this climate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 26, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I have just received a very affectionate letter from * * * and now
+know that I did her an injustice in what I carelessly wrote to you
+about her incivility to me after I had left her. It is plain that she
+did not mean to be uncivil in what she wrote me on a postal card which
+I did not look at until I was in the train; she just "didn't know any
+better." So I have restored her to favor, and hope that you will
+consider my unkind remarks about her as unwritten. Guess I'm addicted
+to going off at half-cock anyhow.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 3, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I have the Yosemite book, and Miss Christiansen has the Mandarin coat.
+I thank you very much. The pictures are beautiful, but of them all I
+prefer that of Nanny bending over the stove. True, the face is not
+visible, but it looks like you all over.
+
+I'm filling out the book with views of the Grand Cañon, so as to have
+my scenic treasures all together. Also I'm trying to get for you a
+certain book of Cañon pictures, which I neglected to obtain when
+there. You will like it--if I get it.
+
+Sometime when you have nothing better to do--don't be in a hurry about
+it--will you go out to Mountain View cemetery with your camera and
+take a picture of the grave of Elizabeth (Lily) Walsh, the little deaf
+mute that I told you of? I think the man in the office will locate it
+for you. It is in the Catholic part of the cemetery--St. Mary's. The
+name Lily Walsh is on the beveled top of the headstone which is shaped
+like this:
+
+[Illustration: Headstone]
+
+You remember I was going to take you there, but never found the time.
+
+Miss Christiansen says she is writing, or has written you. I think the
+coat very pretty.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 15, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+As to the "form of address." A man passing another was halted by the
+words: "You dirty dog!" Turning to the speaker, he bowed coldly and
+said: "Smith is my name, sir." _My_ name is Bierce, and I find, on
+reflection, that I like best those who call me just that. If my
+christen name were George I'd want to be called _that_; but "Ambrose"
+is fit only for mouths of women--in which it sounds fairly well.
+
+_How_ are you my master? I never read one of your poems without
+learning something, though not, alas, how to make one.
+
+Don't worry about "Lilith"; it will work out all right. As to the
+characters not seeming alive, I've always fancied the men and women of
+antiquity--particularly the kings, and great ones generally--should
+not be too flesh-and-bloody, like the "persons whom one meets." A
+little coldness and strangeness is very becoming to them. I like them
+to _stalk_, like the ghosts that they are--our modern passioning seems
+a bit anachronous in them. Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm sure you will
+understand and have some sympathy with the error.
+
+Hudson Maxim takes medicine without biting the spoon. He had a dose
+from me and swallowed it smiling. I too gave him some citations of
+great poetry that is outside the confines of his "definition"--poetry
+in which are no tropes at all. He seems to lack the _feel_ of poetry.
+He even spoils some of the "great lines" by not including enough of
+the context. As to his "improvements," fancy his preference for "the
+fiercest spirit of _the warrior host_" to "the fiercest spirit _that
+fought in Heaven_"! O my!
+
+Yes, Conrad told me the tale of his rescue by you. He gave me the
+impression of hanging in the sky above billows unthinkably huge and
+rocks inconceivably hard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course I could not but be pleased by your inclusion of that sonnet
+on me in your book. And, by the way, I'm including in my tenth volume
+my _Cosmopolitan_ article on the "Wine" and my end of the controversy
+about it. All the volumes of the set are to be out by June, saith the
+publisher. He is certainly half-killing me with proofs--mountains of
+proofs! * * *
+
+Yes, you'll doubtless have a recruit in Carlt for your Socialist
+menagerie--if he is not already a veteran exhibit. Your "party" is
+recruited from among sore-heads only. There are some twenty-five
+thousand of them (sore-heads) in this neck o' woods--all disloyal--all
+growling at the Government which feeds and clothes them twice as well
+as they could feed and clothe themselves in private employment. They
+move Heaven and Earth to get in, and they never resign--just "take it
+out" in abusing the Government. If I had my way nobody should remain
+in the civil service more than five years--at the end of that period
+all are disloyal. Not one of them cares a rap for the good of the
+service or the country--as we soldiers used to do on thirteen dollars
+a month (with starvation, disease and death thrown in). Their
+grievance is that the Government does not undertake to maintain them
+in the style to which they choose to accustom themselves. They fix
+their standard of living just a little higher than they can afford,
+and would do so no matter what salary they got, as all salary-persons
+invariably do. Then they damn their employer for not enabling them to
+live up to it.
+
+If they can do better "outside" why don't they go outside and do so;
+if they can't (which means that they are getting more than they are
+worth) what are they complaining about?
+
+What this country needs--what every country needs occasionally--is a
+good hard bloody war to revive the vice of patriotism on which its
+existence as a nation depends. Meantime, you socialers, anarchists and
+other sentimentaliters and futilitarians will find the civil-service
+your best recruiting ground, for it is the Land of Reasonless
+Discontent. I yearn for the strong-handed Dictator who will swat you
+all on the mouths o' you till you are "heard to cease." Until
+then--How? (drinking.)
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 19, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Every evening coffee is made for me in my rooms, but I have not yet
+ventured to take it from _your_ cup for fear of an accident to the
+cup. Some of the women in this house are stark, staring mad about that
+cup and saucer, and the plate.
+
+I am very sorry Carlt finds his position in the civil service so
+intolerable. If he can do better outside he should resign. If he
+can't, why, that means that the Government is doing better for him
+than he can do for himself, and you are not justified in your little
+tirade about the oppression of "the masses." "The masses" have been
+unprosperous from time immemorial, and always will be. A very simple
+way to escape that condition (and the _only_ way) is to elevate
+oneself out of that incapable class.
+
+You write like an anarchist and say that if you were a man you'd _be_
+one. I should be sorry to believe that, for I should lose a very
+charming niece, and you a most worthy uncle.
+
+You say that Carlt and Grizzly are not Socialists. Does that mean that
+_they_ are anarchists? I draw the line at anarchists, and would put
+them all to death if I lawfully could.
+
+But I fancy your intemperate words are just the babbling of a
+thoughtless girl. In any case you ought to know from my work in
+literature that I am not the person to whom to address them. I carry
+my convictions into my life and conduct, into my friendships,
+affections and all my relations with my fellow creatures. So I think
+it would be more considerate to leave out of your letters to _me_ some
+things that you may have in mind. Write them to others.
+
+My own references to socialism, and the like, have been jocular--I did
+not think you perverted "enough to hurt," though I consider your
+intellectual environment a mighty bad one. As to such matters in
+future let us make a treaty of silence.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 1, 1911.]
+
+MY DEAR RUTH,
+
+It is pleasant to know that the family Robertson is "seeing things"
+and enjoying them. I hate travel, but find it delightful when done by
+you, instead of me. Believe me, I have had great pleasure in following
+you by your trail of words, as in the sport known as the "paper
+chase."
+
+And now about the little story. Your refusal to let your father amend
+it is no doubt dreadfully insubordinate, but I brave his wrath by
+approval. It is _your_ work that I want to see, not anybody's else.
+I've a profound respect for your father's talent: as a litérateur, he
+is the best physician that I know; but he must not be coaching my
+pupil, or he and I (as Mark Twain said of Mrs. Astor) "will have a
+falling out."
+
+The story is not a story. It is not narrative, and nothing occurs. It
+is a record of mental mutations--of spiritual vicissitudes--states of
+mind. That is the most difficult thing that you could have attempted.
+It can be done acceptably by genius and the skill that comes of
+practice, as can anything. You are not quite equal to it--yet. You
+have done it better than I could have done it at your age, but not
+altogether well; as doubtless you did not expect to do it. It would be
+better to confine yourself at present to simple narrative. Write of
+something done, not of something thought and felt, except
+incidentally. I'm sure it is in you to do great work, but in this
+writing trade, as in other matters, excellence is to be attained no
+otherwise than by beginning at the beginning--the simple at first,
+then the complex and difficult. You can not go up a mountain by a leap
+at the peak.
+
+I'm retaining your little sketch till your return, for you can do
+nothing with it--nor can I. If it had been written--preferably
+typewritten--with wide lines and margins I could do something _to_ it.
+Maybe when I get the time I shall; at present I am swamped with
+"proofs" and two volumes behind the printers. If I knew that I should
+_see_ you and talk it over I should rewrite it and (original in hand)
+point out the reasons for each alteration--you would see them quickly
+enough when shown. Maybe you will all come this way.
+
+You are _very_ deficient in spelling. I hope that is not incurable,
+though some persons--clever ones, too--never do learn to spell
+correctly. You will have to learn it from your reading--noting
+carefully all but the most familiar words.
+
+You have "pet" words--nearly all of us have. One of yours is
+"flickering." Addiction to certain words is an "upsetting sin" most
+difficult to overcome. Try to overcome it by cutting them out where
+they seem most felicitous.
+
+By the way, your "hero," as you describe him, would not have been
+accessible to all those spiritual impressions--it is _you_ to whom
+they come. And that confirms my judgment of your imagination.
+Imagination is nine parts of the writing trade. With enough of _that_
+all things are possible; but it is the other things that require the
+hard work, the incessant study, the tireless seeking, the indomitable
+will. It is no "pic-nic," this business of writing, believe me.
+Success comes by favor of the gods, yes; but O the days and nights
+that you must pass before their altars, prostrate and imploring! They
+are exacting--the gods; years and years of service you must give in
+the temple. If you are prepared to do this go on to your reward. If
+not, you can not too quickly throw away the pen and--well, marry, for
+example.
+
+ "Drink deep or taste not the Pierian spring."
+
+_My_ vote is that you persevere.
+
+With cordial regards to all good Robertsons--I think there are no
+others--I am most sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 20, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Thank you for the pictures of the Sloots fire-place and "Joe Gans." I
+can fancy myself cooking a steak in the one, and the other eating one
+better cooked.
+
+I'm glad I've given you the Grand Cañon fever, for I hope to revisit
+the place next summer, and perhaps our Yosemite bunch can meet me
+there. My outing this season will be in Broadway in little old New
+York. That is not as good as Monte Sano, but the best that I can do.
+
+You must have had a good time with the Sterlings, and doubtless you
+all suffered from overfeeding.
+
+Carlt's action in denuding the shaggy pelt of his hands meets with my
+highest commendation, but you'd better look out. It may mean that he
+has a girl--a Jewess descended from Jacob, with an hereditary
+antipathy to anything like Esau. Carlt was an Esaurian.
+
+You'll have to overlook some bad errors in Vol. V of the C. W. I did
+not have the page proofs. Some of the verses are unintelligible.
+That's the penalty for philandering in California instead of sticking
+to my work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 28, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've been having noctes ambrosianæ with "The House of Orchids," though
+truly it came untimely, for I've not yet done reading your other
+books. Don't crowd the dancers, please. I don't know (and you don't
+care) what poem in it I like best, but I get as much delight out of
+these lines as out of any:
+
+ "Such flowers pale as are
+ Worn by the goddess of a distant star--
+ Before whose holy eyes
+ Beauty and evening meet."
+
+And--but what's the use? I can't quote the entire book.
+
+I'm glad you did see your way to make "Memory" a female.
+
+To Hades with Bonnet's chatter of gems and jewels--among the minor
+poetic properties they are better (to my taste) than flowers. By the
+way, I wonder what "lightness" Bonnet found in the "Apothecary"
+verses. They seem to me very serious.
+
+Rereading and rerereading of the Job confirm my first opinion of it. I
+find only one "bad break" in it--and that not inconsistent with God's
+poetry in the real Job: "ropes of adamant." A rope of stone is
+imperfectly conceivable--is, in truth, mixed metaphor.
+
+I think it was a mistake for you to expound to Ned Hamilton, or
+anybody, how you wrote the "Forty-third Chapter," or anything. When
+an author explains his methods of composition he cannot expect to be
+taken seriously. Nine writers in ten wish to have it thought that they
+"dash off" things. Nobody believes it, and the judicious would be
+sorry to believe it. Maybe you do, but I guess you work hard and
+honestly enough over the sketch "dashed off." If you don't--do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With love to Carrie, I will leave you to your sea-gardens and
+abalones.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I'm off to Broadway next week for a season of old-gentlemanly revelry.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 2, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+In packing (I'm going to New York) I find this "Tidal" typoscript, and
+fear that I was to have returned it. Pray God it was not my neglect to
+do so that kept it out of the book. But if not, what did keep it out?
+Maybe the fact that it requires in the reader an uncommon acquaintance
+with the Scriptures.
+
+If Robertson publishes any more books for you don't let him use
+"silver" leaf on the cover. It is not silver, cannot be neatly put on,
+and will come off. The "Wine" book is incomparably better and more
+tasteful than either of the others. By the way, I stick to my liking
+for Scheff's little vignette on the "Wine."
+
+In "Duandon" you--_you_, Poet of the Heavens!--come perilously near to
+qualifying yourself for "mention" in a certain essay of mine on the
+blunders of writers and artists in matters lunar. You must have
+observed that immediately after the full o' the moon the light of that
+orb takes on a redness, and when it rises after dark is hardly a
+"towering glory," nor a "frozen splendor." Its "web" is not
+"silver." In truth, the gibbous moon, rising, has something of menace
+in its suggestion. Even twenty-four (or rather twenty-five) hours
+"after the full" this change in the quality and quantity of its light
+is very marked. I don't know what causes the sudden alteration, but it
+has always impressed me.
+
+I feel a little like signing this criticism "Gradgrind," but anyhow it
+may amuse you.
+
+Do you mind squandering ten cents and a postage stamp on me? I want a
+copy of _Town Talk_--the one in which you are a "Varied Type."
+
+I don't know much of some of your poets mentioned in that article, but
+could wish that you had said a word about Edith Thomas. Thank you for
+your too generous mention of me--who brought you so much vilification!
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 29, 1911.]
+
+MY DEAR RUTH,
+
+You are a faithful correspondent; I have your postals from Athens and
+Syracuse, and now the letter from Rome. The Benares sketch was duly
+received, and I wrote you about it to the address that you
+gave--Cairo, I think. As you will doubtless receive my letter in due
+time I will not now repeat it--further than to say that I liked it. If
+it had been accompanied by a few photographs (indispensable now to
+such articles) I should have tried to get it into some magazine. True,
+Benares, like all other Asiatic and European cities, is pretty
+familiar to even the "general reader," but the sketch had something of
+the writer's personality in it--the main factor in all good writing,
+as in all forms of art.
+
+May I tell you what you already know--that you are deficient in
+spelling and punctuation? It is worth while to know these things--and
+all things that you can acquire. Some persons can not acquire
+orthography, and I don't wonder, but every page of every good book is
+a lesson in punctuation. One's punctuation is a necessary part of
+one's style; you cannot attain to precision if you leave that matter
+to editors and printers.
+
+You ask if "stories" must have action. The name "story" is preferably
+used of narrative, not reflection nor mental analysis. The
+"psychological novel" is in great vogue just now, for example--the
+adventures of the mind, it might be called--but it requires a
+profounder knowledge of life and character than is possible to a young
+girl of whatever talent; and the psychological "short story" is even
+more difficult. Keep to narrative and simple description for a few
+years, until your wings have grown. These descriptions of foreign
+places that you write me are good practice. You are not likely to tell
+me much that I do not know, nor is that necessary; but your way of
+telling what I do know is sometimes very interesting as a study of
+_you_. So write me all you will, and if you would like the letters as
+a record of your travels you shall have them back; I am preserving
+them.
+
+I judge from your letter that your father went straight through
+without bothering about me. Maybe I should not have seen him anyhow,
+for I was away from Washington for nearly a month.
+
+Please give my love to your mother and sister, whom, of course, you
+are to bring here. I shall not forgive you if you do not.
+
+Yes, I wish that you lived nearer to me, so that we could go over your
+work together. I could help you more in a few weeks _that_ way than
+in years _this_ way. God never does anything just right.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ July 31, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Thank you for that Times "review." It is a trifle less malicious than
+usual--regarding _me_, that is all. My publisher, Neale, who was here
+last evening, is about "taking action" against that concern for
+infringement of his copyright in my little book, "Write It Right." The
+wretches have been serving it up to their readers for several weeks as
+the work of a woman named Learned. Repeatedly she uses my very
+words--whole passages of them. They refused even to confess the
+misdeeds of their contributrix, and persist in their sin. So they will
+have to fight.
+
+* * * I have never been hard on women whose hearts go with their
+admiration, and whose bodies follow their hearts--I don't mean that
+the latter was the case in this instance. Nor am I very exacting as to
+the morality of my men friends. I would not myself take another man's
+woman, any more than I would take his purse. Nor, I trust, would I
+seduce the daughter or sister of a friend, nor any maid whom it would
+at all damage--and as to _that_ there is no hard and fast rule.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A fine fellow, I, to be casting the first stone, or the one-hundredth,
+at a lovelorn woman, weak or strong! By the way, I should not believe
+in the love of a strong one, wife, widow or maid.
+
+It looks as if I may get to Sag Harbor for a week or so in the middle
+of the month. It is really not a question of expense, but Neale has
+blocked out a lot of work for me. He wants two more volumes--even five
+more if I'll make 'em. Guess I'll give him two. In a week or so I
+shall be able to say whether I can go Sagharboring. If so, I think we
+should have a night in New York first, no? You could motor-boat up and
+back.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.[14]
+
+[14] Addressed to George Sterling at Sag Harbor, Long Island.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ Monday, August 7, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+In one of your letters you were good enough to promise me a motorboat
+trip from New York to Sag Harbor. I can think of few things more
+delightful than navigating in a motorboat the sea that I used to
+navigate in an open canoe; it will seem like Progress. So if you are
+still in that mind please write me what day _after Saturday next_ you
+can meet me in New York and I'll be there. I should prefer that you
+come the day before the voyage and dine with me that evening.
+
+I always stay at the Hotel Navarre, 7th avenue and 38th street. If
+unable to get in there I'll leave my address there. Or, tell me where
+_you_ will be.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+If the motorboat plan is not practicable let me know and I'll go by
+train or steamer; it will not greatly matter. A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ Tuesday, August 8, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kindly convey to young Smith of Auburn my felicitations on his
+admirable "Ode to the Abyss"--a large theme, treated with dignity and
+power. It has many striking passages--such, for example, as "The Romes
+of ruined spheres." I'm conscious of my sin against the rhetoricians
+in liking that, for it jolts the reader out of the Abyss and back to
+earth. Moreover, it is a metaphor which belittles, instead of
+dignifying. But I like it.
+
+He is evidently a student of George Sterling, and being in the
+formative stage, cannot--why should he?--conceal the fact.
+
+My love to all good Californians of the Sag Harbor colony.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ November 16, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+It is good to know that you are again happy--that is to say, you are
+in Carmel. For your _future_ happiness (if success and a certain
+rounding off of your corners would bring it, as I think) I could wish
+you in New York or thereabout. As the Scripture hath it: "It is not
+good for a man to be in Carmel"--_Revised Inversion_. I note that at
+the late election California damned herself to a still lower
+degradation and is now unfit for a white man to live in. Initiative,
+referendum, recall, employers' liability, woman suffrage--yah!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But you are not to take too seriously my dislike of * * *[15] I like
+him personally very well; he talks like a normal human being. It is
+only that damned book of his. He was here and came out to my tenement
+a few evenings ago, finding me in bed and helpless from lumbago, as I
+was for weeks. I am now able to sit up and take notice, and there are
+even fears for my recovery. My enemies would say, as Byron said of
+Lady B., I am becoming "dangerously well again."
+
+[15] Excised by G. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to harlots, there are not ten in a hundred that are such for any
+other reason than that they wanted to be. Their exculpatory stories
+are mostly lies of magnitude.
+
+Sloots writes me that he will perhaps "walk over" from the mine to
+Yosemite next summer. I can't get there much before July first, but if
+there is plenty of snow in the mountains next winter the valley should
+be visitable then. Later, I hope to beguest myself for a few days at
+the Pine Inn, Carmel. Tell it not to the Point Lobos mussel!
+
+My love to Carrie.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 27, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+As you do not give me that lady's address I infer that you no longer
+care to have me meet her--which is a relief to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I'm a bit broken up by the death of Pollard, whose body I
+assisted to burn. He lost his mind, was paralyzed, had his head cut
+open by the surgeons, and his sufferings were unspeakable. Had he
+lived he would have been an idiot; so it is all right--
+
+ "But O, the difference to me!"
+
+If you don't think him pretty bright read any of his last three books,
+"Their Day in Court," "Masks and Minstrels," and "Vagabond Journeys."
+He did not see the last one--Neale brought down copies of it when he
+came to Baltimore to attend the funeral.
+
+I'm hoping that if Carlt and Lora go to Wagner's mine and we go to
+Yosemite, Lora, at least, will come to us out there. We shall need
+her, though Carrie will find that Misses C. and S. will be "no
+deadheads in the enterprise"--to quote a political phrase of long ago.
+As to me, I shall leave my ten-pounds-each books at home and, like
+St. Jerome, who never traveled with other baggage than a skull, be
+"flying light." My love to Carrie.
+
+ Sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 5, 1912.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+It is good to hear from you again, even if I did have to give you a
+hint that I badly needed a letter.
+
+I am glad that you are going to the mine (if you go)--though Berkeley
+and Oakland will not be the same without you. And where can I have my
+mail forwarded?--and be permitted to climb in at the window to get it.
+As to pot-steaks, toddies, and the like, I shall simply swear off
+eating and drinking.
+
+If Carlt is a "game sport," and does not require "a dead-sure thing,"
+the mining gamble is the best bet for him. Anything to get out of that
+deadening, hopeless grind, the "Government service." It kills a man's
+self-respect, atrophies his powers, unfits him for anything, tempts
+him to improvidence and then turns him out to starve.
+
+It is pleasant to know that there is a hope of meeting you in
+Yosemite--the valley would not be the same without you. My girls
+cannot leave here till the schools close, about June 20, so we shall
+not get into the valley much before July first; but if you have a good
+winter, with plenty of snow, that will do. We shall stay as long as we
+like. George says he and Carrie can go, and I hope Sloots can. It is
+likely that Neale, my publisher, will be of my party. I shall hope to
+visit your mine afterward.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My health, which was pretty bad for weeks after returning from Sag
+Harbor, is restored, and I was never so young in all my life.
+
+Here's wishing you and Carlt plenty of meat on the bone that the new
+year may fling to you.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 14, 1912.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm a long time noticing your letter of January fifth, chiefly
+because, like Teddy, "I have nothing to say." There's this difference
+atwixt him and me--I could say something if I tried.
+
+* * * I'm hoping that you are at work and doing something worth while,
+though I see nothing of yours. Battle against the encroaching abalone
+should not engage all your powers. That spearing salmon at night
+interests me, though doubtless the "season" will be over before I
+visit Carmel.
+
+Bear Yosemite in mind for latter part of June, and use influence with
+Lora and Grizzly, even if Carlt should be inhumed in his mine.
+
+We've had about seven weeks of snow and ice, the mercury around the
+zero mark most of the time. Once it was 13 below. You'd not care for
+that sort of thing, I fancy. Indeed, I'm a bit fatigued of it myself,
+and on Saturday next, God willing, shall put out my prow to sea and
+bring up, I hope, in Bermuda, not, of course, to remain long.
+
+You did not send me the Weininger article on "Sex and Character"--I
+mean the extract that you thought like some of my stuff.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 25, 1912.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I did not go to Bermuda; so I'm not "back." But I did go to Richmond,
+a city whose tragic and pathetic history, of which one is reminded by
+everything that one sees there, always gets on to my nerves with a
+particular dejection. True, the history is some fifty years old, but
+it is always with me when I'm there, making solemn eyes at me.
+
+You're right about "this season in the East." It has indeed been
+penetential. For the first time I am thoroughly disgusted and
+half-minded to stay in California when I go--a land where every
+prospect pleases, and only labor unions, progressives, suffragettes
+(and socialists) are vile. No, I don't think I could stand California,
+though I'm still in the mind to visit it in June. I shall be sorry to
+miss Carrie at Carmel, but hope to have the two of you on some
+excursion or camping trip. We _want_ to go to Yosemite, which the
+girls have not seen, but if there's no water there it may not be
+advisable. Guess we'll have to let you natives decide. How would the
+Big Trees do as a substitute?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Girls is pizen, but not necessarily fatal. I've taken 'em in large
+doses all my life, and suffered pangs enough to equip a number of
+small Hells, but never has one of them paralyzed the inner working
+man. * * * But I'm not a poet. Moreover, as I've not yet put off my
+armor I oughtn't to boast.
+
+So--you've subscribed for the Collected Works. Good! that is what you
+ought to have done a long time ago. It is what every personal friend
+of mine ought to have done, for all profess admiration of my work in
+literature. It is what I was fool enough to permit my publisher to
+think that many of them would do. How many do you guess have done
+so? I'll leave you guessing. God help the man with many friends, for
+_they_ will not. My royalties on the sets sold to my friends are less
+than one-fourth of my outlay in free sets for other friends. Tell me
+not in cheerful numbers of the value and sincerity of friendships.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There! I've discharged my bosom of that perilous stuff and shall take
+a drink. Here's to you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ June 5, 1912.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thank you for the poems, which I've not had the time to
+consider--being disgracefully busy in order to get away. I don't
+altogether share your reverence for Browning, but the primacy of your
+verses on him over the others printed on the same page is almost
+startling. * * *
+
+Of course it's all nonsense about the waning of your power--though
+thinking it so might make it so. My notion is that you've only _begun_
+to do things. But I wish you'd go back to your chain in your uncle's
+office. I'm no believer in adversity and privation as a spur to
+Pegasus. They are oftener a "hopple." The "meagre, muse-rid mope,
+adust and thin" will commonly do better work when tucked out with
+three square meals a day, and having the sure and certain hope of
+their continuance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm expecting to arrive in Oakland (Key Route Inn, probably) late in
+the evening of the 22d of this month and dine at Carlt's on the
+24th--my birthday. Anyhow, I've invited myself, though it is possible
+they may be away on their vacation. Carlt has promised to try to get
+his "leave" changed to a later date than the one he's booked for.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--Just learned that we can not leave here until the 19th--which
+will bring me into San Francisco on the 26th. Birthday dinner served
+in diner--last call!
+
+I've _read_ the Browning poem and I now know why there was a Browning.
+Providence foresaw you and prepared him for you--blessed be
+Providence! * * *
+
+Mrs. Havens asks me to come to them at Sag Harbor--and shouldn't I
+like to! * * * Sure the song of the Sag Harbor frog would be music to
+me--as would that of the indigenous duckling.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 19, 1912.]
+
+MY DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+I thank you for the article from _The Argonaut_, and am glad to get it
+for a special reason, as it gives me your address and thereby enables
+me to explain something.
+
+When, several years ago, you sent me a similar article I took it to
+the editor of The National Geographical Magazine (I am a member of the
+Society that issues it) and suggested its publication. I left it with
+him and hearing nothing about it for several months called at his
+office _twice_ for an answer, and for the copy if publication was
+refused. The copy had been "mislaid"--lost, apparently--and I never
+obtained it. Meantime, either I had "mislaid" your address, or it was
+only on the copy. So I was unable to write you. Indirectly, afterward,
+I heard that you had left California for parts to me unknown.
+
+Twice since then I have been in San Francisco, but confess that I did
+not think of the matter.
+
+Cahill's projection[16] is indubitably the right one, but you are "up
+against" the ages and will be a long time dead before it finds favor,
+or I'm no true pessimist.
+
+[16] The Butterfly Map of the World.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia Apartments, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 17, 1913.]
+
+MY DEAR RUTH,
+
+It's "too bad" that I couldn't remain in Oakland and Berkeley another
+month to welcome you, but I fear it will "have to go at that," for
+I've no expectation of ever seeing California again. I like the
+country as well as ever, but I _don't_ like the rule of labor unions,
+the grafters and the suffragettes. So far as I am concerned they may
+stew in their own juice; I shall not offer myself as an ingredient.
+
+It is pleasant to know that you are all well, including Johnny, poor
+little chap.
+
+You are right to study philology and rhetoric. Surely there must be
+_some_ provision for your need--a university where one cannot learn
+one's own language would be a funny university.
+
+I think your "Mr. Wells" who gave a course of lectures on essay
+writing may be my friend Wells Drury, of Berkeley. If so, mention me
+to him and he will advise you what to do.
+
+Another good friend of mine, whom, however I did not succeed in seeing
+during either of my visits to California, is W. C. Morrow, who is a
+professional teacher of writing and himself a splendid writer. He
+could help you. He lives in San Francisco, but I think has a class in
+Oakland. I don't know his address; you'll find it in the directory.
+He used to write stories splendidly tragic, but I'm told he now
+teaches the "happy ending," in which he is right--commercially--but
+disgusting. I can cordially recommend him.
+
+Keep up your German and French of course. If your English (your mother
+speech) is so defective, think what _they_ must be.
+
+I'll think of some books that will be helpful to you in your English.
+Meantime send me anything that you care to that you write. It will at
+least show me what progress you make.
+
+I'm returning some (all, I think) of your sketches. Don't destroy
+them--yet. Maybe some day you'll find them worth rewriting.
+
+ My love to you all.
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Euclid and 14th Sts., Washington, D. C.,
+ January 20, 1913.]
+
+DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+It is pleasant to know that you are not easily discouraged by the
+croaking of such ravens as I, and I confess that the matter of the
+"civic centre" supplies some reason to hope for prosperity to the
+Cahill projection--which (another croak) will doubtless bear some
+other man's name, probably Hayford's or Woodward's.
+
+I sent the "Argonaut" article to my friend Dr. Franklin, of
+Schenectady, a "scientific gent" of some note, but have heard nothing
+from him.
+
+I'm returning the "Chronicle" article, which I found interesting. If I
+were not a writer without an "organ" I'd have a say about that
+projection. For near four years I've been out of the newspaper game--a
+mere compiler of my collected works in twelve volumes--and shall
+probably never "sit into the game" again, being seventy years old. My
+work is finished, and so am I.
+
+Luck to you in the new year, and in many to follow.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia Apartments, Washington, D. C.,
+ I prefer to get my letters at this address. Make a memorandum of it.
+ January 28, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I have been searching for your letter of long ago, fearing it
+contained something that I should have replied to. But I don't find
+it; so I make the convenient assumption that it did not.
+
+I'd like to hear from you, however unworthy I am to do so, for I want
+to know if you and Carlt have still a hope of going mining. Pray God
+you do, if there's a half-chance of success; for success in the
+service of the Government is failure.
+
+Winter here is two-thirds gone and we have not had a cold day, and
+only one little dash of snow--on Christmas eve. Can California beat
+that? I'm told it's as cold there as in Greenland.
+
+Tell me about yourself--your health since the operation--how it has
+affected you--all about you. My own health is excellent; I'm equal to
+any number of Carlt's toddies. By the way, Blanche has made me a
+co-defendant with you in the crime (once upon a time) of taking a drop
+too much. I plead not guilty--how do _you_ plead? Sloots, at least,
+would acquit us on the ground of inability--that one _can't_ take too
+much. * * *
+
+ Affectionately, your avuncular,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 20, 1913.]
+
+DEAR RUTH,
+
+I'm returning your little sketches with a few markings which are to be
+regarded (or disregarded) as mere suggestions. I made them in pencil,
+so that you can erase them if you don't approve. Of course I should
+make many more if I could have you before me so that I could explain
+_why_; in this way I can help you but little. You'll observe that I
+have made quite a slaughter of some of the adjectives in some of your
+sentences--you will doubtless slaughter some in others. Nearly all
+young writers use too many adjectives. Indeed, moderation and skill in
+the use of adjectives are about the last things a good writer learns.
+Don't use those that are connoted by the nouns; and rather than have
+all the nouns, or nearly all, in a sentence outfitted with them it is
+better to make separate sentences for some of those desired.
+
+In your sketch "Triumph" I would not name the "hero" of the piece. To
+do so not only makes the sketch commonplace, but it logically requires
+you to name his victim too, and her offense; in brief, it commits you
+to a _story_.
+
+A famous writer (perhaps Holmes or Thackeray--I don't remember) once
+advised a young writer to cut all the passages that he thought
+particularly good. Your taste I think is past the need of so heroic
+treatment as that, but the advice may be profitably borne in memory
+whenever you are in doubt, if ever you are. And sometimes you will be.
+
+I think I know what Mr. Morrow meant by saying that your characters
+are not "humanly significant." He means that they are not such persons
+as one meets in everyday life--not "types." I confess that I never
+could see why one's characters _should_ be. The exceptional--even
+"abnormal"--person seems to me the more interesting, but I must warn
+you that he will not seem so to an editor. Nor to an editor will the
+tragic element seem so good as the cheerful--the sombre denouement as
+the "happy ending." One must have a pretty firm reputation as a writer
+to "send in" a tragic or supernatural tale with any hope of its
+acceptance. The average mind (for which editors purvey, and mostly
+possess) dislikes, or thinks it dislikes, any literature that is not
+"sunny." True, tragedy holds the highest and most permanent place in
+the world's literature and art, but it has the divvel's own time
+getting to it. For immediate popularity (if one cares for it) one must
+write pleasant things; though one may put in here and there a bit of
+pathos.
+
+I think well of these two manuscripts, but doubt if you can get them
+into any of our magazines--if you want to. As to that, nobody can help
+you. About the only good quality that a magazine editor commonly has
+is his firm reliance on the infallibility of his own judgment. It is
+an honest error, and it enables him to mull through somehow with a
+certain kind of consistency. The only way to get a footing with him is
+to send him what you think he wants, not what you think he ought to
+want--and keep sending. But perhaps you do not care for the magazines.
+
+I note a great improvement in your style--probably no more than was to
+be expected of your better age, but a distinct improvement. It is a
+matter of regret with me that I have not the training of you; we
+should see what would come of it. You certainly have no reason for
+discouragement. But if you are to be a writer you must "cut out" the
+dances and the teas (a little of the theater may be allowed) and
+_work_ right heartily. The way of the good writer is no primrose path.
+
+No, I have not read the poems of Service. What do I think of Edith
+Wharton? Just what Pollard thought--see _Their Day in Court_, which I
+think you have.
+
+I fear you have the wanderlust incurably. I never had it bad, and
+have less of it now than ever before. I shall not see California
+again.
+
+My love to all your family goes with this, and to you all that you
+will have.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ May 22, 1913.]
+
+EDITOR "LANTERN",[17]
+
+[17] The editor was Curtis J. Kirch ("Guido Bruno") and the weekly had
+a brief career in Chicago. It was the forerunner of the many Bruno
+weeklies and monthlies, later published from other cities.
+
+Will I tell you what I think of your magazine? Sure I will.
+
+It has thirty-six pages of reading matter.
+
+Seventeen are given to the biography of a musician,--German, dead.
+
+Four to the mother of a theologian,--German, peasant-wench, dead.
+
+(The mag. is published in America, to-day.)
+
+Five pages about Eugene Field's ancestors. All dead.
+
+17 + 4 + 5 = 26.
+
+36 - 26 = 10.
+
+Two pages about Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
+
+Three-fourths page about a bad poet and his indifference to--German.
+
+Two pages of his poetry.
+
+2 + ¾ + 2 = 4¾.
+
+10 - 4¾ = 5¼. Not enough to criticise.
+
+What your magazine needs is an editor--presumably older, preferably
+American, and indubitably alive. At least awake. It is your inning.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 31, 1913.]
+
+MY DEAR LORA,
+
+You were so long in replying to my letter of the century before last,
+and as your letter is not really a reply to anything in mine, that I
+fancy you did not get it. I don't recollect, for example, that you
+ever acknowledged receipt of little pictures of myself, though maybe
+you did--I only hope you got them. The photographs that you send are
+very interesting. One of them makes me thirsty--the one of that
+fountainhead of good booze, your kitchen sink.
+
+What you say of the mine and how you are to be housed there pleases me
+mightily. That's how I should like to live, and mining is what I
+should like again to do. Pray God you be not disappointed.
+
+Alas, I cannot even join you during Carlt's vacation, for the mountain
+ramble. Please "go slow" in your goating this year. I _think_ you are
+better fitted for it than ever before, but you'd better ask your
+surgeon about that. By the way, do you know that since women took to
+athletics their peculiar disorders have increased about fifty per
+cent? You can't make men of women. The truth is, they've taken to
+walking on their hind legs a few centuries too soon. Their in'ards
+have not learned how to suspend the law of gravity. Add the jolts of
+athletics and--there you are.
+
+I wish I could be with you at Monte Sano--or anywhere.
+
+Love to Carlt and Sloots.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 10, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Your letter was forwarded to me in New York, whence I have just
+returned. I fancy you had a more satisfactory outing than I. I never
+heard of the Big Sur river nor of "Arbolado." But I'm glad you went
+there, for I'm hearing so much about Hetch Hetchy that I'm tired of
+it. I'm helping the San Francisco crowd (a little) to "ruin" it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm glad to know that you still expect to go to the mine. Success or
+failure, it is better than the Mint, and you ought to live in the
+mountains where you can climb things whenever you want to.
+
+Of course I know nothing of Neale's business--you'd better write to
+him if he has not filled your order. I suppose you know that volumes
+eleven and twelve are not included in the "set."
+
+If you care to write to me again please do so at once as I am going
+away, probably to South America, but if we have a row with Mexico
+before I start I shall go there first. I want to see something going
+on. I've no notion of how long I shall remain away.
+
+With love to Carlt and Sloots,
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 10, 1913.]
+
+DEAR JOE,[18]
+
+[18] To Mrs. Josephine Clifford McCrackin, San Jose, California.
+
+The reason that I did not answer your letter sooner is--I have been
+away (in New York) and did not have it with me. I suppose I shall not
+see your book for a long time, for I am going away and have no notion
+when I shall return. I expect to go to, perhaps across, South
+America--possibly via Mexico, if I can get through without being stood
+up against a wall and shot as a Gringo. But that is better than dying
+in bed, is it not? If Duc did not need you so badly I'd ask you to get
+your hat and come along. God bless and keep you.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 13, 1913.]
+
+DEAR JOE,
+
+Thank you for the book. I thank you for your friendship--and much
+besides. This is to say good-by at the end of a pleasant
+correspondence in which your woman's prerogative of having the last
+word is denied to you. Before I could receive it I shall be gone. But
+some time, somewhere, I hope to hear from you again. Yes, I shall go
+into Mexico with a pretty definite purpose, which, however, is not at
+present disclosable. You must try to forgive my obstinacy in not
+"perishing" where I am. I want to be where something worth while is
+going on, or where nothing whatever is going on. Most of what is going
+on in your own country is exceedingly distasteful to me.
+
+Pray for me? Why, yes, dear--that will not harm either of us. I loathe
+religions, a Christian gives me qualms and a Catholic sets my teeth on
+edge, but pray for me just the same, for with all those faults upon
+your head (it's a nice head, too), I am pretty fond of you, I guess.
+May you live as long as you want to, and then pass smilingly into the
+darkness--the good, good darkness.
+
+ Devotedly your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Euclid Street, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 1, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I go away tomorrow for a long time, so this is only to say good-bye. I
+think there is nothing else worth saying; _therefore_ you will
+naturally expect a long letter. What an intolerable world this would
+be if we said nothing but what is worth saying! And did nothing
+foolish--like going into Mexico and South America.
+
+I'm hoping that you will go to the mine soon. You must hunger and
+thirst for the mountains--Carlt likewise. So do I. Civilization be
+dinged!--it is the mountains and the desert for me.
+
+Good-bye--if you hear of my being stood up against a Mexican stone
+wall and shot to rags please know that I think that a pretty good way
+to depart this life. It beats old age, disease, or falling down the
+cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in Mexico--ah, that is euthanasia!
+
+ With love to Carlt, affectionately yours,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Laredo, Texas,
+ November 6, 1913.]
+
+MY DEAR LORA,
+
+I think I owe you a letter, and probably this is my only chance to pay
+up for a long time. For more than a month I have been rambling about
+the country, visiting my old battlefields, passing a few days in New
+Orleans, a week in San Antonio, and so forth. I turned up here this
+morning. There is a good deal of fighting going on over on the Mexican
+side of the Rio Grande, but I hold to my intention to go into Mexico
+if I can. In the character of "innocent bystander" I ought to be
+fairly safe if I don't have too much money on me, don't you think? My
+eventual destination is South America, but probably I shall not get
+there this year.
+
+Sloots writes me that you and Carlt still expect to go to the mine, as
+I hope you will.
+
+The Cowdens expect to live somewhere in California soon, I believe.
+They seem to be well, prosperous and cheerful.
+
+ With love to Carlt and Sloots, I am affectionately yours,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+P.S. You need not believe _all_ that these newspapers say of me and my
+purposes. I had to tell them _something_.
+
+
+[Laredo, Texas,
+ November 6, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I wrote you yesterday at San Antonio, but dated the letter here and
+today, expecting to bring the letter and mail it here. That's because
+I did not know if I would have time to write it here. Unfortunately,
+I forgot and posted it, with other letters, where it was written. Thus
+does man's guile come to naught!
+
+Well, I'm here, anyhow, and have time to explain.
+
+Laredo was a Mexican city before it was an American. It is Mexican
+now, five to one. Nuevo Laredo, opposite, is held by the Huertistas
+and Americans don't go over there. In fact a guard on the bridge will
+not let them. So those that sneak across have to wade (which can be
+done almost anywhere) and go at night.
+
+I shall not be here long enough to hear from you, and don't know where
+I shall be next. Guess it doesn't matter much.
+
+ Adios,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+
+
+ _Extracts from Letters_
+
+
+You are right too--dead right about the poetry of Socialism; and you
+might have added the poetry of wailing about the woes of the poor
+generally. Only the second- and the third-raters write it--except
+"incidentally." You don't find the big fellows sniveling over that
+particular shadow-side of Nature. Yet not only are the poor always
+with us, they always _were_ with us, and their state was worse in the
+times of Homer, Virgil, Shakspeare, Milton and the others than in the
+days of Morris and Markham.
+
+
+But what's the use? I have long despaired of convincing poets and
+artists of anything, even that white is not black. I'm convinced that
+all you chaps ought to have a world to yourselves, where two and two
+make whatever you prefer that it _should_ make, and cause and effect
+are remoulded "more nearly to the heart's desire." And then I suppose
+I'd want to go and live there too.
+
+
+Did you ever know so poor satire to make so great a row as that of
+Watson? Compared with certain other verses against particular
+women--Byron's "Born in a garret, in a kitchen bred"; even my own skit
+entitled "Mad" (pardon my modesty) it is infantile. What an
+interesting book might be made of such "attacks" on women! But Watson
+is the only one of us, so far as I remember, who has had the
+caddishness to _name_ the victim.
+
+Have you seen Percival Pollard's "Their Day in Court"? It is amusing,
+clever--and more. He has a whole chapter on me, "a lot" about Gertrude
+Atherton, and much else that is interesting. And he skins alive
+certain popular gods and goddesses of the day, and is "monstrous
+naughty."
+
+
+As to * * *'s own character I do not see what that has to do with his
+criticism of London. If only the impeccable delivered judgment no
+judgment would ever be delivered. All men could do as they please,
+without reproof or dissent. I wish you would take your heart out of
+your head, old man. The best heart makes a bad head if housed there.
+
+
+The friends that warned you against the precarious nature of my
+friendship were right. To hold my regard one must fulfil hard
+conditions--hard if one is not what one should be; easy if one is. I
+have, indeed, a habit of calmly considering the character of a man
+with whom I have fallen into any intimacy and, whether I have any
+grievance against him or not, informing him by letter that I no longer
+desire his acquaintance. This, I do after deciding that he is not
+truthful, candid, without conceit, and so forth--in brief, honorable.
+If any one is conscious that he is not in all respects worthy of my
+friendship he would better not cultivate it, for assuredly no one can
+long conceal his true character from an observant student of it. Yes,
+my friendship is a precarious possession. It grows more so the longer
+I live, and the less I feel the need of a multitude of friends. So,
+if in your heart you are conscious of being any of the things which
+you accuse _me_ of being, or anything else equally objectionable (to
+_me_) I can only advise you to drop me before I drop you.
+
+Certainly you have an undoubted right to your opinion of my ability,
+my attainments and my standing. If you choose to publish a censorious
+judgment of these matters, do so by all means: I don't think I ever
+cared a cent for what was printed about me, except as it supplied me
+with welcome material for my pen. One may presumably have a "sense of
+duty to the public," and the like. But convincing one person (one at a
+time) of one's friend's deficiencies is hardly worth while, and is to
+be judged differently. It comes under another rule. * * *
+
+Maybe, as you say, my work lacks "soul," but my life does not, as a
+man's life is the man. Personally, I hold that sentiment has a place
+in this world, and that loyalty to a friend is not inferior as a
+characteristic to correctness of literary judgment. If there is a
+heaven I think it is more valued there. If Mr. * * * (your publisher
+as well as mine) had considered you a Homer, a Goethe or a Shakspeare
+a team of horses could not have drawn from _me_ the expression of a
+lower estimate. And let me tell you that if you are going through life
+as a mere thinking machine, ignoring the generous promptings of the
+heart, sacrificing it to the brain, you will have a hard row to hoe,
+and the outcome, when you survey it from the vantage ground of age,
+will not please you. You seem to me to be beginning rather badly, as
+regards both your fortune and your peace of mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I saw * * * every day while in New York, and he does not know that I
+feel the slightest resentment toward you, nor do I know it myself. So
+far as he knows, or is likely to know (unless you will have it
+otherwise) you and I are the best of friends, or rather, I am the best
+of friends to you. And I guess that is so. I could no more hate you
+for your disposition and character than I could for your hump if you
+had one. You are as Nature has made you, and your defects, whether
+they are great or small, are your misfortunes. I would remove them if
+I could, but I know that I cannot, for one of them is inability to
+discern the others, even when they are pointed out.
+
+I must commend your candor in one thing. You confirm * * * words in
+saying that you commented on "my seeming lack of sympathy with certain
+modern masters," which you attribute to my not having read them. That
+is a conclusion to which a low order of mind in sympathy with the
+"modern masters" naturally jumps, but it is hardly worthy of a man of
+your brains. It is like your former lofty assumption that I had not
+read some ten or twelve philosophers, naming them, nearly all of whom
+I had read, and laughed at, before you were born. In fact, one of your
+most conspicuous characteristics is the assumption that what a man who
+does not care to "talk shop" does not speak of, and vaunt his
+knowledge of, he does not know. I once thought this a boyish fault,
+but you are no longer a boy. Your "modern masters" are Ibsen and Shaw,
+with both of whose works and ways I am thoroughly familiar, and both
+of whom I think very small men--pets of the drawing-room and gods of
+the hour. No, I am not an "up to date" critic, thank God. I am not a
+literary critic at all, and never, or very seldom, have gone into that
+field except in pursuance of a personal object--to help a good writer
+(who is commonly a friend)--maybe you can recall such instances--or
+laugh at a fool. Surely you do not consider my work in the
+Cosmopolitan (mere badinage and chaff, the only kind of stuff that the
+magazine wants from me, or will print) essays in literary criticism.
+It has never occurred to me to look upon myself as a literary critic;
+if you _must_ prick my bubble please to observe that it contains more
+of your breath than of mine. Yet you have sometimes seemed to value, I
+thought, some of my notions about even poetry. * * *
+
+Perhaps I am unfortunate in the matter of keeping friends; I know, and
+have abundant reason to know, that you are at least equally luckless
+in the matter of making them. I could put my finger on the very
+qualities in you that make you so, and the best service that I could
+do you would be to point them out and take the consequences. That is
+to say, it would serve you many years hence; at present you are like
+Carlyle's "Mankind"; you "refuse to be served." You only consent to be
+enraged.
+
+I bear you no ill will, shall watch your career in letters with
+friendly solicitude--have, in fact, just sent to the * * * a most
+appreciative paragraph about your book, which may or may not commend
+itself to the editor; most of what I write does not. I hope to do a
+little, now and then, to further your success in letters. I wish you
+were different (and that is the harshest criticism that I ever uttered
+of you except to yourself) and wish it for your sake more than for
+mine. I am older than you and probably more "acquainted with
+grief"--the grief of disappointment and disillusion. If in the future
+you are convinced that you have become different, and I am still
+living, my welcoming hand awaits you. And when I forgive I forgive all
+over, even the new offence.
+
+Miller undoubtedly is sincere in his praise of you, for with all his
+faults and follies he is always generous and usually over generous to
+other poets. There's nothing little and mean in him. Sing ho for
+Joaquin!
+
+
+If I "made you famous" please remember that you were guilty of
+contributory negligence by meriting the fame. "Eternal vigilance" is
+the price of its permanence. Don't loaf on your job.
+
+
+I have told her of a certain "enchanted forest" hereabout to which I
+feel myself sometimes strongly drawn as a fitting place to lay down
+"my weary body and my head." (Perhaps you remember your Swinburne:
+
+ "Ah yet, would God this flesh of mine might be
+ Where air might wash and long leaves cover me!
+ Ah yet, would God that roots and stems were bred
+ Out of my weary body and my head.")
+
+The element of enchantment in that forest is supplied by my wandering
+and dreaming in it forty-one years ago when I was a-soldiering and
+there were new things under a new sun. It is miles away, but from a
+near-by summit I can overlook the entire region--ridge beyond ridge,
+parted by purple valleys full of sleep. Unlike me, it has not visibly
+altered in all these years, except that I miss, here and there, a thin
+blue ghost of smoke from an enemy's camp. Can you guess my feelings
+when I view this Dream-land--my Realm of Adventure, inhabited by
+memories that beckon me from every valley? I shall go; I shall retrace
+my old routes and lines of march; stand in my old camps; inspect my
+battlefields to see that all is right and undisturbed. I shall go to
+the Enchanted Forest.
+
+
+
+
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+<pre>
+
+Project Gutenberg's The Letters of Ambrose Bierce, by Ambrose Bierce
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+ With a Memoir by George Sterling
+
+Author: Ambrose Bierce
+
+Editor: Bertha Clark Pope
+
+Release Date: May 25, 2011 [EBook #36218]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LETTERS OF AMBROSE BIERCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Melissa McDaniel and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tnbox">
+<p class="center"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b></p>
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original
+document have been preserved.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1><i>The Letters of Ambrose Bierce</i></h1>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/frontis.jpg" width="369" height="534" alt="Portrait of Bierce" />
+</div>
+
+<h2><i>The</i><br />
+<i>Letters of Ambrose Bierce</i></h2>
+
+<p class="p4 center"><small>EDITED BY</small></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap"><big><b>Bertha Clark Pope</b></big></span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><small>WITH A MEMOIR BY</small></p>
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap"><big><b>George Sterling</b></big></span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/logoa.png" width="247" height="200" alt="Printer's Logo" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">San Francisco</span></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">The Book Club of California</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">1922</p>
+
+<p class="p6"><i>In reproducing these letters we have followed as nearly as possible the original
+manuscripts. This inevitably has caused a certain lack of uniformity throughout
+the volume, as in the case of the names of magazines and newspapers, which
+are sometimes italicized and sometimes in quotation marks.</i>&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Editor.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center p6">COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY THE CALIFORNIA BOOK CLUB</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter p6">
+<img src="images/section.png" width="300" height="33" alt="new section" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="c15" />
+
+<h2 class="p2"><i>The Introduction</i></h2>
+<p class="center p2"><big><b><i>by</i> <span class="smcap">Bertha Clark Pope</span></b></big></p>
+<hr class="c15" />
+
+<p><i>"The question that starts to the lips of ninety-nine readers<span class="pagenum">v</span>
+out of a hundred," says Arnold Bennett, in a review
+in the London </i><span class="smcap">New Age</span><i> in 1909, "even the
+best informed, will assuredly be: 'Who is Ambrose Bierce?'
+I scarcely know, but I will say that among what I may term
+'underground reputations' that of Ambrose Bierce is perhaps
+the most striking example. You may wander for years
+through literary circles and never meet anybody who has
+heard of Ambrose Bierce, and then you may hear some erudite
+student whisper in an awed voice: 'Ambrose Bierce is
+the greatest living prose writer.' I have heard such an opinion
+expressed."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Bierce himself shows his recognition of the "underground"
+quality of his reputation in a letter to George Sterling: "How
+many times, and during a period of how many years must
+one's unexplainable obscurity be pointed out to constitute
+fame? Not knowing, I am almost disposed to consider myself
+the most famous of authors. I have pretty nearly ceased
+to be 'discovered,' but my notoriety as an obscurian may be
+said to be worldwide and everlasting."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Anything which would throw light on such a figure, at once
+obscure and famous, is valuable. These letters of Ambrose<span class="pagenum">vi</span>
+Bierce, here printed for the first time, are therefore of unusual
+interest. They are the informal literary work&mdash;the term
+is used advisedly&mdash;of a man esteemed great by a small but
+acutely critical group, read enthusiastically by a somewhat
+larger number to whom critical examination of what they
+read seldom occurs, and ignored by the vast majority of readers;
+a man at once more hated and more adored than any on
+the Pacific Coast; a man not ten years off the scene yet already
+become a tradition and a legend; whose life, no less than his
+death, held elements of mystery, baffling contradictions, problems
+for puzzled conjecture, motives and meanings not
+vouchsafed to outsiders.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Were Ambrose Bierce as well known as he deserves to be,
+the introduction to these letters could be slight; we should not
+have to stop to inquire who he was and what he did. As it is,
+we must.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Ambrose Bierce, the son of Marcus Aurelius and Laura
+(Sherwood) Bierce, born in Meiggs County, Ohio, June 24,
+1842, was at the outbreak of the Civil War a youth without
+formal education, but with a mind already trained. "My
+father was a poor farmer," he once said to a friend, "and
+could give me no general education, but he had a good library,
+and to his books I owe all that I have." He promptly volunteered
+in 1861 and served throughout the war. Twice, at
+the risk of his life, he rescued wounded companions from the
+battlefield, and at Kenesaw Mountain was himself severely
+wounded in the head. He was brevetted Major for distinguished<span class="pagenum">vii</span>
+services; but in after life never permitted the title to
+be used in addressing him. There is a story that when the war
+was over he tossed up a coin to determine what should be his
+career. Whatever the determining auguries, he came at once
+to San Francisco to join his favorite brother Albert&mdash;there
+were ten brothers and sisters to choose from&mdash;and for a short
+time worked with him in the Mint; he soon began writing
+paragraphs for the weeklies, particularly the </i><span class="smcap">Argonaut</span><i>
+and the </i><span class="smcap">News Letter</span><i>.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"I was a slovenly writer in those days," he observes in a
+letter forty years later, "though enough better than my neighbors
+to have attracted my own attention. My knowledge of
+English was imperfect 'a whole lot.' Indeed, my intellectual
+status (whatever it may be, and God knows it's enough to
+make me blush) was of slow growth&mdash;as was my moral. I
+mean, I had not literary sincerity." Apparently, attention
+other than his own was attracted, for he was presently editing
+the </i><span class="smcap">News Letter</span><i>.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In 1872 he went to London and for four years was on the
+staff of </i><span class="smcap">Fun</span><i>. In London Bierce found congenial and stimulating
+associates. The great man of his circle was George
+Augustus Sala, "one of the most skilful, finished journalists
+ever known," a keen satiric wit, and the author of a ballad of
+which it is said that Swift might have been proud. Another
+notable figure was Tom Hood the younger, mordantly humorous.
+The satiric style in journalism was popular then; and
+"personal" journals were so personal that one "Jimmy"
+Davis, editor of the </i><span class="smcap">Cuckoo</span><i> and the </i><span class="smcap">Bat</span><i> successively,
+found it healthful to remain some years in exile in France.<span class="pagenum">viii</span>
+Bierce contributed to several of these and to </i><span class="smcap">Figaro</span><i>, the
+editor of which was James Mortimer. To this gentleman
+Bierce owed what he designated as the distinction of being
+"probably the only American journalist who was ever employed
+by an Empress in so congenial a pursuit as the pursuit
+of another journalist." This other journalist was M.
+Henri Rochefort, communard, formerly editor of </i><span class="smcap">La Lanterne</span><i>
+in Paris, in which he had made incessant war upon
+the Empire and all its personnel, particularly the Empress.
+When, an exile, Rochefort announced his intention of renewing
+</i><span class="smcap">La Lanterne</span><i> in London, the exiled Empress
+circumvented him by secretly copyrighting the title, </i><span class="smcap">The
+Lantern</span><i>, and proceeding to publish a periodical under
+that name with the purpose of undermining his influence.
+Two numbers were enough; M. Rochefort fled to Belgium.
+Bierce said that in "the field of chromatic journalism" it
+was the finest thing that ever came from a press, but of the
+literary excellence of the twelve pages he felt less qualified
+for judgment as he had written every line.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>This was in 1874. Two years earlier, under his journalistic
+pseudonym of "Dod Grile," he had published his first
+books&mdash;two small volumes, largely made up of his articles
+in the San Francisco </i><span class="smcap">News Letter</span><i>, called </i>The Fiend's
+Delight<i>, and </i>Nuggets And Dust Panned Out In California<i>.
+Now, he used the same pseudonym on the title-page of
+a third volume, </i>Cobwebs from an Empty Skull<i>. The
+</i>Cobwebs<i> were selections from his work in </i><span class="smcap">Fun</span><i>&mdash;satirical
+tales and fables, often inspired by weird old woodcuts given<span class="pagenum">ix</span>
+him by the editors with the request that he write something
+to fit. His journalistic associates praised these volumes liberally,
+and a more distinguished admirer was Gladstone, who,
+discovering the </i>Cobwebs<i> in a second-hand bookshop, voiced
+his delight in their cleverness, and by his praise gave a certain
+currency to Bierce's name among the London elect. But
+despite so distinguished a sponsor, the books remained generally
+unknown.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Congenial tasks and association with the brilliant journalists
+of the day did not prevent Bierce from being undeniably
+hard up at times. In 1876 he returned to San Francisco,
+where he remained for twenty-one years, save for a brief
+but eventful career as general manager of a mining company
+near Deadwood, South Dakota. All this time he got his
+living by writing special articles&mdash;for the </i><span class="smcap">Wasp</span><i>, a weekly
+whose general temper may be accurately surmised from its
+name, and, beginning in 1886, for the </i><span class="smcap">Examiner</span><i>, in which
+he conducted every Sunday on the editorial page a department
+to which he gave the title he had used for a similar column
+in </i><span class="smcap">The Lantern</span>&mdash;Prattle<i>. A partial explanation
+of a mode of feeling and a choice of themes which Bierce developed
+more and more, ultimately to the practical exclusion
+of all others, is to be found in the particular phase through
+which California journalism was just then passing.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In the evolution of the comic spirit the lowest stage, that of
+delight in inflicting pain on others, is clearly manifest in savages,
+small boys, and early American journalism. It was exhibited
+in all parts of America&mdash;Mark Twain gives a vivid<span class="pagenum">x</span>
+example in his </i>Journalistic Wild Oats<i> of what it was in
+Tennessee&mdash;but with particular intensity in San Francisco.
+As a community, San Francisco exalted personal courage,
+directness of encounter, straight and effective shooting. The
+social group was so small and so homogeneous that any news
+of importance would be well known before it could be reported,
+set up in type, printed, and circulated. It was isolated by so
+great distances from the rest of the world that for years no
+pretense was made of furnishing adequate news from the
+outside. So the newspapers came to rely on other sorts of interest.
+They were pamphlets for the dissemination of the opinions
+of the groups controlling them, and weapons for doing
+battle, if need be, for those opinions. And there was abundant
+occasion: municipal affairs were corrupt, courts weak
+or venal, or both. Editors and readers enjoyed a good fight;
+they also wanted humorous entertainment; they happily combined
+the two. In the creative dawn of 1847 when the foundations
+of the journalistic earth were laid and those two morning
+stars, the </i><span class="smcap">Californian</span><i> of Monterey and the </i><span class="smcap">California
+Star</span><i> of San Francisco, sang together, we find the
+editors attacking the community generally, and each other
+particularly, with the utmost ferocity, laying about them
+right and left with verbal broad-axes, crow-bars, and such
+other weapons as might be immediately at hand. The </i><span class="smcap">California
+Star's</span><i> introduction to the public of what would,
+in our less direct day, be known as its "esteemed contemporary"
+is typical:</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><i>"We have received two late numbers of the </i><span class="smcap">Californian</span><i>, a<span class="pagenum">xi</span>
+dim, dirty little paper printed in Monterey on the worn-out materials
+of one of the old California </i><span class="smcap">WAR PRESSES</span><i>. It is published
+and edited by Walter Colton and Robert Semple, the one a </i><span class="smcap">WHINING
+SYCOPHANT</span><i>, and the other an </i><span class="smcap">OVER-GROWN LICK-SPITTLE</span><i>.
+At the top of one of the papers we find the words 'please exchange.'
+This would be considered in almost any other country a
+bare-faced attempt to swindle us. We should consider it so now
+were it not for the peculiar situation of our country which induces
+us to do a great deal for others in order for them to do us a
+little good.... We have concluded to give our paper to them this
+year, so as to afford them some insight into the manner in which
+a Republican newspaper should be conducted. They appear now
+to be awfully verdant."</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Down through the seventies and eighties the tradition persisted,
+newspapers being bought and read, as a historian of
+journalism asserts, not so much for news as to see who was
+getting "lambasted" that day. It is not strange, then, that
+journals of redoubtable pugnacity were popular, or that editors
+favored writers who were likely to excel in the gladiatorial
+style. It is significant that public praise first came to
+Bierce through his articles in the caustic </i><span class="smcap">News Letter</span><i>,
+widely read on the Pacific Coast during the seventies. Once
+launched in this line, he became locally famous for his fierce
+and witty articles in the </i><span class="smcap">Argonaunt</span><i> and the </i><span class="smcap">Wasp</span><i>, and for
+many years his column </i>Prattle<i> in the </i><span class="smcap">Examiner</span><i> was, in the
+words of Mr. Bailey Millard, "the most wickedly clever, the
+most audaciously personal, and the most eagerly devoured
+column of </i>causerie<i> that ever was printed in this country."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In 1896 Bierce was sent to Washington to fight, through<span class="pagenum">xii</span>
+the Hearst newspapers, the "refunding bill" which Collis
+P. Huntington was trying to get passed, releasing his Central
+Pacific Railroad from its obligations to the government.
+A year later he went again to Washington, where he remained
+during the rest of his journalistic career, as correspondent
+for the New York </i><span class="smcap">American</span><i>, conducting also for
+some years a department in the </i><span class="smcap">Cosmopolitan</span><i>.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Much of Bierce's best work was done in those years in San
+Francisco. Through the columns of the </i><span class="smcap">Wasp</span><i> and the </i><span class="smcap">Examiner</span><i>
+his wit played free; he wielded an extraordinary
+influence; his trenchant criticism made and unmade reputations&mdash;literary
+and otherwise. But this to Bierce was mostly
+"journalism, a thing so low that it cannot be mentioned in
+the same breath with literature." His real interest lay elsewhere.
+Throughout the early eighties he devoted himself to
+writing stories; all were rejected by the magazine editors to
+whom he offered them. When finally in 1890 he gathered
+these stories together into book form and offered them to the
+leading publishers of the country, they too, would have none
+of them. "These men," writes Mr. Bailey Millard, "admitted
+the purity of his diction and the magic of his haunting
+power, but the stories were regarded as revolting."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>At last, in 1891, his first book of stories, </i>Tales of Soldiers
+and Civilians<i>, saw the reluctant light of day. It had this for
+foreword:</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><i>"Denied existence by the chief publishing houses of the country,
+this book owes itself to Mr. E. L. G. Steele, merchant, of this city,
+[San Francisco]. In attesting Mr. Steele's faith in his judgment<span class="pagenum">xiii</span>
+and his friend, it will serve its author's main and best ambition."</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>There is Biercean pugnacity in these words; the author
+flings down the gauntlet with a confident gesture. But it
+cannot be said that anything much happened to discomfit
+the publishing houses of little faith. Apparently, Bierce had
+thought to appeal past the dull and unjust verdict of such
+lower courts to the higher tribunal of the critics and possibly
+an elect group of general readers who might be expected to
+recognize and welcome something rare. But judgment was
+scarcely reversed. Only a few critics were discerning, and
+the book had no vogue. When </i>The Monk and the Hangman's
+Daughter<i> was published by F. J. Schulte and Company,
+Chicago, the next year, and </i>Can Such Things Be<i> by
+The Cassell Publishing Company, the year following, a few
+enthusiastic critics could find no words strong enough to describe
+Bierce's vivid imagination, his uncanny divination
+of atavistic terrors in man's consciousness, his chiseled perfection
+of style; but the critics who disapproved had even
+more trouble in finding words strong enough for their purposes
+and, as before, there was no general appreciation.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>For the next twenty years Ambrose Bierce was a prolific
+writer but, whatever the reason, no further volumes of stories
+from his pen were presented to the world. </i>Black Beetles
+in Amber<i>, a collection of satiric verse, had appeared the
+same year as </i>The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter<i>;
+then for seven years, with the exception of a republication
+by G. P. Putnam's Sons of </i>Tales of Soldiers and Civilians<i>
+under the title, </i>In the Midst of Life<i>, no books by Bierce.<span class="pagenum">xiv</span>
+In 1899 appeared </i>Fantastic Fables<i>; in 1903 </i>Shapes of
+Clay<i>, more satiric verse; in 1906 </i>The Cynic's Word
+Book<i>, a dictionary of wicked epigrams; in 1909 </i>Write it
+Right<i>, a blacklist of literary faults, and </i>The Shadow on
+the Dial<i>, a collection of essays covering, to quote from the
+preface of S. O. Howes, "a wide range of subjects, embracing
+among other things, government, dreams, writers of dialect
+and dogs"&mdash;Mr. Howes might have heightened his crescendo
+by adding "emancipated woman"; and finally&mdash;1909
+to 1912&mdash;</i>The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce<i>,
+containing all his work previously published in book form,
+save the two last mentioned, and much more besides, all collected
+and edited by Bierce himself.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>On October 2, 1913, Ambrose Bierce, having settled his
+business affairs, left Washington for a trip through the southern
+states, declaring in letters his purpose of going into Mexico
+and later on to South America. The fullest account of his
+trip and his plans is afforded by a newspaper clipping he
+sent his niece in a letter dated November 6, 1913; through
+the commonplaceness of the reportorial vocabulary shines out
+the vivid personality that was making its final exit:</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><i>"Traveling over the same ground that he had covered with
+General Hazen's brigade during the Civil War, Ambrose Bierce,
+famed writer and noted critic, has arrived in New Orleans. Not
+that this city was one of the places figuring in his campaigns, for
+he was here after and not during the war. He has come to New
+Orleans in a haphazard, fancy-free way, making a trip toward
+Mexico. The places that he has visited on the way down have become<span class="pagenum">xv</span>
+famous in song and story&mdash;places where the greatest battles
+were fought, where the moon shone at night on the burial corps,
+and where in day the sun shone bright on polished bayonets and
+the smoke drifted upward from the cannon mouths.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"For Mr. Bierce was at Chickamauga; he was at Shiloh; at
+Murfreesboro; Kenesaw Mountain, Franklin and Nashville.
+And then when wounded during the Atlanta campaign he was
+invalided home. He 'has never amounted to much since then,' he
+said Saturday. But his stories of the great struggle, living as
+deathless characterizations of the bloody episodes, stand for what
+he 'has amounted to since then.'</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"Perhaps it was in mourning for the dead over whose battlefields
+he has been wending his way toward New Orleans that
+Mr. Bierce was dressed in black. From head to foot he was
+attired in this color, except where the white cuffs and collar
+and shirt front showed through. He even carried a walking
+cane, black as ebony and unrelieved by gold or silver. But his
+eyes, blue and piercing as when they strove to see through the
+smoke at Chickamauga, retained all the fire of the indomitable
+fighter.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"'I'm on my way to Mexico, because I like the game,' he said,
+'I like the fighting; I want to see it. And then I don't think Americans
+are as oppressed there as they say they are, and I want to
+get at the true facts of the case. Of course, I'm not going into the
+country if I find it unsafe for Americans to be there, but I want to
+take a trip diagonally across from northeast to southwest by
+horseback, and then take ship for South America, go over the
+Andes and across that continent, if possible, and come back to
+America again.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"'There is no family that I have to take care of; I've retired
+from writing and I'm going to take a rest. No, my trip isn't for
+local color. I've retired just the same as a merchant or business<span class="pagenum">xvi</span>
+man retires. I'm leaving the field for the younger authors.'</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"An inquisitive question was interjected as to whether Mr.
+Bierce had acquired a competency only from his writings, but he
+did not take offense.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"'My wants are few, and modest,' he said, 'and my royalties
+give me quite enough to live on. There isn't much that I need,
+and I spend my time in quiet travel. For the last five years I
+haven't done any writing. Don't you think that after a man has
+worked as long as I have that he deserves a rest? But perhaps
+after I have rested I might work some more&mdash;I can't tell, there
+are so many things&mdash;' and the straightforward blue eyes took on
+a faraway look, 'there are so many things that might happen between
+now and when I come back. My trip might take several
+years, and I'm an old man now.'</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"Except for the thick, snow-white hair no one would think him
+old. His hands are steady, and he stands up straight and tall&mdash;perhaps
+six feet."</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>In December of that same year the last letter he is known
+to have written was received by his daughter. It is dated
+from Chihuahua, and mentions casually that he has attached
+himself unofficially to a division of Villa's army, and
+speaks of a prospective advance on Ojinaga. No further
+word has ever come from or of Ambrose Bierce. Whether
+illness overtook him, then an old man of seventy-one, and
+death suddenly, or whether, preferring to go foaming over
+a precipice rather than to straggle out in sandy deltas, he
+deliberately went where he knew death was, no one can say.
+His last letters, dauntless, grave, tender, do not say, though
+they suggest much. "You must try to forgive my obstinacy
+in not 'perishing' where I am," he wrote as he left Washington.<span class="pagenum">xvii</span>
+"I want to be where something worth while is going
+on, or where nothing whatever is going on." "Good-bye&mdash;if
+you hear of my being stood up against a Mexican stone
+wall and shot to rags please know that I think that a pretty
+good way to depart this life. It beats old age, disease, or falling
+down the cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in Mexico&mdash;ah,
+that is euthanasia!" Whatever end Ambrose Bierce found
+in Mexico, the lines of George Sterling well express what
+must have been his attitude in meeting it:</i></p>
+
+<div class="poem">
+<p><i>"Dream you he was afraid to live?<br />
+<span class="i1">Dream you he was afraid to die?</span><br />
+<span class="i1">Or that, a suppliant of the sky,</span><br />
+He begged the gods to keep or give?<br />
+Not thus the shadow-maker stood,<br />
+<span class="i1">Whose scrutiny dissolved so well</span><br />
+<span class="i1">Our thin mirage of Heaven or Hell&mdash;</span><br />
+The doubtful evil, dubious good....</i></p>
+<p><i>"If now his name be with the dead,<br />
+<span class="i1">And where the gaunt agaves flow'r,</span><br />
+<span class="i1">The vulture and the wolf devour</span><br />
+The lion-heart, the lion-head,<br />
+Be sure that heart and head were laid<br />
+<span class="i1">In wisdom down, content to die;</span><br />
+<span class="i1">Be sure he faced the Starless Sky</span><br />
+Unduped, unmurmuring, unafraid."</i></p></div>
+
+<p><i>In any consideration of the work of Ambrose Bierce, a central
+question must be why it contains so much that is trivial
+or ephemeral. Another question facing every critic of Bierce,
+is why the fundamentally original point of view, the clarity<span class="pagenum">xviii</span>
+of workmanship of his best things&mdash;mainly stories&mdash;did not
+win him immediate and general recognition.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>A partial answer to both questions is to be found in a certain
+discord between Bierce and his setting. Bierce, paradoxically,
+combined the bizarre in substance, the severely
+restrained and compressed in form. An ironic mask covered
+a deep-seated sensibility; but sensibility and irony were alike
+subject to an uncompromising truthfulness; he would have
+given deep-throated acclaim to Clough's</i></p>
+
+<p class="poem"><i>
+<span class="o1">"But play no tricks upon thy soul, O man,</span><br />
+Let truth be truth, and life the thing it can."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>He had the aristocrat's contempt for mass feeling, a selectiveness
+carried so far that he instinctively chose for themes
+the picked person and experience, the one decisive moment of
+crisis. He viewed his characters not in relation to other men
+and in normal activities; he isolated them&mdash;often amid abnormalities.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>All this was in sharp contrast to the literary fashion obtaining
+when he dipped his pen to try his luck as a creative
+artist. The most popular novelist of the day was Dickens;
+the most popular poet, Tennyson. Neither looked straight at
+life; both veiled it: one in benevolence, the other in beauty.
+Direct and painful verities were best tolerated by the reading
+public when exhibited as instances of the workings of
+natural law. The spectator of the macrocosm in action could
+stomach the wanton destruction of a given human atom; one
+so privileged could and did excuse the Creator for small mistakes
+like harrying Hetty Sorrell to the gallow's foot, because<span class="pagenum">xix</span>
+of the conviction that, taking the Universe by and
+large, "He was a good fellow, and 'twould all be well."
+This benevolent optimism was the offspring of a strange
+pair, evangelicism and evolution; and in the minds of the
+great public whom Bierce, under other circumstances and
+with a slightly different mixture of qualities in himself,
+might have conquered, it became a large, soft insincerity
+that demanded "happy endings," a profuse broadness of
+treatment prohibitive of harsh simplicity, a swathing of
+elemental emotion in gentility or moral edification.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>But to Bierce's mind, "noble and nude and antique," this
+mid-Victorian draping and bedecking of "unpleasant
+truths" was abhorrent. Absolutely direct and unafraid&mdash;not
+only in his personal relations but, what is more rare, in
+his thinking&mdash;he regarded easy optimism, sure that God is
+in his heaven with consequently good effects upon the world,
+as blindness, and the hopefulness that demanded always
+the "happy ending," as silly. In many significant passages
+Bierce's attitude is the ironic one of Voltaire: "'Had not
+Pangloss got himself hanged,' replied Candide, 'he would
+have given us most excellent advice in this emergency; for
+he was a profound philosopher.'" Bierce did not fear to bring
+in disconcerting evidence that </i>a priori<i> reasoning may prove
+a not infallible guide, that causes do not always produce the
+effects complacently pre-argued, and that the notion of this
+as the best of all possible worlds is sometimes beside the point.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>The themes permitted by such an attitude were certain to
+displease the readers of that period. In </i>Tales of Soldiers<span class="pagenum">xx</span>
+and Civilians<i>, his first book of stories, he looks squarely and
+grimly at one much bedecked subject of the time&mdash;war; not
+the fine gay gallantry of war, the music and the marching
+and the romantic episodes; but the ghastly horror of it;
+through his vivid, dramatic passages beats a hatred of war,
+not merely "unrighteous" war, but all war, the more disquieting
+because never allowed to become articulate. With
+bitter but beautiful truth he brings each tale to its tragic
+close, always with one last turn of the screw, one unexpected
+horror more. And in this book&mdash;note the solemn implication
+of the title he later gave it, </i>In the Midst of Life<i>&mdash;as well
+as in the next, </i>Can Such Things Be<i>, is still another subject
+which Bierce alone in his generation seemed unafraid
+to consider curiously: "Death, in warfare and in the horrid
+guise of the supernatural, was painted over and over. Man's
+terror in the face of death gave the artist his cue for his wonderful
+physical and psychologic microscopics. You could not
+pin this work down as realism, or as romance; it was the
+greatest human drama&mdash;the conflict between life and death&mdash;fused
+through genius. Not Zola, in the endless pages of his
+</i>Debâcle<i>, not the great Tolstoi in his great </i>War and Peace<i>
+had ever painted war, horrid war, more faithfully than any
+of the stories of this book; not Maupassant had invented out
+of war's terrible truths more dramatically imagined plots....
+There painted an artist who had seen the thing itself,
+and being a genius, had made it an art still greater.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Death of the young, the beautiful, the brave, was the closing
+note of every line of the ten stories of war in this book.<span class="pagenum">xxi</span>
+The brilliant, spectacular death that came to such senseless
+bravery as Tennyson hymned for the music-hall intelligence
+in his </i>Charge of the Light Brigade<i>; the vision-starting,
+slow, soul-drugging death by hanging; the multiplied, comprehensible
+death that makes rivers near battlefields run
+red; the death that comes by sheer terror; death actual and
+imagined&mdash;every sort of death was on these pages, so painted
+as to make Pierre Loti's </i>Book of Pity and Death<i> seem
+but feeble fumbling."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Now death by the mid-Victorian was considered almost
+as undesirable an element in society as sex itself. Both must
+be passed over in silence or presented decently draped. In
+the eighties any writer who dealt unabashed with death
+was regarded as an unpleasant person. "Revolting!" cried
+the critics when they read Bierce's </i>Chickamauga<i> and
+</i>The Affair at Coulter's Notch<i>.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Bierce's style, too, by its very fineness, alienated his public.
+Superior, keen, perfect in detail, finite, compressed&mdash;such
+was his manner in the free and easy, prolix, rambling, multitudinous
+nineteenth century.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Bierce himself knew that although it is always the fashion
+to jeer at fashion, its rule is absolute for all that, whether
+it be fashion in boots or books.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"A correspondent of mine," he wrote in 1887 in his </i><span class="smcap">Examiner</span><i>
+column, "a well-known and clever writer, appears
+surprised because I do not like the work of Robert Louis
+Stevenson. I am equally hurt to know that he does. If he was
+ever a boy he knows that the year is divided, not into seasons<span class="pagenum">xxii</span>
+and months, as is vulgarly supposed, but into 'top time,'
+'marble time,' 'kite time,' et cetera, and woe to the boy
+who ignores the unwritten calendar, amusing himself according
+to the dictates of an irresponsible conscience. I venture
+to remind my correspondent that a somewhat similar
+system obtains in matters of literature&mdash;a word which I beg
+him to observe means fiction. There are, for illustration&mdash;or
+rather, there were&mdash;James time, Howells time, Crawford
+time, Russell time and Conway time, each epoch&mdash;named for
+the immortal novelist of the time being&mdash;lasting, generally
+speaking, as much as a year.... All the more rigorous is the
+law of observance. It is not permitted to admire Jones in
+Smith time. I must point out to my heedless correspondent
+that this is not Stevenson time&mdash;that was last year." It was
+decidedly not Bierce time when Bierce's stories appeared.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>And there was in him no compromise&mdash;or so he thought.
+"A great artist," he wrote to George Sterling, "is superior
+to his world and his time, or at least to his parish and his
+day." His practical application of that belief is shown in a
+letter to a magazine editor who had just rejected a satire he
+had submitted:</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"Even </i>you<i> ask for literature&mdash;if my stories are literature,
+as you are good enough to imply. (By the way, all the leading
+publishers of the country turned down that book until they
+saw it published without them by a merchant in San Francisco
+and another sort of publishers in London, Leipsig and
+Paris.) Well, you wouldn't do a thing to one of my stories!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"No, thank you; if I have to write rot, I prefer to do it for<span class="pagenum">xxiii</span>
+the newspapers, which make no false pretenses and are
+frankly rotten, and in which the badness of a bad thing escapes
+detection or is forgotten as soon as it is cold.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"I know how to write a story (of 'happy ending' sort) for
+magazine readers for whom literature is too good, but I will
+not do so, so long as stealing is more honorable and interesting.
+I have offered you ... the best that I am able to make; and
+now you must excuse me." In these two utterances we have
+some clue to the secret of his having ceased, in 1893, to publish
+stories. Vigorously refusing to yield in the slightest degree
+to the public so far as his stories were concerned, he
+abandoned his best field of creative effort and became almost
+exclusively a "columnist" and a satirist; he put his world to
+rout, and left his "parish and his day" resplendently the
+victors.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>All this must not be taken to mean that the "form and
+pressure of the time" put into Bierce what was not there.
+Even in his creative work he had a satiric bent; his early
+training and associations, too, had been in journalistic satire.
+Under any circumstances he undoubtedly would have
+written satire&mdash;columns of it for his daily bread, books of
+it for self-expression; but under more favorable circumstances
+he would have kept on writing other sort of books
+as well. Lovers of literature may well lament that Bierce's
+insistence on going his way and the demands of his "parish"
+forced him to overdevelop one power to the almost complete
+paralysis of another and a perhaps finer.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>As a satirist Bierce was the best America has produced,<span class="pagenum">xxiv</span>
+perhaps the best since Voltaire. But when he confined himself
+to "exploring the ways of hate as a form of creative energy,"
+it was with a hurt in his soul, and with some intellectual
+and spiritual confusion. There resulted a kink in his
+nature, a contradiction that appears repeatedly, not only in
+his life, but in his writings. A striking instance is found in
+his article </i>To Train a Writer<i>:</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><i>"He should, for example, forget that he is an American and
+remember that he is a man. He should be neither Christian nor
+Jew, nor Buddhist, nor Mahometan, nor Snake Worshiper. To
+local standards of right and wrong he should be civilly indifferent.
+In the virtues, so-called, he should discern only the rough notes
+of a general expediency; in fixed moral principles only time-saving
+predecisions of cases not yet before the court of conscience. Happiness
+should disclose itself to his enlarging intelligence as the end
+and purpose of life; art and love as the only means to happiness.
+He should free himself of all doctrines, theories, etiquettes, politics,
+simplifying his life and mind, attaining clarity with breadth
+and unity with height. To him a continent should not seem wide nor
+a century long. And it would be needful that he know and have
+an ever-present consciousness that this is a world of fools and
+rogues, blind with superstition, tormented with envy, consumed
+with vanity, selfish, false, cruel, cursed with illusions&mdash;frothing
+mad!"</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>Up to that last sentence Ambrose Bierce beholds this world
+as one where tolerance, breadth of view, simplicity of life
+and mind, clear thinking, are at most attainable, at least
+worthy of the effort to attain; he regards life as purposive,
+as having happiness for its end, and art and love as the
+means to that good end. But suddenly the string from which<span class="pagenum">xxv</span>
+he has been evoking these broad harmonies snaps with a
+snarl. All is evil and hopeless&mdash;"frothing mad." Both views
+cannot be held simultaneously by the same mind. Which was
+the real belief of Ambrose Bierce? The former, it seems clear.
+But he has been hired to be a satirist.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>On the original fabric of Bierce's mind the satiric strand
+has encroached more than the design allows. There results
+not only considerable obliteration of the main design, but
+confusion in the substituted one. For it is significant that
+much of the work of Bierce seems to be that of what he would
+have called a futilitarian, that he seldom seems able to find
+a suitable field for his satire, a foeman worthy of such perfect
+steel as he brings to the encounter; he fights on all fields,
+on both sides, against all comers; ubiquitous, indiscriminate,
+he is as one who screams in pain at his own futility,
+one who "might be heard," as he says of our civilization,
+"from afar in space as a scolding and a riot." That Bierce
+would have spent so much of his superb power on the trivial
+and the ephemeral, breaking magnificent vials of wrath on
+Oakland nobodies, preserving insignificant black beetles in
+the amber of his art, is not merely, as it has long been, cause
+of amazement to the critics; it is cause of laughter to the
+gods, and of weeping among Bierce's true admirers.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Some may argue that Bierce's failure to attain international
+or even national fame cannot be ascribed solely to a
+lack of concord between the man and his time and to the consequent
+reaction in him. It is true that in Bierce's work is a
+sort of paucity&mdash;not a mere lack of printed pages, but of the<span class="pagenum">xxvi</span>
+fulness of creative activity that makes Byron, for example,
+though vulgar and casual, a literary mountain peak. Bierce
+has but few themes, few moods; his literary river runs clear
+and sparkling, but confined&mdash;a narrow current, not the opulent
+stream that waters wide plains of thought and feeling.
+Nor has Bierce the power to weave individual entities and
+situations into a broad pattern of existence, which is the distinguishing
+mark of such writers as Thackeray, Balzac,
+and Tolstoi among the great dead, and Bennett and Wells
+among the lesser living. Bierce's interest does not lie in the
+group experience nor even in the experience of the individual
+through a long period. His unit of time is the minute, not the
+month. It is significant that he never wrote a novel&mdash;unless
+</i>The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter<i> be reckoned
+one&mdash;and that he held remarkable views of the novel as a
+literary form, witness this passage from </i>Prattle<i>, written in
+1887:</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p><i>"English novelists are not great because the English novel is
+dead&mdash;deader than Queen Anne at her deadest. The vein is worked
+out. It was a thin one and did not 'go down.' A single century from
+the time when Richardson sank the discovery shaft it had already
+begun to 'pinch out.' The miners of today have abandoned
+it altogether to search for 'pockets,' and some of the best of them
+are merely 'chloriding the dumps.' To expect another good novel
+in English is to expect the gold to 'grow' again."</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<p><i>It may well be that at the bottom of this sweeping condemnation
+was an instinctive recognition of his own lack
+of constructive power on a large scale.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>But an artist, like a nation, should be judged not by what<span class="pagenum">xxvii</span>
+he cannot do, but by what he can. That Bierce could not paint
+the large canvas does not make him negligible or even inconsiderable.
+He is by no means a second-rate writer; he is a
+first-rate writer who could not consistently show his first-rateness.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>When he did show his first-rateness, what is it? In all his
+best work there is originality, a rare and precious idiosyncracy;
+his point of view, his themes are rich with it. Above
+all writers Bierce can present&mdash;brilliantly present&mdash;startling
+fragments of life, carved out from attendant circumstance;
+isolated problems of character and action; sharply
+bitten etchings of individual men under momentary stresses
+and in bizarre situations. Through his prodigious emotional
+perceptivity he has the power of feeling and making us feel
+some strange, perverse accident of fate, destructive of the
+individual&mdash;of making us feel it to be real and terrible.
+This is not an easy thing to do. De Maupassant said that
+men were killed every year in Paris by the falling of tiles
+from the roof, but if he got rid of a principal character in
+that way, he should be hooted at. Bierce can make us accept
+as valid and tragic events more odd than the one de Maupassant
+had to reject. "In the line of the startling,&mdash;half
+Poe, half Merimee&mdash;he cannot have many superiors," says
+Arnold Bennett.... "A story like </i>An Occurrence at
+Owl Creek Bridge<i>&mdash;well, Edgar Allan Poe might have
+deigned to sign it. And that is something.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"He possesses a remarkable style&mdash;what Kipling's would<span class="pagenum">xxviii</span>
+have been had Kipling been born with any significance of the
+word 'art'&mdash;and a quite strangely remarkable perception of
+beauty. There is a feeling for landscape in </i>A Horseman in
+the Sky<i> which recalls the exquisite opening of that indifferent
+novel, </i>Les Frères Zemganno<i> by Edmond de Goncourt,
+and which no English novelist except Thomas Hardy,
+and possibly Charles Marriott, could match." The feeling for
+landscape which Bennett notes is but one part of a greater
+power&mdash;the power to make concrete and visible, action, person,
+place. Bierce's descriptions of Civil War battles in his
+</i>Bits of Autobiography<i> are the best descriptions of battle
+ever written. He lays out the field with map-like clearness,
+marshals men and events with precision and economy, but
+his account never becomes exposition&mdash;it is drama. Real
+battles move swiftly; accounts make them seem labored and
+slow. What narrator save Bierce can convey the sense of
+their being lightly swift, and, again and again the shock of
+surprise the event itself must have given?</i></p>
+
+<p><i>This could not be were it not for his verbal restraint. In
+his descriptions is no welter of adjectives and adverbs;
+strong exact nouns and verbs do the work, and this means
+that the veritable object and action are brought forward, not
+qualifying talk around and about them. And this, again,
+could not be were it not for what is, beyond all others, his
+greatest quality&mdash;absolute precision. "I sometimes think,"
+he once wrote playfully about letters of his having been misunderstood,
+"I sometimes think that I am the only man in the
+world who understands the meaning of the written word.
+Or the only one who does not." A reader of Ambrose Bierce<span class="pagenum">xxix</span>
+comes almost to believe that not till now has he found a writer
+who understands&mdash;completely&mdash;the meaning of the written
+word. He has the power to bring out new meanings in well-worn
+words, so setting them as to evoke brilliant significances
+never before revealed. He gives to one phrase the
+beauty, the compressed suggestion of a poem; his titles&mdash;</i>Black
+Beetles in Amber<i>, </i>Ashes of the Beacon<i>, </i>Cobwebs
+from an Empty Skull<i> are masterpieces in miniature.
+That he should have a gift of coining striking words
+naturally follows: in his later years he has fallen into his
+"anecdotage," a certain Socialist is the greatest "futilitarian"
+of them all, "femininies"&mdash;and so on infinitely. Often
+the smaller the Biercean gem, the more exquisite the workmanship.
+One word has all the sparkle of an epigram.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In such skill Ambrose Bierce is not surpassed by any writer,
+ancient or modern; it gives him rank among the few masters
+who afford that highest form of intellectual delight, the
+immediate recognition of a clear idea perfectly set forth in
+fitting words&mdash;wit's twin brother, evoking that rare joy, the
+sudden, secret laughter of the mind. So much for Bierce the
+artist; the man is found in these letters. If further clue to
+the real nature of Ambrose Bierce were needed it is to be
+found in a conversation he had in his later years with a
+young girl: "You must be very proud, Mr. Bierce, of all your
+books and your fame?" "No," he answered rather sadly,
+"you will come to know that all that is worth while in life
+is the love you have had for a few people near to you."</i></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter p6">
+<img src="images/section.png" width="300" height="33" alt="new section" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="c15" />
+<h2><i>A Memoir of Ambrose Bierce</i></h2>
+<p class="p2 center"><big><b><i>by </i><span class="smcap">George Sterling</span></b></big></p>
+<hr class="c15" />
+
+<p><i>Though from boyhood a lover of tales of the terrible,<span class="pagenum">xxxiii</span>
+it was not until my twenty-second year that I heard
+of Ambrose Bierce, I having then been for ten
+months a resident of Oakland, California. But in the fall of
+the year 1891 my friend Roosevelt Johnson, newly arrived
+from our town of birth, Sag Harbor, New York, asked me
+if I were acquainted with his work, adding that he had been
+told that Bierce was the author of stories not inferior in
+awesomeness to the most terrible of Poe's.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>We made inquiry and found that Bierce had for several
+years been writing columns of critical comment, satirically
+named </i>Prattle<i>, for the editorial page of the Sunday
+</i><span class="smcap">Examiner</span><i>, of San Francisco. As my uncle, of whose household I
+had been for nearly a year a member, did not subscribe to that
+journal, I had unfortunately overlooked these weekly contributions
+to the wit and sanity of our western literature&mdash;an
+omission for which we partially consoled ourselves by subsequently
+reading with great eagerness each installment of
+</i>Prattle<i> as it appeared. But, so far as his short stories were
+concerned, we had to content ourselves with the assurance
+of a neighbor that "they'd scare an owl off a tombstone."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>However, later in the autumn, while making a pilgrimage<span class="pagenum">xxxiv</span>
+to the home of our greatly worshipped Joaquin Miller, we
+became acquainted with Albert, an elder brother of Bierce's,
+a man who was to be one of my dearest of friends to the day
+of his death, in March, 1914. From him we obtained much
+to gratify our not unnatural curiosity as to this mysterious
+being, who, from his isolation on a lonely mountain above the
+Napa Valley, scattered weekly thunderbolts on the fool, the
+pretender, and the knave, and cast ridicule or censure on
+many that sat in the seats of the mighty. For none, however
+socially or financially powerful, was safe from the stab of
+that aculeate pen, the venom of whose ink is to gleam vividly
+from the pages of literature for centuries yet to come.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>For Bierce is of the immortals. That fact, known, I think,
+to him, and seeming then more and more evident to some of
+his admirers, has become plainly apparent to anyone who can
+appraise the matter with eyes that see beyond the flimsy artifices
+that bulk so large and so briefly in the literary arena.
+Bierce was a sculptor who wrought in hardest crystal.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>I was not to be so fortunate as to become acquainted with
+him until after the publication of his first volume of short
+stories, entitled </i>Tales of Soldiers and Civilians<i>. That mild
+title gives scant indication of the terrors that await the unwarned
+reader. I recall that I hung fascinated over the book,
+unable to lay it down until the last of its printed dooms had
+become an imperishable portion of the memory. The tales are
+told with a calmness and reserve that make most of Poe's
+seem somewhat boyish and melodramatic by comparison.
+The greatest of them seems to me to be </i>An Occurrence at<span class="pagenum">xxxv</span>
+Owl Creek Bridge<i>, though I am perennially charmed by
+the weird beauty of </i>An Inhabitant of Carcosa<i>, a tale of
+unique and unforgettable quality.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Bierce, born in Ohio in 1842, came to San Francisco soon
+after the close of the Civil War. It is amusing to learn that
+he was one of a family of eleven children, male and female,
+the Christian name of each of whom began with the letter
+"A!" Obtaining employment at first in the United States
+Mint, whither Albert, always his favorite brother, had preceded
+him, he soon gravitated to journalism, doing his first
+work on the San Francisco </i><span class="smcap">News Letter</span><i>. His brother
+once told me that he (Ambrose) had from boyhood been eager
+to become a writer and was expectant of success at that pursuit.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Isolated from most men by the exalted and austere habit
+of his thought, Bierce finally suffered a corresponding exile
+of the body, and was forced to live in high altitudes, which
+of necessity are lonely. This latter banishment was on account
+of chronic and utterly incurable asthma, an ailment
+contracted in what might almost be termed a characteristic
+manner. Bierce had no fear of the dead folk and their marble
+city. From occasional strollings by night in Laurel Hill
+Cemetery, in San Francisco, his spirit "drank repose," and
+was able to attain a serenity in which the cares of daytime
+existence faded to nothingness. It was on one of those strolls
+that he elected to lie for awhile in the moonlight on a flat
+tombstone, and awakening late in the night, found himself
+thoroughly chilled, and a subsequent victim of the disease<span class="pagenum">xxxvi</span>
+that was to cast so dark a shadow over his following years.
+For his sufferings from asthma were terrible, arising often
+to a height that required that he be put under the influence
+of chloroform.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>So afflicted, he found visits to the lowlands a thing not to
+be indulged in with impunity. For many years such trips
+terminated invariably in a severe attack of his ailment,
+and he was driven back to his heights shaken and harassed.
+But he found such visits both necessary and pleasant on
+occasion, and it was during one that he made in the summer
+of 1892 that I first made his acquaintance, while he was
+temporarily a guest at his brother Albert's camp on a rocky,
+laurel-covered knoll on the eastern shore of Lake Temescal,
+a spot now crossed by the tracks of the Oakland, Antioch
+and Eastern Railway.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>I am not likely to forget his first night among us. A tent
+being, for his ailment, insufficiently ventilated, he decided
+to sleep by the campfire, and I, carried away by my youthful
+hero-worship, must partially gratify it by occupying the
+side of the fire opposite to him. I had a comfortable cot in my
+tent, and was unaccustomed at the time to sleeping on the
+ground, the consequence being that I awoke at least every
+half-hour. But awake as often as I might, always I found
+Bierce lying on his back in the dim light of the embers, his
+gaze fixed on the stars of the zenith. I shall not forget the
+gaze of those eyes, the most piercingly blue, under yellow
+shaggy brows, that I have ever seen.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>After that, I saw him at his brother's home in Berkeley, at<span class="pagenum">xxxvii</span>
+irregular intervals, and once paid him a visit at his own
+temporary home at Skylands, above Wrights, in Santa Clara
+County, whither he had moved from Howell Mountain, in
+Napa County. It was on this visit that I was emboldened
+to ask his opinion on certain verses of mine, the ambition to
+become a poet having infected me at the scandalously mature
+age of twenty-six. He was hospitable to my wish, and I was
+fortunate enough to be his pupil almost to the year of his
+going forth from among us. During the greater part of that
+time he was a resident of Washington, D. C., whither he had
+gone in behalf of the San Francisco </i><span class="smcap">Examiner</span><i>, to aid in
+defeating (as was successfully accomplished) the Funding
+Bill proposed by the Southern Pacific Company. It was on
+this occasion that he electrified the Senate's committee by
+repeatedly refusing to shake the hand of the proponent of
+that measure, no less formidable an individual than Collis
+P. Huntington.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>For Bierce carried into actual practice his convictions on
+ethical matters. Secure in his own self-respect, and valuing
+his friendship or approval to a high degree, he refused to
+make, as he put it, "a harlot of his friendship." Indeed, he
+once told me that it was his rule, on subsequently discovering
+the unworth of a person to whom a less fastidious friend
+had without previous warning introduced him, to write a
+letter to that person and assure him that he regarded the
+introduction as a mistake, and that the twain were thenceforth
+to "meet as strangers!" He also once informed me that
+he did not care to be introduced to persons whom he had<span class="pagenum">xxxviii</span>
+criticized, or was about to criticize, in print. "I might get
+to like the beggar," was his comment, "and then I'd have
+one less pelt in my collection."</i></p>
+
+<p><i>In his criticism of my own work, he seldom used more than
+suggestion, realizing, no doubt, the sensitiveness of the tyro
+in poetry. It has been hinted to me that he laid, as it were,
+a hand of ice on my youthful enthusiasms, but that, to such
+extent as it may be true, was, I think, a good thing for a
+pupil of the art, youth being apt to gush and become over-sentimental.
+Most poets would give much to be able to obliterate
+some of their earlier work, and he must have saved
+me a major portion of such putative embarrassment. Reviewing
+the manuscripts that bear his marginal counsels,
+I can now see that such suggestions were all "indicated,"
+though at the time I dissented from some of them. It was one
+of his tenets that a critic should "keep his heart out of his
+head" (to use his own words), when sitting in judgment on
+the work of writers whom he knew and liked. But I cannot
+but think that he was guilty of sad violations of that
+rule, especially in my own case.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Bierce lived many years in Washington before making
+a visit to his old home. That happened in 1910, in which
+year he visited me at Carmel, and we afterwards camped
+for several weeks together with his brother and nephew,
+in Yosemite. I grew to know him better in those days, and
+he found us hospitable, in the main degree, to his view of
+things, socialism being the only issue on which we were not
+in accord. It led to many warm arguments, which, as usual,<span class="pagenum">xxxix</span>
+conduced nowhere but to the suspicion that truth in such
+matters was mainly a question of taste.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>I saw him again in the summer of 1911, which he spent
+at Sag Harbor. We were much on the water, guests of my
+uncle in his power-yacht "La Mascotte II." He was a
+devotee of canoeing, and made many trips on the warm and
+shallow bays of eastern Long Island, which he seemed to
+prefer to the less spacious reaches of the Potomac. He revisited
+California in the fall of the next year, a trip on which
+we saw him for the last time. An excursion to the Grand
+Canyon was occasionally proposed, but nothing came of it,
+nor did he consent to be again my guest at Carmel, on the
+rather surprising excuse that the village contained too many
+anarchists! And in November, 1913, I received my last
+letter from him, he being then in Laredo, Texas, about to
+cross the border into warring Mexico.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Why he should have gone forth on so hazardous an enterprise
+is for the most part a matter of conjecture. It may
+have been in the spirit of adventure, or out of boredom, or he
+may not, even, have been jesting when he wrote to an intimate
+friend that, ashamed of having lived so long, and not
+caring to end his life by his own hand, he was going across
+the border and let the Mexicans perform for him that service.
+But he wrote to others that he purposed to extend his
+pilgrimage as far as South America, to cross the Andes,
+and return to New York by way of a steamer from Buenos
+Ayres. At any rate, we know, from letters written during
+the winter months, that he had unofficially attached himself<span class="pagenum">xl</span>
+to a section of Villa's army, even taking an active part
+in the fighting. He was heard from until the close of 1913;
+after that date the mist closes in upon his trail, and we are
+left to surmise what we may. Many rumors as to his fate
+have come out of Mexico, one of them even placing him in
+the trenches of Flanders. These rumors have been, so far as
+possible, investigated: all end in nothing. The only one that
+seems in the least degree illuminative is the tale brought by
+a veteran reporter from the City of Mexico, and published
+in the San Francisco </i><span class="smcap">Bulletin</span><i>. It is the story of a soldier in
+Villa's army, one of a detachment that captured, near the
+village of Icamole, an ammunition train of the Carranzistas.
+One of the prisoners was a sturdy, white-haired,
+ruddy-faced Gringo, who, according to the tale, went before
+the firing squad with an Indian muleteer, as sole companion
+in misfortune. The description of the manner&mdash;indifferent, even
+contemptuous&mdash;with which the white-haired
+man met his death seems so characteristic of Bierce that
+one would almost be inclined to give credence to the tale,
+impossible though it may be of verification. But the date of
+the tragedy being given as late in 1915, it seems incredible
+that Bierce could have escaped observation for so long a
+period, with so many persons in Mexico eager to know of his
+fate. It is far more likely that he met his death at the hands
+of a roving band of outlaws or guerrilla soldiery.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>I have had often in mind the vision of his capture by such
+a squad, their discovery of the considerable amount of gold
+coin that he was known to carry on his person, and his immediate<span class="pagenum">xli</span>
+condemnation and execution as a spy in order that
+they might retain possession of the booty. Naturally, such
+proceedings would not have been reported, from fear of the
+necessity of sharing with those "higher up." And so the veil
+would have remained drawn, and impenetrable to vision.
+Through the efforts of the War Department, all United
+States Consuls were questioned as to Bierce's possible departure
+from the country; all Americans visiting or residing
+in Mexico were begged for information&mdash;even prospectors.
+But the story of the reporter is the sole one that seems
+partially credible. To such darkness did so shining and fearless
+a soul go forth.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>It is now over eight years since that disappearance, and
+though the likelihood of his existence in the flesh seems faint
+indeed, the storm of detraction and obloquy that he always
+insisted would follow his demise has never broken, is not
+even on the horizon. Instead, he seems to be remembered with
+tolerance by even those whom he visited with a chastening
+pen. Each year of darkness but makes the star of his fame
+increase and brighten, but we have, I think, no full conception
+as yet of his greatness, no adequate realization of
+how wide and permanent a fame he has won. It is significant
+that some of the discerning admire him for one phase
+of his work, some for another. For instance, the clear-headed
+H. L. Mencken acclaims him as the first wit of America,
+but will have none of his tales; while others, somewhat disconcerted
+by the cynicism pervading much of his wit, place
+him among the foremost exponents of the art of the short story.<span class="pagenum">xlii</span>
+Others again prefer his humor (for he was humorist as
+well as wit), and yet others like most the force, clarity and
+keen insight of his innumerable essays and briefer comments
+on mundane affairs. Personally, I have always regarded
+Poe's </i>Fall of the House of Usher<i> as our greatest tale; close
+to that come, in my opinion, at least a dozen of Bierce's stories,
+whether of the soldier or civilian. He has himself stated
+in </i>Prattle<i>: "I am not a poet." And yet he wrote poetry,
+on occasion, of a high order, his </i>Invocation<i> being one of the
+noblest poems in the tongue. Some of his satirical verse seems
+to me as terrible in its withering invective as any that has
+been written by classic satirists, not excepting Juvenal and
+Swift. Like the victims of their merciless pens, his, too, will
+be forgiven and forgotten. Today no one knows, nor cares,
+whether or not those long-dead offenders gave just offense.
+The grave has closed over accuser and accused, and the only
+thing that matters is that a great mind was permitted to
+function. One may smile or sigh over the satire, but one must
+also realize that even the satirist had his own weaknesses,
+and could have been as savagely attacked by a mentality
+as keen as his own. Men as a whole will never greatly care
+for satire, each recognizing, true enough, glimpses of himself
+in the invective, but sensing as well its fundamental
+bias and cruelty. However, Bierce thought best of himself
+as a satirist.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Naturally, Bierce carried his wit and humor into his immediate
+human relationships. I best recall an occasion,
+when, in my first year of acquaintance with him, we were<span class="pagenum">xliii</span>
+both guests at the home of the painter, J. H. E. Partington.
+It happened that a bowl of nasturtiums adorned the center
+table, and having been taught by Father Tabb, the poet,
+to relish that flower, I managed to consume most of them
+before the close of the evening, knowing there were plenty
+more to be had in the garden outside. Someone at last remarked:
+"Why, George has eaten all the nasturtiums! Go
+out and bring some more." At which Bierce dryly and justly
+remarked: "No&mdash;bring some thistles!" It is an indication,
+however, of his real kindness of heart that, observing my confusion,
+he afterwards apologized to me for what he termed
+a thoughtless jest. It was, nevertheless, well deserved.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>I recall even more distinctly a scene of another setting.
+This concerns itself with Bierce's son, Leigh, then a youth
+in the early twenties. At the time (</i>circa<i> 1894) I was a
+brother lodger with them in an Oakland apartment house.
+Young Bierce had contracted a liaison with a girl of his
+own age, and his father, determined to end the affair, had
+appointed an hour for discussion of the matter. The youth
+entered his father's rooms defiant and resolute: within an
+hour he appeared weeping, and cried out to me, waiting for
+him in his own room: "My father is a greater man than
+Christ! He has suffered more than Christ!" And the affair
+of the heart was promptly terminated.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>One conversant with Bierce only as a controversionalist
+and </i>censor morum<i> was, almost of necessity, constrained to
+imagine him a misanthrope, a soured and cynical recluse.
+Only when one was privileged to see him among his intimates<span class="pagenum">xliv</span>
+could one obtain glimpses of his true nature, which
+was considerate, generous, even affectionate. Only the waving
+of the red flag of Socialism could rouse in him what
+seemed to us others a certain savageness of intolerance.
+Needless to say, we did not often invoke it, for he was an
+ill man with whom to bandy words. It was my hope, at one
+time, to involve him and Jack London in a controversy on
+the subject, but London declined the oral encounter, preferring
+one with the written word. Nothing came of the plan,
+which is a pity, as each was a supreme exponent of his point
+of view. Bierce subsequently attended one of the midsummer
+encampments of the Bohemian Club, of which he was once
+the secretary, in their redwood grove near the Russian river.
+Hearing that London was present, he asked why they had
+not been mutually introduced, and I was forced to tell him
+that I feared that they'd be, verbally, at each other's throats,
+within an hour. "Nonsense!" exclaimed Bierce. "Bring
+him around! I'll treat him like a Dutch Uncle." He kept
+his word, and seemed as much attracted to London as London
+was to him. But I was always ill at ease when they
+were conversing. I do not think the two men ever met again.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Bierce was the cleanest man, personally, of whom I have
+knowledge&mdash;almost fanatically so, if such a thing be possible.
+Even during our weeks of camping in the Yosemite, he
+would spend two hours on his morning toilet in the privacy
+of his tent. His nephew always insisted that the time was
+devoted to shaving himself from face to foot! He was also
+a most modest man, and I still recall his decided objections<span class="pagenum">xlv</span>
+to my bathing attire when at the swimming-pool of the Bohemian
+Club, in the Russian River. Compared to many of those
+visible, it seemed more than adequate; but he had another
+opinion of it. He was a good, even an eminent, tankard-man,
+and retained a clear judgment under any amount of potations.
+He preferred wine (especially a dry </i>vin du pays<i>, usually
+a sauterne) to "hard likker," in this respect differing
+in taste from his elder brother. In the days when I first made
+his acquaintance, I was accustomed to roam the hills beyond
+Oakland and Berkeley from Cordonices Creek to Leona
+Heights, in company with Albert Bierce, his son Carlton,
+R. L. ("Dick") Partington, Leigh Bierce (Ambrose's surviving
+son) and other youths. On such occasions I sometimes
+hid a superfluous bottle of port or sherry in a convenient
+spot, and Bierce, afterwards accompanying us on several
+such outings, pretended to believe that I had such flagons
+concealed under each bush or rock in the reach and breadth
+of the hills, and would, to carry out the jest, hunt zealously
+in such recesses. I could wish that he were less often unsuccessful
+in the search, now that he has had "the coal-black
+wine" to drink.</i></p>
+
+<p><i>Though an appreciable portion of his satire hints at misanthropy,
+Bierce, while profoundly a pessimist, was, by his
+own confession to me, "a lover of his country and his fellowmen,"
+and was ever ready to proffer assistance in the time
+of need and sympathy in the hour of sorrow. His was a great
+and tender heart, and giving of it greatly, he expected, or
+rather hoped for, a return as great. It may have been by<span class="pagenum">xlvi</span>
+reason of the frustration of such hopes that he so often broke
+with old and, despite his doubts, appreciative friends. His
+brother Albert once told me that he (Ambrose) had never been
+"quite the same," after the wound in the head that he received
+in the battle of Kenesaw Mountain, but had a tendency
+to become easily offended and to show that resentment.
+Such estrangements as he and his friends suffered are not,
+therefore, matters on which one should sit in judgment. It
+is sad to know that he went so gladly from life, grieved and
+disappointed. But the white flame of Art that he tended for
+nearly half a century was never permitted to grow faint
+nor smoky, and it burned to the last with a pure brilliance.
+Perhaps, he bore witness to what he had found most admirable
+and enduring in life in the following words, the conclusion
+of the finest of his essays:</i></p>
+
+<p><i>"Literature and art are about all that the world really
+cares for in the end; those who make them are not without
+justification in regarding themselves as masters in the House
+of Life and all others as their servitors. In the babble and
+clamor, the pranks and antics of its countless incapables,
+the tremendous dignity of the profession of letters is overlooked;
+but when, casting a retrospective eye into 'the dark
+backward and abysm of time' to where beyond these voices
+is the peace of desolation, we note the majesty of the few
+immortals and compare them with the pygmy figures of their
+contemporary kings, warriors and men of action generally&mdash;when
+across the silent battle-fields and hushed </i>fora<i> where
+the dull destinies of nations were determined, nobody cares<span class="pagenum">xlvii</span>
+how, we hear</i></p>
+
+<p class="poem"><i>
+<span class="i2">like ocean on a western beach</span><br />
+The surge and thunder of the Odyssey,</i></p>
+
+<p><i>then we appraise literature at its true value, and how little
+worth while seems all else with which Man is pleased to
+occupy his fussy soul and futile hands!"</i></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter p6">
+<img src="images/section.png" width="300" height="33" alt="new section" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="c15" />
+<h2><i>The Letters of Ambrose Bierce</i></h2>
+<hr class="c15" />
+<div class="sidenote">
+Angwin,<br />
+July 31,<br />
+1892.<br />
+</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You will not, I hope, mind my saying that the first part<span class="pagenum">3</span>
+of your letter was so pleasing that it almost solved the disappointment
+created by the other part. For <i>that</i> is a bit discouraging.
+Let me explain.</p>
+
+<p>You receive my suggestion about trying your hand *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*
+at writing, with assent and apparently pleasure. But, alas,
+not for love of the art, but for the purpose of helping God repair
+his botchwork world. You want to "reform things," poor
+girl&mdash;to rise and lay about you, slaying monsters and liberating
+captive maids. You would "help to alter for the better
+the position of working-women." You would be a missionary&mdash;and
+the rest of it. Perhaps I shall not make myself
+understood when I say that this discourages me; that in such
+aims (worthy as they are) I would do nothing to assist you;
+that such ambitions are not only impracticable but incompatible
+with the spirit that gives success in art; that such
+ends are a prostitution of art; that "helpful" writing is
+dull reading. If you had had more experience of life I should
+regard what you say as entirely conclusive against your
+possession of any talent of a literary kind. But you are
+so young and untaught in that way&mdash;and I have the
+testimony of little felicities and purely literary touches
+(apparently unconscious) in your letters&mdash;perhaps your
+unschooled heart and hope should not be held as having<span class="pagenum">4</span>
+spoken the conclusive word. But surely, my child&mdash;as
+surely as anything in mathematics&mdash;Art will laurel no
+brow having a divided allegiance. Love the world as much
+as you will, but serve it otherwise. The best service you
+can perform by writing is to write well with no care for
+anything but that. Plant and water and let God give the
+increase if he will, and to whom it shall please him.</p>
+
+<p>Suppose your father were to "help working-women" by
+painting no pictures but such (of their ugly surroundings,
+say) as would incite them to help themselves, or others to
+help them. Suppose you should play no music but such as&mdash;but
+I need go no further. Literature (I don't mean journalism)
+is an <i>art</i>;&mdash;it is not a form of benevolence. It has nothing
+to do with "reform," and when used as a means of reform
+suffers accordingly and justly. Unless you can <i>feel</i> that way
+I cannot advise you to meddle with it.</p>
+
+<p>It would be dishonest in me to accept your praise for
+what I wrote of the Homestead Works quarrel&mdash;unless
+you should praise it for being well written and true. I have
+no sympathies with that savage fight between the two
+kinds of rascals, and no desire to assist either&mdash;except to
+better hearts and manners. The love of truth is good
+enough motive for me when I write of my fellowmen. I
+like many things in this world and a few persons&mdash;I like
+you, for example; but after they are served I have no love
+to waste upon the irreclaimable mass of brutality that we
+know as "mankind." Compassion, yes&mdash;I am sincerely
+sorry that they are brutes.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I wrote the article "The Human Liver." Your criticism
+is erroneous. My opportunities of knowing women's
+feelings toward Mrs. Grundy are better than yours. They
+hate her with a horrible antipathy; but they cower all the<span class="pagenum">5</span>
+same. The fact that they are a part of her mitigates neither
+their hatred nor their fear.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>After next Monday I shall probably be in St. Helena, but
+if you will be so good as still to write to me please address
+me here until I apprise you of my removal; for I shall intercept
+my letters at St. Helena, wherever addressed. And
+maybe you will write before Monday. I need not say how
+pleasant it is for me to hear from you. And I shall want to
+know what you think of what I say about your "spirit of
+reform."</p>
+
+<p>How I should have liked to pass that Sunday in camp
+with you all. And to-day&mdash;I wonder if you are there to-day.
+I feel a peculiar affection for that place.</p>
+
+<p>Please give my love to all your people, and forgive my
+intolerably long letters&mdash;or retaliate in kind.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely your friend,<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+August 15,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">I know, dear Blanche</span>, of the disagreement among men
+as to the nature and aims of literature; and the subject is
+too "long" to discuss. I will only say that it seems to me
+that men holding Tolstoi's view are not properly literary
+men (that is to say, artists) at all. They are "missionaries,"
+who, in their zeal to lay about them, do not scruple
+to seize any weapon that they can lay their hands on; they
+would grab a crucifix to beat a dog. The dog is well beaten,
+no doubt (which makes him a worse dog than he was before)
+but note the condition of the crucifix! The work of
+these men is better, of course, than the work of men of
+truer art and inferior brains; but always you see the possibilities&mdash;possibilities<span class="pagenum">6</span>
+to <i>them</i>&mdash;which they have missed or
+consciously sacrificed to their fad. And after all they do no
+good. The world does not wish to be helped. The poor wish
+only to be rich, which is impossible, not to be better. They
+would like to be rich in order to be worse, generally speaking.
+And your working woman (also generally speaking)
+does not wish to be virtuous; despite her insincere deprecation
+she would not let the existing system be altered if
+she could help it. Individual men and women can be
+assisted; and happily some are worthy of assistance. No
+<i>class</i> of mankind, no tribe, no nation is worth the sacrifice
+of one good man or woman; for not only is their average
+worth low, but they like it that way; and in trying to help
+them you fail to help the good individuals. Your family,
+your immediate friends, will give you scope enough for all
+your benevolence. I must include your<i>self</i>.</p>
+
+<p>In timely illustration of some of this is an article by Ingersoll
+in the current <i>North American Review</i>&mdash;I shall send
+it you. It will be nothing new to you; the fate of the philanthropist
+who gives out of his brain and heart instead of
+his pocket&mdash;having nothing in that&mdash;is already known to
+you. It serves him richly right, too, for his low taste in loving.
+He who dilutes, spreads, subdivides, the love which naturally
+<i>all</i> belongs to his family and friends (if they are good)
+should not complain of non-appreciation. Love those, help
+those, whom from personal knowledge you know to be worthy.
+To love and help others is treason to <i>them</i>. But, bless my
+soul! I did not mean to say all this.</p>
+
+<p>But while you seem clear as to your own art, you seem
+undecided as to the one you wish to take up. I know the
+strength and sweetness of the illusions (that is, <i>de</i>lusions)
+that you are required to forego. I know the abysmal ignorance
+of the world and human character which, as a girl,<span class="pagenum">7</span>
+you necessarily have. I know the charm that inheres in the
+beckoning of the Britomarts, as they lean out of their
+dream to persuade you to be as like them as is compatible
+with the fact that you exist. But I believe, too, that if you
+are set thinking&mdash;not reading&mdash;you will find the light.</p>
+
+<p>You ask me of journalism. It is so low a thing that it <i>may</i>
+be legitimately used as a means of reform or a means of
+anything deemed worth accomplishing. It is not an art;
+art, except in the greatest moderation, is damaging to it.
+The man who can write well must not write as well as he
+can; the others may, of course. Journalism has many purposes,
+and the people's welfare <i>may</i> be one of them; though
+that is not the purpose-in-chief, by much.</p>
+
+<p>I don't mind your irony about my looking upon the unfortunate
+as merely "literary material." It is true in so
+far as I consider them <i>with reference to literature</i>. Possibly
+I might be willing to help them otherwise&mdash;as your father
+might be willing to help a beggar with money, who is not
+picturesque enough to go into a picture. As you might be
+willing to give a tramp a dinner, yet unwilling to play "The
+Sweet Bye-and-Bye," or "Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay," to tickle
+his ear.</p>
+
+<p>You call me "master." Well, it is pleasant to think of
+you as a pupil, but&mdash;you know the young squire had to
+watch his arms all night before the day of his accolade and
+investiture with knighthood. I think I'll ask you to contemplate
+yours a little longer before donning them&mdash;not
+by way of penance but instruction and consecration. When
+you are quite sure of the nature of your <i>call</i> to write&mdash;quite
+sure that it is <i>not</i> the voice of "duty"&mdash;then let me
+do you such slight, poor service as my limitations and the
+injunctions of circumstance permit. In a few ways I can<span class="pagenum">8</span>
+help you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Since coming here I have been ill all the time, but it
+seems my duty to remain as long as there is a hope that I
+<i>can</i> remain. If I get free from my disorder and the fear of it
+I shall go down to San Francisco some day and then try to
+see your people and mine. Perhaps you would help me to
+find my brother's new house&mdash;if he is living in it.</p>
+
+<p>With sincere regards to all your family, I am most truly
+your friend,<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>Your letters are very pleasing to me. I think it nice of you
+to write them.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+August 17,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It was not that I forgot to mail you the magazine that I
+mentioned; I could not find it; but now I send it.</p>
+
+<p>My health is bad again, and I fear that I shall have to
+abandon my experiment of living here, and go back to the
+mountain&mdash;or some mountain. But not directly.</p>
+
+<p>You asked me what books would be useful to you&mdash;I'm
+assuming that you've repented your sacrilegious attitude
+toward literature, and will endeavor to thrust your pretty
+head into the crown of martyrdom otherwise. I may mention
+a few from time to time as they occur to me. There is
+a little book entitled (I think) simply "English Composition."
+It is by Prof. John Nichol&mdash;elementary, in a few
+places erroneous, but on the whole rather better than the
+ruck of books on the same subject.</p>
+
+<p>Read those of Landor's "Imaginary Conversations" which
+relate to literature.</p>
+
+<p>Read Longinus, Herbert Spencer on Style, Pope's "Essay
+on Criticism" (don't groan&mdash;the detractors of Pope are not
+always to have things their own way), Lucian on the writing<span class="pagenum">9</span>
+of history&mdash;though you need not write history. Read
+poor old obsolete Kames' notions; some of them are not half
+bad. Read Burke "On the Sublime and Beautiful."</p>
+
+<p>Read&mdash;but that will do at present. And as you read don't
+forget that the rules of the literary art are deduced from
+the work of the masters who wrote in ignorance of them or
+in unconsciousness of them. That fixes their value; it is
+secondary to that of <i>natural</i> qualifications. None the less,
+it is considerable. Doubtless you have read many&mdash;perhaps
+most&mdash;of these things, but to read them with a view
+to profit <i>as a writer</i> may be different. If I could get to San
+Francisco I could dig out of those artificial memories, the
+catalogues of the libraries, a lot of titles additional&mdash;and
+get you the books, too. But I've a bad memory, and am
+out of the Book Belt.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you would write some little thing and send it me
+for examination. I shall not judge it harshly, for this I
+<i>know</i>: the good writer (supposing him to be born to the
+trade) is not made by reading, but by observing and experiencing.
+You have lived so little, seen so little, that your
+range will necessarily be narrow, but within its lines I
+know no reason why you should not do good work. But it
+is all conjectural&mdash;you may fail. Would it hurt if I should
+tell you that I thought you had failed? Your absolute and
+complete failure would not affect in the slightest my
+admiration of your intellect. I have always half suspected
+that it is only second rate minds, and minds below the
+second rate, that hold their cleverness by so precarious a
+tenure that they can detach it for display in words.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">God bless you, <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+August 28,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,<span class="pagenum">10</span></p>
+
+<p>I positively shall not bore you with an interminated
+screed this time. But I thought you might like to know
+that I have recovered my health, and hope to be able to
+remain here for a few months at least. And if I remain well
+long enough to make me reckless I shall visit your town
+some day, and maybe ask your mother to command you
+to let me drive you to Berkeley. It makes me almost sad
+to think of the camp at the lake being abandoned.</p>
+
+<p>So you liked my remarks on the "labor question." That
+is nice of you, but aren't you afraid your praise will get me
+into the disastrous literary habit of writing for some <i>one</i>
+pair of eyes?&mdash;your eyes? Or in resisting the temptation I
+may go too far in the opposite error. But you do not see
+that it is "Art for Art's sake"&mdash;hateful phrase! Certainly
+not, it is not Art at all. Do you forget the distinction I
+pointed out between journalism and literature? Do you
+not remember that I told you that the former was of so
+little value that it might be used for anything? My newspaper
+work is in <i>no</i> sense literature. It is nothing, and only
+becomes something when I give it the very use to which I
+would put nothing literary. (Of course I refer to my editorial
+and topical work.)</p>
+
+<p>If you want to learn to write that kind of thing, so as to
+do good with it, you've an easy task. <i>Only</i> it is not worth
+learning and the good that you can do with it is not worth
+doing. But literature&mdash;the desire to do good with <i>that</i> will
+not help you to your means. It is not a sufficient incentive.
+The Muse will not meet you if you have any work for her
+to do. Of course I sometimes like to do good&mdash;who does
+not? And sometimes I am glad that access to a great number
+of minds every week gives me an opportunity. But,
+thank Heaven, I don't make a business of it, nor use in it<span class="pagenum">11</span>
+a tool so delicate as to be ruined by the service.</p>
+
+<p>Please do not hesitate to send me anything that you may
+be willing to write. If you try to make it perfect before you
+let me see it, it will never come. My remarks about the
+kind of mind which holds its thoughts and feelings by so
+precarious a tenure that they are detachable for use by
+others were not made with a forethought of your failure.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Harte of the New England Magazine seems to want
+me to know his work (I asked to) and sends me a lot of it
+cut from the magazine. I pass it on to you, and most of it
+is just and true.</p>
+
+<p>But I'm making another long letter.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I were not an infidel&mdash;so that I could say: "God
+bless you," and mean it literally. I wish there <i>were</i> a God
+to bless you, and that He had nothing else to do.</p>
+
+<p>Please let me hear from you. Sincerely,<span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+September 28,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have been waiting for a full hour of leisure to write you
+a letter, but I shall never get it, and so I'll write you anyhow.
+Come to think of it, there is nothing to say&mdash;nothing
+that <i>needs</i> be said, rather, for there is always so much that
+one would like to say to you, best and most patient of
+<i>sayees</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you and your father copies of my book. Not
+that I think you (either of you) will care for that sort of
+thing, but merely because your father is my co-sinner in
+making the book, and you in sitting by and diverting my
+mind from the proof-sheets of a part of it. Your part, therefore,
+in the work is the typographical errors. So you are in
+literature in spite of yourself.</p>
+
+<p>I appreciate what you write of my girl. She is the best of<span class="pagenum">12</span>
+girls to me, but God knoweth I'm not a proper person to
+direct her way of life. However, it will not be for long. A
+dear friend of mine&mdash;the widow of another dear friend&mdash;in
+London wants her, and means to come out here next
+spring and try to persuade me to let her have her&mdash;for a
+time at least. It is likely that I shall. My friend is wealthy,
+childless and devoted to both my children. I wish that in
+the meantime she (the girl) could have the advantage of
+association with <i>you</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Please say to your father that I have his verses, which I
+promise myself pleasure in reading.</p>
+
+<p><i>You</i> appear to have given up your ambition to "write
+things." I'm sorry, for "lots" of reasons&mdash;not the least
+being the selfish one that I fear I shall be deprived of a
+reason for writing you long dull letters. Won't you <i>play</i>
+at writing things?</p>
+
+<p>My (and Danziger's) book, "The Monk and the Hangman's
+Daughter," is to be out next month. The Publisher&mdash;I
+like to write it with a reverent capital letter&mdash;is unprofessional
+enough to tell me that he regards it as the very
+best piece of English composition that he ever saw, and he
+means to make the world know it. Now let the great English
+classics hide their diminished heads and pale their
+ineffectual fires!</p>
+
+<p>So you begin to suspect that books do not give you the
+truth of life and character. Well, that suspicion is the beginning
+of wisdom, and, so far as it goes, a preliminary
+qualification for writing&mdash;books. Men and women are
+certainly not what books represent them to be, nor what
+<i>they</i> represent&mdash;and sometimes believe&mdash;themselves to be.
+They are better, they are worse, and far more interesting.</p>
+
+<p>With best regards to all your people, and in the hope that<span class="pagenum">13</span>
+we may frequently hear from you, I am very sincerely your
+friend,<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>Both the children send their <i>love</i> to you. And they mean
+just that.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+October 6,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I send you by this mail the current <i>New England Magazine</i>&mdash;merely
+because I have it by me and have read all
+of it that I shall have leisure to read. Maybe it will entertain
+you for an idle hour.</p>
+
+<p>I have so far recovered my health that I hope to do a
+little pot-boiling to-morrow. (Is that properly written with
+a hyphen?&mdash;for the life o' me I can't say, just at this
+moment. There is a story of an old actor who having
+played one part half his life had to cut out the name of the
+person he represented wherever it occurred in his lines: he
+could never remember which syllable to accent.) My illness
+was only asthma, which, unluckily, does not kill me
+and so should not alarm my friends.</p>
+
+<p>Dr. Danziger writes that he has ordered your father's sketch
+sent me. And I've ordered a large number of extra impressions
+of it&mdash;if it is still on the stone. So you see I like it.</p>
+
+<p>Let me hear from you and about you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely your friend,</p>
+<p>I enclose Bib.<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+October 7,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Partington</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've been too ill all the week to write you of your manuscripts,
+or even read them understandingly.</p>
+
+<p>I think "Honest Andrew's Prayer" far and away the
+best. <i>It</i> is witty&mdash;the others hardly more than earnest,
+and not, in my judgment, altogether fair. But then you
+know you and I would hardly be likely to agree on a point<span class="pagenum">14</span>
+of that kind,&mdash;I refuse my sympathies in some directions
+where I extend my sympathy&mdash;if that is intelligible. You,
+I think, have broader sympathies than mine&mdash;are not only
+sorry for the Homestead strikers (for example) but approve
+them. I do not. But we are one in detesting their
+oppressor, the smug-wump, Carnegie.</p>
+
+<p>If you had not sent "Honest Andrew's Prayer" elsewhere
+I should try to place it here. It is so good that I hope
+to see it in print. If it is rejected please let me have it again
+if the incident is not then ancient history.</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad you like some things in my book. But you should
+not condemn me for debasing my poetry with abuse; you
+should commend me for elevating my abuse with a little
+poetry, here and there. I am not a poet, but an abuser&mdash;that
+makes all the difference. It is "how you look at it."</p>
+
+<p>But I'm still too ill to write. With best regards to all your
+family, I am sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>I've been reading your pamphlet on Art Education. You
+write best when you write most seriously&mdash;and your best
+is very good.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+October 15,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I send you this picture in exchange for the one that you
+have&mdash;I'm "redeeming" all those with these. But I asked
+you to return that a long time ago. Please say if you like
+this; to me it looks like a dude. But I hate the other&mdash;the
+style of it.</p>
+
+<p>It is very good of your father to take so much trouble as
+to go over and work on that stone. I want the pictures&mdash;lithographs&mdash;only
+for economy: so that when persons for
+whom I do not particularly care want pictures of me I
+need not bankrupt myself in orders to the photographer.<span class="pagenum">15</span>
+And I do not like photographs anyhow. How long, O Lord,
+how long am I to wait for that sketch of <i>you</i>?</p>
+
+<p>My dear girl, I do not see that folk like your father and
+me have any just cause of complaint against an unappreciative
+world; nobody compels us to make things that the
+world does not want. We merely choose to because the
+pay, <i>plus</i> the satisfaction, exceeds the pay alone that we
+get from work that the world does want. Then where is our
+grievance? We get what we prefer when we do good work;
+for the lesser wage we do easier work. It has never seemed
+to me that the "unappreciated genius" had a good case to
+go into court with, and I think he should be promptly non-suited.
+Inspiration from Heaven is all very fine&mdash;the
+mandate of an attitude or an instinct is good; but when A
+works for B, yet insists on taking his orders from C, what
+can he expect? So don't distress your good little heart with
+compassion&mdash;not for me, at least; whenever I tire of pot-boiling,
+wood-chopping is open to me, and a thousand other
+honest and profitable employments.</p>
+
+<p>I have noted Gertrude's picture in the Examiner with a
+peculiar interest. That girl has a bushel of brains, and her
+father and brother have to look out for her or she will leave
+them out of sight. I would suggest as a measure of precaution
+against so monstrous a perversion of natural order that
+she have her eyes put out. The subjection of women must
+be maintained.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Bib and Leigh send love to you. Leigh, I think, is expecting
+Carlt. I've permitted Leigh to join the band again, and
+he is very peacocky in his uniform. God bless you. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">St. Helena,<br />
+November 6,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,<span class="pagenum">16</span></p>
+
+<p>I am glad you will consent to tolerate the new photograph&mdash;all
+my other friends are desperately delighted with
+it. I prefer your tolerance.</p>
+
+<p>But I don't like to hear that you have been "ill and
+blue"; that is a condition which seems more naturally to
+appertain to me. For, after all, whatever cause you may
+have for "blueness," you can always recollect that you are
+<i>you</i>, and find a wholesome satisfaction in your identity;
+whereas I, alas, am <i>I</i>!</p>
+
+<p>I'm sure you performed your part of that concert creditably
+despite the ailing wrist, and wish that I might have
+added myself to your triumph.</p>
+
+<p>I have been very ill again but hope to get away from here
+(back to my mountain) before it is time for another attack
+from my friend the enemy. I shall expect to see you there
+sometime when my brother and his wife come up. They
+would hardly dare to come without you.</p>
+
+<p>No, I did not read the criticism you mention&mdash;in the
+<i>Saturday Review</i>. Shall send you all the <i>Saturdays</i> that I
+get if you will have them. Anyhow, they will amuse (and
+sometimes disgust) your father.</p>
+
+<p>I have awful arrears of correspondence, as usual.</p>
+
+<p>The children send love. They had a pleasant visit with
+Carlt, and we hope he will come again.</p>
+
+<p>May God be very good to you and put it into your heart
+to write to your uncle often.</p>
+
+<p>Please give my best respects to all Partingtons, jointly
+and severally.<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+November 29,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Only just a word to say that I have repented of my assent
+to your well-meant proposal for your father to write of <i>me</i>.<span class="pagenum">17</span>
+If there is anything in my work in letters that engages his
+interest, or in my <i>literary</i> history&mdash;that is well enough, and
+I shall not mind. But "biography" in the other sense is
+distasteful to me. I never read biographical "stuff" of
+other writers&mdash;of course you know "stuff" is literary
+slang for "matter"&mdash;and think it "beside the question."
+Moreover, it is distinctly mischievous to letters. It throws
+no light on one's work, but on the contrary "darkens
+counsel." The only reason that posterity judges work with
+some slight approach to accuracy is that posterity knows
+less, and cares less, about the author's personality. It considers
+his work as impartially as if it had found it lying
+on the ground with no footprints about it and no initials
+on its linen.</p>
+
+<p>My brother is not "fully cognizant" of my history, anyhow&mdash;not
+of the part that is interesting.</p>
+
+<p>So, on the whole, I'll ask that it be not done. It was only
+my wish to please that made me consent. That wish is no
+weaker now, but I would rather please otherwise.</p>
+
+<p>I trust that you arrived safe and well, and that your
+memory of those few stormy days is not altogether disagreeable.
+Sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+December 25,<br />
+1892.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Returning here from the city this morning, I find your
+letter. And I had not replied to your last one before that!
+But <i>that</i> was because I hoped to see you at your home. I
+was unable to do so&mdash;I saw no one (but Richard) whom I
+really wanted to see, and had not an hour unoccupied by
+work or "business" until this morning. And then&mdash;it was
+Christmas, and my right to act as skeleton at anybody's
+feast by even so much as a brief call was not clear. I hope<span class="pagenum">18</span>
+my brother will be as forgiving as I know you will be.</p>
+
+<p>When I went down I was just recovering from as severe
+an attack of illness as I ever had in my life. Please consider
+unsaid all that I have said in praise of this mountain,
+its air, water, and everything that is its.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>It was uncommonly nice of Hume to entertain so good an
+opinion of me; if you had seen him a few days later you
+would have found a different state of affairs, probably; for
+I had been exhausting relays of vials of wrath upon him
+for delinquent diligence in securing copyright for my little
+story&mdash;whereby it is uncopyrighted. I ought to add that
+he has tried to make reparation, and is apparently contrite
+to the limit of his penitential capacity.</p>
+
+<p>No, there was no other foundation for the little story
+than its obvious naturalness and consistency with the
+sentiments "appropriate to the season." When Christendom
+is guzzling and gorging and clowning it has not time
+to cease being cruel; all it can do is to augment its hypocrisy
+a trifle.</p>
+
+<p>Please don't lash yourself and do various penances any
+more for your part in the plaguing of poor Russell; he is
+quite forgotten in the superior affliction sent upon James
+Whitcomb Riley. <i>That</i> seems a matter of genuine public
+concern, if I may judge by what I heard in town (and I
+heard little else) and by my letters and "esteemed"
+(though testy) "contemporaries." Dear, dear, how sensitive
+people are becoming!</p>
+
+<p>Richard has promised me the Blanchescape that I have
+so patiently waited for while you were practicing the art of
+looking pretty in preparation for the sitting, so now I am
+happy. I shall put you opposite Joaquin Miller, who is<span class="pagenum">19</span>
+now framed and glazed in good shape. I have also your
+father's sketch of me&mdash;that is, I got it and left it in San
+Francisco to be cleaned if possible; it was in a most unregenerate
+state of dirt and grease.</p>
+
+<p>Seeing Harry Bigelow's article in the <i>Wave</i> on women
+who write (and it's unpleasantly near to the truth of the
+matter) I feel almost reconciled to the failure of my gorgeous
+dream of making a writer of <i>you</i>. I wonder if you
+would have eschewed the harmless, necessary tub and
+danced upon the broken bones of the innocuous toothbrush.
+Fancy you with sable nails and a soiled cheek,
+uttering to the day what God taught in the night! Let us
+be thankful that the peril is past.</p>
+
+<p>The next time I go to "the Bay" I shall go to 1019 <i>first</i>.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you for a good girl.<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="p4">[First part of this letter missing.]</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I know Blackburn Harte has a weakness for the proletariat
+of letters *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* and doubtless thinks Riley good
+<i>because</i> he is "of the people," peoply. But he will have to
+endure me as well as he can. You ask my opinion of Burns.
+He has not, I think, been translated into English, and I do
+not (that is, I can but <i>will</i> not) read that gibberish. I read
+Burns once&mdash;that was once too many times; but happily
+it was before I knew any better, and so my time, being
+worthless, was not wasted.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you could be up here this beautiful weather. But
+I dare say it would rain if you came. In truth, it is "thickening"
+a trifle just because of my wish. And I wish I <i>had</i>
+given you, for your father, all the facts of my biography<span class="pagenum">20</span>
+from the cradle&mdash;downward. When you come again I
+shall, if you still want them. For I'm worried half to death
+with requests for them, and when I refuse am no doubt
+considered surly or worse. And my refusal no longer serves,
+for the biography men are beginning to write my history
+from imagination. So the next time I see you I shall give
+you (orally) that "history of a crime," my life. Then, if
+your father is still in the notion, he can write it from your
+notes, and I can answer all future inquiries by enclosing
+his article.</p>
+
+<p>Do you know?&mdash;you will, I think, be glad to know&mdash;that
+I have many more offers for stories at good prices,
+than I have the health to accept. (For I am less nearly well
+than I have told you.) Even the <i>Examiner</i> has "waked
+up" (I woke it up) to the situation, and now pays me $20 a
+thousand words; and my latest offer from New York is $50.</p>
+
+<p>I hardly know why I tell you this unless it is because you
+tell me of any good fortune that comes to your people, and
+because you seem to take an interest in my affairs such as
+nobody else does in just the same unobjectionable and, in
+fact, agreeable way. I wish you were my "real, sure-enough"
+niece. But in that case I should expect you to pass
+all your time at Howell Mountain, with your uncle and
+cousin. Then I should teach you to write, and you could
+expound to me the principles underlying the art of being
+the best girl in the world. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+January 4,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Not hearing from [you] after writing you last week, I fear
+you are ill&mdash;may I not know? I am myself ill, as I feared. On
+Thursday last I was taken violently ill indeed, and have but
+just got about. In truth, I'm hardly able to write you, but<span class="pagenum">21</span>
+as I have to go to work on Friday, <i>sure</i>, I may as well practice
+a little on you. And the weather up here is Paradisaical.
+Leigh and I took a walk this morning in the woods.
+We scared up a wild deer, but I did not feel able to run it
+down and present you with its antlers.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you are well, that you are all well. And I hope
+Heaven will put it into your good brother's heart to send
+me that picture of the sister who is so much too good for
+him&mdash;or anybody.</p>
+
+<p>In the meantime, and always, God bless you. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>My boy (who has been an angel of goodness to me in my
+illness) sends his love to you and all your people.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin, Cal.,<br />
+January 14,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Partington</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You see the matter is this way. You can't come up here
+and go back the same day&mdash;at least that would give you
+but about an hour here. You must remain over night. Now
+I put it to you&mdash;how do you think I'd feel if you came and
+remained over night and I, having work to do, should have
+to leave you to your own devices, mooning about a place
+that has nobody to talk to? When a fellow comes a long
+way to see me I want to see a good deal of him, however <i>he</i>
+may feel about it. It is not the same as if he lived in the
+same bailiwick and "dropped in." That is why, in the present
+state of my health and work, I ask all my friends to
+give me as long notice of their coming as possible. I'm sure
+you'll say I am right, inasmuch as certain work if undertaken
+must be done by the time agreed upon.</p>
+
+<p>My relations with Danziger are peculiar&mdash;as any one's
+relations with him must be. In the matter of which you
+wished to speak I could say nothing. For this I must ask<span class="pagenum">22</span>
+you to believe there are reasons. It would not have been
+fair not to let you know, before coming, that I would not
+talk of him.</p>
+
+<p>I thought, though, that you would probably come up to-day
+if I wrote you. Well, I should like you to come and pass
+a week with me. But if you come for a day I naturally want
+it to be an "off" day with me. Sincerely yours,<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+January 23,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I should have written you sooner; it has been ten whole
+days since the date of your last letter. But I have not been
+in the mood of letter writing, and am prepared for maledictions
+from all my neglected friends but you. My
+health is better. Yesterday I returned from Napa, where I
+passed twenty-six hours, buried, most of the time, in fog;
+but apparently it has not harmed me. The weather here
+remains heavenly. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>If I grow better in health I shall in time feel able to extend
+my next foray into the Lowlands as far as Oakland
+and Berkeley.</p>
+
+<p>Here are some fronds of maiden-hair fern that I have just
+brought in. The first wild flowers of the season are beginning
+to venture out and the manzanitas are a sight to see.</p>
+
+<p>With warmest regards to all your people, I am, as ever,
+your most unworthy uncle, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+February 5,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>What an admirable reporter you would be! Your account
+of the meeting with Miller in the restaurant and of the
+"entertainment" are amusing no end. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* By the way,
+I observe a trooly offle "attack" on me in the Oakland<span class="pagenum">23</span>
+<i>Times</i> of the 3rd (I think) *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* (I know of course it
+means me&mdash;I always know that when they pull out of
+their glowing minds that old roasted chestnut about
+"tearing down" but not "building up"&mdash;that is to say,
+effacing one imposture without giving them another in
+place of it.) The amusing part of the business is that he
+points a contrast between me and Realf (God knows
+there's unlikeness enough) quite unconscious of the fact
+that it is I and no other who have "built up" Realf's reputation
+as a poet&mdash;published his work, and paid him for it,
+when nobody else would have it; repeatedly pointed out its
+greatness, and when he left that magnificent crown of sonnets
+behind him protested that posterity would know California
+better by the incident of his death than otherwise&mdash;not
+a soul, until now, concurring in my view of the verses.
+Believe me, my trade is not without its humorous side.</p>
+
+<p>Leigh and I went down to the waterfall yesterday. It was
+almost grand&mdash;greater than I had ever seen it&mdash;and I
+took the liberty to wish that you might see it in that state.
+My wish must have communicated itself, somehow, though
+imperfectly, to Leigh, for as I was indulging it he expressed
+the same wish with regard to Richard.</p>
+
+<p>I wish too that you might be here to-day to see the swirls
+of snow. It is falling rapidly, and I'm thinking that this
+letter will make its way down the mountain to-morrow
+morning through a foot or two of it. Unluckily, it has a
+nasty way of turning to rain.</p>
+
+<p>My health is very good now, and Leigh and I take long
+walks. And after the rains we look for Indian arrow-heads
+in the plowed fields and on the gravel bars of the creek. My
+collection is now great; but I fear I shall tire of the fad
+before completing it. One in the country must have a fad<span class="pagenum">24</span>
+or die of dejection and oxidation of the faculties. How happy
+is he who can make a fad of his work!</p>
+
+<p>By the way, my New York publishers (The United States
+Book Company) have failed, owing me a pot of money, of
+which I shall probably get nothing. I'm beginning to cherish
+an impertinent curiosity to know what Heaven means to do
+to me next. If your function as one of the angels gives you
+a knowledge of such matters please betray your trust and
+tell me where I'm to be hit, and how hard.</p>
+
+<p>But this is an intolerable deal of letter.</p>
+
+<p>With best regards to all good Partingtons&mdash;and I think
+there are no others&mdash;I remain your affectionate uncle by
+adoption, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>Leigh has brought in some manzanita blooms which I
+shall try to enclose. But they'll be badly smashed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+February 14,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My Dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I thank you many times for the picture, which is a monstrous
+good picture, whatever its shortcomings as a portrait
+may be. On the authority of the great art critic, Leigh
+Bierce, I am emboldened to pronounce some of the work
+in it equal to Gribayedoff at his best; and that, according
+to the g. a. c. aforesaid, is to exhaust eulogium. But&mdash;it
+isn't altogether the Blanche that I know, as I know her.
+Maybe it is the hat&mdash;I should prefer you hatless, and so
+less at the mercy of capricious fortune. Suppose hats were
+to "go out"&mdash;I tremble to think of what would happen to
+that gorgeous superstructure which now looks so beautiful.
+O, well, when I come down I shall drag you to the hateful
+photographer and get something that looks quite like
+you&mdash;and has no other value.</p>
+
+<p>And I mean to "see Oakland and die" pretty soon. I have<span class="pagenum">25</span>
+not dared go when the weather was bad. It promises well
+now, but I am to have visitors next Sunday, so must stay
+at home. God and the weather bureau willing, you may be
+bothered with me the Saturday or Sunday after. We shall see.</p>
+
+<p>I hope your father concurs in my remarks on picture
+"borders"&mdash;I did not think of him until the remarks had
+been written, or I should have assured myself of his practice
+before venturing to utter my mind o' the matter. If it
+were not for him and Gertrude and the <i>Wave</i> I should
+snarl again, anent "half-tones," which I abhor. Hume tried
+to get me to admire his illustrations, but I would not, so far
+as the process is concerned, and bluntly told him he would
+not get your father's best work that way.</p>
+
+<p>If you were to visit the Mountain now I should be able
+to show you a redwood forest (newly discovered) and a
+picturesque gulch to match.</p>
+
+<p>The wild flowers are beginning to put up their heads to
+look for you, and my collection of Indian antiquities is
+yearning to have you see it.</p>
+
+<p>Please convey my thanks to Richard for the picture&mdash;the
+girlscape&mdash;and my best regards to your father and all
+the others.</p>
+<p class="left65">Sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+February 21,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm very sorry indeed that I cannot be in Oakland Thursday
+evening to see you "in your glory," arrayed, doubtless,
+like a lily of the field. However glorious you may be in
+public, though, I fancy I should like you better as you used
+to be out at camp.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I mean to see you on Saturday afternoon if you are
+at home, and think I shall ask you to be my guide to<span class="pagenum">26</span>
+Grizzlyville; for surely I shall never be able to find the
+wonderful new house alone. So if your mamma will let you
+go out there with me I promise to return you to her instead
+of running away with you. And, possibly, weather
+permitting, we can arrange for a Sunday in the redwoods
+or on the hills. Or don't your folks go out any more o'
+Sundays?</p>
+
+<p>Please give my thanks to your mother for the kind invitation
+to put up at your house; but I fear that would be
+impossible. I shall have to be where people can call on me&mdash;and
+such a disreputable crowd as my friends are would ruin
+the Partingtonian reputation for respectability. In your new
+neighborhood you will all be very proper&mdash;which you could
+hardly be with a procession of pirates and vagrants pulling
+at your door-bell.</p>
+
+<p>So&mdash;if God is good&mdash;I shall call on you Saturday afternoon.
+In the meantime and always be thou happy&mdash;thou
+and thine. Your unworthy uncle, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+March 18,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is good to have your letters again. If you will not let
+me teach you my trade of writing stories it is right that you
+practice your own of writing letters. You are mistress of
+that. Byron's letters to Moore are dull in comparison with
+yours to me. Some allowance, doubtless, must be made for
+my greater need of your letters than of Byron's. For, truth
+to tell, I've been a trifle dispirited and noncontent. In that
+mood I peremptorily resigned from the <i>Examiner</i>, for one
+thing&mdash;and permitted myself to be coaxed back by Hearst,
+for another. My other follies I shall not tell you. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>We had six inches of snow up here and it has rained
+steadily ever since&mdash;more than a week. And the fog is of<span class="pagenum">27</span>
+superior opacity&mdash;quite peerless that way. It is still raining
+and fogging. Do you wonder that your unworthy uncle
+has come perilously and alarmingly near to loneliness? Yet
+I have the companionship, at meals, of one of your excellent
+sex, from San Francisco. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Truly, I should like to attend one of your at-homes, but I
+fear it must be a long time before I venture down there
+again. But when this brumous visitation is past I can <i>look</i>
+down, and that assists the imagination to picture you all in
+your happy (I hope) home. But if that woolly wolf, Joaquin
+Miller, doesn't keep outside the fold I <i>shall</i> come down and
+club him soundly. I quite agree with your mother that his
+flattery will spoil you. You said I would spoil Phyllis, and
+now, you bad girl, you wish to be spoiled yourself. Well, you
+can't eat four Millerine oranges.&mdash;My love to all your family. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+March 26,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Partington</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am very glad indeed to get the good account of Leigh
+that you give me. I've feared that he might be rather a bore
+to you, but you make me easy on that score. Also I am
+pleased that you think he has a sufficient "gift" to do
+something in the only direction in which he seems to care
+to go.</p>
+
+<p>He is anxious to take the place at the <i>Examiner</i>, and his
+uncle thinks that would be best&mdash;if they will give it him.
+I'm a little reluctant for many reasons, but there are considerations&mdash;some
+of them going to the matter of character
+and disposition&mdash;which point to that as the best arrangement.
+The boy needs discipline, control, and work.
+He needs to learn by experience that life is not all beer and
+skittles. Of course you can't quite know him as I do. As to<span class="pagenum">28</span>
+his earning anything on the <i>Examiner</i> or elsewhere, that cuts
+no figure&mdash;he'll spend everything he can get his fingers on
+anyhow; but I feel that he ought to have the advantage
+of a struggle for existence where the grass is short and the
+soil stony.</p>
+
+<p>Well, I shall let him live down there somehow, and see
+what can be done with him. There's a lot of good in him,
+and a lot of the other thing, naturally.</p>
+
+<p>I hope Hume has, or will, put you in authority in the
+<i>Post</i> and give you a decent salary. He seems quite enthusiastic
+about the <i>Post</i> and&mdash;about you.</p>
+
+<p>With sincere regards to Mrs. Partington and all the Partingtonettes,
+I am very truly yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+April 10,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Partington</span>,</p>
+
+<p>If you are undertaking to teach my kid (which, unless
+it is entirely agreeable to you, you must not do) I hope you
+will regard him as a pupil whose tuition is to be paid for like
+any other pupil. And you should, I think, name the price.
+Will you kindly do so?</p>
+
+<p>Another thing. Leigh tells me you paid him for something
+he did for the <i>Wave</i>. That is not right. While you let him
+work with you, and under you, his work belongs to you&mdash;is
+a part of yours. I mean the work that he does in your
+shop for the <i>Wave</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I don't wish to feel that you are bothering with him for
+nothing&mdash;will you not tell me your notion of what I should
+pay you?</p>
+
+<p>I fancy you'll be on the <i>Examiner</i> pretty soon&mdash;if you wish.</p>
+
+<p>With best regards to your family I am sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+April 10,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,<span class="pagenum">29</span></p>
+
+<p>As I was writing to your father I was, of course, strongly
+impressed with a sense of <i>you</i>; for you are an intrusive kind
+of creature, coming into one's consciousness in the most
+lawless way&mdash;Phyllis-like. (Phyllis is my "type and example"
+of lawlessness, albeit I'm devoted to her&mdash;a Phyllistine,
+as it were.)</p>
+
+<p>Leigh sends me a notice (before the event) of your concert.
+I hope it was successful. Was it?</p>
+
+<p>It rains or snows here all the time, and the mountain
+struggles in vain to put on its bravery of leaf and flower.
+When this kind of thing stops I'm going to put in an application
+for you to come up and get your bad impressions of
+the place effaced. It is insupportable that my earthly paradise
+exist in your memory as a "bad eminence," like Satan's
+primacy.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you the <i>New England Magazine</i>&mdash;perhaps I
+have sent it already&mdash;and a <i>Harper's Weekly</i> with a story
+by Mrs. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, who is a sort of pupil of mine. She used to
+do bad work&mdash;does now sometimes; but she will do great
+work by-and-by.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you had not got that notion that you cannot learn
+to write. You see I'd like you to do <i>some</i> art work that I
+can understand and enjoy. I wonder why it is that no note
+or combination of notes can be struck out of a piano that
+will touch me&mdash;give me an emotion of any kind. It is not
+wholly due to my ignorance and bad ear, for other instruments&mdash;the
+violin, organ, zither, guitar, etc., sometimes affect
+me profoundly. Come, read me the riddle if you know.
+What have I done that I should be inaccessible to your
+music? I know it is good; I can hear that it is, but not feel
+that it is. Therefore to me it is not.</p>
+
+<p>Now that, you will confess, is a woeful state&mdash;"most<span class="pagenum">30</span>
+tolerable and not to be endured." Will you not cultivate
+some art within the scope of my capacity? Do you think
+you could learn to walk on a wire (if it lay on the ground)?
+Can you not ride three horses at once if they are suitably
+dead? Or swallow swords? Really, you should have some
+way to entertain your uncle.</p>
+
+<p>True, you can talk, but you never get the chance; I always
+"have the floor." Clearly you must learn to write,
+and I mean to get Miller to teach you how to be a poet.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you will write occasionally to me,&mdash;letter-writing
+is an art that you do excel in&mdash;as I in "appreciation" of
+your excellence in it.</p>
+
+<p>Do you see my boy? I hope he is good, and diligent in his
+work.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You must write to me or I shall withdraw my avuncular
+relation to you.</p>
+
+<p>With good will to all your people&mdash;particularly Phyllis&mdash;I
+am sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin, Calif.,<br />
+April 16,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Partington</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I think you wrong. On your own principle, laid down in
+your letter, that "every man has a right to the full value
+of his labor"&mdash;pardon me, good Englishman, I meant
+"laboUr"&mdash;you have a right to your wage for the labo<sup><span style="font-size: 1.2em;">&#7799;</span></sup>r
+of teaching Leigh. And what work would <i>he</i> get to do but
+for you?</p>
+
+<p>I can't hold you and inject shekels into your pocket, but
+if the voice of remonstrance has authority to enter at your
+ear without a ticket I pray you to show it hospitality.</p>
+
+<p>Leigh doubtless likes to see his work in print, but I hope
+you will not let him put anything out until it is as good as
+he can make it&mdash;nor then if it is not good <i>enough</i>. And<span class="pagenum">31</span>
+that whether he signs it or not. I have talked to him about
+the relation of conscience to lab-work, but I don't know
+if my talk all came out at the other ear.</p>
+
+<p>O&mdash;that bad joke o' mine. Where do you and Richard
+expect to go when death do you part? You were neither of
+you present that night on the dam, nor did I know either
+of you. Blanche, thank God, retains the old-time reverence
+for truth: it was to her that I said it. Richard evidently
+dreamed it, and you&mdash;you've been believing that confounded
+<i>Wave</i>! Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin,<br />
+April 18,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I take a few moments from work to write you in order
+(mainly) to say that your letter of March 31st did not go
+astray, as you seem to fear&mdash;though why <i>you</i> should care
+if it did I can't conjecture. The loss to me&mdash;that is probably
+what would touch your compassionate heart.</p>
+
+<p>So you <i>will</i> try to write. That is a good girl. I'm almost
+sure you can&mdash;not, of course, all at once, but by-and-by.
+And if not, what matter? You are not of the sort, I am sure,
+who would go on despite everything, determined to succeed
+by dint of determining to succeed.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>We are blessed with the most amiable of all conceivable
+weathers up here, and the wild flowers are putting up their
+heads everywhere to look for you. Lying in their graves
+last autumn, they overheard (<i>under</i>heard) your promise to
+come in the spring, and it has stimulated and cheered them
+to a vigorous growth.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you some more papers. Don't think yourself
+obliged to read all the stuff I send you&mdash;<i>I</i> don't read it.</p>
+
+<p>Condole with me&mdash;I have just lost another publisher&mdash;by<span class="pagenum">32</span>
+failure. Schulte, of Chicago, publisher of "The Monk"
+etc., has "gone under," I hear. Danziger and I have not
+had a cent from him. I put out three books in a year, and
+lo! each one brings down a publisher's gray hair in sorrow
+to the grave! for Langton, of "Black Beetles," came to
+grief&mdash;that is how Danziger got involved. "O that mine
+enemy would <i>publish</i> one of my books!"</p>
+
+<p>I am glad to hear of your success at your concert. If I
+could have reached you you should have had the biggest
+basket of pretty vegetables that was ever handed over the
+footlights. I'm sure you merited it all&mdash;what do you <i>not</i>
+merit?</p>
+
+<p>Your father gives me good accounts of my boy. He <i>must</i>
+be doing well, I think, by the way he neglects all my commissions.</p>
+
+<p>Enclosed you will find my contribution to the Partington
+art gallery, with an autograph letter from the artist. You
+can hang them in any light you please and show them to
+Richard. He will doubtless be pleased to note how the
+latent genius of his boss has burst into bloom.</p>
+
+<p>I have been wading in the creek this afternoon for pure
+love of it; the gravel looked so clean under the water. I
+was for the moment at least ten years younger than your
+father. To whom, and to all the rest of your people, my
+sincere regards, Your uncle, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Angwin, Cala.,<br />
+April 26,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I accept your sympathy for my misfortunes in publishing.
+It serves me right (I don't mean the sympathy does) for
+publishing. I should have known that if a publisher cannot
+beat an author otherwise, or is too honest to do so, he will<span class="pagenum">33</span>
+do it by failing. Once in London a publisher gave me a
+check dated two days ahead, and then (the only thing he
+could do to make the check worthless)&mdash;ate a pork pie and
+died. That was the late John Camden Hotten, to whose
+business and virtues my present London publishers, Chatto
+and Windus, have succeeded. They have not failed, and they
+refuse pork pie, but they deliberately altered the title of
+my book.</p>
+
+<p>All this for your encouragement in "learning to write."
+Writing books is a noble profession; it has not a shade of
+selfishness in it&mdash;nothing worse than conceit.</p>
+
+<p>O yes, you shall have your big basket of flowers if ever I
+catch you playing in public. I wish I could give you the
+carnations, lilies-of-the-valley, violets, and first-of-the-season
+sweet peas now on my table. They came from down near
+you&mdash;which fact they are trying triumphantly and as hard
+as they can to relate in fragrance.</p>
+
+<p>I trust your mother is well of her cold&mdash;that you are all
+well and happy, and that Phyllis will not forget me. And
+may the good Lord bless you regularly every hour of every
+day for your merit, and every minute of every hour as a
+special and particular favor to Your uncle, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Berkeley,<br />
+October 2,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I accept with pleasure your evidence that the Piano is not
+as black as I have painted, albeit the logical inference is
+that I'm pretty black myself. Indubitably I'm "in outer
+darkness," and can only say to you: "Lead, kindly light."
+Thank you for the funny article on the luxury question&mdash;from
+the funny source. But you really must not expect me
+to answer it, nor show you wherein it is "wrong." I cannot<span class="pagenum">34</span>
+discern the expediency of you having any "views" at all
+in those matters&mdash;even correct ones. If I could have my
+way you should think of more profitable things than the
+(conceded) "wrongness" of a world which is the habitat of
+a wrongheaded and wronghearted race of irreclaimable savages.
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* When woman "broadens her sympathies" they
+become annular. Don't.</p>
+
+<p>Cosgrave came over yesterday for a "stroll," but as he
+had a dinner engagement to keep before going home, he was
+in gorgeous gear. So I kindly hoisted him atop of Grizzly
+Peak and sent him back across the Bay in a condition impossible
+to describe, save by the aid of a wet dishclout for
+illustration.</p>
+
+<p>Please ask your father when and where he wants me to
+sit for the portrait. If that picture is not sold, and ever
+comes into my possession, I shall propose to swap it for
+yours. I have always wanted to lay thievish hands on that,
+and would even like to come by it honestly. But what
+under the sun would I do with either that or mine? Fancy
+me packing large paintings about to country hotels and
+places of last resort!</p>
+
+<p>Leigh is living with me now. Poor chap, the death of his
+aunt has made him an orphan. I feel a profound compassion
+for any one whom an untoward fate compels to live
+with <i>me</i>. However, such a one is sure to be a good deal
+alone, which is a mitigation.</p>
+
+<p>With good wishes for all your people, I am sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Berkeley,<br />
+December 27,<br />
+1893.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you (by way of pretext for writing you) a
+magazine that I asked Richard to take to you last evening,<span class="pagenum">35</span>
+but which he forgot. There's an illustrated article on gargoyles
+and the like, which will interest you. Some of the
+creatures are delicious&mdash;more so than I had the sense to
+perceive when I saw them alive on Notre Dame.</p>
+
+<p>I want to thank you too for the beautiful muffler before I
+take to my willow chair, happy in the prospect of death.
+For at this hour, 10:35 p. m., I "have on" a very promising
+case of asthma. If I come out of it decently alive in a week
+or so I shall go over to your house and see the finished portrait
+if it is "still there," like the flag in our national
+anthem.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Oakland,<br />
+July 31,<br />
+1894.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>If you are not utterly devoured by mosquitoes perhaps
+you'll go to the postoffice and get this. In that hope I write,
+not without a strong sense of the existence of the clerks in
+the Dead Letter Office at Washington.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you are (despite the mosquitoes) having "heaps"
+of rest and happiness. As to me, I have only just recovered
+sufficiently to be out, and "improved the occasion" by going
+to San Francisco yesterday and returning on the 11:15 boat.
+I saw Richard, and he seemed quite solemn at the thought
+of the dispersal of his family to the four winds.</p>
+
+<p>I have a joyous letter from Leigh dated "on the road,"
+nearing Yosemite. He has been passing through the storied
+land of Bret Harte, and is permeated with a sense of its
+beauty and romance. When shall you return? May I hope,
+then, to see you?</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>P.S. Here are things that I cut out for memoranda. On
+second thought <i>I</i> know all that; so send them to you for the<span class="pagenum">36</span>
+betterment of your mind and heart. <span class="flright">B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">San Jose,<br />
+October 17,<br />
+1894.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Blanche</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your kindly note was among a number which I put into
+my pocket at the postoffice and forgot until last evening
+when I returned from Oakland. (I dared remain up there
+only a few hours, and the visit did me no good.)</p>
+
+<p>Of course I should have known that your good heart would
+prompt the wish to hear from your patient, but I fear I was
+a trifle misanthropic all last week, and indisposed to communicate
+with my species.</p>
+
+<p>I came here on Monday of last week, and the change has
+done me good. I have no asthma and am slowly getting
+back my strength.</p>
+
+<p>Leigh and Ina Peterson passed Sunday with me, and
+Leigh recounted his adventures in the mountains. I had
+been greatly worried about him; it seems there was abundant
+reason. The next time he comes I wish he would
+bring you. It is lovely down here. Perhaps you and Katie
+can come some time, and I'll drive you all over the valley&mdash;if
+you care to drive.</p>
+
+<p>If I continue well I shall remain here or hereabout; if not
+I don't know where I shall go. Probably into the Santa
+Cruz mountains or to Gilroy. If I could have my way I'd
+live at Piedmont.</p>
+
+<p>Do you know I lost Pin the Reptile? I brought him along
+in my bicycle bag (I came the latter half of the way bike-back)
+and the ungrateful scoundrel wormed himself out and
+took to the weeds just before we got to San Jose. So I've
+nothing to lavish my second-childhoodish affection upon&mdash;nothing
+but just myself.</p>
+
+<p>My permanent address is Oakland, as usual, but <i>you</i> may<span class="pagenum">37</span>
+address me here at San Jose if you will be so good as to
+address me anywhere. Please do, and tell me of your triumphs
+and trials at the Conservatory of Music. I do fervently
+hope it may prove a means of prosperity to you, for,
+behold, you are The Only Girl in the World Who Merits
+Prosperity!</p>
+
+<p>Please give my friendly regards to your people; and so&mdash;Heaven
+be good to you.<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">San Jose,<br />
+October 28,<br />
+1894.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">O, Best of Poets</span>,</p>
+
+<p>How have you the heart to point out what you deem an
+imperfection in those lines. Upon my soul, I swear they are
+faultless, and "moonlight" is henceforth and forever a
+rhyme to "delight." Also, likewise, moreover and furthermore,
+a &mdash; is henceforth &mdash;; and &mdash; are forever &mdash;;
+and to &mdash; shall be &mdash;; and so forth.
+You have established new canons of literary criticism&mdash;more
+liberal ones&mdash;and death to the wretch who does not accept
+them! Ah, I always knew you were a revolutionist.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I am in better health, worse luck! For I miss the beef-teaing
+expeditions more than you can by trying.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, if you again encounter your fellow practitioner,
+Mrs. Hirshberg, please tell her what has become of
+her patient, and that I remember her gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>It is not uninteresting to me to hear of your progress in
+your art, albeit I am debarred from entrance into the temple
+where it is worshiped. After all, art finds its best usefulness
+in its reaction upon the character; and in that work I can
+trace your proficiency in the art that you love. As you become
+a better artist you grow a nicer girl, and if your music
+does not cause my tympana to move themselves aright, yet
+the niceness is not without its effect upon the soul o' me.<span class="pagenum">38</span>
+So I'm not so <i>very</i> inert a clod, after all.</p>
+
+<p>No, Leigh has not infected me with the exploring fad. I
+exhausted my capacity in that way years before I had the
+advantage of his acquaintance and the contagion of his
+example. But I don't like to think of that miserable mountain
+sitting there and grinning in the consciousness of having
+beaten the Bierce family.</p>
+
+<p>So&mdash;apropos of my brother&mdash;<i>I</i> am "odd" after a certain
+fashion! My child, that is blasphemy. You grow hardier
+every day of your life, and you'll end as a full colonel yet,
+and challenge Man to mortal combat in true Stetsonian
+style. Know thy place, thou atom!</p>
+
+<p>Speaking of colonels reminds me that one of the most
+eminent of the group had the assurance to write me, asking
+for an "audience" to consult about a benefit that she&mdash;<i>she!</i>&mdash;is
+getting up for my friend Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, a glorious
+writer and eccentric old maid whom you do not know.
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* evidently wants more notoriety and proposes to shine
+by Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* light. I was compelled to lower the temperature
+of the situation with a letter curtly courteous. Not
+even to assist Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* shall my name be mixed up with
+those of that gang. But of course all that does not amuse
+you.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could have a chat with you. I speak to nobody
+but my chambermaid and the waiter at my restaurant. By
+the time I see you I shall have lost the art of speech altogether
+and shall communicate with you by the sign language.</p>
+
+<p>God be good to you and move you to write to me sometimes.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p class="p4">[First part of this letter missing.]<span class="pagenum">39</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You may, I think, expect my assistance in choosing between
+(or among) your suitors next month, early. I propose
+to try living in Oakland again for a short time beginning
+about then. But I shall have much to do the first few days&mdash;possibly
+in settling my earthly affairs for it is my determination
+to be hanged for killing all those suitors. That seems
+to me the simplest way of disembarrassing you. As to me&mdash;it
+is the "line of least resistance"&mdash;unless they fight.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>So you have been ill. You must not be ill, my child&mdash;it
+disturbs my Marcus Aurelian tranquillity, and is most selfishly
+inconsiderate of you.</p>
+
+<p>Mourn with me: the golden leaves of my poplars are now
+underwheel. I sigh for the perennial eucalyptus leaf of
+Piedmont.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you are all well. Sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">San Jose,<br />
+November 20,<br />
+1894.</div>
+
+<p class="p4">Since writing you yesterday, dear Blanche, I have observed
+that the benefit to *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* is not abandoned&mdash;it is to
+occur in the evening of the 26th, at Golden Gate Hall, San
+Francisco. I recall your kind offer to act for me in any way
+that I might wish to assist Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*. Now, I will not have
+my name connected with anything that the *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* woman and
+her sister-in-evidence may do for their own glorification,
+but I enclose a Wells, Fargo &amp; Co. money order for all the
+money I can presently afford&mdash;wherewith you may do as
+you will; buy tickets, or hand it to the treasurer in your
+own name. I know Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* must be awfully needy to
+accept a benefit&mdash;you have no idea how sensitive and suspicious<span class="pagenum">40</span>
+and difficult she is. She is almost impossible. But
+there are countless exactions on my lean purse, and I must
+do the rest with my pen. So&mdash;I thank you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">18 Iowa Circle,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 1,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>This is just a hasty note to acknowledge receipt of your
+letter and the poems. I hope to reach those pretty soon and
+give them the attention which I am sure they will prove to
+merit&mdash;which I cannot do now. By the way, I wonder why
+most of you youngsters so persistently tackle the sonnet.
+For the same reason, I suppose, that a fellow always wants
+to make his first appearance on the stage in the rôle of
+"Hamlet." It is just the holy cheek of you.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, Leigh prospers fairly well, and I&mdash;well, I don't know
+if it is prosperity; it is a pretty good time.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I shall have to write to that old scoundrel
+Grizzly,<a name="fnanchor_1" id="fnanchor_1"></a><a href="#footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a> to give him my new address, though I supposed
+he had it; and the old one would do, anyhow. Now that his
+cub has returned he probably doesn't care for the other
+plantigrades of his kind.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for telling me so much about some of our companions
+and companionesses of the long ago. I fear that not
+all my heart was in my baggage when I came over here.
+There's a bit of it, for example, out there by that little lake
+in the hills.</p>
+
+<p>So I may have a photograph of one of your pretty sisters.
+Why, of course I want it&mdash;I want the entire five of them;
+their pictures, I mean. If you had been a nice fellow you
+would have let me know them long ago. And how about<span class="pagenum">41</span>
+that other pretty girl, your infinitely better half? You
+might sneak into the envelope a little portrait of <i>her</i>, lest I
+forget, lest I forget. But I've not yet forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>The new century's best blessings to the both o' you. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>P.S.&mdash;In your studies of poetry have you dipped into
+Stedman's new "American Anthology"? It is the most notable
+collection of American verse that has been made&mdash;on
+the whole, a book worth having. In saying so I rather pride
+myself on my magnanimity; for of course I don't think he
+has done as well by me as he might have done. That, I
+suppose, is what every one thinks who happens to be alive
+to think it. So I try to be in the fashion. <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_1" id="footnote_1" href="#fnanchor_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Albert Bierce.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">18 Iowa Circle,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 19,<br />
+1901. </div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've been a long while getting to your verses, but there
+were many reasons&mdash;including a broken rib. They are
+pretty good verses, with here and there <i>very</i> good lines. I'd
+a strong temptation to steal one or two for my "Passing
+Show," but I knew what an avalanche of verses it would
+bring down upon me from other poets&mdash;as every mention
+of a new book loads my mail with new books for a month.</p>
+
+<p>If I ventured to advise you I should recommend to you
+the simple, ordinary meters and forms native to our language.</p>
+
+<p>I await the photograph of the pretty sister&mdash;don't fancy
+I've forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>It is 1 a. m. and I'm about to drink your health in a glass
+of Riesling and eat it in a pâte.</p>
+
+<p>My love to Grizzly if you ever see him. Yours ever, <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 23,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My Dear Doyle</span>,<span class="pagenum">42</span></p>
+
+<p>Your letter of the 16th has just come and as I am waiting
+at my office (where I seldom go) I shall amuse myself by
+replying "to onct." See here, I don't purpose that your
+attack on poor Morrow's book shall become a "continuous
+performance," nor even an "annual ceremony." It is not
+"rot." It is not "filthy." It does not "suggest bed-pans,"&mdash;at
+least it did not to me, and I'll wager something that
+Morrow never thought of them. Observe and consider: If
+his hero and heroine had been man and wife, the bed-pan
+would have been there, just the same; yet you would not
+have thought of it. Every reader would have been touched
+by the husband's devotion. A physician has to do with
+many unpleasant things; whom do his ministrations disgust?
+A trained nurse lives in an atmosphere of bed-pans&mdash;to
+whom is her presence or work suggestive of them? I'm
+thinking of the heroic Father Damien and his lepers; do
+you dwell upon the rotting limbs and foul distortions of his
+unhappy charges? Is not his voluntary martyrdom one of
+the sanest, cleanest, most elevating memories in all history?
+Then it is <i>not</i> the bed-pan necessity that disgusts
+you; it is something else. It is the fact that the hero of the
+story, being neither physician, articled nurse, nor certificated
+husband, nevertheless performed <i>their</i> work. He ministered
+to the helpless in a natural way without authority
+from church or college, quite irregular and improper and
+all that. My noble critic, there speaks in your blood the
+Untamed Philistine. You were not caught young enough.
+You came into letters and art with all your beastly conventionalities
+in full mastery of you. Take a purge. Forget
+that there are Philistines. Forget that they have put their
+abominable pantalettes upon the legs of Nature. Forget
+that their code of morality and manners (it stinks worse<span class="pagenum">43</span>
+than a bed-pan) does <i>not</i> exist in the serene altitude of great
+art, toward which you have set your toes and into which I
+want you to climb. I know about this thing. I, too, tried to
+rise with all that dead weight dragging at my feet. Well, I
+could not&mdash;now I could if I cared to. In my mind I do. It
+is not freedom of act&mdash;not freedom of living, for which I
+contend, but freedom of thought, of mind, of spirit; the
+freedom to see in the horrible laws, prejudices, custom,
+conventionalities of the multitude, something good for
+them, but of no value to you <i>in your art.</i> In your life and
+conduct defer to as much of it as you will (you'll find it convenient
+to defer to a whole lot), but in your mind and art
+let not the Philistine enter, nor even speak a word through
+the keyhole. My own chief objection to Morrow's story is
+(as I apprised him) its unnaturalness. He did not dare to
+follow the logical course of his narrative. He was too cowardly
+(or had too keen an eye upon his market of prudes)
+to make hero and heroine join in the holy bonds of <i>bed</i>lock,
+as they naturally, inevitably and rightly would have done
+long before she was able to be about. I daresay that, too,
+would have seemed to you "filthy," without the parson
+and his fee. When you analyze your objection to the story
+(as I have tried to do for you) you will find that it all crystallizes
+into that&mdash;the absence of the parson. I don't envy
+you your view of the matter, and I really don't think you
+greatly enjoy it yourself. I forgot to say: Suppose they had
+been two men, two partners in hunting, mining, or exploring,
+as frequently occurs. Would the bed-pan suggestion
+have come to you? Did it come to you when you read of the
+slow, but not uniform, starvation of Greeley's party in the
+arctic? Of course not. Then it is a matter, not of bed-pans,
+but of sex-exposure (unauthorized by the church), of prudery&mdash;of<span class="pagenum">44</span>
+that artificial thing, the "sense of shame," of
+which the great Greeks knew nothing; of which the great
+Japanese know nothing; of which Art knows nothing. Dear
+Doctor, do you really put trousers on your piano-legs?
+Does your indecent intimacy with your mirror make you
+blush?</p>
+
+<p>There, there's the person whom I've been waiting for
+(I'm to take her to dinner, and I'm not married to even so
+much of her as her little toe) has come; and until you offend
+again, you are immune from the switch. May all your
+brother Philistines have to "Kiss the place to make it
+well."</p>
+
+<p>Pan is dead! Long live Bed-Pan!</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Yours ever, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+February 17,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I send back the poems, with a few suggestions. You grow
+great so rapidly that I shall not much longer dare to touch
+your work. I mean that.</p>
+
+<p>Your criticisms of Stedman's Anthology are just. But
+equally just ones can be made of any anthology. None of
+them can suit any one. I fancy Stedman did not try to
+"live up" to his standard, but to make <i>representative</i>,
+though not always the <i>best</i>, selections. It would hardly do
+to leave out Whitman, for example. <i>We</i> may not like him;
+thank God, we don't; but many others&mdash;the big fellows
+too&mdash;do; and in England he is thought great. And then
+Stedman has the bad luck to know a lot of poets personally&mdash;many
+bad poets. Put yourself in his place. Would
+you leave out me if you honestly thought my work bad?</p>
+
+<p>In any compilation we will all miss some of our favorites&mdash;and<span class="pagenum">45</span>
+find some of the public's favorites. You miss
+from Whittier "Joseph Sturge"&mdash;I the sonnet "Forgiveness,"
+and so forth. Alas, there is no universal standard!</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the photographs. Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* is a pretty
+girl, truly, and has the posing instinct as well. She has the
+place of honor on my mantel. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* But what scurvy knave
+has put the stage-crime into her mind? If you know that
+life as I do you will prefer that she die, poor girl.</p>
+
+<p>It is no trouble, but a pleasure, to go over your verses&mdash;I
+am as proud of your talent as if I'd made it.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>[over]</p>
+
+<p>About the rhymes in a sonnet:</p>
+
+<div class="center">
+<table border="0" cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" summary="Rhymes in a Sonnet">
+<col width="50" /><col width="100" /><col width="260" />
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">"Regular", or</td><td align="center">"English"</td><td align="center">Modern</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">Italian form</td><td align="center">form</td><td align="center">English</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">(Petrarch):</td><td align="center">(Shakspear's):</td><td align="center">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">1</td><td align="center">1</td><td align="center">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">2</td><td align="center">2</td><td align="center">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">2</td><td align="center">1</td><td align="center">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">1</td><td align="center">2</td><td align="center">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">1</td><td align="center">3</td><td align="center">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">2</td><td align="center">4</td><td align="center">2</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">2</td><td align="center">3</td><td align="center">1</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">1</td><td align="center">4</td><td align="center">Two or three</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">3</td><td align="center">5</td><td align="center">rhymes; any</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">4</td><td align="center">6</td><td align="center">arrangement</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">5</td><td align="center">5</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">3</td><td align="center">6</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">4</td><td align="center">7</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="center"></td><td align="center">5</td><td align="center">7</td></tr>
+</table></div>
+
+<p>There are good reasons for preferring the regular Italian
+form created by Petrarch&mdash;who knew a thing or two; and
+sometimes good reasons for another arrangement&mdash;of the
+sestet rhymes. If one should sacrifice a great thought to be
+like Petrarch one would not resemble him. <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 2,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,<span class="pagenum">46</span></p>
+
+<p>I am sending to the "Journal" your splendid poem on
+Memorial Day. Of course I can't say what will be its fate.
+I am not even personally acquainted with the editor of the
+department to which it goes. But if he has not the brains to
+like it he is to send it back and I'll try to place it elsewhere.
+It is great&mdash;great!&mdash;the loftiest note that you have struck
+and <i>held</i>.</p>
+
+<p>Maybe I owe you a lot of letters. I don't know&mdash;my correspondence
+all in arrears and I've not the heart to take it up.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for your kind words of sympathy.<a name="fnanchor_2" id="fnanchor_2"></a><a href="#footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[2]</a> I'm hit
+harder than any one can guess from the known facts&mdash;am
+a bit broken and gone gray of it all.</p>
+
+<p>But I remember you asked the title of a book of synonyms.
+It is "Roget's Thesaurus," a good and useful book.</p>
+
+<p>The other poems I will look up soon and consider. I've
+made no alterations in the "Memorial Day" except to
+insert the omitted stanza. </p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_2" id="footnote_2" href="#fnanchor_2"><span class="label">[2]</span></a> Concerning the death of his son Leigh.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+May 9,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I send the poems with suggestions. There's naught to say
+about 'em that I've not said of your other work. Your
+"growth in grace" (and other poetic qualities) is something
+wonderful. You are leaving my other "pupils" so
+far behind that they are no longer "in it." Seriously, you
+"promise" better than any of the new men in our literature&mdash;and
+perform better than all but Markham in his
+lucid intervals, alas, too rare.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+May 22,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,<span class="pagenum">47</span></p>
+
+<p>I enclose a proof of the poem<a name="fnanchor_3" id="fnanchor_3"></a><a href="#footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[3]</a>&mdash;all marked up. The poem
+was offered to the Journal, but to the wrong editor. I would
+not offer it to him in whose department it could be used,
+for he once turned down some admirable verses of my
+friend Scheffauer which I sent him. I'm glad the Journal is
+<i>not</i> to have it, for it now goes into the Washington Post&mdash;and
+the Post into the best houses here and elsewhere&mdash;a
+good, clean, unyellow paper. I'll send you some copies with
+the poem.</p>
+
+<p>I think my marks are intelligible&mdash;I mean my <i>re</i>marks.
+Perhaps you'll not approve all, or anything, that I did to
+the poem; I'll only ask you to endure. When you publish in
+covers you can restore to the original draft if you like. I had
+not time (after my return from New York) to get your
+approval and did the best and the least I could.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>My love to your pretty wife and sister. Let me know how
+hard you hate me for monkeying with your sacred lines.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">Yes, your poem recalled my "Invocation" as I read it;
+but it is better, and not too much like&mdash;hardly like at all
+except in the "political" part. Both, in that, are characterized,
+I think, by decent restraint. How *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* would, at
+those places, have ranted and chewed soap!&mdash;a superior
+quality of soap, I confess. <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_3" id="footnote_3" href="#fnanchor_3"><span class="label">[3]</span></a> "Memorial Day"</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1825 Nineteenth St.,<br />
+N. W.,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 30, 1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am glad my few words of commendation were not unpleasing
+to you. I meant them all and more. You ought to
+have praise, seeing that it is all you got. The "Post," like<span class="pagenum">48</span>
+most other newspapers, "don't pay for poetry." What a
+damning confession! It means that the public is as insensible
+to poetry as a pig to&mdash;well, to poetry. To any sane
+mind such a poem as yours is worth more than all the other
+contents of a newspaper for a year.</p>
+
+<p>I've not found time to consider your "bit of blank" yet&mdash;at
+least not as carefully as it probably merits.</p>
+
+<p>My relations with the present editor of the Examiner are
+not unfriendly, I hope, but they are too slight to justify
+me in suggesting anything to him, or even drawing his
+attention to anything. I hoped you would be sufficiently
+"enterprising" to get your poem into the paper if you cared
+to have it there. I wrote Dr. Doyle about you. He is a dear
+fellow and you should know each other. As to Scheffauer,
+he is another. If you want him to see your poem why not
+send it to him? But the last I heard he was very ill. I'm
+rather anxious to hear more about him.</p>
+
+<p>It was natural to enclose the stamps, but I won't have
+it so&mdash;so there! as the women say.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1825 Nineteenth St.,<br />
+N. W.,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+July 15,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Here is the bit of blank. When are we to see the book?
+Needless question&mdash;when you can spare the money to pay
+for publication, I suppose, if by that time you are ambitious
+to achieve public inattention. That's my notion of
+encouragement&mdash;I like to cheer up the young author as he
+sets his face toward "the peaks of song."</p>
+
+<p>Say, that photograph of the pretty sister&mdash;the one with a
+downward slope of the eyes&mdash;is all faded out. That is a
+real misfortune: it reduces the sum of human happiness<span class="pagenum">49</span>
+hereabout. Can't you have one done in fast colors and let
+me have it? The other is all right, but that is not the one
+that I like the better for my wall. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 16,<br />
+1901.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I enclose the poems with a few suggestions. They require
+little criticism of the sort that would be "helpful." As to
+their merit I think them good, but not great. I suppose you
+do not expect to write great things every time. Yet in the
+body of your letter (of Oct. 22) you do write greatly&mdash;and
+say that the work is "egoistic" and "unprintable." If it<a name="fnanchor_4" id="fnanchor_4"></a><a href="#footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[4]</a>
+were addressed to another person than myself I should say
+that it is "printable" exceedingly. Call it what you will,
+but let me tell you it will probably be long before you write
+anything better than some&mdash;many&mdash;of these stanzas.</p>
+
+<p>You ask if you have correctly answered your own questions.
+Yes; in four lines of your running comment:</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose that I'd do the greater good in the long run by
+making my work as good poetry as possible."</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Of course I deplore your tendency to dalliance with the
+demagogic muse. I hope you will not set your feet in the
+dirty paths&mdash;leading nowhither&mdash;of social and political
+"reform".... I hope you will not follow *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* in making
+a sale of your poet's birthright for a mess of "popularity."
+If you do I shall have to part company with you, as I have
+done with him and at least <i>one</i> of his betters, for I draw the
+line at demagogues and anarchists, however gifted and however
+beloved.</p>
+
+<p>Let the "poor" alone&mdash;they are oppressed by nobody but<span class="pagenum">50</span>
+God. Nobody hates them, nobody despises. "The rich" love
+them a deal better than they love one another. But I'll not
+go into these matters; your own good sense must be your
+salvation if you are saved. I recognise the temptations of
+environment: you are of San Francisco, the paradise of ignorance,
+anarchy and general yellowness. Still, a poet is not
+altogether the creature of his place and time&mdash;at least not
+of his to-day and his parish.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, you say that *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* is your only associate
+that knows anything of literature. She is a dear girl, but
+look out for her; she will make you an anarchist if she can,
+and persuade you to kill a President or two every fine
+morning. I warrant you she can pronounce the name of
+McKinley's assassin to the ultimate zed, and has a little
+graven image of him next her heart.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, you can republish the Memorial Day poem without
+the <i>Post's</i> consent&mdash;could do so in "book form" even if the
+<i>Post</i> had copyrighted it, which it did not do. I think the
+courts have held that in purchasing work for publication in
+his newspaper or magazine the editor acquires no right in
+it, <i>except for that purpose</i>. Even if he copyright it that is
+only to protect him from other newspapers or magazines;
+the right to publish in a book remains with the author.
+Better ask a lawyer though&mdash;preferably without letting
+him know whether you are an editor or an author.</p>
+
+<p>I ought to have answered (as well as able) these questions
+before, but I have been ill and worried, and have written
+few letters, and even done little work, and that only of the
+pot-boiling sort.</p>
+
+<p>My daughter has recovered and returned to Los Angeles.</p>
+
+<p>Please thank Miss *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* for the beautiful photographs&mdash;I
+mean for being so beautiful as to "take" them, for doubtless<span class="pagenum">51</span>
+I owe their possession to you.</p>
+
+<p>I wrote Doyle about you and he cordially praised your
+work as incomparably superior to his own and asked that
+you visit him. He's a lovable fellow and you'd not regret
+going to Santa Cruz and boozing with him.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the picture of Grizzly and the cub of him.</p>
+
+<p>Sincerely yours, with best regards to the pretty ever-so-much-better
+half of you,<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>P.S. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_4" id="footnote_4" href="#fnanchor_4"><span class="label">[4]</span></a> "Dedication" poem to Ambrose Bierce.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 15,<br />
+1902.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Where are you going to stop?&mdash;I mean at what stage of
+development? I presume you have not a "whole lot" of
+poems really writ, and have not been feeding them to me,
+the least good first, and not in the order of their production.
+So it must be that you are advancing at a stupendous
+rate. This last<a name="fnanchor_5" id="fnanchor_5"></a><a href="#footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[5]</a> beats any and all that went before&mdash;or I
+am bewitched and befuddled. I dare not trust myself to say
+what I think of it. In manner it is great, but the greatness
+of the theme!&mdash;that is beyond anything.</p>
+
+<p>It is a new field, the broadest yet discovered. To paraphrase
+Coleridge,</p>
+
+<p class="poem">You are the first that ever burst<br />
+Into that silent [unknown] sea&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>a silent sea <i>because</i> no one else has burst into it in full song.
+True, there have been short incursions across the "border,"
+but only by way of episode. The tremendous phenomena of
+Astronomy have never had adequate poetic treatment,
+their meaning adequate expression. You must make it your
+own domain. You shall be the poet of the skies, the prophet<span class="pagenum">52</span>
+of the suns. Don't fiddle-faddle with such infinitesimal and
+tiresome trivialities as (for example) the immemorial squabbles
+of "rich" and "poor" on this "mote in the sun-beam."
+(Both "classes," when you come to that, are about equally
+disgusting and unworthy&mdash;there's not a pin's moral difference
+between them.) Let them cheat and pick pockets and
+cut throats to the satisfaction of their base instincts, but do
+thou regard them not. Moreover, by that great law of change
+which you so clearly discern, there can be no permanent
+composition of their nasty strife. "Settle" it how they will&mdash;another
+beat of the pendulum and all is as before; and ere
+another, Man will again be savage, sitting on his naked
+haunches and gnawing raw bones.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, circumstances make the "rich" what they are. And
+circumstances make the poor what <i>they</i> are. I have known
+both, long and well. The rich&mdash;<i>while</i> rich&mdash;are a trifle
+better. There's nothing like poverty to nurture badness.
+But in this country there are no such "classes" as "rich"
+and "poor": as a rule, the wealthy man of to-day was a
+poor devil yesterday; the poor devils of to-day have an
+equal chance to be rich to-morrow&mdash;or would have if they
+had equal brains and providence. The system that gives
+them the chance is not an oppressive one. Under a really
+oppressive system a salesman in a village grocery could not
+have risen to a salary of one million dollars a year because
+he was worth it to his employers, as Schwab has done.
+True, some men get rich by dishonesty, but the poor commonly
+cheat as hard as they can and remain poor&mdash;thereby
+escaping observation and censure. The moral difference between
+cheating to the limit of a small opportunity and
+cheating to the limit of a great one is to me indiscernable.
+The workman who "skimps his work" is just as much a<span class="pagenum">53</span>
+rascal as the "director" who corners a crop.</p>
+
+<p>As to "Socialism." I am something of a Socialist myself;
+that is, I think that the principle, which has always coexisted
+with competition, each safeguarding the other, may
+be advantageously extended. But those who rail against
+"the competitive system," and think they suffer from it,
+really suffer from their own unthrift and incapacity. For
+the competent and provident it is an ideally perfect system.
+As the other fellows are not of those who effect permanent
+reforms, or reforms of any kind, pure Socialism is the dream
+of a dream.</p>
+
+<p>But why do I write all this. One's opinions on such matters
+are unaffected by reason and instance; they are born of
+feeling and temperament. There is a Socialist diathesis, as
+there is an Anarchist diathesis. Could you teach a bulldog
+to retrieve, or a sheep to fetch and carry? Could you make
+a "born artist" comprehend a syllogism? As easily persuade
+a poet that black is not whatever color he loves. Somebody
+has defined poetry as "glorious nonsense." It is not an altogether
+false definition, albeit I consider poetry the flower
+and fruit of speech and would rather write gloriously than
+sensibly. But if poets saw things as they are they would
+write no more poetry.</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, I venture to ask you: <i>Can't</i> you see in the
+prosperity of the strong and the adversity of the weak a
+part of that great beneficent law, "the survival of the
+fittest"? Don't you see that such evils as inhere in "the
+competitive system" are evils only to individuals, but
+blessings to the race by gradually weeding out the incompetent
+and their progeny?</p>
+
+<p>I've done, i' faith. Be any kind of 'ist or 'er that you will,
+but don't let it get into your ink. Nobody is calling you to<span class="pagenum">54</span>
+deliver your land from Error's chain. What we want of you
+is poetry, not politics. And if you care for fame just have
+the goodness to consider if any "champion of the poor"
+has ever obtained it. From the earliest days down to Massanielo,
+Jack Cade and Eugene Debs the leaders and
+prophets of "the masses" have been held unworthy. And
+with reason too, however much injustice is mixed in with
+the right of it. Eventually the most conscientious, popular
+and successful "demagogue" comes into a heritage of infamy.
+The most brilliant gifts cannot save him. That will
+be the fate of Edwin Markham if he does not come out o'
+that, and it will be the fate of George Sterling if he will not
+be warned.</p>
+
+<p>You think that "the main product of that system" (the
+"competitive") "is the love of money." What a case of the
+cart before the horse! The love of money is not the product,
+but the root, of the system&mdash;not the effect, but the cause.
+When one man desires to be better off than another he
+competes with him. You can abolish the system when you
+can abolish the desire&mdash;when you can make man as Nature
+did <i>not</i> make him, content to be as poor as the poorest. Do
+away with the desire to excel and you may set up your
+Socialism at once. But what kind of a race of sloths and
+slugs will you have?</p>
+
+<p>But, bless me, I shall <i>never</i> have done if I say all that
+comes to me.</p>
+
+<p>Why, of course my remarks about *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* were facetious&mdash;playful.
+She really is an anarchist, and her sympathies are
+with criminals, whom she considers the "product" of the
+laws, but&mdash;well, she inherited the diathesis and can no
+more help it than she can the color of her pretty eyes. But
+she is a child&mdash;and except in so far as her convictions make<span class="pagenum">55</span>
+her impossible they do not count. She would not hurt a
+fly&mdash;not even if, like the toad, it had a precious jewel in its
+head that it did not work for. But I am speaking of the
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* that <i>I</i> knew. If I did not know that the anarchist
+leopard's spots "will wash," your words would make me
+think that she might have changed. It does not matter
+what women think, if thinking it may be called, and *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*
+will never be other than lovable.</p>
+
+<p>Lest you have <i>not</i> a copy of the verses addressed to me I
+enclose one that I made myself. Of course their publication
+could not be otherwise than pleasing to me if you care to do
+it. You need not fear the "splendid weight" expression,
+and so forth&mdash;there is nothing "conceited" in the poem.
+As it was addressed to me, I have not criticised it&mdash;I <i>can't</i>.
+And I guess it needs no criticism.</p>
+
+<p>I fear for the other two-thirds of this latest poem. If you
+descend from Arcturus to Earth, from your nebulae to your
+neighbors, from Life to lives, from the measureless immensities
+of space to the petty passions of us poor insects, won't
+you incur the peril of anti-climax? I doubt if you can touch
+the "human interest" after those high themes without an
+awful tumble. I should be sorry to see the poem "peter
+out," or "soak in." It would be as if Goethe had let his
+"Prologue in Heaven" expire in a coon song. You have
+reached the "heights of dream" all right, but how are you
+to stay there to the end? By the way, you must perfect
+yourself in Astronomy, or rather get a general knowledge of
+it, which I fear you lack. Be sure about the pronunciation
+of astronomical names.</p>
+
+<p>I have read some of Jack London's work and think it
+clever. Of Whitaker I never before heard, I fear. If London
+wants to criticise your "Star poem" what's the objection?<span class="pagenum">56</span>
+I should not think, though, from his eulogism of *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, that
+he is very critical. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Where are you to place Browning? Among thinkers. In
+his younger days, when he wrote in English, he stood among
+the poets. I remember writing once&mdash;of the thinker: "There's
+nothing more obscure than Browning except blacking." I'll
+stand to that.</p>
+
+<p>No, don't take the trouble to send me a copy of these
+verses: I expect to see them in a book pretty soon. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_5" id="footnote_5" href="#fnanchor_5"><span class="label">[5]</span></a> "The Testimony of the Suns."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 31,<br />
+1902.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am glad to know that you too have a good opinion of
+that poem.<a name="fnanchor_6" id="fnanchor_6"></a><a href="#footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[6]</a> One should know about one's own work. Most
+writers think their work good, but good writers know it.
+Pardon me if I underrated your astronomical knowledge.
+My belief was based on your use of those names. I never
+met with the spelling "Betelgeux"; and even if it is correct
+and picturesque I'd not use it if I were you, for it does not
+quite speak itself, and you can't afford to jolt the reader's
+attention from your thought to a matter of pronunciation.
+In my student days we, I am sure, were taught to say
+Procy&#180;on. I don't think I've heard it pronounced since, and
+I've no authority at hand. If you are satisfied with Pro&#180;cyon
+I suppose it is that. But your pronunciation was Aldeb&#180;aran
+or your meter very crazy indeed. I asked (with an interrogation
+point) if it were not Aldeba&#180;ran&mdash;and I think it is.
+Fomalhaut I don't know about; I thought it French and
+masculine. In that case it would, I suppose, be "ho," not
+"hote."</p>
+
+<p>Don't cut out that stanza, even if "clime" doesn't seem<span class="pagenum">57</span>
+to me to have anything to do with duration. The stanza is
+good enough to stand a blemish.</p>
+
+<p>"Ye stand rebuked by suns who claim"&mdash;I was wrong in
+substituting "that" for "who," not observing that it would
+make it ambiguous. I merely yielded to a favorite impulse:
+to say "that" instead of "who," and did not count the
+cost.</p>
+
+<p>Don't cut out <i>any</i> stanza&mdash;if you can't perfect them let
+them go imperfect.</p>
+
+<p>"Without or genesis or end."<br />
+"Devoid of birth, devoid of end."</p>
+
+<p>These are not so good as</p>
+
+<p>"Without beginning, without end";&mdash;I submit them to
+suggest a way to overcome that identical rhyme. All you
+have to do is get rid of the second "without." I should not
+like "impend."</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I vote for Orion's <i>sword</i> of suns. "Cimetar" sounds
+better, but it is more specific&mdash;less generic. It is modern&mdash;or,
+rather, less ancient than "sword," and makes one think
+of Turkey and the Holy Land. But "sword"&mdash;there were
+swords before Homer. And I don't think the man who
+named this constellation ever saw a curved blade. And yet,
+and yet&mdash;"cimetar of suns" is "mighty catchin'."</p>
+
+<p>No, indeed, I could not object to your considering the
+heavens in a state of war. I have sometimes fancied I could
+hear the rush and roar of it. Why, a few months ago I began
+a sonnet thus:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"Not as two erring spheres together grind,</span><br />
+With monstrous ruin, in the vast of space,<br />
+Destruction born of that malign embrace&mdash;<br />
+Their hapless peoples all to death consigned&mdash;" etc.</p>
+
+<p>I've been a star-gazer all my life&mdash;from my habit of being<span class="pagenum">58</span>
+"out late," I guess; and the things have always seemed to
+me <i>alive</i>.</p>
+
+<p>The change in the verses <i>ad meum</i>, from "<i>thy</i> clearer
+light" to "<i>the</i> clearer light" may have been made modestly
+or inadvertently&mdash;I don't recollect. It is, of course, no
+improvement and you may do as you please. I'm uniformly
+inadvertent, but intermittently modest.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>A class of stuff that I can't (without "trouble in the office")
+write my own way I will not write at all. So I'm writing
+very little of anything but nonsense. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>With best regards to Mrs. Sterling and Miss Marian I am</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p>Leigh died a year ago this morning. I wish I could stop
+counting the days.</p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_6" id="footnote_6" href="#fnanchor_6"><span class="label">[6]</span></a> "The Testimony of the Suns."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 15,<br />
+1902.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>All right&mdash;I only wanted you to be <i>sure</i> about those
+names of stars; it would never do to be less than sure.</p>
+
+<p>After all our talk (made by me) I guess that stanza would
+better stand as first written. "Clime"&mdash;climate&mdash;connotes
+temperature, weather, and so forth, in ordinary speech, but
+a poet may make his own definitions, I suppose, and compel
+the reader to study them out and accept them.</p>
+
+<p>Your misgiving regarding your inability to reach so high
+a plane again as in this poem is amusing, but has an element
+of the pathetic. It certainly is a misfortune for a
+writer to do his <i>best</i> work early; but I fancy you'd better
+trust your genius and do its bidding whenever the monkey
+chooses to bite. "The Lord will provide." Of course you
+have read Stockton's story "His Wife's Deceased Sister."<span class="pagenum">59</span>
+But Stockton gets on very well, despite "The Lady or the
+Tiger." I've a notion that you'll find other tragedies among
+the stars if earth doesn't supply you with high enough
+themes.</p>
+
+<p>Will I write a preface for the book? Why, yes, if you think
+me competent. Emerson commands us to "hitch our wagon
+to a star?" and, egad! here's a whole constellation&mdash;a universe&mdash;of
+stars to draw mine! It makes me blink to think
+of it.</p>
+
+<p>O yes, I'd like well enough to "leave the Journal," but&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+July 10,<br />
+1902.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>If rejection wounded, all writers would bleed at every pore.
+Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done. Of course I
+shall be glad to go over your entire body of work again and
+make suggestions if any occur to me. It will be no trouble&mdash;I
+could not be more profitably employed than in critically
+reading you, nor more agreeably.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Of course your star poem has one defect&mdash;if it is a defect&mdash;that
+limits the circle of understanding and admiring
+readers&mdash;its lack of "<i>human</i> interest." We human
+insects, as a rule, care for nothing but ourselves, and think
+that is best which most closely touches such emotions and
+sentiments as grow out of our relations, the one with
+another. I don't share the preference, and a few others do
+not, believing that there are things more interesting than
+men and women. The Heavens, for example. But who
+knows, or cares anything about them&mdash;even knows the
+name of a single constellation? Hardly any one but the<span class="pagenum">60</span>
+professional astronomers&mdash;and there are not enough of
+them to buy your books and give you fame. I should be
+sorry not to have that poem published&mdash;sorry if you did
+not write more of the kind. But while it may impress and
+dazzle "the many" it will not win them. They want you to
+finger their heart-strings and pull the cord that works their
+arms and legs. So you must finger and pull&mdash;too.</p>
+
+<p>The Château Yquem came all right, and is good. Thank
+you for it&mdash;albeit I'm sorry you feel that you must do
+things like that. It is very conventional and, I fear,
+"proper." However, I remember that you used to do so
+when you could not by any stretch of imagination have felt
+that you were under an "obligation." So I guess it is all
+right&mdash;just your way of reminding me of the old days.
+Anyhow, the wine is so much better than my own that I've
+never a scruple when drinking it.</p>
+
+<p>Has "Maid Marian" a photograph of me?&mdash;I don't
+remember. If not I'll send her one; I've just had some
+printed from a negative five or six years old. I've renounced
+the photograph habit, as one renounces other habits when
+age has made them ridiculous&mdash;or impossible.</p>
+
+<p>Send me the typewritten book when you have it complete.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+August 19,<br />
+1902.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I suppose you are in Seattle, but this letter will keep till
+your return.</p>
+
+<p>I am delighted to know that I am to have "the book" so
+soon, and will give it my best attention and (if you still
+desire) some prefatory lines. Think out a good title and I
+shall myself be hospitable to any suggestion of my dæmon<span class="pagenum">61</span>
+in the matter. He has given me nothing for the star poem
+yet.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You'll "learn in suffering what you teach in song," all
+right; but let us hope the song will be the richer for it. It
+<i>will</i> be. For that reason I never altogether "pity the sorrows"
+of a writer&mdash;knowing they are good for him. He
+needs them in his business. I suspect you must have shed a
+tear or two since I knew you.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you a photograph, but you did not tell me if
+Maid Marian the Superb already has one&mdash;that's what I
+asked you, and if you don't answer I shall ask her.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I am fairly well, and, though not "happy," content.
+But I'm dreadfully sorry about Peterson.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">I am about to break up my present establishment and
+don't know where my next will be. Better address me "Care
+N. Y. American and Journal Bureau, Washington, D. C."</p>
+
+<p>You see I'm still chained to the oar of yellow journalism,
+but it is a rather light servitude.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Address me at<br />
+1321 Yale Street,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 20,<br />
+1902.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I fancy you must fear by this time that I did not get the
+poems, but I did. I'll get at them, doubtless, after awhile,
+though a good deal of manuscript&mdash;including a couple of
+novels!&mdash;is ahead of them; and one published book of bad
+poems awaits a particular condemnation.</p>
+
+<p>I'm a little embarrassed about the preface which I'm to
+write. I fear you must forego the preface or I the dedication.
+That kind of "coöperation" doesn't seem in very good<span class="pagenum">62</span>
+taste: it smacks of "mutual admiration" in the bad sense,
+and the reviewers would probably call it "log-rolling." Of
+course it doesn't matter too much what the reviewers say,
+but it matters a lot what the intelligent readers think; and
+your book will have no others. I really shouldn't like to
+write the preface of a book dedicated to me, though I did
+not think of that at first.</p>
+
+<p>The difficulty could be easily removed by <i>not</i> dedicating
+the book to me were it not that that would sacrifice the
+noble poem with my name atop of it. That poem is itself
+sufficiently dedicatory if printed by itself in the forepages
+of the book and labeled "Dedication&mdash;To Ambrose
+Bierce." I'm sure that vanity has nothing to do, or little
+to do, with my good opinion of the verses. And, after all,
+they <i>show</i> that I have said <i>to you</i> all that I could say to the
+reader in your praise and encouragement. What do you
+think?</p>
+
+<p>As to dedicating individual poems to other fellows, I have
+not the slightest hesitancy in advising you against it. The
+practice smacks of the amateur and is never, I think, pleasing
+to anybody but the person so honored. The custom has
+fallen into "innocuous desuetude" and there appears to be
+no call for its revival. Pay off your obligations (if such there
+be) otherwise. You may put it this way if you like: The
+whole book being dedicated to me, no part of it <i>can</i> be
+dedicated to another. Or this way: Secure in my exalted
+position I don't purpose sharing the throne with rival (and
+inferior) claimants. They be gam doodled!</p>
+
+<p>Seriously&mdash;but I guess it is serious enough as it stands.
+It occurs to me that in saying: "no part of it <i>can</i> be dedicated
+to another" I might be understood as meaning: "no
+part of it <i>must</i> be," etc. No; I mean only that the dedication<span class="pagenum">63</span>
+to another would contradict the dedication to me. The
+two things are (as a matter of fact) incompatible.</p>
+
+<p>Well, if you think a short preface by me preferable to the
+verses with my name, all right; I will cheerfully write it,
+and that will leave you free to honor your other friends if
+you care to. But those are great lines, and implying, as they
+do, all that a set preface could say, it seems to me that they
+ought to stand.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Maid Marian shall have the photograph.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">1321 Yale Street,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 1,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You are a brick. You shall do as you will. My chief reluctance
+is that if it become known, or <i>when</i> it becomes known,
+there may ensue a suspicion of my honesty in praising you
+and <i>your</i> book; for critics and readers are not likely to look
+into the matter of dates. For your sake I should be sorry to
+have it thought that my commendation was only a log-rolling
+incident; for myself, I should care nothing about it.
+This eel is accustomed to skinning.</p>
+
+<p>It is not the least pleasing of my reflections that my
+friends have always liked my work&mdash;or me&mdash;well enough
+to want to publish my books at their own expense. Everything
+that I have written could go to the public that way
+if I would consent. In the two instances in which I did consent
+they got their money back all right, and I do not doubt
+that it will be so in this; for if I did not think there was at
+least a little profit in a book of mine I should not offer it to
+a publisher. "Shapes of Clay" <i>ought</i> to be published in
+California, and it would have been long ago if I had not<span class="pagenum">64</span>
+been so lazy and so indisposed to dicker with the publishers.
+Properly advertised&mdash;which no book of mine ever has
+been&mdash;it should sell there if nowhere else. Why, then, do
+<i>I</i> not put up the money? Well, for one reason, I've none to
+put up. Do you care for the other reasons?</p>
+
+<p>But I must make this a condition. If there is a loss, <i>I</i> am
+to bear it. To that end I shall expect an exact accounting
+from your Mr. Wood, and the percentage that Scheff. purposes
+having him pay to me is to go to you. The copyright
+is to be mine, but nothing else until you are entirely recouped.
+But all this I will arrange with Scheff., who, I take
+it, is to attend to the business end of the matter, with, of
+course, your assent to the arrangements that he makes.</p>
+
+<p>I shall write Scheff. to-day to go ahead and make his contract
+with Mr. Wood on these lines. Scheff. appears not to
+know who the "angel" in the case is, and he need not,
+unless, or until, you want him to.</p>
+
+<p>I've a pretty letter from Maid Marian in acknowledgment
+of the photograph. I shall send one to Mrs. Sterling
+at once, in the sure and certain hope of getting another. It
+is good of her to remember my existence, considering that
+your scoundrelly monopoly of her permitted us to meet so
+seldom. I go in for a heavy tax on married men who live
+with their wives.</p>
+
+<p>"She holds no truce with Death <i>or</i> Peace" means that
+with <i>one</i> of them she holds no truce; "nor" makes it mean
+that she holds no truce with <i>either</i>. The misuse of "or" (its
+use to mean "nor") is nearly everybody's upsetting sin. So
+common is it that "nor" instead usually sounds harsh.</p>
+
+<p>I omitted the verses on "Puck," not because Bunner is
+dead, but because his work is dead too, and the verses
+appear to lack intrinsic merit to stand alone. I shall perhaps<span class="pagenum">65</span>
+omit a few more when I get the proofs (I wish you
+could see the bushels I've left out already) and add a few
+serious ones.</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad no end that you and Scheff. have met. I'm fond
+of the boy and he likes me, I think. He too has a book of
+verses on the ways, and I hope for it a successful launching.
+I've been through it all; some of it is great in the matter of
+thews and brawn; some fine.</p>
+
+<p>Pardon the typewriter; I wanted a copy of this letter.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The New York<br />
+"American" Bureau,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 13,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is good to hear from you again and to know that the
+book is so nearly complete as to be in the hands of the publishers.
+I dare say they will not have it, and you'll have to
+get it out at your own expense. When it comes to that I
+shall hope to be of service to you, as you have been to me.</p>
+
+<p>So you like Scheff. Yes, he is a good boy and a good friend.
+I wish you had met our friend Dr. Doyle, who has now
+gone the long, lone journey. It has made a difference to me,
+but that matters little, for the time is short in which to
+grieve. I shall soon be going his way.</p>
+
+<p>No, I shall not put anything about the *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* person into
+"Shapes of Clay." His offence demands another kind of
+punishment, and until I meet him he goes unpunished. I
+once went to San Francisco to punish him (but that was in
+hot blood) but *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* of "The Wave" told me the man was
+a hopeless invalid, suffering from locomotor ataxia. I have
+always believed that until I got your letter and one from
+Scheff. Is it not so?&mdash;or <i>was</i> it not? If not he has good
+reason to think me a coward, for his offence was what men<span class="pagenum">66</span>
+are killed for; but of course one does not kill a helpless person,
+no matter what the offence is. If *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* lied to me I am
+most anxious to know it; he has always professed himself a
+devoted friend.</p>
+
+<p>The passage that you quote from Jack London strikes me
+as good. I don't dislike the word "penetrate"&mdash;rather like
+it. It is in frequent use regarding exploration and discovery.
+But I think you right about "rippling"; it is too lively
+a word to be outfitted with such an adjective as "melancholy."
+I see London has an excellent article in "The
+Critic" on "The Terrible and Tragic in Fiction." He knows
+how to think a bit.</p>
+
+<p>What do I think of Cowley-Brown and his "Goosequill"?
+I did not know that he had revived it; it died several years
+ago. I never met him, but in both Chicago and London
+(where he had "The Philistine," or "The Anti-Philistine,"
+I do not at the moment remember which) he was most kind
+to me and my work. In one number of his magazine&mdash;the
+London one&mdash;he had four of my stories and a long article
+about me which called the blushes to my maiden cheek like
+the reflection of a red rose in the petal of a violet. Naturally
+I think well of Cowley-Brown.</p>
+
+<p>You make me sad to think of the long leagues and the
+monstrous convexity of the earth separating me from your
+camp in the redwoods. There are few things that I would
+rather do than join that party; and I'd be the last to strike
+my tent and sling my swag. Alas, it cannot be&mdash;not this
+year. My outings are limited to short runs along this coast.
+I was about to set out on one this morning; and wrote a
+hasty note to Scheff in consequence of my preparations. In
+five hours I was suffering from asthma, and am now confined
+to my room. But for eight months of the year here I<span class="pagenum">67</span>
+am immune&mdash;as I never was out there.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You will have to prepare yourself to endure a good deal of
+praise when that book is out. One does not mind when one
+gets accustomed to it. It neither pleases nor bores; you
+will have just no feeling about it at all. But if you really
+care for <i>my</i> praise I hope you have quoted a bit of it at the
+head of those dedicatory verses, as I suggested. That will
+give them a <i>raison d'être</i>.</p>
+
+<p>With best regards to Mrs. Sterling and Katie I am sincerely
+yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">P.S.&mdash;If not too much trouble you may remind Dick
+Partington and wife that I continue to exist and to remember
+them pleasantly.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">N. Y. "American"<br />
+Bureau,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+[July, 1903].</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Scheff</span>:</p>
+
+<p>I got the proofs yesterday, and am returning them by this
+mail. The "report of progress" is every way satisfactory,
+and I don't doubt that a neat job is being done.</p>
+
+<p>The correction that you made is approved. I should have
+wanted and expected you to make many corrections and
+suggestions, but that I have had a purpose in making this
+book&mdash;namely, that it should represent my work at its average.
+In pursuance of this notion I was not hospitable even
+to suggestions, and have retained much work that I did not
+myself particularly approve; some of it trivial. You know
+I have always been addicted to trifling, and no book from
+which trivialities were excluded would fairly represent me.</p>
+
+<p>I could not commend this notion in another. In your work
+and Sterling's I have striven hard to help you to come as
+near to perfection as we could, because perfection is what
+you and he want, and as young writers ought to want, the<span class="pagenum">68</span>
+character of your work being higher than mine. I reached
+my literary level long ago, and seeing that it is not a high
+one there would seem to be a certain affectation, even a
+certain dishonesty, in making it seem higher than it is by
+republication of my best only. Of course I have not carried
+out this plan so consistently as to make the book dull: I
+had to "draw the line" at that.</p>
+
+<p>I say all this because I don't want you and Sterling to
+think that I disdain assistance: I simply decided beforehand
+not to avail myself of its obvious advantages. You
+would have done as much for the book in one way as you
+have done in another.</p>
+
+<p>I'll have to ask you to suggest that Mr. Wood have a man
+go over all the matter in the book, and see that none of the
+pieces are duplicated, as I fear they are. Reading the titles
+will not be enough: I might have given the same piece two
+titles. It will be necessary to compare first lines, I think.
+That will be drudgery which I'll not ask you to undertake:
+some of Wood's men, or some of the printer's men, will do
+it as well; it is in the line of their work.</p>
+
+<p>The "Dies Irae" is the most earnest and sincere of religious
+poems; my travesty of it is mere solemn fooling, which
+fact is "given away" in the prose introduction, where I
+speak of my version being of possible service in the church!
+The travesty is not altogether unfair&mdash;it was inevitably
+suggested by the author's obvious inaccessibility to humor
+and logic&mdash;a peculiarity that is, however, observable in all
+religious literature, for it is a fundamental necessity to the
+religious mind. Without logic and a sense of the ludicrous a
+man is religious as certainly as without webbed feet a bird
+has the land habit.</p>
+
+<p>It is funny, but I am a "whole lot" more interested in<span class="pagenum">69</span>
+seeing your cover of the book than my contents of it. I
+don't at all doubt&mdash;since you dared undertake it&mdash;that
+your great conception will find a fit interpreter in your
+hand; so my feeling is not anxiety. It is just interest&mdash;pure
+interest in what is above my powers, but in which <i>you</i> can
+work. By the way, Keller, of the old "Wasp" was <i>not</i> the
+best of its cartoonists. The best&mdash;the best of <i>all</i> cartoonists
+if he had not died at eighteen&mdash;was another German,
+named Barkhaus. I have all his work and have long cherished
+a wish to republish it with the needed explanatory
+text&mdash;much of it being "local" and "transient." Some day,
+perhaps&mdash;most likely not. But Barkhaus was a giant.</p>
+
+<p>How I envy you! There are few things that would please
+me so well as to "drop in" on you folks in Sterling's camp.
+Honestly, I think all that prevents is the (to me) killing
+journey by rail. And two months would be required, going
+and returning by sea. But the rail trip across the continent
+always gives me a horrible case of asthma, which lasts for
+weeks. I shall never take <i>that</i> journey again if I can avoid
+it. What times you and they will have about the campfire
+and the table! I feel like an exile, though I fear I don't look
+and act the part.</p>
+
+<p>I did not make the little excursion I was about to take
+when I wrote you recently. Almost as I posted the letter I
+was taken ill and have not been well since.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Doyle! how thoughtful of him to provide for the
+destruction of my letters! But I fear Mrs. Doyle found
+some of them queer reading&mdash;if she read them.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Great Scott! if ever they begin to publish mine there will
+be a circus! For of course the women will be the chief sinners,
+and&mdash;well, they have material a-plenty; they can<span class="pagenum">70</span>
+make many volumes, and your poor dead friend will have
+so bad a reputation that you'll swear you never knew him.
+I dare say, though, you have sometimes been indiscreet,
+too. <i>My</i> besetting sin has been in writing to my girl friends
+as if they were sweethearts&mdash;the which they'll doubtless
+not be slow to affirm. The fact that they write to me in the
+same way will be no defense; for when I'm worm's meat I
+can't present the proof&mdash;and wouldn't if I could. Maybe it
+won't matter&mdash;if I don't turn in my grave and so bother
+the worms.</p>
+
+<p>As Doyle's "literary executor" I fear your duties will be
+light: he probably did not leave much manuscript. I judge
+from his letters that he was despondent about his work and
+the narrow acceptance that it had. So I assume that he did
+not leave much more than the book of poems, which no
+publisher would (or will) take.</p>
+
+<p>You are about to encounter the same stupid indifference
+of the public&mdash;so is Sterling. I'm sure of Sterling, but don't
+quite know how it will affect <i>you</i>. You're a pretty sturdy
+fellow, physically and mentally, but this <i>may</i> hurt horribly.
+I pray that it do not, and could give you&mdash;perhaps have
+given you&mdash;a thousand reasons why it <i>should</i> not. You are
+still young and your fame may come while you live; but
+you must not expect it now, and doubtless do not. To me,
+and I hope to you, the approval of one person who knows
+is sweeter than the acclaim of ten thousand who do not&mdash;whose
+acclaim, indeed, I would rather not have. If you do
+not <i>feel</i> this in every fibre of your brain and heart, try to
+learn to feel it&mdash;practice feeling it, as one practices some
+athletic feat necessary to health and strength.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you very much for the photograph. You are growing
+too infernally handsome to be permitted to go about<span class="pagenum">71</span>
+unchained. If I had your "advantages" of youth and comeliness
+I'd go to the sheriff and ask him to lock me up. That
+would be the honorable thing for you to do, if you don't
+mind. God be with you&mdash;but inattentive.</p>
+
+<p class="smcap right">Ambrose Bierce.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Aurora,<br />
+Preston Co.,<br />
+West Virginia,<br />
+August 15,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I fear that among the various cares incident to my departure
+from Washington I forgot, or neglected, to acknowledge
+the Joaquin Miller book that you kindly sent me. I
+was glad to have it. It has all his characteristic merits and
+demerits&mdash;among the latter, his interminable prolixity, the
+thinness of the thought, his endless repetition of favorite
+words and phrases, many of them from his other poems, his
+mispronunciation, his occasional flashes of prose, and so forth.</p>
+
+<p>Scheff tells me his book is out and mine nearly out. But
+what of yours? I do fear me it never will be out if you rely
+upon its "acceptance" by any American publisher. If it
+meets with no favor among the publisher tribe we must
+nevertheless get it out; and you will of course let me do what
+I can. That is only tit for tat. But tell me about it.</p>
+
+<p>I dare say Scheff, who is clever at getting letters out of
+me&mdash;the scamp!&mdash;has told you of my being up here atop
+of the Alleghenies, and why I <i>am</i> here. I'm having a rather
+good time. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* Can you fancy me playing croquet, cards,
+lawn&mdash;no, thank God, I've escaped lawn tennis and golf!
+In respect of other things, though, I'm a glittering specimen
+of the Summer Old Man.</p>
+
+<p>Did <i>you</i> have a good time in the redwoods?</p>
+
+<p>Please present my compliments to Madame (and Mademoiselle)
+Sterling. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Aurora,<br />
+West Virginia,<br />
+September 8,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,<span class="pagenum">72</span></p>
+
+<p>I return the verses with a few suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sorry your time for poetry is so brief. But take your
+pencil and figure out how much you would write in thirty
+years (I hope you'll live that long) at, say, six lines a day.
+You'll be surprised by the result&mdash;and encouraged. Remember
+that 50,000 words make a fairly long book.</p>
+
+<p>You make me shudder when you say you are reading the
+"Prattle" of years. I haven't it and should hardly dare to
+read it if I had. There is so much in it to deplore&mdash;so much
+that is not wise&mdash;so much that was the expression of a
+mood or a whim&mdash;so much was not altogether sincere&mdash;so
+many half-truths, and so forth. Make allowances, I beg,
+and where you cannot, just forgive.</p>
+
+<p>Scheff has mentioned his great desire that you join the
+Bohemian Club. I know he wants me to advise you to do
+so. So I'm between two fires and would rather not advise
+at all. There are advantages (obvious enough) in belonging;
+and to one of your age and well grounded in sobriety
+and self-restraint generally, the disadvantages are not so
+great as to a youngster like Scheff. (Of course he is not so
+young as he seems to me; but he is younger by a few years
+and a whole lot of thought than you.)</p>
+
+<p>The trouble with that kind of club&mdash;with any club&mdash;is
+the temptation to waste of time and money; and the
+danger of the drink habit. If one is proof against these a
+club is all right. I belong to one myself in Washington, and
+at one time came pretty near to "running" it.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>No, I don't think Scheff's view of Kipling just. He asked
+me about putting that skit in the book. It <i>was</i> his view and,
+that being so, I could see no reason for suppressing it in
+deference to those who do not hold it. I like free speech,<span class="pagenum">73</span>
+though I'd not accord it to my enemies if I were Dictator.
+I should not think it for the good of the State to let *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*
+write verses, for example. The modern fad Tolerance does
+not charm me, but since it is all the go I'm willing that my
+friends should have their fling.</p>
+
+<p>I dare say Scheff is unconscious of Kipling's paternity in
+the fine line in "Back, back to Nature":</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"Loudly to the shore cries the surf upon the sea."</p>
+
+<p>But turn to "The Last Chanty," in "The Seven Seas," fill
+your ears with it and you'll write just such a line yourself.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>God be decent to you, old man. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Aurora,<br />
+West Virginia,<br />
+September 12,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have yours of the 5th. Before now you have mine of
+<i>some</i> date.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad you like London; I've heard he is a fine fellow
+and have read one of his books&mdash;"The Son of the Wolf," I
+think is the title&mdash;and it seemed clever work mostly. The
+general impression that remains with me is that it is always
+winter and always night in Alaska.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* will probably be glad to sell his scrap-book later, to
+get bread. He can't make a living out of the labor unions
+alone. I wish he were not a demgagoue and would not, as
+poor Doyle put it, go a-whoring after their Muse. When he
+returns to truth and poetry I'll receive him back into favor
+and he may kick me if he wants to.</p>
+
+<p>No, I can't tell you how to get "Prattle"; if I could I'd
+not be without it myself. You ask me when I began it in the<span class="pagenum">74</span>
+"Examiner." Soon after Hearst got the paper&mdash;I don't
+know the date&mdash;they can tell you at the office and will
+show you the bound volumes.</p>
+
+<p>I have the bound volumes of the "Argonaut" and "Wasp"
+during the years when I was connected with them, but my
+work in the "Examiner" (and previously in the "News
+Letter" and the London "Fun" and "Figaro" and other
+papers) I kept only in a haphazard and imperfect way.</p>
+
+<p>I don't recollect giving Scheff any "epigram" on woman
+or anything else. So I can't send it to you. I amuse myself
+occasionally with that sort of thing in the "Journal"
+("American") and suppose Hearst's other papers copy
+them, but the "environment" is uncongenial and uninspiring.</p>
+
+<p>Do I think extracts from "Prattle" would sell? I don't
+think anything of mine will sell. I could make a dozen
+books of the stuff that I have "saved up"&mdash;have a few
+ready for publication now&mdash;but all is vanity so far as profitable
+publication is concerned. Publishers want nothing
+from me but novels&mdash;and I'll die first.</p>
+
+<p>Who is *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*&mdash;and why? It is good of London to defend
+me against him. I fancy all you fellows have a-plenty of defending
+me to do, though truly it is hardly worth while. All
+my life I have been hated and slandered by all manner of
+persons except good and intelligent ones; and I don't greatly
+mind. I knew in the beginning what I had to expect, and
+I know now that, like spanking, it hurts (sometimes) but
+does not harm. And the same malevolence that has surrounded
+my life will surround my memory if I am remembered.
+Just run over in your mind the names of men who
+have told the truth about their unworthy fellows and about
+human nature "as it was given them to see it." They are<span class="pagenum">75</span>
+the bogie-men of history. None of them has escaped vilification.
+Can poor little I hope for anything better? When
+you strike you are struck. The world is a skunk, but it has
+rights; among them that of retaliation. Yes, you deceive
+yourself if you think the little fellows of letters "like" you,
+or rather if you think they will like you when they know
+how big you are. They will lie awake nights to invent new
+lies about you and new means of spreading them without
+detection. But you have your revenge: in a few years they'll
+all be dead&mdash;just the same as if you had killed them. Better
+yet, you'll be dead yourself. So&mdash;you have my entire
+philosophy in two words: "Nothing matters."</p>
+
+<p>Reverting to Scheff. What he has to fear (if he cares) is
+not incompetent criticism, but public indifference. That
+does not bite, but poets are an ambitious folk and like the
+limelight and the center of the stage. Maybe Scheff is different,
+as I know you are. Try to make him so if he isn't.
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* Wise poets write for one another. If the public happens
+to take notice, well and good. Sometimes it does&mdash;and
+then the wise poet would a blacksmith be. But this
+screed is becoming an essay.</p>
+
+<p>Please give my love to all good Sterlings&mdash;those by birth
+and those by marriage. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>My friends have returned to Washington, and I'm having
+great times climbing peaks (they are knobs) and exploring
+gulches and cañons&mdash;for which these people have no
+names&mdash;poor things. My dreamland is still unrevisited.
+They found a Confederate soldier over there the other day,
+with his rifle alongside. I'm going over to beg his pardon.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Ever yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.<br />
+[Postmarked<br />
+October 12,<br />
+1903.]</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,<span class="pagenum">76</span></p>
+
+<p>I have Jack London's books&mdash;the one from you and the
+one from him. I thank you and shall find the time to read
+them. I've been back but a few days and find a brace of
+dozen of books "intitualed" "Shapes of Clay." That the
+splendid work done by Scheff and Wood and your other
+associates in your labor of love is most gratifying to me
+should "go without saying." Surely <i>I</i> am most fortunate
+in having so good friends to care for my interests. Still,
+there will be an aching void in the heart of me until <i>your</i>
+book is in evidence. Honest, I feel more satisfaction in the
+work of you and Scheff than in my own. It is through you
+two that I expect my best fame. And how generously you
+accord it!&mdash;unlike certain others of my "pupils," whom I
+have assisted far more than I did you.</p>
+
+<p>My trip through the mountains has done my health
+good&mdash;and my heart too. It was a "sentimental journey"
+in a different sense from Sterne's. Do you know, George,
+the charm of a new emotion? Of course you do, but at my
+age I had thought it impossible. Well, I had it repeatedly.
+Bedad, I think of going again into my old "theatre of
+war," and setting up a cabin there and living the few days
+that remain to me in meditation and sentimentalizing. But
+I should like you to be near enough to come up some Saturday
+night with some'at to drink. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">N. Y. Journal Office,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 21,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Sterling</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm indebted to you for two letters&mdash;awfully good ones.
+In the last you tell me that your health is better, and I can
+see for myself that your spirits are. This you attribute to
+exercise, correctly, no doubt. You need a lot of the open
+air&mdash;we all do. I can give myself hypochondria in forty-eight<span class="pagenum">77</span>
+hours by staying in-doors. The sedentary life and abstracted
+contemplation of one's own navel are good for
+Oriental gods only. We spirits of a purer fire need sunlight
+and the hills. My own recent wanderings afoot and horseback
+in the mountains did me more good than a sermon.
+And you have "the hills back of Oakland"! God, what
+would I not give to help you range them, the dear old things!
+Why, I know every square foot of them from Walnut Creek
+to Niles Cañon. Of course they swarm with ghosts, as do all
+places out there, even the streets of San Francisco; but I
+and my ghosts always get on well together. With the female
+ones my relations are sometimes a bit better than they were
+with the dear creatures when they lived.</p>
+
+<p>I guess I did not acknowledge the splendidly bound
+"Shapes" that you kindly sent, nor the Jack London books.
+Much thanks.</p>
+
+<p>I'm pleased to know that Wood expects to sell the whole
+edition of my book, but am myself not confident of that.</p>
+
+<p>So we are to have your book soon. Good, but I don't like
+your indifference to its outward and visible aspect. Some
+of my own books have offended, and continue to offend,
+in that way. At best a book is not too beautiful; at worst it
+is hideous. Be advised a bit by Scheff in this matter; his
+taste seems to me admirable and I'm well pleased by his
+work on the "Shapes"; even his covers, which I'm sorry to
+learn do not please Wood, appear to me excellent. I approved
+the design before he executed it&mdash;in fact chose it
+from several that he submitted. Its only fault seems to me
+too much gold leaf, but that is a fault "on the right side."
+In that and all the rest of the work (except my own) experts
+here are delighted. I gave him an absolutely free hand
+and am glad I did. I don't like the ragged leaves, but he<span class="pagenum">78</span>
+does not either, on second thought. The public&mdash;the reading
+public&mdash;I fear does, just now.</p>
+
+<p>I'll get at your new verses in a few days. It will be, as always
+it is, a pleasure to go over them.</p>
+
+<p>About "Prattle." I should think you might get help in
+that matter from Oscar T. Schuck, 2916 Laguna St. He
+used to suffer from "Prattle" a good deal, but is very
+friendly, and the obtaining it would be in the line of his
+present business.</p>
+
+<p>How did you happen to hit on Markham's greatest two
+lines&mdash;but I need not ask that&mdash;from "The Wharf of
+Dreams"?</p>
+
+<p>Well, I wish I could think that those lines of mine in
+"Geotheos" were worthy to be mentioned with Keats'
+"magic casements" and Coleridge's "woman wailing for
+her demon lover." But I don't think any lines of anybody
+are. I laugh at myself to remember that Geotheos, never
+before in print I believe, was written for E. L. G. Steele to
+read before a "young ladies' seminary" somewhere in the
+cow counties! Like a man of sense he didn't read it. I don't
+share your regret that I have not devoted myself to serious
+poetry. I don't think of myself as a poet, but as a satirist;
+so I'm entitled to credit for what little gold there may be
+in the mud I throw. But if I professed gold-throwing, the
+mud which I should surely mix with the missiles would
+count against me. Besides, I've a preference for being the
+first man in a village, rather than the second man in Rome.
+Poetry is a ladder on which there is now no room at the
+top&mdash;unless you and Scheff throw down some of the chaps
+occupying the upper rung. It looks as if you might, but I
+could not. When old Homer, Shakspeare and that crowd&mdash;building
+better than Ozymandias&mdash;say: "Look on my<span class="pagenum">79</span>
+works, ye mighty, and despair!" I, considering myself specially
+addressed, despair. The challenge of the wits does
+not alarm me.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>As to your problems in grammar.</p>
+
+<p>If you say: "There is no hope <i>or</i> fear" you say that <i>one</i>
+of them does not exist. In saying: "There is no hope <i>nor</i>
+fear" you say that <i>both</i> do not exist&mdash;which is what you
+mean.</p>
+
+<p>"Not to weary you, I shall say that I fetched the book
+from his cabin." Whether that is preferable to "I will say"
+depends on just what is meant; both are grammatical. The
+"shall" merely indicates an intention to say; the "will"
+implies a certain shade of concession in saying it.</p>
+
+<p>It is no trouble to answer such questions, <i>nor</i> to do anything
+else to please you. I only hope I make it clear.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know if all my "Journal" work gets into the
+"Examiner," for I don't see all the issues of either paper.
+I'm not writing much anyhow. They don't seem to want
+much from me, and their weekly check is about all that I
+want from them.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>No, I don't know any better poem of Kipling than "The
+Last Chanty." Did you see what stuff of his Prof. Harry
+Thurston Peck, the Hearst outfit's special literary censor,
+chose for a particular commendation the other day? Yet
+Peck is a scholar, a professor of Latin and a writer of merited
+distinction. Excepting the ability to write poetry, the
+ability to understand it is, I think, the rarest of intellectual
+gifts. Let us thank "whatever gods may be" that we have
+it, if we haven't so very much else.</p>
+
+<p>I've a lovely birch stick a-seasoning for you&mdash;cut it up<span class="pagenum">80</span>
+in the Alleghanies.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 29,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I return the verses&mdash;with apology for tardiness. I've been
+"full up" with cares.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I would not change "Religion" to "Dogma" (if I were
+you) for all "the pious monks of St. Bernard." Once you
+begin to make concessions to the feelings of this person or
+that there is no place to stop and you may as well hang up
+the lyre. Besides, Dogma does not "seek"; it just impudently
+declares something to have been found. However,
+it is a small matter&mdash;nothing can destroy the excellence of
+the verses. I only want to warn you against yielding to a
+temptation which will assail you all your life&mdash;the temptation
+to "edit" your thought for somebody whom it may
+pain. Be true to Truth and let all stand from under.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I think the quatrain that you wrote in Col. Eng's
+book good enough to go in your own. But I'd keep "discerning,"
+instead of substituting "revering." In art discernment
+<i>carries</i> reverence.</p>
+
+<p><i>Of course</i> I expect to say something of Scheff's book, but
+in no paper with which I have a present connection can I
+regularly "review" it. Hearst's papers would give it incomparably
+the widest publicity, but they don't want "reviews"
+from me. They have Millard, who has already reviewed
+it&mdash;right well too&mdash;and Prof. Peck&mdash;who possibly
+might review it if it were sent to him. "Prof. Harry Thurston
+Peck, care of 'The American,' New York City." Mention
+it to Scheff. I'm trying to find out what I can do.</p>
+
+<p>I'm greatly pleased to observe your ability to estimate<span class="pagenum">81</span>
+the relative value of your own poems&mdash;a rare faculty. "To
+Imagination" is, <i>I</i> think, the best of all your short ones.</p>
+
+<p>I'm impatient for the book. It, too, I shall hope to write
+something about. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Navarre Hotel and<br />
+Importation Co.,<br />
+Seventh Avenue<br />
+and 38th St.,<br />
+New York,<br />
+December 26,<br />
+1903.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>A thousand cares have prevented my writing to you&mdash;and
+Scheff. And this is to be a "busy day." But I want to say
+that I've not been unmindful of your kindness in sending
+the book&mdash;which has hardly left my pocket since I got it.
+And I've read nothing in it more than once, excepting the
+"Testimony." <i>That</i> I've studied, line by line&mdash;and "precept
+by precept"&mdash;finding in it always "something rich
+and strange." It is greater than I knew; it is the greatest
+"ever"!</p>
+
+<p>I'm saying a few words about it in tomorrow's "American"&mdash;would
+that I had a better place for what I say and
+more freedom of saying. But they don't want, and won't
+have, "book reviews" from me; probably because I will
+not undertake to assist their advertising publishers. So I
+have to disguise my remarks and work up to them as parts
+of another topic. In this case I have availed myself of my
+favorite "horrible example," Jim Riley, who ought to be
+proud to be mentioned on the same page with you. After
+all, the remarks may not appear; I have the <i>littlest</i> editor
+that ever blue-penciled whatever he thought particularly
+dear to the writer. I'm here for only a few days, I hope.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I want to say that you seem to me greatest when you
+have the greatest subject&mdash;not flowers, women and all
+that,&mdash;but something above the flower-and-woman belt&mdash;something
+that you see from altitudes from which <i>they</i> are unseen<span class="pagenum">82</span>
+and unsmelled. Your poetry is incomparable with that
+of our other poets, but your thought, philosophy,&mdash;that is
+greater yet. But I'm writing this at a desk in the reading
+room of a hotel; when I get home I'll write you again.</p>
+
+<p>I'm concerned about your health, of which I get bad reports.
+Can't you go to the mesas of New Mexico and round
+up cattle for a year or two&mdash;or do anything that will permit,
+or compel, you to sleep out-of-doors under your favorite
+stars&mdash;something that will <i>not</i> permit you to enter a
+house for even ten minutes? You say no. Well, some day
+you'll <i>have</i> to&mdash;when it is too late&mdash;like Peterson, my
+friend Charley Kaufman and so many others, who might
+be living if they had gone into that country in time and
+been willing to make the sacrifice when it would have done
+good. You can go <i>now</i> as well as <i>then</i>; and if now you'll
+come back well, if then, you'll not only sacrifice your salary,
+"prospects," and so forth, but lose your life as well. I <i>know</i>
+that kind of life would cure you. I've talked with dozens of
+men whom it did cure.</p>
+
+<p>You'll die of consumption if you don't. Twenty-odd years
+ago I was writing articles on the out-of-doors treatment for
+consumption. Now&mdash;only just now&mdash;the physicians are
+doing the same, and establishing out-of-door sanitaria for
+consumption.</p>
+
+<p>You'll say you haven't consumption. I don't say that you
+have. But you will have if you listen to yourself saying: "I
+can't do it." *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Pardon me, my friend, for this rough advice as to your
+personal affairs: I am greatly concerned about you. Your life
+is precious to me and to the world. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 8,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Thank you so much for the books and the inscription&mdash;which<span class="pagenum">83</span>
+(as do all other words of praise) affects me with a sad
+sense of my shortcomings as writer and man. Things of
+that kind from too partial friends point out to me with a
+disquieting significance what I ought to be; and the contrast
+with what I am hurts. Maybe you feel enough that
+way sometimes to understand. You are still young enough
+to profit by the pain; <i>my</i> character is made&mdash;<i>my</i> opportunities
+are gone. But it does not greatly matter&mdash;nothing
+does. I have some little testimony from you and Scheff and
+others that I have not lived altogether in vain, and I know
+that I have greater satisfaction in my slight connection
+with your and their work than in my own. Also a better
+claim to the attention and consideration of my fellow-men.</p>
+
+<p>Never mind about the "slow sale" of my book; I did not
+expect it to be otherwise, and my only regret grows out of
+the fear that some one may lose money by the venture. <i>It
+is not to be you.</i> You know I am still a little "in the dark" as
+to what <i>you</i> have really done in the matter. I wish you
+would tell me if any of your own money went into it. The
+contract with Wood is all right; it was drawn according to
+my instructions and I shall not even accept the small royalty
+allowed me if anybody is to be "out." If <i>you</i> are to be
+out I shall not only not accept the royalty, but shall reimburse
+you to the last cent. Do you mind telling me about
+all that? In any case don't "buy out Wood" and don't pay
+out anything for advertising nor for anything else.</p>
+
+<p>The silence of the reviewers does not trouble me, any
+more than it would you. Their praise of my other books
+never, apparently, did me any good. No book published in
+this country ever received higher praise from higher sources
+than my first collection of yarns. But the book was never a<span class="pagenum">84</span>
+"seller," and doubtless never will be. That <i>I</i> like it fairly
+well is enough. You and I do not write books to sell; we
+write&mdash;or rather publish&mdash;just because we like to. We've
+no right to expect a profit from fun.</p>
+
+<p>It is odd and amusing that you could have supposed that
+I had any other reason for not writing to you than a fixed
+habit of procrastination, some preoccupation with my
+small affairs and a very burdensome correspondence. Probably
+you <i>could</i> give me a grievance by trying hard, but if
+you ever are conscious of not having tried you may be sure
+that I haven't the grievance.</p>
+
+<p>I should have supposed that the author of "Viverols"
+and several excellent monographs on fish would have understood
+your poems. (O no; I don't mean that your Muse
+is a mermaid.) Perhaps he did, but you know how temperate
+of words men of science are by habit. Did you send a
+book to Garrett Serviss? I should like to know what he
+thinks of the "Testimony." As to Joaquin, it is his detestable
+habit, as it was Longfellow's, to praise all poetry submitted
+to him, and he said of Madge Morris's coyote poem
+the identical thing that he says of your work. Sorry to disillusionize
+you, but it is so.</p>
+
+<p>As to your health. You give me great comfort.*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* But it
+was not only from Scheff that I had bad accounts of you and
+"your cough." Scheff, indeed, has been reticent in the
+matter, but evidently anxious; and you yourself have
+written despondently and "forecasted" an early passing
+away. If nothing is the matter with you and your lungs
+some of your friends are poor observers. I'm happy to have
+your testimony, and beg to withdraw my project for your recovery.
+You whet my appetite for that new poem. The lines</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"The blue-eyed vampire, sated at her feast,</span><br /><span class="pagenum">85</span>
+Smiles bloodily against the leprous moon"</p>
+
+<p>give me the shivers. Gee! they're awful! Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 5,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You should not be irritated by the "conspiracy of silence"
+about me on the part of the "Call," the "Argonaut" and
+other papers. Really my enemies are under no obligation to
+return good for evil; I fear I should not respect them if they
+did. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, his head still sore from my many beatings of
+that "distracted globe," would be a comic figure stammering
+his sense of my merit and directing attention to the excellence
+of the literary wares on my shelf.</p>
+
+<p>As to the pig of a public, its indifference to a diet of pearls&mdash;<i>our</i>
+pearls&mdash;was not unknown to me, and truly it does not
+trouble me anywhere except in the pocket. <i>That</i> pig, too, is
+not much beholden to me, who have pounded the snout of
+it all my life. Why should it assist in the rite? Its indifference
+to <i>your</i> work constitutes a new provocation and
+calls for added whacks, but not its indifference to mine.</p>
+
+<p>The Ashton Stevens interview was charming. His finding
+you and Scheff together seems too idyllic to be true&mdash;I
+thought it a fake. He put in quite enough&mdash;too much&mdash;about
+me. As to Joaquin's hack at me&mdash;why, that was
+magnanimity itself in one who, like most of us, does not
+offset blame against praise, subtract the latter from the
+former and find matter for thanks in the remainder. You
+know "what fools we mortals be"; criticism that is not all
+honey is all vinegar. Nobody has more delighted than I in
+pointing out the greatness of Joaquin's great work; but nobody
+than I has more austerely condemned *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, his vanity<span class="pagenum">86</span>
+and the general humbugery that makes his prose so insupportable.
+Joaquin is a good fellow, all the same, and you
+should not demand of him impossible virtues and a reach of
+reasonableness that is alien to him.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I have the books you kindly sent and have planted two or
+three in what I think fertile soil which I hope will produce a
+small crop of appreciation.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>And the poem!<a name="fnanchor_7" id="fnanchor_7"></a><a href="#footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[7]</a> I hardly know how to speak of it. No
+poem in English of equal length has so bewildering a wealth
+of imagination. Not Spenser himself has flung such a profusion
+of jewels into so small a casket. Why, man, it takes
+away the breath! I've read and reread&mdash;read it for the expression
+and read it for the thought (always when I speak
+of the "thought" in your work I mean the meaning&mdash;which
+is another thing) and I shall read it many times more.
+And pretty soon I'll get at it with my red ink and see if I
+can suggest anything worth your attention. I fear not.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_7" id="footnote_7" href="#fnanchor_7"><span class="label">[7]</span></a> "A Wine of Wizardry."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">"New York<br />
+American"<br />
+Office,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 29,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I wrote you yesterday. Since then I have been rereading
+your letter. I wish you would not say so much about what I
+have done for you, and how much it was worth to you, and
+all that. I should be sorry to think that I did not do a little
+for you&mdash;I tried to. But, my boy, you should know that I
+don't keep that kind of service <i>on sale</i>. Moreover, I'm
+amply repaid by what <i>you</i> have done for <i>me</i>&mdash;I mean with<span class="pagenum">87</span>
+your pen. Do you suppose <i>I</i> do not value such things?
+Does it seem reasonable to think me unpleasured by those
+magnificent dedicatory verses in your book? Is it nothing
+to me to be called "Master" by such as you? Is my nature
+so cold that I have no pride in such a pupil? There is no
+obligation in the matter&mdash;certainly none that can be suffered
+to satisfy itself out of your pocket.</p>
+
+<p>You greatly overestimate the sums I spend in "charity."
+I sometimes help some poor devil of an unfortunate over
+the rough places, but not to the extent that you seem to
+suppose. I couldn't&mdash;I've too many regular, constant,
+<i>legitimate</i> demands on me. Those, mostly, are what keep
+me poor.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Maybe you think it odd that I've not said a word in print
+about any of your work except the "Testimony." It is not
+that I don't appreciate the minor poems&mdash;I do. But I don't
+like to scatter; I prefer to hammer on a single nail&mdash;to
+push one button until someone hears the bell. When the
+"Wine" is published I'll have another poem that is not
+only great, but striking&mdash;notable&mdash;to work on. However
+good, or even great, a short poem with such a title as
+"Poesy," "Music," "To a Lily," "A White Rose," and so
+forth, cannot be got into public attention. Some longer and
+more notable work, of the grander manner, may <i>carry</i> it,
+but of itself it will not go. Even a bookful of its kind will
+not. Not till you're famous.</p>
+
+<p>Your letter regarding your brother (who has not turned
+up) was needless&mdash;I could be of no assistance in procuring
+him employment. I've tried so often to procure it for others,
+and so vainly, that nobody could persuade me to try any
+more. I'm not fond of the character of suppliant, nor of<span class="pagenum">88</span>
+being "turned down" by the little men who run this Government.
+Of course I'm not in favor with this Administration,
+not only because of my connection with Democratic
+newspapers, but because, also, I sometimes venture to dissent
+openly from the doctrine of the divinity of those in
+high station&mdash;particularly Teddy.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sorry you find your place in the office intolerable.
+That is "the common lot of all" who work for others. I
+have chafed under the yoke for many years&mdash;a heavier
+yoke, I think, than yours. It does not fit my neck anywhere.
+Some day perhaps you and I will live on adjoining ranches
+in the mountains&mdash;or in adjoining caves&mdash;"the world forgetting,
+by the world forgot." I have really been on the
+point of hermitizing lately, but I guess I'll have to continue
+to live like a reasonable human being a little longer until I
+can release myself with a conscience void of offense to my
+creditors and dependents. But "the call of the wild"
+sounds, even in my dreams.</p>
+
+<p>You ask me if you should write in "A Wine of Wizardry"
+vein, or in that of "The Testimony of the Suns." Both. I
+don't know in which you have succeeded the better. And I
+don't know anyone who has succeeded better in either. To
+succeed in both is a marvelous performance. You may say
+that the one is fancy, the other imagination, which is true,
+but not the whole truth. The "Wine" has as true imagination
+as the other, and fancy into the bargain. I like your
+grandiose manner, and I like the other as well. In terms of
+another art I may say&mdash;rear great towers and domes.
+Carve, also, friezes. But I'd not bother to cut single finials
+and small decorations. However exquisite the workmanship,
+they are not worth your present attention. If you
+were a painter (as, considering your wonderful sense of<span class="pagenum">89</span>
+color, you doubtless could have been) your large canvases
+would be your best.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I don't care if that satire of Josephare refers to me or not;
+it was good. He may jump on me if he wants to&mdash;I don't
+mind. All I ask is that he do it well.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I passed yesterday with Percival Pollard, viewing the
+burnt district of Baltimore. He's a queer duck whom I like,
+and he likes your work. I'm sending you a copy of "The
+Papyrus," with his "rehabilitation" of the odious Oscar
+Wilde. Wilde's work is all right, but what can one do with
+the work of one whose name one cannot speak before
+women?</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 19,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>The "belatedness" of your letter only made <i>me</i> fear that
+<i>I</i> had offended <i>you</i>. Odd that we should have such views of
+each other's sensitiveness.</p>
+
+<p>About Wood. No doubt that he is doing all that he can,
+but&mdash;well, he is not a publisher. For example: He sent
+forty or fifty "Shapes" here. They lie behind a counter at
+the bookseller's&mdash;not even <i>on</i> the counter. There are probably
+not a dozen persons of my acquaintance in Washington
+who know that I ever wrote a book. Now <i>how</i> are even
+these to know about <i>that</i> book? The bookseller does not advertise
+the books he has on sale and the public does not go
+rummaging behind his counters. A publisher's methods are
+a bit different, naturally.</p>
+
+<p>Only for your interest I should not care if my books sold<span class="pagenum">90</span>
+or not; they exist and will not be destroyed; every book will
+eventually get to <i>somebody</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>It seems to be a matter for you to determine&mdash;whether
+Wood continues to try to sell the book or it is put in other
+hands if he is ever tired of it. Remember, I don't care a rap
+what happens to the book except as a means of reimbursing
+you; I want no money and I want no glory. If you and
+Wood can agree, do in all things as you please.</p>
+
+<p>I return Wood's letters; they show what I knew before:
+that the public and the librarians would not buy that book.
+Let us discuss this matter no more, but at some time in
+the future you tell me how much you are out of pocket.</p>
+
+<p><i>Your</i> book shows that a fellow can get a good deal of glory
+with very little profit. You are now famous&mdash;at least on
+the Pacific Coast; but I fancy you are not any "for'arder"
+in the matter of wealth than you were before. I too have
+some reputation&mdash;a little wider, as yet, than yours. Well, my
+work sells tremendously&mdash;in Mr. Hearst's newspapers, at
+the price of a small fraction of one cent! Offered by itself, in
+one-dollar and two-dollar lots, it tempts nobody to fall over
+his own feet in the rush to buy. A great trade, this of ours!</p>
+
+<p>I note with interest the "notices" you send. The one by
+Monahan is amusing with its gabble about your "science."
+To most men, as to him, a mention of the stars suggests
+astronomy, with its telescopes, spectroscopes and so forth.
+Therefore it is "scientific." To tell such men that there is
+nothing of science in your poem would puzzle them greatly.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think poor Lang meant to do anything but his
+best and honestest. He is a rather clever and rather small
+fellow and not to be blamed for the limitations of his insight.
+I have repeatedly pointed out in print that it requires<span class="pagenum">91</span>
+genius to discern genius at first hand. Lang has written
+almost the best, if not quite the best, sonnet in the language&mdash;yet
+he is no genius.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Why, of course&mdash;why should you not help the poor devil,
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*; I used to help him myself&mdash;introduced him to the
+public and labored to instruct him. Then&mdash;but it is unspeakable
+and so is he. He will bite your hand if you feed
+him, but I think I'd throw a crust to him myself.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>No, I don't agree with you about Homer, nor "stand for"
+your implied view that narrative poetry is not "pure
+poetry." Poetry seems to me to speak with a thousand
+voices&mdash;"a various language." The miners have a saying:
+"Gold is where you find it." So is poetry; I'm expecting to
+find it some fine day in the price list of a grocery store. I
+fancy <i>you</i> could put it there.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>As to Goethe, the more you read him, the better you
+will love Heine.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for "A Wine of Wizardry"&mdash;amended. It
+seems to me that the fake dictum of "Merlin-sage" (I don't
+quite perceive the necessity of the hyphen) is better than
+the hackneyed Scriptural quotation. It is odd, but my
+recollection is that it was the "sick enchantress" who cried
+"unto Betelgeuse a mystic word." Was it not so in the copy
+that I first had, or do I think so merely because the cry of
+one is more lone and awful than the cry of a number?</p>
+
+<p>I am still of the belief that the poem should have at least
+a few breaks in it, for I find myself as well as the public
+more or less&mdash;I, doubtless, less than the public&mdash;indisposed
+to tackle solid columns of either verse or prose. I told<span class="pagenum">92</span>
+you this poem "took away one's breath,"&mdash;give a fellow,
+can't you, a chance to recover it now and again.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"Space to breathe, how short soever."</p>
+
+<p>Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done, on earth as it
+is in San Francisco. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 11,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>To begin at the beginning, I shall of course be pleased to
+meet Josephare if he come this way; if only to try to solve
+the problem of what is in a fellow who started so badly and
+in so short a time was running well, with a prospect of
+winning "a place." Byron, you know, was the same way
+and Tennyson not so different. Still their start was not so
+bad as Josephare's. I freely confess that I thought him a
+fool. It is "one on me."</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I wonder if a London house would publish "Shapes of
+Clay." Occasionally a little discussion about me breaks out
+in the London press, blazes up for a little while and "goes
+up in smoke." I enclose some evidences of the latest one&mdash;which
+you may return if you remember to do so. The letter
+of "a deeply disappointed man" was one of rollicking
+humor suggested by some articles of Barr about me and a
+private intimation from him that I should publish some
+more books in London.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I've dropped "The Passing Show" again, for the
+same old reason&mdash;wouldn't stand the censorship of my
+editor. I'm writing for the daily issues of The American,
+mainly, and, as a rule, anonymously. It's "dead easy"
+work.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>It is all right&mdash;that "cry unto Betelgeuse"; the "sick enchantress"<span class="pagenum">93</span>
+passage is good enough without it. I like the
+added lines of the poem. Here's another criticism: The
+"Without" and "Within," beginning the first and third
+lines, respectively, <i>seem</i> to be antithetic, when they are not,
+the latter having the sense of "into," which I think might,
+for clearness, be substituted for it without a displeasing
+break of the metre&mdash;a trochee for an iambus.</p>
+
+<p>Why should I not try "The Atlantic" with this poem?&mdash;if
+you have not already done so. I could write a brief note
+about it, saying what <i>you</i> could not say, and possibly winning
+attention to the work. If you say so I will. It is impossible
+to imagine a magazine editor rejecting that amazing
+poem. I have read it at least twenty times with ever increasing
+admiration.</p>
+
+<p>Your book, by the way, is still my constant companion&mdash;I
+carry it in my pocket and read it over and over, in the
+street cars and everywhere. <i>All</i> the poems are good, though
+the "Testimony" and "Memorial Day" are supreme&mdash;the
+one in grandeur, the other in feeling.</p>
+
+<p>I send you a criticism in a manuscript letter from a friend
+who complains of your "obscurity," as many have the candor
+to do. It requires candor to do that, for the fault is in
+the critic's understanding. Still, one who understands Shakspeare
+and Milton is not without standing as a complaining
+witness in the court of literature.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>My favorite translation of Homer is that of Pope, of
+whom it is the present fashion to speak disparagingly, as it
+is of Byron. I know all that can be said against them, and
+say <i>some</i> of it myself, but I wish their detractors had a little
+of their brains. I know too that Pope's translations of The
+Iliad and The Odyssey are rather paraphrases than translations.<span class="pagenum">94</span>
+But I love them just the same, while wondering
+(with you, doubtless) what so profoundly affected Keats
+when he "heard Chapman speak out loud and bold." Whatever
+it was, it gave us what Coleridge pronounced the best
+sonnet in our language; and Lang's admiration of Homer
+has given us at least the next best. Of course there must be
+something in poems that produce poems&mdash;in a poet whom
+most poets confess their king. I hold (with Poe) that there
+is no such thing as a <i>long</i> poem&mdash;a poem of the length of an
+Epic. It must consist of poetic passages connected by <i>recitativo</i>,
+to use an opera word; but it is perhaps better for that.
+If the writer cannot write "sustained" poetry the reader
+probably could not read it. Anyhow, I vote for Homer.</p>
+
+<p>I am passing well, but shall soon seek the mountains,
+though I hope to be here when Scheff points his prow this
+way. Would that you were sailing with him!</p>
+
+<p>I've been hearing all about all of you, for Eva Crawford
+has been among you "takin' notes," and Eva's piquant
+comments on what and whom she sees are delicious reading.
+I should suppose that <i>you</i> would appreciate Eva&mdash;most
+persons don't. She is the best letter writer of her sex&mdash;who
+are all good letter writers&mdash;and she is much beside. I
+may venture to whisper that you'd find her estimate of
+your work and personality "not altogether displeasing."</p>
+
+<p>Now that I'm about such matters, I shall enclose a note
+to my friend Dr. Robertson, who runs an insanery at Livermore
+and is an interesting fellow with a ditto family and a
+library that will make you pea-green with envy. Go out
+and see him some day and take Scheff, or any friend, along&mdash;he
+wants to know you. You won't mind the facts that he
+thinks all poetry the secretion of a diseased brain, and that
+the only reason he doesn't think all brains (except his own)<span class="pagenum">95</span>
+diseased is the circumstance that not all secrete poetry.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Seriously, he is a good fellow and full of various knowledges
+that most of us wot not of.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 14,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have a letter from *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, who is in St. Louis, to which
+his progress has been more leisurely than I liked, considering
+that I am remaining away from my mountains only to
+meet him. However, he intimates an intention to come in a
+week. I wish you were with him.</p>
+
+<p>I am sending the W. of W. to Scribner's, as you suggest,
+and if it is not taken shall try the other mags in the order
+of your preference. But it's funny that you&mdash;<i>you</i>&mdash;should
+prefer the "popular" magazines and wish the work "illustrated."
+Be assured the illustrations will shock you if you
+get them.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I understand what you say about being bored by the persons
+whom your work in letters brings about your feet.
+The most <i>contented</i> years of my life lately were the two or
+three that I passed here before Washington folk found out
+that I was an author. The fact has leaked out, and although
+not a soul of them buys and reads my books some of them
+bore me insupportably with their ignorant compliments
+and unwelcome attentions. I fancy I'll have to "move on."</p>
+
+<p>Tell Maid Marian to use gloves when modeling, or the
+clay will enter into her soul through her fingers and she
+become herself a Shape of Clay. My notion is that she
+should work in a paste made of ashes-of-roses moistened<span class="pagenum">96</span>
+with nectar.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">P.S. Does it bore you that I like you to know my friends?
+Professor *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*'s widow (and daughter) are very dear to
+me. She knows about you, and I've written her that I'd ask
+you to call on her. You'll like them all right, but I have
+another purpose. I want to know how they prosper; and
+they are a little reticent about that. Maybe you could ascertain
+indirectly by seeing how they live. I asked Grizzly
+to do this but of course he didn't, the shaggy brute that
+he is. <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Haines' Falls,<br />
+Greene Co., N. Y.,<br />
+August 4,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I haven't written a letter, except on business, since leaving
+Washington, June 30&mdash;no, not since Scheff's arrival
+there. I now return to earth, and my first call is on you.</p>
+
+<p>You'll be glad to know that I'm having a good time here
+in the Catskills. I shall not go back so long as I can find an
+open hotel.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I should like to hear from you about our&mdash;or rather
+your&mdash;set in California, and especially about <i>you</i>. Do you
+still dally with the Muse? Enclosed you will find two damning
+evidences of additional incapacity. <i>Harper's</i> now have
+"A Wine of Wizardry," and they too will indubitably turn
+it down. I shall then try <i>The Atlantic</i>, where it should have
+gone in the first place; and I almost expect its acceptance.</p>
+
+<p>I'm not working much&mdash;just loafing on my cottage
+porch; mixing an occasional cocktail; infesting the forests,
+knife in hand, in pursuit of the yellow-birch sapling that<span class="pagenum">97</span>
+furnishes forth the walking stick like yours; and so forth. I
+knocked off work altogether for a month when Scheff came,
+and should like to do so for <i>you</i>. Are you never going to
+visit the scenes of your youth?</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>It is awfully sad&mdash;that latest visit of Death to the heart
+and home of poor Katie Peterson. Will you kindly assure
+her of my sympathy?</p>
+
+<p>Love to all the Piedmontese. Sincerely yours,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Haines' Falls,<br />
+Greene Co., N. Y.,<br />
+August 27,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>First, thank you for the knife and the distinction of membership
+in the Ancient and Honorable Order of Knifers. I
+have made little use of the blades and other appliances, but
+the corkscrew is in constant use.</p>
+
+<p>I'm enclosing a little missive from the editor of <i>Harper's</i>.
+Please reserve these things awhile and sometime I may ask
+them of you to "point a moral or adorn a tale" about that
+poem. If we can't get it published I'd like to write for some
+friendly periodical a review of an unpublished poem, with
+copious extracts and a brief history of it. I think that would
+be unique.</p>
+
+<p>I find the pictures of Marian interesting, but have the self-denial
+to keep only one of them&mdash;the prettiest one of course.
+Your own is rather solemn, but it will do for the title page
+of the Testimony, which is still my favorite reading.</p>
+
+<p>Scheff showed me your verses on Katie's baby, and Katie
+has since sent them. They are very tender and beautiful. I
+would not willingly spare any of your "personal" poems&mdash;least
+of all, naturally, the one personal to me. Your success
+with them is exceptional. Yet the habit of writing them is<span class="pagenum">98</span>
+perilous, as the many failures of great poets attest&mdash;Milton,
+for example, in his lines to Syriack Skinner, his lines
+to a baby that died a-bornin' and so forth. The reason is
+obvious, and you have yourself, with sure finger, pointed
+it out:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"Remiss the ministry they bear</span><br />
+<span class="i1">Who serve her with divided heart;</span><br />
+<span class="i1">She stands reluctant to impart</span><br />
+Her strength to purpose, end, or care."</p>
+
+<p>When one is intent upon pleasing some mortal, one is less
+intent upon pleasing the immortal Muse. All this is said
+only by way of admonition for the future, not in criticism
+of the past. I'm a sinner myself in that way, but then I'm
+not a saint in any way, so my example doesn't count.</p>
+
+<p>I don't mind *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* calling me a "dignified old gentleman"&mdash;indeed,
+that is what I have long aspired to be, but have
+succeeded only in the presence of strangers, and not always
+then. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>(I forgot to say that your poem is now in the hands of the
+editor of the Atlantic.)</p>
+
+<p>Your determination to "boom" me almost frightens me.
+Great Scott! you've no notion of the magnitude of the task
+you undertake; the labors of Hercules were as nothing to
+it. Seriously, don't make any enemies that way; it is not
+worth while. And you don't know how comfortable I am in
+my obscurity. It is like being in "the shadow of a great
+rock in a weary land."</p>
+
+<p>How goes the no sale of Shapes of Clay? I am slowly saving
+up a bit of money to recoup your friendly outlay.
+That's a new thing for me to do&mdash;the saving, I mean&mdash;and
+I rather enjoy the sensation. If it results in making a
+miser of me you will have to answer for it to many a<span class="pagenum">99</span>
+worthy complainant.</p>
+
+<p>Get thee behind me, Satan!&mdash;it is not possible for me to
+go to California yet. For one thing, my health is better here
+in the East; I have utterly escaped asthma this summer,
+and summer is my only "sickly season" here. In California
+I had the thing at any time o' year&mdash;even at Wright's.
+But it is my hope to end my days out there.</p>
+
+<p>I don't think Millard was too hard on Kipling; it was no
+"unconscious" plagiarism; just a "straight steal."</p>
+
+<p>About Prentice Mulford. I knew him but slightly and
+used to make mild fun of him as "Dismal Jimmy." That
+expressed my notion of his character and work, which was
+mostly prose platitudes. I saw him last in London, a member
+of the Joaquin Miller-Charles Warren Stoddard-Olive
+Harper outfit at 11 Museum Street, Bloomsbury Square.
+He married there a fool girl named Josie&mdash;forget her other
+name&mdash;with whom I think he lived awhile in hell, then
+freed himself, and some years afterward returned to this
+country and was found dead one morning in a boat at Sag
+Harbor. Peace to the soul of him. No, he was not a faker,
+but a conscientious fellow who mistook his vocation.</p>
+
+<p>My friends have returned to Washington, but I expect to
+remain here a few weeks yet, infesting the woods, devastating
+the mountain larders, supervising the sunsets and
+guiding the stars in their courses. Then to New York, and
+finally to Washington. Please get busy with that fame o'
+yours so as to have the wealth to come and help me loaf.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you don't mind the typewriter&mdash;<i>I</i> don't.</p>
+
+<p>Convey my love to all the sweet ladies of your entourage and
+make my compliments also to the Gang. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+October 5,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,<span class="pagenum">100</span></p>
+
+<p>Your latest was dated Sept. 10. I got it while alone in the
+mountains, but since then I have been in New York City
+and at West Point and&mdash;here. New York is too strenuous
+for me; it gets on my nerves.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Please don't persuade me to come to California&mdash;I mean
+don't <i>try</i> to, for I can't, and it hurts a little to say nay.
+There's a big bit of my heart there, but&mdash;O never mind the
+reasons; some of them would not look well on paper. One of
+them I don't mind telling; I would not live in a state under
+union labor rule. There is still one place where the honest
+American laboring man is not permitted to cut throats and
+strip bodies of women at his own sweet will. That is the
+District of Columbia.</p>
+
+<p>I am anxious to read Lilith; please complete it.</p>
+
+<p>I have another note of rejection for you. It is from *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*.
+Knowing that you will not bank on what he says about the
+Metropolitan, I enclose it. I've acted on his advising and
+sent the poem. It is about time for it to come back. Then I
+shall try the other magazines until the list is exhausted.</p>
+
+<p>Did I return your Jinks verses? I know I read them and
+meant to send them back, but my correspondence and my
+papers are in such hopeless disorder that I'm all at sea on
+these matters. For aught I know I may have elaborately
+"answered" the letter that I think myself to be answering
+now. I liked the verses very temperately, not madly.</p>
+
+<p>Of course you are right about the magazine editors not
+knowing poetry when they see it. But who does? I have not
+known more than a half-dozen persons in America that
+did, and none of them edited a magazine.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>No, I did not write the "Urus-Agricola-Acetes stuff,"<span class="pagenum">101</span>
+though it was written <i>for</i> me and, I believe, at my suggestion.
+The author was "Jimmy" Bowman, of whose death
+I wrote a sonnet which is in Black Beetles. He and I used
+to have a lot of fun devising literary mischiefs, fighting
+sham battles with each other and so forth. He was a clever
+chap and a good judge of whiskey.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, in The Cynic's Dictionary I did "jump from A to
+M." I had previously done the stuff in various papers as
+far as M, then lost the beginning. So in resuming I re-did
+that part (quite differently, of course) in order to have the
+thing complete if I should want to make a book of it. I
+guess the Examiner isn't running much of it, nor much of
+anything of mine.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I like your love of Keats and the early Coleridge.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The N. Y.<br />
+American Office,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 12,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Davis</span>,</p>
+
+<p>The "bad eminence" of turning down Sterling's great
+poem is one that you will have to share with some of your
+esteemed fellow magazinists&mdash;for examples, the editors of
+the Atlantic, Harper's, Scribner's, The Century, and now
+the Metropolitan, all of the élite. All of these gentlemen, I
+believe, profess, as you do not, to know literature when
+they see it, and to deal in it.</p>
+
+<p>Well I profess to deal in it in a small way, and if Sterling
+will let me I propose some day to ask judgment between
+them and me.</p>
+
+<p>Even <i>you</i> ask for literature&mdash;if my stories are literature,
+as you are good enough to imply. (By the way, all the leading
+publishers of the country turned down that book until<span class="pagenum">102</span>
+they saw it published without them by a merchant in San
+Francisco and another sort of publishers in London,
+Leipzig and Paris.) Well, you wouldn't do a thing to one of
+my stories!</p>
+
+<p>No, thank you; if I have to write rot, I prefer to do it for
+the newspapers, which make no false pretences and are
+frankly rotten, and in which the badness of a bad thing
+escapes detection or is forgotten as soon as it is cold.</p>
+
+<p>I know how to write a story (of the "happy ending" sort)
+for magazine readers for whom literature is too good, but I
+will not do so so long as stealing is more honorable and interesting.</p>
+
+<p>I've offered you the best stuff to be had&mdash;Sterling's
+poem&mdash;and the best that I am able to make; and now you
+must excuse me. I do not doubt that you really think that
+you would take "the kind of fiction that made 'Soldiers
+and Civilians' the most readable book of its kind in this
+country," and it is nice of you to put it that way; but
+neither do I doubt that you would find the story sent a
+different kind of fiction and, like the satire which you return
+to me, "out of the question." An editor who has a
+preformed opinion of the kind of stuff that he is going to get
+will always be disappointed with the stuff that he does get.</p>
+
+<p>I know this from my early experience as an editor&mdash;before
+I learned that what I needed was, not any particular
+kind of stuff, but just the stuff of a particular kind of
+writer.</p>
+
+<p>All this without any feeling, and only by way of explaining
+why I must ask you to excuse me.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 6,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,<span class="pagenum">103</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I got and read that fool thing in the August Critic.
+I found in it nothing worse than stupidity&mdash;no malice.
+Doubtless you have not sounded the deeper deeps of stupidity
+in critics, and so are driven to other motives to
+explain their unearthly errors. I know from my own experience
+of long ago how hard it is to accept abominable
+criticism, obviously (to the criticee) unfair, without attributing
+a personal mean motive; but the attribution is nearly
+always erroneous, even in the case of a writer with so many
+personal enemies as I. You will do well to avoid that weakness
+of the tyro. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* has the infirmity in an apparently
+chronic form. Poets, by reason of the sensibilities that
+<i>make</i> them poets, are peculiarly liable to it. I can't see any
+evidence that the poor devil of the Critic knew better.</p>
+
+<p>The Wine of Wizardry is at present at the Booklovers'.
+It should have come back ere this, but don't you draw any
+happy augury from that: I'm sure they'll turn it down, and
+am damning them in advance.</p>
+
+<p>I had a postal from *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* a few days ago. He was in Paris.
+I've written him only once, explaining by drawing his attention
+to the fact that one's reluctance to write a letter
+increases in the ratio of the square of the distance it has to
+go. I don't know why that is so, but it is&mdash;at least in my
+case.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I'm in perfect health, barring a bit of insomnia at
+times, and enjoy life as much as I ever did&mdash;except when
+in love and the love prospering; that is to say, when it was
+new.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 8,<br />
+1904.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>This is the worst yet! This jobbernowl seems to think<span class="pagenum">104</span>
+"The Wine of Wizardry" a story. It should "arrive" and
+be "dramatic"&mdash;the denouement being, I suppose, a particularly
+exciting example of the "happy ending."</p>
+
+<p>My dear fellow, I'm positively ashamed to throw your
+pearls before any more of these swine, and I humbly ask
+your pardon for having done it at all. I guess the "Wine"
+will have to await the publication of your next book.</p>
+
+<p>But I'd like to keep this fellow's note if you will kindly
+let me have it. Sometime, when the poem is published, I
+shall paste it into a little scrap book, with all the notes of
+rejection, and then if I know a man or two capable of
+appreciating the humor of the thing I can make merry over
+it with them.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+My permanent<br />
+address,<br />
+February 18,<br />
+1905.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It's a long time since the date of your latest letter, but
+I've been doing two men's work for many weeks and have
+actually not found the leisure to write to my friends. As it
+is the first time that I've worked really hard for several
+years I ought not to complain, and don't. But I hope it will
+end with this session of Congress.</p>
+
+<p>I think I did not thank you for the additional copies of
+your new book&mdash;the new edition. I wish it contained the
+new poem, "A Wine of Wizardry." I've given up trying to
+get it into anything. I related my failure to Mackay, of
+"Success," and he asked to be permitted to see it. "No," I
+replied, "you too would probably turn it down, and I will
+take no chances of losing the respect that I have for you."
+And I'd not show it to him. He declared his intention of
+getting it, though&mdash;which was just what I wanted him to<span class="pagenum">105</span>
+do. But I dare say he didn't.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, you sent me "The Sea Wolf." My opinion of it?
+Certainly&mdash;or a part of it. It is a most disagreeable book,
+as a whole. London has a pretty bad style and no sense of
+proportion. The story is a perfect welter of disagreeable incidents.
+Two or three (of the kind) would have sufficed to
+<i>show</i> the character of the man Larsen; and his own self-revealings
+by word of mouth would have "done the rest."
+Many of these incidents, too, are impossible&mdash;such as that
+of a man mounting a ladder with a dozen other men&mdash;more
+or less&mdash;hanging to his leg, and the hero's work of rerigging
+a wreck and getting it off a beach where it had stuck for
+weeks, and so forth. The "love" element, with its absurd
+suppressions and impossible proprieties, is awful. I confess
+to an overwhelming contempt for both the sexless lovers.</p>
+
+<p>Now as to the merits. It is a rattling good story in one
+way; something is "going on" all the time&mdash;not always
+what one would wish, but <i>something</i>. One does not go to
+sleep over the book. But the great thing&mdash;and it is among
+the greatest of things&mdash;is that tremendous creation, Wolf
+Larsen. If that is not a permanent addition to literature, it
+is at least a permanent figure in the memory of the reader.
+You "can't lose" Wolf Larsen. He will be with you to the
+end. So it does not really matter how London has hammered
+him into you. You may quarrel with the methods,
+but the result is almost incomparable. The hewing out and
+setting up of such a figure is enough for a man to do in one
+life-time. I have hardly words to impart my good judgment
+of <i>that</i> work.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>That is a pretty picture of Phyllis as Cleopatra&mdash;whom I
+think you used to call "the angel child"&mdash;as the Furies<span class="pagenum">106</span>
+were called Eumenides.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm enclosing a review of your book in the St. Louis
+"Mirror," a paper always kindly disposed toward our little
+group of gifted obscurians. I thought you might not have
+seen it; and it is worth seeing. Percival Pollard sends it me;
+and to him we owe our recognition by the "Mirror."</p>
+
+<p>I hope you prosper apace. I mean mentally and spiritually;
+all other prosperity is trash.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 17,<br />
+1905.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've reached your letter on my file. I wonder that I did,
+for truly I'm doing a lot of work&mdash;mostly of the pot-boiler,
+newspaper sort, some compiling of future&mdash;probably
+<i>very</i> future&mdash;books and a little for posterity.</p>
+
+<p>Valentine has not returned the "Wine of Wizardry," but
+I shall tell him to in a few days and will then try it on the
+magazines you mention. If that fails I can see no objection
+to offering it to the English periodicals.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know about Mackay. He has a trifle of mine which
+he was going to run months ago. He didn't and I asked it
+back. He returned it and begged that it go back to him for
+immediate publication. It went back, but publication did
+not ensue. In many other ways he has been exceedingly
+kind. Guess he can't always have his way.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I read that other book to the bitter end&mdash;the "Arthur
+Sterling" thing. He is the most disagreeable character in
+fiction, though Marie Bashkirtseff and Mary McLean in
+real life could give him cards and spades. Fancy a poet, or<span class="pagenum">107</span>
+any kind of writer, whom it hurts to think! What the devil
+are his agonies all about&mdash;his writhings and twistings and
+foaming at all his mouths? What would a poem by an intellectual
+epileptic like that be? Happily the author spares
+us quotation. I suppose there are Arthur Sterlings among
+the little fellows, but if genius is not serenity, fortitude and
+reasonableness I don't know what it is. One cannot even
+imagine Shakespeare or Goethe bleeding over his work and
+howling when "in the fell clutch of circumstance." The
+great ones are figured in my mind as ever smiling&mdash;a little
+sadly at times, perhaps, but always with conscious inaccessibility
+to the pinpricking little Titans that would storm
+their Olympus armed with ineffectual disasters and pop-gun
+misfortunes. Fancy a fellow wanting, like Arthur Sterling,
+to be supported by his fellows in order that he may
+write what they don't want to read! Even Jack London
+would gag at such Socialism as <i>that</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm going to pass a summer month or two with the Pollards,
+at Saybrook, Conn. How I wish you could be of the
+party. But I suppose you'll be chicken-ranching then, and
+happy enough where you are. I wish you joy of the venture
+and, although I fear it means a meagre living, it will probably
+be more satisfactory than doubling over a desk in your
+uncle's office. The very name Carmel Bay is enchanting.
+I've a notion I shall see that ranch some day. I don't quite
+recognize the "filtered-through-the-emasculated-minds-of-about-six-fools"
+article from which you say I quote&mdash;don't
+remember it, nor remember quoting from it.</p>
+
+<p>I don't wonder at your surprise at my high estimate of
+Longfellow in a certain article. It is higher than my permanent
+one. I was thinking (while writing for a newspaper,<span class="pagenum">108</span>
+recollect) rather of his fame than of his genius&mdash;I had to
+have a literary equivalent to Washington or Lincoln. Still,
+we must not forget that Longfellow wrote "Chrysaor"
+and, in narrative poetry (which you don't care for) "Robert
+of Sicily." Must one be judged by his average, or may
+he be judged, on occasion, by his highest? He is strongest
+who can lift the greatest weight, not he who habitually
+lifts lesser ones.</p>
+
+<p>As to your queries. So far as I know, Realf <i>did</i> write his
+great sonnets on the night of his death. Anyhow, they were
+found with the body. Your recollection that I said they
+were written before he came to the Coast is faulty. Some
+of his other things were in print when he submitted them
+to me (and took pay for them) as new; but not the "De
+Mortuis."</p>
+
+<p>I got the lines about the echoes (I <i>think</i> they go this way:</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="i10">"the loon</span><br />
+Laughed, and the echoes, huddling in affright,<br />
+Like Odin's hounds went baying down the night")<br /></p>
+
+<p>from a poem entitled, I think, "The Washers of the
+Shroud." I found it in the "Atlantic," in the summer of
+1864, while at home from the war suffering from a wound,
+and&mdash;disgraceful fact!&mdash;have never seen nor heard of it
+since. If the magazine was a current number, as I suppose,
+it should be easy to find the poem. If you look it up tell me
+about it. I don't even know the author&mdash;had once a vague
+impression that it was Lowell but don't know.</p>
+
+<p>The compound "mulolatry," which I made in "Ashes of
+the Beacon," would not, of course, be allowable in composition
+altogether serious. I used it because I could not at
+the moment think of the right word, "gyneolatry," or
+"gynecolatry," according as you make use of the nominative<span class="pagenum">109</span>
+or the accusative. I once made "caniolatry" for a
+similar reason&mdash;just laziness. It's not nice to do things o'
+that kind, even in newspapers.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I had intended to write you something of "beesness," but
+time is up and it must wait. This letter is insupportably
+long already.</p>
+
+<p>My love to Carrie and Katie. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Army and Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 16,<br />
+1905.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Bailey Millard is editor of "The Cosmopolitan Magazine,"
+which Mr. Hearst has bought. I met him in New
+York two weeks ago. He had just arrived and learning from
+Hearst that I was in town looked me up. I had just recommended
+him to Hearst as editor. He had intended him for
+associate editor. I think that will give you a chance, such as
+it is. Millard dined with me and I told him the adventures
+of "A Wine of Wizardry." I shall send it to him as soon as
+he has warmed his seat, unless you would prefer to send it
+yourself. He already knows my whole good opinion of it,
+and he shares my good opinion of you.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose you are at your new ranch, but I shall address
+this letter as usual.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>If you hear of my drowning know that it is the natural
+(and desirable) result of the canoe habit. I've a dandy
+canoe and am tempting fate and alarming my friends by
+frequenting, not the margin of the upper river, but the
+broad reaches below town, where the wind has miles and
+miles of sweep and kicks up a most exhilarating combobbery.
+If I escape I'm going to send my boat up to Saybrook,<span class="pagenum">110</span>
+Connecticut, and navigate Long Island Sound.</p>
+
+<p>Are you near enough to the sea to do a bit of boating now
+and then? When I visit you I shall want to bring my canoe.</p>
+
+<p>I've nearly given up my newspaper work, but shall do
+something each month for the Magazine. Have not done
+much yet&mdash;have not been in the mind. Death has been
+striking pretty close to me again, and you know how that
+upsets a fellow.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+June 16,<br />
+1905.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm your debtor for two good long letters. You err in
+thinking your letters, of whatever length and frequency,
+can be otherwise than delightful to me.</p>
+
+<p>No, you had not before sent me Upton Sinclair's article
+explaining why American literature is "bourgeois." It is
+amusingly grotesque. The political and economical situation
+has about as much to do with it as have the direction
+of our rivers and the prevailing color of our hair. But it is of
+the nature of the faddist (and of all faddists the ultra socialist
+is the most untamed by sense) to see in everything
+his hobby, with its name writ large. He is the humorist of
+observers. When Sinclair transiently forgets his gospel of
+the impossible he can see well enough.</p>
+
+<p>I note what you say of *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* and know that he did not use
+to like me, though I doubt if he ever had any antipathy to
+you. Six or eight years ago I tackled him on a particularly
+mean fling that he had made at me while I was absent from
+California. (I think I had not met him before.) I told him,
+rather coarsely, what I thought of the matter. He candidly
+confessed himself in the wrong, expressed regret and has
+ever since, so far as I know, been just and even generous<span class="pagenum">111</span>
+to me. I think him sincere now, and enclose a letter which
+seems to show it. You may return it if you will&mdash;I send it
+mainly because it concerns your poem. The trouble&mdash;our
+trouble&mdash;with *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* is that he has voluntarily entered into
+slavery to the traditions and theories of the magazine
+trade, which, like those of all trades, are the product of
+small men. The big man makes his success by ignoring
+them. Your estimate of *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* I'm not disposed to quarrel
+with, but do think him pretty square.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Bless you, don't take the trouble to go through the Iliad
+and Odyssey to pick out the poetical parts. I grant you
+they are brief and infrequent&mdash;I mean in the translation.
+I hold, with Poe, that there are no long poems&mdash;only
+bursts of poetry in long spinnings of metrical prose. But even
+the "recitativo" of the translated Grecian poets has a charm
+to one that it may not have to another. I doubt if anyone
+who has always loved "the glory that was Greece"&mdash;who
+has been always in love with its jocund deities, and
+so forth, can say accurately just how much of his joy in
+Homer (for example) is due to love of poetry, and how
+much to a renewal of mental youth and young illusions.
+Some part of the delight that we get from verse defies
+analysis and classification. Only a man without a memory
+(and memories) could say just what pleased him in poetry
+and be sure that it was the poetry only. For example, I
+never read the opening lines of the Pope Iliad&mdash;and I don't
+need the book for much of the first few hundred, I guess&mdash;without
+seeming to be on a sunny green hill on a cold windy
+day, with the bluest of skies above me and billows of pasture
+below, running to a clean-cut horizon. There's nothing
+in the text warranting that illusion, which is nevertheless<span class="pagenum">112</span>
+to me a <i>part</i> of the Iliad; a most charming part, too. It all
+comes of my having first read the thing under such conditions
+at the age of about ten. I <i>remember</i> that; but how
+many times I must be powerfully affected by the poets
+<i>without</i> remembering why. If a fellow could cut out all that
+extrinsic interest he would be a fool to do so. But he would
+be a better critic.</p>
+
+<p>You ought to be happy in the contemplation of a natural,
+wholesome life at Carmel Bay&mdash;the "prospect pleases,"
+surely. But I fear, I fear. Maybe you can get a newspaper
+connection that will bring you in a small income without
+compelling you to do violence to your literary conscience.
+I doubt if you can get your living out of the ground. But I
+shall watch the experiment with sympathetic interest, for
+it "appeals" to me. I'm a trifle jaded with age and the
+urban life, and maybe if you can succeed in that other sort
+of thing I could.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>As to *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* the Superb. Isn't Sag Harbor somewhere near
+Saybrook, Connecticut, at the mouth of the river of that
+name? I'm going there for a month with Percival Pollard.
+Shall leave here about the first of July. If Sag Harbor is
+easily accessible from there, and *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* would care to see
+me, I'll go and call on her. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* But maybe I'd fall in love
+with her and, being now (alas) eligible, just marry her
+alive!&mdash;or be turned down by her, to the unspeakable
+wrecking of my peace! I'm only a youth&mdash;63 on the 24th
+of this month&mdash;and it would be too bad if I got started
+wrong in life. But really I don't know about the good taste
+of being jocular about *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*. I'm sure she must be a serious
+enough maiden, with the sun of a declining race yellow
+on her hair. Eva Crawford thinks her most lovable&mdash;and<span class="pagenum">113</span>
+Eva has a clear, considering eye upon you all.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm going to send up my canoe to Saybrook and challenge
+the rollers of the Sound. Don't you fear&mdash;I'm an expert
+canoeist from boyhood. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+<p class="left65">Sincerely,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 3,<br />
+1905.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have at last the letter that I was waiting for&mdash;didn't
+answer the other, for one of mine was on the way to you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You need not worry yourself about your part of the business.
+You have acted "mighty white," as was to have been
+expected of you; and, caring little for any other feature of
+the matter, I'm grateful to you for giving my pessimism
+and growing disbelief in human disinterestedness a sound
+wholesome thwack on the mazzard.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I was sorry to whack London, for whom, in his character
+as author, I have a high admiration, and in that of
+publicist and reformer a deep contempt. Even if he had
+been a personal friend, I should have whacked him, and
+doubtless much harder. I'm not one of those who give their
+friends carte blanche to sin. If my friend dishonors himself
+he dishonors me; if he makes a fool of himself he makes a
+fool of me&mdash;which another cannot do.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Your description of your new environment, in your other
+letter, makes me "homesick" to see it. I cordially congratulate
+you and Mrs. Sterling on having the sense to do what
+I have always been too indolent to do&mdash;namely as you
+please. Guess I've been always too busy "warming both<span class="pagenum">114</span>
+hands before the fire of life." And now, when</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"It sinks and I am ready to depart,"</p>
+
+<p>I find that the damned fire was in <i>me</i> and ought to have
+been quenched with a dash of cold sense. I'm having my
+canoe decked and yawl-rigged for deep water and live in
+the hope of being drowned according to the dictates of my
+conscience.</p>
+
+<p>By way of proving my power of self-restraint I'm going
+to stop this screed with a whole page unused.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, as ever,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 3,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I don't know why I've not written to you&mdash;that is, I
+don't know why God made me what I have the misfortune
+to be: a sufferer from procrastination.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I have read Mary Austin's book with unexpected interest.
+It is pleasing exceedingly. You may not know that I'm
+familiar with the <i>kind</i> of country she writes of, and reading
+the book was like traversing it again. But the best of her is
+her style. That is delicious. It has a slight "tang" of archaism&mdash;just
+enough to suggest "lucent sirups tinct with
+cinnamon," or the "spice and balm" of Miller's sea-winds.
+And what a knack at observation she has! Nothing escapes
+her eye. Tell me about her. What else has she written?
+What is she going to write? If she is still young she will do
+great work; if not&mdash;well, she <i>has</i> done it in that book. But
+she'll have to hammer and hammer again and again before
+the world will hear and heed.</p>
+
+<p>As to me I'm pot-boiling. My stuff in the N. Y. American<span class="pagenum">115</span>
+(I presume that the part of it that you see is in the Examiner)
+is mere piffle, written without effort, purpose or care.
+My department in the Cosmopolitan is a failure, as I told
+Millard it would be. It is impossible to write topical stuff
+for a magazine. How can one discuss with heart or inspiration
+a thing that happens two months or so before one's
+comments on it will be read? The venture and the title
+were Hearst's notion, but the title so handicaps me that I
+can do nothing right. I shall drop it.</p>
+
+<p>I've done three little stories for the March number (they
+may be postponed) that are ghastly enough to make a pig
+squeal.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 12,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>First, about the "Wine," I dislike the "privately printed"
+racket. Can you let the matter wait a little longer? Neale
+has the poem, and Neale is just now inaccessible to letters,
+somewhere in the South in the interest of his magazine-that-is-to-be.
+I called when in New York, but he had flown
+and I've been unable to reach him; but he is due here on
+the 23rd. Then if his mag is going to hold fire, or if he
+doesn't want the poem for it, let Robertson or Josephare
+have a hack at it.</p>
+
+<p>Barr is amusing. I don't care to have a copy of his remarks.</p>
+
+<p>About the pirating of my stories. That is a matter for
+Chatto and Windus, who bought the English copyright of
+the book from which that one story came. I dare say,
+though, the publication was done by arrangement with
+them. Anyhow my interests are not involved.</p>
+
+<p>I was greatly interested in your account of Mrs. Austin.<span class="pagenum">116</span>
+She's a clever woman and should write a good novel&mdash;if
+there is such a thing as a good novel. I won't read novels.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, the "Cosmopolitan" cat-story is Leigh's and is to
+be credited to him if ever published in covers. I fathered it
+as the only way to get it published at all. Of course I had
+to rewrite it; it was very crude and too horrible. A story
+may be terrible, but must not be horrible&mdash;there is a difference.
+I found the manuscript among his papers.</p>
+
+<p>It is disagreeable to think of the estrangement between
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* and his family. Doubtless the trouble arises from his
+being married. Yes, it is funny, his taking his toddy along
+with you old soakers. I remember he used to kick at my
+having wine in camp and at your having a bottle hidden
+away in the bushes.</p>
+
+<p>I had seen that group of you and Joaquin and Stoddard
+and laughed at your lifelike impersonation of the Drowsy
+Demon.</p>
+
+<p>I passed the first half of last month in New York. Went
+there for a dinner and stayed to twelve. Sam Davis and
+Homer Davenport were of the party.</p>
+
+<p>Sam was here for a few days&mdash;but maybe you don't know
+Sam. He's a brother to Bob, who swears you got your
+Dante-like solemnity of countenance by coming into his
+office when he was editing a newspaper.</p>
+
+<p>You are not to think I have thrown *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* over. There
+are only two or three matters of seriousness between us
+and they cannot profitably be discussed in letters, so they
+must wait until he and I meet if we ever do. I shall mention
+them to no one else and I don't suppose he will to anyone
+but me. Apart from these&mdash;well, our correspondence
+was disagreeable, so the obvious thing to do was to put an
+end to it. To unlike a friend is not an easy thing to do, and<span class="pagenum">117</span>
+I've not attempted to do it.</p>
+
+<p>Of course I approve the new lines in the "Wine" and if
+Neale or anybody else will have the poem I shall insert
+them in their place. That "screaming thing" stays with
+one almost as does "the blue-eyed vampire," and is not
+only visible, as is she, but audible as well. If you go on
+adding lines to the poem I shall not so sharply deplore our
+failure to get it into print. As Mark Twain says: "Every
+time you draw you fill."</p>
+
+<p>The "Night in Heaven" is fine work in the grand style
+and its swing is haunting when one gets it. I get a jolt or
+two in the reading, but I dare say you purposely contrived
+them and I can't say they hurt. Of course the rhythm recalls
+Kipling's "The Last Chanty" (I'm not sure I spell
+the word correctly&mdash;if there's a correct way) but that is
+nothing. Nobody has the copyright of any possible metre
+or rhythm in English prosody. It has been long since anybody
+was "first." When are you coming to Washington to
+sail in my canoe? Sincerely yours,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 5,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've been in New York again but am slowly recovering. I
+saw Neale. He assures me that the magazine will surely
+materialize about June, and he wants the poem, "A Wine
+of Wizardry," with an introduction by me. I think he
+means it; if so that will give it greater publicity than what
+you have in mind, even if the mag eventually fail. Magazines
+if well advertised usually sell several hundred thousand
+of the first issue; the trick is to keep them going. Munsey's
+"Scrap Book" disposed of a half-million. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* was to start for a few weeks in California about
+now. I hope you will see him. He is not a bad lot when convinced<span class="pagenum">118</span>
+that one respects him. He has been treated pretty
+badly in this neck o' the woods, as is every Western man
+who breaks into this realm of smugwumps.</p>
+
+<p>My benediction upon Carmelites all and singular&mdash;if any
+are all.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">Doubleday, Page &amp; Co. are to publish my "Cynic's Dictionary."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 20,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I write in the hope that you are alive and the fear that
+you are wrecked.<a name="fnanchor_8" id="fnanchor_8"></a><a href="#footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[8]</a></p>
+
+<p>Please let me know if I can help&mdash;I need not say how
+glad I shall be to do so. "Help" would go with this were I
+sure about you and the post-office. It's a mighty bad business
+and one does not need to own property out there to be
+"hit hard" by it. One needs only to have friends there.</p>
+
+<p>We are helpless here, so far as the telegraph is concerned&mdash;shall
+not be able to get anything on the wires for many
+days, all private dispatches being refused.</p>
+
+<p>Pray God you and yours may be all right. Of course anything
+that you may be able to tell me of my friends will be
+gratefully received.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_8" id="footnote_8" href="#fnanchor_8"><span class="label">[8]</span></a> The San Francisco earthquake and fire had occurred April 18, 1906.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 6,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your letter relieves me greatly. I had begun to fear that
+you had "gone before." Thank you very much for your
+news of our friends. I had already heard from Eva Croffie.
+Also from Grizzly.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for Mr. Eddy's review of "Shapes." But he is
+misinformed about poor Flora Shearer. Of course I helped<span class="pagenum">119</span>
+her&mdash;who would not help a good friend in adversity? But
+she went to Scotland to a brother long ago, and at this time
+I do not know if she is living or dead.</p>
+
+<p>But here am I forgetting (momentarily) that awful wiping
+out of San Francisco. It "hit" me pretty hard in many
+ways&mdash;mostly indirectly, through my friends. I had rather
+hoped to have to "put up" for you and your gang, and am
+a trifle disappointed to know that you are all right&mdash;except
+the chimneys. I'm glad that tidal wave did not come, but
+don't you think you'd better have a canoe ready? You
+could keep it on your veranda stacked with provisions and
+whiskey.</p>
+
+<p>My letter from Ursus (written during the conflagration)
+expresses a keen solicitude for the Farallones, as the fire
+was working westward.</p>
+
+<p>If this letter is a little disconnected and incoherent know,
+O King, that I have just returned from a dinner in Atlantic
+City, N. J. I saw Markham there, also Bob Davis, Sam
+Moffett, Homer Davenport, Bob Mackay and other San
+Franciscans. (Can there be a San Franciscan when there is
+no San Francisco? I don't want to go back. Doubtless the
+new San Francisco&mdash;while it lasts&mdash;will be a finer town
+than the old, but it will not be <i>my</i> San Francisco and I
+don't want to see it. It has for many years been, to me, full
+of ghosts. Now it is itself a ghost.)</p>
+
+<p>I return the sonnets. Destruction of "Town Talk" has
+doubtless saved you from having the one on me turned
+down. Dear old fellow, don't take the trouble to defend my
+memory when&mdash;or at least until&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="i2">"I am fled</span><br />
+From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell."</p>
+
+<p>I'm not letting my enemies' attitude trouble me at all. On<span class="pagenum">120</span>
+the contrary, I'm rather sorry for them and their insomnia&mdash;lying
+awake o' nights to think out new and needful lies
+about me, while I sleep sweetly. O, it is all right, truly.</p>
+
+<p>No, I never had any row (nor much acquaintance) with
+Mark Twain&mdash;met him but two or three times. Once with
+Stoddard in London. I think pretty well of him, but doubt
+if he cared for me and can't, at the moment, think of any
+reason why he <i>should</i> have cared for me.</p>
+
+<p>"The Cynic's Dictionary" is a-printing. I shall have to
+call it something else, for the publishers tell me there is a
+"Cynic's Dictionary" already out. I dare say the author
+took more than my title&mdash;the stuff has been a rich mine
+for a plagiarist for many a year. They (the publishers)
+won't have "The Devil's Dictionary." Here in the East
+the Devil is a sacred personage (the Fourth Person of the
+Trinity, as an Irishman might say) and his name must not
+be taken in vain.</p>
+
+<p>No, "The Testimony of the Suns" has not "palled" on
+me. I still read it and still think it one of the world's greatest
+poems.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Well, God be wi' ye and spare the shack at Carmel,</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 11,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your poem, "A Dream of Fear" was so good before that
+it needed no improvement, though I'm glad to observe that
+you have "the passion for perfection." Sure&mdash;you shall
+have your word "colossal" applied to a thing of two dimensions,
+an you will.</p>
+
+<p>I have no objection to the publication of that sonnet on<span class="pagenum">121</span>
+me. It may give my enemies a transient feeling that is disagreeable,
+and if I can do that without taking any trouble
+in the matter myself it is worth doing. I think they must
+have renewed their activity, to have provoked you so&mdash;got
+up a new and fascinating lie, probably. Thank you for putting
+your good right leg into action themward.</p>
+
+<p>What a "settlement" you have collected about you at
+Carmel! All manner of cranks and curios, to whom I feel
+myself drawn by affinity. Still I suppose I shall not go. I
+should have to see the new San Francisco&mdash;when it has
+foolishly been built&mdash;and I'd rather not. One does not care
+to look upon either the mutilated face of one's mashed
+friend or an upstart imposter bearing his name. No, <i>my</i>
+San Francisco is gone and I'll have no other.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You are wrong about Gorky&mdash;he has none of the "artist"
+in him. He is not only a peasant, but an anarchist and an
+advocate of assassination&mdash;by others; like most of his
+tribe, he doesn't care to take the risk himself. His "career"
+in this country has been that of a yellow dog. Hearst's
+newspapers and *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* are the only friends that remain to
+him of all those that acclaimed him when he landed. And
+all the sturdy lying of the former cannot rehabilitate him.
+It isn't merely the woman matter. You'd understand if you
+were on this side of the country. I was myself a dupe in the
+matter. He had expressed high admiration of my books (in
+an interview in Russia) and when his Government released
+him from prison I cabled him congratulations. O, my!</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I've observed the obviously lying estimates of the
+San Franciscan dead; also that there was no earthquake&mdash;just
+a fire; also the determination to "beat" the insurance
+companies. Insurance is a hog game, and if they (the companies)<span class="pagenum">122</span>
+can be beaten out of their dishonest gains by
+superior dishonesty I have no objection; but in my judgment
+they are neither legally nor morally liable for the half
+that is claimed of them. Those of them that took no earthquake
+risks don't owe a cent.</p>
+
+<p>Please don't send *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*'s verses to me if you can decently
+decline. I should be sorry to find them bad, and my loathing
+of the Whitmaniacal "form" is as deep as yours. Perhaps
+I should find them good otherwise, but the probability
+is so small that I don't want to take the chance.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I've just finished reading the first proofs of "The Cynic's
+Word Book," which Doubleday, Page &amp; Co. are to bring
+out in October. My dealings with them have been most
+pleasant and one of them whom I met the other day at
+Atlantic City seems a fine fellow.</p>
+
+<p>I think I told you that S. O. Howes, of Galveston, Texas,
+is compiling a book of essays and sich from some of my
+stuff that I sent him. I've left the selection entirely to him
+and presented him with the profits if there be any. He'll
+probably not even find a publisher. He has the work about
+half done. By the way, he is an enthusiastic admirer of you.
+For that I like him, and for much else.</p>
+
+<p>I mean to stay here all summer if I die for it, as I probably
+shall. Luck and love to you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 20, 1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Cahill</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am more sorry than I can say to be unable to send you
+the copy of the Builder's Review that you kindly sent <i>me</i>.
+But before receiving your note I had, in my own interest,<span class="pagenum">123</span>
+searched high and low for it, in vain. Somebody stole it
+from my table. I especially valued it after the catastrophe,
+but should have been doubly pleased to have it for you.</p>
+
+<p>It was indeed a rough deal you San Franciscans got. I
+had always expected to go back to the good old town some
+day, but I have no desire to see the new town, if there is to
+be one. I fear the fire consumed even the ghosts that used
+to meet me at every street corner&mdash;ghosts of dear dead
+friends, oh, so many of them!</p>
+
+<p>Please accept my sympathy for your losses. I too am a
+"sufferer," a whole edition of my latest book, plates and
+all, having gone up in smoke and many of my friends being
+now in the "dependent class." It hit us all pretty hard, I
+guess, wherever we happened to be.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C,<br />
+August 11,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>If your neighbor Carmelites are really "normal" and
+respectable I'm sorry for you. They will surely (remaining
+cold sober themselves) drive you to drink. Their sort
+affects <i>me</i> that way. God bless the crank and the curio!&mdash;what
+would life in this desert be without its mullahs and
+its dervishes? A matter of merchants and camel drivers&mdash;no
+one to laugh with and at.</p>
+
+<p>Did you see Gorky's estimate of us in "Appleton's"?
+Having been a few weeks in the land, whose language he
+knows not a word of, he knows (by intuition of genius and
+a wee-bit help from Gaylord Wilshire and his gang) all
+about us, and tells it in generalities of vituperation as applicable
+to one country as to another. He's a dandy bomb-thrower,<span class="pagenum">124</span>
+but he handles the stink-pot only indifferently
+well. He should write (for "The Cosmopolitan") on "The
+Treason of God."</p>
+
+<p>Sorry you didn't like my remarks in that fool "symposium."
+If I said enough to make it clear that I don't care a
+damn for any of the matters touched upon, nor for the fellows
+who <i>do</i> care, I satisfied my wish. It was not intended
+to be an "argument" at all&mdash;at least not on my part; I
+don't argue with babes and sucklings. Hunter is a decentish
+fellow, for a dreamer, but the Hillquit person is a humorless
+anarchist. When I complimented him on the beauty of his
+neck and expressed the hope of putting a nice, new rope
+about it he nearly strangled on the brandy that I was putting
+down it at the hotel bar. And it wasn't with merriment.
+His anarchist sentiments were all cut out.</p>
+
+<p>I'm not familiar with the poetry of William Vaughan
+Moody. Can you "put me on"?</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you an odd thing by Eugene Wood, of Niagara
+Falls, where I met him two or three years ago. I'm sure
+you will appreciate it. The poor chap died the other day
+and might appropriately&mdash;as he doubtless will&mdash;lie in a
+neglected grave. You may return the book when you have
+read it enough. I'm confident you never heard of it.</p>
+
+<p>Enclosed is your sonnet, with a few suggestions of no importance.
+I had not space on it to say that the superfluity
+of superlatives noted, is accentuated by the words "west"
+and "quest" immediately following, making a lot of
+"ests." The verses are pleasing, but if any villain prefer
+them to "In Extremis" may he bite himself with a Snake!</p>
+
+<p>If you'll send me that shuddery thing on Fear&mdash;with the
+"clangor of ascending chains" line&mdash;and one or two others
+that you'd care to have in a magazine, I'll try them on<span class="pagenum">125</span>
+Maxwell. I suspect he will fall dead in the reading, or possibly
+dislocate the jaw of him with a yawn, but even so you
+will not have written in vain.</p>
+
+<p>Have you tried anything on "Munsey"? Bob Davis is the
+editor, and we talked you over at dinner (where would you
+could have been). I think he values my judgment a little. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could be blown upon by your Carmel sea-breeze;
+the weather here is wicked! I don't even canoe.</p>
+
+<p>My "Cynic" book is due in October. Shall send it to you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+September 28,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Both your letters at hand.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Be a "magazine poet" all you can&mdash;that is the shortest
+road to recognition, and all our greater poets have travelled
+it. You need not compromise with your conscience, however,
+by writing "magazine poetry." You couldn't.</p>
+
+<p>What's your objection to *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*? I don't observe that
+it is greatly worse than others of its class. But a fellow who
+has for nigh upon twenty years written for yellow newspapers
+can't be expected to say much that's edifying on
+that subject. So I dare say I'm wrong in my advice about
+the <i>kind</i> of swine for your pearls. There are probably more
+than the two kinds of pigs&mdash;live ones and dead ones.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I'm a colonel&mdash;in Pennsylvania Avenue. In the
+neighborhood of my tenement I'm a Mister. At my club
+I'm a major&mdash;which is my real title by an act of Congress.
+I suppressed it in California, but couldn't here, where I run
+with the military gang.</p>
+
+<p>You need not blackguard your poem, "A Visitor," though<span class="pagenum">126</span>
+I could wish you had not chosen blank verse. That form
+seems to me suitable (in serious verse) only to lofty, not
+lowly, themes. Anyhow, I always expect something pretty
+high when I begin an unknown poem in blank. Moreover, it
+is not your best "medium." Your splendid poem, "Music,"
+does not wholly commend itself to me for that reason. May
+I say that it is a little sing-songy&mdash;the lines monotonously
+alike in their caesural pauses and some of their other
+features?</p>
+
+<p>By the way, I'd like to see what you could do in more unsimple
+meters than the ones that you handle so well. The
+wish came to me the other day in reading Lanier's "The
+Marshes of Glynn" and some of his other work. Lanier did
+not often equal his master, Swinburne, in getting the most
+out of the method, but he did well in the poem mentioned.
+Maybe you could manage the dangerous thing. It would be
+worth doing and is, therefore, worth trying.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the Moody book, which I will return. He
+pleaseth me greatly and I could already fill pages with
+analyses of him for the reasons therefore. But for you to say
+that he has <i>you</i> "skinned"&mdash;that is magnanimity. An excellent
+thing in poets, I grant you, and a rare one. There is
+something about him and his book in the current "Atlantic,"
+by May Sinclair, who, I dare say, has never heard of
+<i>you</i>. Unlike you, she thinks his dramatic work the best of
+what he does. I've not seen that. To be the best it must be
+mighty good.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, poor White's poetry is all you say&mdash;and worse, but,
+faith! he "had it in him." What struck me was his candid
+apotheosis of piracy on the high seas. I'd hate the fellow
+who hadn't some sneaking sympathy with that&mdash;as Goethe
+confessed to some sympathy with every vice. Nobody'll ever<span class="pagenum">127</span>
+hear of White, but (pray observe, ambitious bard!) he isn't
+caring. How wise are the dead!</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>My friend Howes, of Galveston, has, I think, nearly finished
+compiling his book of essaylets from my stuff. Neale
+has definitely decided to bring out "The Monk and the
+Hangman's Daughter." He has the plates of my two luckless
+Putnam books, and is figuring on my "complete works,"
+to be published by subscription. I doubt if he will undertake
+it right away.</p>
+
+<p><i>Au reste</i>, I'm in good health and am growing old not altogether
+disgracefully.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington,<br />
+October 30,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm pained by your comments on my book. I always feel
+that way when praised&mdash;"just plunged in a gulf of dark
+despair" to think that I took no more trouble to make the
+commendation truer. I shall try harder with the Howes
+book.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I can't supply the missing link between pages 101 and 102
+of the "Word Book," having destroyed the copy and
+proofs. Supply it yourself.</p>
+
+<p>You err: the book is getting me a little glory, but that
+will be all&mdash;it will have no sale, for it has no slang, no
+"dialect" and no grinning through a horse-collar. By the,
+way, please send me any "notices" of it that you may
+chance to see out there.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I've done a ghost story for the January "Cosmopolitan,"
+which I think pretty well of. That's all I've done for more<span class="pagenum">128</span>
+than two months.</p>
+
+<p>I return your poem and the Moody book. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington,<br />
+December 5,<br />
+1906.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your letter of Nov. 28 has just come to my breakfast
+table. It is the better part of the repast.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>No, my dictionary will not sell. I so assured the publishers.</p>
+
+<p>I lunched with Neale the other day&mdash;he comes down here
+once a month. His magazine (I think he is to call it "The
+Southerner," or something like that) will not get out this
+month, as he expected it to. And for an ominous reason:
+He had relied largely on Southern writers, and finds that
+they can't write! He assures me that it <i>will</i> appear this winter
+and asked me not to withdraw your poem and my remarks
+on it unless you asked it. So I did not.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>In your character of bookseller carrying a stock of my
+books you have a new interest. May Heaven promote you
+to publisher!</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the Moody books&mdash;which I'll return soon.
+"The Masque of Judgment" has some great work in its
+final pages&mdash;quite as great as anything in Faust. The passages
+that you marked are good too, but some of them
+barely miss being entirely satisfying. It would trouble you
+to find many such passages in the other book, which is,
+moreover, not distinguished for clarity. I found myself
+frequently prompted to ask the author: "What the devil
+are you driving at?"</p>
+
+<p>I'm going to finish this letter at home where there is less<span class="pagenum">129</span>
+talk of the relative military strength of Japan and San
+Francisco and the latter power's newest and most grievous
+affliction, Teddy Roosevelt.</p>
+
+<p class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</p>
+
+<p class="p2">P.S. Guess the letter is finished.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 27,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I suppose I owe you letters and letters&mdash;but you don't
+particularly like to write letters yourself, so you'll understand.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Hanging before me is a water-color of a bit of Carmel
+Beach, by Chris Jorgensen, for which I blew in fifty dollars
+the other day. He had a fine exhibition of his Californian
+work here. I wanted to buy it all, but compromised
+with my desire by buying what I could. The picture has a
+sentimental value to me, apart from its artistic.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I am to see Neale in a few days and shall try to learn
+definitely when his magazine is to come out&mdash;if he knows.
+If he does not I'll withdraw your poem. Next month he is
+to republish "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter,"
+with a new preface which somebody will not relish. I'll send
+you a copy. The Howes book is on its travels among the
+publishers, and so, doubtless, will long continue.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 5,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Our letters "crossed"&mdash;a thing that "happens" oftener
+than not in my correspondence, when neither person has
+written for a long time. I have drawn some interesting inferences
+from this fact, but have no time now to state<span class="pagenum">130</span>
+them. Indeed, I have no time to do anything but send you
+the stuff on the battle of Shiloh concerning which you
+inquire.</p>
+
+<p>I should write it a little differently now, but it may entertain
+you as it is.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center p2">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington,<br />
+February 21,<br />
+1907</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>If you desert Carmel I shall destroy my Jorgensen picture,
+build a bungalow in the Catskills and cut out California
+forever. (Those are the footprints of my damned
+canary, who will neither write himself nor let me write.
+Just now he is perched on my shoulder, awaiting the command
+to sing&mdash;then he will deafen me with a song without
+sense. O he's a poet all right.)</p>
+
+<p>I entirely approve your allegiance to Mammon. If I'd had
+brains enough to make a decision like that I could now, at
+65, have the leisure to make a good book or two before I go
+to the waste-dump. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* Get yourself a fat bank account&mdash;there's
+no such friend as a bank account, and the
+greatest book is a check-book; "You may lay to that!" as
+one of Stevenson's pirates puts it.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>No, sir, your boss will not bring you East next June; or if
+he does you will not come to Washington. How do I know?
+I don't know how I know, but concerning all (and they are
+many) who were to come from California to see me I have
+never once failed in my forecast of their coming or not coming.
+Even in the case of *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, although I wrote to you, and
+to her, as if I expected her, I <i>said</i> to one of my friends:<span class="pagenum">131</span>
+"She will not come." I don't think it's a gift of divination&mdash;it
+just happens, somehow. Yours is not a very good example,
+for you have not said you were coming, "sure."</p>
+
+<p>So your colony of high-brows is re-establishing itself at
+the old stand&mdash;Piedmont. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* But Piedmont&mdash;it must
+be in the heart of Oakland. I could no longer shoot rabbits
+in the gulch back of it and sleep under a tree to shoot more
+in the morning. Nor could I traverse that long ridge with
+various girls. I dare say there's a boulevard running the
+length of it,</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"A palace and a prison on each hand."</p>
+
+<p>If I could stop you from reading that volume of old
+"Argonauts" I'd do so, but I suppose an injunction would
+not "lie." Yes, I was a slovenly writer in those days,
+though enough better than my neighbors to have attracted
+my own attention. My knowledge of English was imperfect
+"a whole lot." Indeed, my intellectual status (whatever
+it may be, and God knows it's enough to make me
+blush) was of slow growth&mdash;as was my moral. I mean, I
+had not literary sincerity.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I wrote of Swinburne the distasteful words that you
+quote. But they were not altogether untrue. He used to set
+my teeth on edge&mdash;could <i>not</i> stand still a minute, and kept
+you looking for the string that worked his legs and arms.
+And he had a weak face that gave you the memory of chinlessness.
+But I have long renounced the views that I once
+held about his poetry&mdash;held, or thought I held. I don't
+remember, though, if it was as lately as '78 that I held
+them.</p>
+
+<p>You write of Miss Dawson. Did she survive the 'quake?
+And do you know about her? Not a word of her has reached<span class="pagenum">132</span>
+me. Notwithstanding your imported nightingale (upon
+which I think you should be made to pay a stiff duty) your
+Ina Coolbrith poem is so good that I want to keep it if you
+have another copy. I find no amendable faults in it. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>The fellow that told you that I was an editor of "The
+Cosmopolitan" has an impediment in his veracity. I simply
+write for it, *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, and the less of my stuff the editor uses
+the better I'm pleased.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>O, you ask about the "Ursus-Aborn-Gorgias-Agrestis-Polyglot"
+stuff. It was written by James F. ("Jimmie")
+Bowman&mdash;long dead. (See a pretty bad sonnet on page 94,
+"Shapes of Clay.") My only part in the matter was to suggest
+the papers and discuss them with him over many mugs
+of beer.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>By the way, Neale says he gets almost enough inquiries
+for my books (from San Francisco) to justify him in republishing
+them.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>That's all&mdash;and, as George Augustus Sala wrote of a chew
+of tobacco as the price of a certain lady's favors, "God
+knows it's enough!" <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 23,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have your letter of the 13th. The enclosed slip from the
+Pacific Monthly (thank you for it) is amusing. Yes, *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*
+is an insufferable pedant, but I don't at all mind his pedantry.
+Any critic is welcome to whack me all he likes if he
+will append to his remarks (as *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* had the thoughtfulness
+to do) my definition of "Critic" from the "Word
+Book."</p>
+
+<p>Please don't bother to write me when the spirit does not<span class="pagenum">133</span>
+move you thereto. You and I don't need to write to each
+other for any other reason than that we want to. As to
+coming East, abstain, O, abstain from promises, lest you
+resemble all my other friends out there, who promise
+always and never come. It would be delightful to see you
+here, but I know how those things arrange themselves without
+reference to our desires. We do as we must, not as we
+will.</p>
+
+<p>I think that uncle of yours must be a mighty fine fellow.
+Be good to him and don't kick at his service, even when
+you feel the chain. It beats poetry for nothing a year.</p>
+
+<p>Did you get the "Shiloh" article? I sent it to you. I sent
+it also to Paul Elder &amp; Co. (New York branch) for their
+book of "Western Classics," and hope it will meet their
+need. They wanted something, and it seemed to me as
+good, with a little revision, as any of my stuff that I control.
+Do you think it would be wise to offer them for republication
+"In the Midst of Life"? It is now "out of print"
+and on my hands.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad of your commendation of my "Cosmopolitan"
+stuff. They don't give me much of a "show"&mdash;the editor
+doesn't love me personally as he should, and lets me do
+only enough to avert from himself the attention of Mr.
+Hearst and that gentleman's interference with the mutual
+admiration game as played in the "Cosmopolitan" office.
+As I'm rather fond of light work I'm not shrieking.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You don't speak of getting the book that I sent, "The
+Monk and the Hangman's Daughter"&mdash;new edition. 'Tisn't
+as good as the old. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm boating again. How I should like to put out my prow<span class="pagenum">134</span>
+on Monterey Bay.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 8,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your letter, with the yerba buena and the spray of redwood,
+came like a breeze from the hills. And the photographs
+are most pleasing. I note that Sloot's moustache is
+decently white at last, as becomes a fellow of his years. I
+dare say his hair is white too, but I can't see under his hat.
+And I think he never removes it. That backyard of yours is
+a wonder, but I sadly miss the appropriate ash-heaps, tin
+cans, old packing-boxes, and so forth. And that palm in
+front of the house&mdash;gracious, how she's grown! Well, it has
+been more than a day growing, and I've not watched it
+attentively.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you'll have a good time in Yosemite, but Sloots is
+an idiot not to go with you&mdash;nineteen days is as long as
+anybody would want to stay there.</p>
+
+<p>I saw a little of Phyllis Partington in New York. She told
+me much of you and seems to be fond of you. That is very
+intelligent of her, don't you think?</p>
+
+<p>No, I shall not wait until I'm rich before visiting you.
+I've no intention of being rich, but do mean to visit you&mdash;some
+day. Probably when Grizzly has visited <i>me</i>. Love to
+you all. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Army and Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 25,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>So *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* showed you his article on me. He showed it to
+me also, and some of it amused me mightily, though I
+didn't tell him so. That picture of me as a grouchy and disappointed
+old man occupying the entire cave of Adullam is<span class="pagenum">135</span>
+particularly humorous, and so poetic that I would not for
+the world "cut it out." *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* seems incapable (like a good
+many others) of estimating success in other terms than
+those of popularity. He gives a rather better clew to his own
+character than to mine. The old man is fairly well pleased
+with the way that he has played the game, and with his
+share of the stakes, thank'ee.</p>
+
+<p>I note with satisfaction <i>your</i> satisfaction with my article
+on you and your poem. I'll correct the quotation about the
+"timid sapphires"&mdash;don't know how I happened to leave
+out the best part of it. But I left out the line about "harlot's
+blood" because I didn't (and don't) think a magazine
+would "stand for it" if I called the editor's attention to it.
+You don't know what magazines are if you haven't tested
+them. However, I'll try it on Chamberlain if you like. And
+I'll put in "twilight of the year" too.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>It's pleasing to know that you've "cut out" your clerical
+work if you can live without it. Now for some great poetry!
+Carmel has a fascination for me too&mdash;because of your letters.
+If I did not fear illness&mdash;a return of my old complaint&mdash;I'd
+set out for it at once. I've nothing to do that would
+prevent&mdash;about two day's work a month. But I'd never
+set foot in San Francisco. Of all the Sodoms and Gomorrahs
+in our modern world it is the worst. There are not ten
+righteous (and courageous) men there. It needs another
+quake, another whiff of fire, and&mdash;more than all else&mdash;a
+steady tradewind of grapeshot. When *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* gets done
+blackguarding New York (as it deserves) and has shaken
+the dung of San Francisco from his feet I'm going to "sick
+him onto" that moral penal colony of the world. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I've two "books" seeking existence in New York&mdash;the<span class="pagenum">136</span>
+Howes book and some satires. Guess they are cocks that
+will not fight.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">I was sixty-five yesterday.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+July 11,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've just finished reading proofs of my stuff about you
+and your poem. Chamberlain, as I apprised you, has it
+slated for September. But for that month also he has slated
+a longish spook story of mine, besides my regular stuff.
+Not seeing how he can run it all in one issue, I have asked
+him to run your poem (with my remarks) and hold the
+spook yarn till some other time. I <i>hope</i> he'll do so, but if he
+doesn't, don't think it my fault. An editor never does as
+one wants him to. I inserted in my article another quotation
+or two, and restored some lines that I had cut out of
+the quotations to save space.</p>
+
+<p>It's grilling hot here&mdash;I envy you your Carmel.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I guess several of your good letters are unanswered, as
+are many others of other correspondents. I've been gadding
+a good deal lately&mdash;to New York principally. When I want
+a royal good time I go to New York; and I get it.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>As to Miller being "about the same age" as I, why, no.
+The rascal is long past seventy, although nine or ten years
+ago he wrote from Alaska that he was "in the middle
+fifties." I've known him for nearly thirty years and he
+can't fool me with his youthful airs and tales. May he live<span class="pagenum">137</span>
+long and repent.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for taking the trouble to send Conan Doyle's
+opinion of me. No, it doesn't turn my head; I can show you
+dozens of "appreciations" from greater and more famous
+men. I return it to you corrected&mdash;as he really wrote it.
+Here it is:</p>
+
+<p>"Praise from Sir Hugo is praise indeed." In "Through
+the Magic Door," an exceedingly able article on short
+stories that have interested him, Conan Doyle pays the following
+well-deserved tribute to Ambrose Bierce, whose
+wonderful short stories have so often been praised in these
+columns: "Talking of weird American stories, have you
+ever read any of the works of Ambrose Bierce? I have one
+of his books before me, 'In the Midst of Life.' This man
+(has) had a flavor quite his own, and (is)<a name="fnanchor_9" id="fnanchor_9"></a><a href="#footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[9]</a> was a great
+artist. It is not cheerful reading, but it leaves its mark upon
+you, and that is the proof of good work."</p>
+
+<p>Thank you also for the Jacobs story, which I will read.
+As a <i>humorist</i> he is no great thing.</p>
+
+<p>I've not read your Bohemian play to a finish yet, *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*.
+By the way, I've always wondered why they did not "put
+on" Comus. Properly done it would be great woodland
+stuff. Read it with a view to that and see if I'm not right.
+And then persuade them to "stage it" next year.</p>
+
+<p>I'm being awfully pressed to return to California. No San
+Francisco for me, but Carmel sounds good. For about how
+much could I get ground and build a bungalow&mdash;for one?
+That's a pretty indefinite question; but then the will to go
+is a little hazy at present. It consists, as yet, only of the
+element of desire. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>The "Cosmopolitan," with your poem, has not come to<span class="pagenum">138</span>
+hand but is nearly due&mdash;I'm a little impatient&mdash;eager to
+see the particular kind of outrage Chamberlain's artist has
+wrought upon it. He (C.) asked for your address the other
+day; so he will doubtless send you a check.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Now please go to work at "Lilith"; it's bound to be great
+stuff, for you'll have to imagine it all. I'm sorry that anybody
+ever invented Lilith; it makes her too much of an historical
+character.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>"The other half of the Devil's Dictionary" is in the fluid
+state&mdash;not even liquid. And so, doubtless, it will remain.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_9" id="footnote_9" href="#fnanchor_9"><span class="label">[9]</span></a> (has) and (is) crossed out by A. B.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+September 7,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm awfully glad that you don't mind Chamberlain's yellow
+nonsense in coupling Ella's name with yours. But
+when you read her natural opinion of your work you'll
+acquit her of complicity in the indignity. I'm sending a few
+things from Hearst's newspapers&mdash;written by the slangers,
+dialecters and platitudinarians of the staff, and by some of
+the swine among the readers.</p>
+
+<p>Note the deliberate and repeated lying of Brisbane in
+quoting me as saying the "Wine" is "the greatest poem
+ever written in America." Note his dishonesty in confessing
+that he has commendatory letters, yet not publishing a
+single one of them. But the end is not yet&mdash;my inning is to
+come, in the magazine. Chamberlain (who professes an enthusiastic
+admiration of the poem) promises me a free hand
+in replying to these ignorant asses. If he does not give it to
+me I quit. I've writ a paragraph or two for the November<span class="pagenum">139</span>
+number (too late now for the October) by way of warning
+them what they'll get when December comes. So you see
+you must patiently endure the befouling till then.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Did you notice in the last line of the "Wine" that I restored
+the word "smile" from your earlier draft of the
+verses? In one of your later (I don't remember if in the last)
+you had it "sigh." That was wrong; "smile" seems to me
+infinitely better as a definition of the poet's attitude toward
+his dreams. So, considering that I had a choice, I chose it.
+Hope you approve.</p>
+
+<p>I am serious in wishing a place in Carmel as a port of
+refuge from the storms of age. I don't know that I shall
+ever live there, but should like to feel that I can if I want
+to. Next summer I hope to go out there and spy out the
+land, and if I then "have the price" (without sacrificing
+any of my favorite stocks) I shall buy. I don't care for the
+grub question&mdash;should like to try the simple life, for I
+have already two gouty finger points as a result of the other
+kind of life. (Of course if they all get that way I shan't
+mind, for I love uniformity.) Probably if I attempted to
+live in Carmel I should have asthma again, from which I
+have long been free.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Army and Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 9,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Morrow</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Whether you "prosper" or not I'm glad you write instead
+of teaching. I have done a bit of teaching myself, but as the
+tuition was gratuitous I could pick my pupils; so it was a
+labor of love. I'm pretty well satisfied with the results.</p>
+
+<p>No, I'm not "toiling" much now. I've written all I care<span class="pagenum">140</span>
+to, and having a pretty easy berth (writing for The Cosmopolitan
+only, and having no connection with Mr.
+Hearst's newspapers) am content.</p>
+
+<p>I have observed your story in Success, but as I never never
+(sic) read serials shall await its publication in covers before
+making a meal of it.</p>
+
+<p>You seem to be living at the old place in Vallejo Street, so
+I judge that it was spared by the fire. I had some pretty
+good times in that house, not only with you and Mrs. Morrow
+(to whom my love, please) but with the dear Hogan
+girls. Poor Flodie! she is nearly a sole survivor now. I
+wonder if she ever thinks of us.</p>
+
+<p>I hear from California frequently through a little group of
+interesting folk who foregather at Carmel&mdash;whither I shall
+perhaps stray some day and there leave my bones. Meantime,
+I am fairly happy here.</p>
+
+<p>I wish you would add yourself to the Carmel crowd. You
+would be a congenial member of the gang and would find
+them worth while. You must know George Sterling: he is
+the high panjandrum and a gorgeously good fellow. Go get
+thee a bungalow at Carmel, which is indubitably the
+charmingest place in the State. As to San Francisco, with
+its labor-union government, its thieves and other impossibilities,
+I could not be drawn into it by a team of behemoths.
+But California&mdash;ah, I dare not permit myself to
+remember it. Yet this Eastern country is not without
+charm. And my health is good here, as it never was there.
+Nothing ails me but age, which brings its own cure.</p>
+
+<p>God keep thee!&mdash;go and live at Carmel.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 29,<br />
+1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">James D. Blake, Esq.</span>,<br /><span class="pagenum">141</span>
+<span class="smcap">Dear Sir</span>:</p>
+
+<p>It is a matter of no great importance to me, but the republication
+of the foolish books that you mention would
+not be agreeable to me. They have no kind of merit or
+interest. One of them, "The Fiend's Delight," was published
+against my protest; the utmost concession that the
+compiler and publisher (the late John Camden Hatten,
+London) would make was to let me edit his collection of my
+stuff and write a preface. You would pretty surely lose
+money on any of them.</p>
+
+<p>If you care to republish anything of mine you would, I
+think, do better with "Black Beetles in Amber," or
+"Shapes of Clay." The former sold well, and the latter
+would, I think, have done equally well if the earthquake-and-fire
+had not destroyed it, including the plates. Nearly
+all of both books were sold in San Francisco, and the sold,
+as well as the unsold, copies&mdash;I mean the unsold copies of
+the latter&mdash;perished in the fire. There is much inquiry for
+them (mainly from those who lost them) and I am told
+that they bring fancy prices. You probably know about
+that better than I.</p>
+
+<p>I should be glad to entertain proposals from you for their
+republication&mdash;in San Francisco&mdash;and should not be exacting
+as to royalties, and so forth.</p>
+
+<p>But the other books are "youthful indiscretions" and are
+"better dead." Sincerely yours,
+<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 28,1907.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Please send me a copy of the new edition of "The Testimony."
+I borrowed one of the first edition to give away,
+and want to replace it. Did you add the "Wine" to it? I'd<span class="pagenum">142</span>
+not leave off the indefinite article from the title of that; it
+seems to dignify the tipple by hinting that it was no ordinary
+tope. It may have been witch-fermented.</p>
+
+<p>I don't "dislike" the line: "So terribly that brilliance
+shall enhance"; it seems merely less admirable than the
+others. Why didn't I tell you so? I could not tell you <i>all</i> I
+thought of the poem&mdash;for another example, how I loved
+the lines:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"Where Dawn upon a pansy's breast hath laid</span><br />
+A single tear, and <i>whence the wind hath flown<br />
+And left a silence</i>."</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm returning you, under another cover (as the ceremonial
+slangers say) some letters that have come to me and
+that I have answered. I have a lot more, most of them
+abusive, I guess, that I'll dig out later. But the most pleasing
+ones I can't send, for I sent them to Brisbane on his
+promise to publish them, which the liar did not, nor has he
+had the decency to return them. I'm hardly sorry, for it
+gave me good reason to call him a peasant and a beast of
+the field. I'm always grateful for the chance to prod somebody.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I detest the "limited edition" and "autograph copies"
+plan of publication, but for the sake of Howes, who has
+done a tremendous lot of good work on my book, have assented
+to Blake's proposal in all things and hope to be able
+to laugh at this brilliant example of the "irony of fate."
+I've refused to profit in any way by the book. I want
+Howes to "break even" for his labor.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, Pollard and I had a good time in Galveston,
+and on the way I took in some of my old battlefields. At
+Galveston they nearly killed me with hospitality&mdash;so<span class="pagenum">143</span>
+nearly that Pollard fled. I returned via Key West and
+Florida.</p>
+
+<p>You'll probably see Howes next Summer&mdash;I've persuaded
+him to go West and renounce the bookworm habit for some
+other folly. Be good to him; he is a capital fellow in his odd,
+amusing way.</p>
+
+<p>I didn't know there was an American edition of "The
+Fiends' Delight." Who published it and when?</p>
+
+<p>Congratulations on acceptance of "Tasso and Leonora."
+But I wouldn't do much in blank verse if I were you. It
+betrays you (somehow) into mere straightaway expression,
+and seems to repress in you the glorious abundance of
+imagery and metaphor that enriches your rhyme-work.
+This is not a criticism, particularly, of "Tasso," which is
+good enough for anybody, but&mdash;well, it's just <i>so</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I'm not doing much. My stuff in the Cosmo. comes last,
+and when advertisements crowd some of it is left off. Most
+of it gets in later (for of course I don't replace it with more
+work) but it is sadly antiquated. My checks, though, are
+always up to date. Sincerely<a name="fnanchor_10" id="fnanchor_10"></a><a href="#footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[10]</a> yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_10" id="footnote_10" href="#fnanchor_10"><span class="label">[10]</span></a> I can almost say "sinecurely."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 19,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have just come upon a letter of yours that I got at Galveston
+and (I fear) did not acknowledge. But I've written
+you since, so I fancy all is well.</p>
+
+<p>You mention that sonnet that Chamberlain asked for.
+You should not have let him have it&mdash;it was, as you say,
+the kind of stuff that magazines like. Nay, it was even
+better. But I wish you'd sent it elsewhere. You owed it to
+me not to let the Cosmopolitan's readers see anything of<span class="pagenum">144</span>
+yours (for awhile, at least) that was less than <i>great</i>. Something
+as great as the sonnet that you sent to McClure's
+was what the circumstances called for.</p>
+
+<p>"And strict concern of relativity"&mdash;O bother! that's not
+poetry. It's the slang of philosophy.</p>
+
+<p>I am still awaiting my copy of the new "Testimony."
+That's why I'm scolding.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 18,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm an age acknowledging your letter; but then you'd
+have been an age writing it if you had not done it for
+"Sloots." And the other day I had one from him, written
+in his own improper person.</p>
+
+<p>I think it abominable that he and Carlt have to work so
+hard&mdash;at <i>their</i> age&mdash;and I quite agree with George Sterling
+that Carlt ought to go to Carmel and grow potatoes.
+I'd like to do that myself, but for the fact that so many
+objectionable persons frequent the place: *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* and
+the like. I'm hoping, however, that the ocean will swallow
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* and be unable to throw him up.</p>
+
+<p>I trust you'll let Sloots "retire" at seventy, which is
+really quite well along in life toward the years of discretion
+and the age of consent. But when he is retired I know that
+he will bury himself in the redwoods and never look upon
+the face of man again. That, too, I should rather like to do
+myself&mdash;for a few months.</p>
+
+<p>I've laid out a lot of work for myself this season, and
+doubt if I shall get to California, as I had hoped. So I shall
+never, never see you. But you might send me a photograph.</p>
+
+<p>God be with you. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+July 11,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4">N.B. If you follow the pages you'll be able to make <i>some</i><span class="pagenum">145</span>
+sense of this screed.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">My dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am sorry to learn that you have not been able to break
+your commercial chains, since you wish to, though I don't
+at all know that they are bad for you. I've railed at mine
+all my life, but don't remember that I ever made any good
+use of leisure when I had it&mdash;unless the mere "having a
+good time" is such. I remember once writing that one's
+career, or usefulness, was about ended when one thought
+less about how best to do his work than about the hardship
+of having to do it. I might have said the hardship of having
+so little leisure to do it. As I grow older I see more and more
+clearly the advantages of disadvantage, the splendid urge
+of adverse conditions, the uplifting effect of repression.
+And I'm ashamed to note how little <i>I</i> profited by them. I
+wasn't the right kind, that is all; but I indulge the hope
+that <i>you</i> are.</p>
+
+<p>No I don't think it of any use, your trying to keep *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*
+and me friends. But don't let that interfere with your
+regard for him if you have it. We are not required to share
+one another's feelings in such matters. I should not expect
+you to like my friends nor hate my enemies if they seemed
+to you different from what they seem to me; nor would I
+necessarily follow <i>your</i> lead. For example, I loathe your
+friend *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* and expect his safe return because the ocean
+will refuse to swallow him.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I congratulate you on the Gilder acceptance of your sonnet,
+and on publication of the "Tasso to Leonora." I don't
+think it your best work by much&mdash;don't think any of your
+blank verse as good as most of your rhyme&mdash;but it's not a<span class="pagenum">146</span>
+thing to need apology.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly, I shall be pleased to see Hopper. Give me his
+address, and when I go to New York&mdash;this month or the
+next&mdash;I'll look him up. I think well of Hopper and trust
+that he will not turn out to be an 'ist of some kind, as most
+writers and artists do. That is because they are good feelers
+and poor thinkers. It is the emotional element in them, not
+the logical, that makes them writers and artists. They have,
+as a rule, sensibility and no sense. Except the <i>big</i> fellows.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Neale has in hand already three volumes of the "Collected
+Works," and will have two more in about a month;
+and all (I hope) this year. I'm revising all the stuff and cutting
+it about a good deal, taking from one book stuff for
+another, and so forth. If Neale gets enough subscriptions
+he will put out all the ten volumes next year; if not I shall
+probably not be "here" to see the final one issued.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Glad you think better of my part in the Hunter-Hillquit
+"symposium." <i>I</i> think I did very well considering, first,
+that I didn't care a damn about the matter; second, that I
+knew nothing of the men I was to meet, nor what we were
+to talk about, whereas they came cocked and primed for
+the fray; and, third, that the whole scheme was to make a
+Socialist holiday at my expense. Of all 'ists the Socialist is
+perhaps the damnedest fool for (in this country) he is
+merely the cat that pulls chestnuts from the fire for the
+Anarchist. His part of the business is to talk away the
+country's attention while the Anarchist places the bomb.
+In some countries Socialism is clean, but not in this. And
+everywhere the Socialist is a dreamer and futilitarian.</p>
+
+<p>But I guess I'll call a halt on this letter, the product of an<span class="pagenum">147</span>
+idle hour in garrulous old age.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+August 7,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Mr. Cahill</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your note inquiring about "Ashes of the Beacon" interests
+me. You mention it as a "pamphlet." I have no knowledge
+of its having appeared otherwise than as an article
+in the Sunday edition of the "N. Y. American"&mdash;I do not
+recall the date. If it has been published as a pamphlet, or
+in any other form, separately&mdash;that is by itself&mdash;I should
+like "awfully" to know by whom, if <i>you</i> know.</p>
+
+<p>I should be pleased to send it to you&mdash;in the "American"&mdash;if
+I had a copy of the issue containing it, but I have not. It
+will be included in Vol. I of my "Collected Works," to be
+published by the Neale Publishing Company, N. Y. That
+volume will be published probably early next year.</p>
+
+<p>But the work is to be in ten or twelve costly volumes, and
+sold by subscription only. That buries it fathoms deep so
+far as the public is concerned.</p>
+
+<p>Regretting my inability to assist you, I am sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+August 14,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I am amused by your attitude toward the spaced sonnet,
+and by the docility of Gilder. If I had been your editor I
+guess you'd have got back your sonnets. I never liked the
+space. If the work naturally divides itself into two parts, as
+it should, the space is needless; if not, it is worse than that.
+The space was the invention of printers of a comparatively
+recent period, neither Petrarch nor Dante (as Gilder points<span class="pagenum">148</span>
+out) knew of it. Every magazine has its own <i>system</i> of
+printing, and Gilder's good-natured compliance with your
+wish, or rather demand, shows him to be a better fellow,
+though not a better poet, than I have thought him to be.
+As a victory of author over editor, the incident pleases.</p>
+
+<p>I've not yet been in New York, but expect to go soon. I
+shall be glad to meet Hopper if he is there.</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the article from "Town Talk." It suggests
+this question: How many times, and covering a period of
+how many years, must one's unexplainable obscurity be
+pointed out to constitute fame? Not knowing, I am almost
+disposed to consider myself the most famous of authors. I
+have pretty nearly ceased to be "discovered," but my
+notoriety as an obscurian may be said to be worldwide and
+apparently everlasting.</p>
+
+<p>The trouble, I fancy, is with our vocabulary&mdash;the lack of
+a word meaning something intermediate between "popular"
+and "obscure"&mdash;and the ignorance of writers as to
+the reading of readers. I seldom meet a person of education
+who is not acquainted with some of my work; my clipping
+bureau's bills were so heavy that I had to discontinue my
+patronage, and Blake tells me that he sells my books at one
+hundred dollars a set. Rather amusing all this to one so
+widely unknown.</p>
+
+<p>I sometimes wonder what you think of Scheff's new book.
+Does it perform the promise of the others? In the dedicatory
+poem it seems to me that it does, and in some others.
+As a good Socialist you are bound to like <i>that</i> poem because
+of its political-economic-views. I like it despite them.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"The dome of the Capitol roars</span><br />
+With the shouts of the Caesars of crime"</p>
+
+<p>is great poetry, but it is not true. I am rather familiar with<span class="pagenum">149</span>
+what goes on in the Capitol&mdash;not through the muck-rakers,
+who pass a few days here "investigating," and then
+look into their pockets and write, but through years of personal
+observation and personal acquaintance with the men
+observed. There are no Caesars of crime, but about a dozen
+rascals, all told, mostly very small fellows; I can name them
+all. They are without power or influence enough to count
+in the scheme of legislation. The really dangerous and mischievous
+chaps are the demagogues, friends of the pee-pul.
+And they do all the "shouting." Compared with the Congress
+of our forefathers, the Congress of to-day is as a flock
+of angels to an executive body of the Western Federation
+of Miners.</p>
+
+<p>When I showed the "dome" to *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* (who had been
+reading his own magazine) the tears came into his voice,
+and I guess his eyes, as he lamented the decay of civic
+virtue, "the treason of the Senate," and the rest of it. He
+was so affected that I hastened to brace him up with whiskey.
+He, too, was "squirming" about "other persons'
+troubles," and with about as good reason as you.</p>
+
+<p>I think "the present system" is not "frightful." It is all
+right&mdash;a natural outgrowth of human needs, limitations
+and capacities, instinct with possibilities of growth in goodness,
+elastic, and progressively better. Why don't you
+study humanity as you do the suns&mdash;not from the viewpoint
+of time, but from that of eternity. The middle ages
+were yesterday, Rome and Greece the day before. The individual
+man is nothing, as a single star is nothing. If this
+earth were to take fire you would smile to think how little
+it mattered in the scheme of the universe; all the wailing of
+the egoist mob would not affect you. Then why do you
+squirm at the minute catastrophe of a few thousands or<span class="pagenum">150</span>
+millions of pismires crushed under the wheels of evolution.
+Must the new heavens and the new earth of prophecy and
+science come in <i>your</i> little instant of life in order that you
+may not go howling and damning with Jack London up
+and down the earth that we happen to have? Nay, nay,
+read history to get the long, large view&mdash;to learn to think
+in centuries and cycles. Keep your eyes off your neighbors
+and fix them on the nations. What poetry we shall have
+when you get, and give us, The Testimony of the Races!</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I peg away at compilation and revision. I'm cutting-about
+my stuff a good deal&mdash;changing things from one
+book to another, adding, subtracting and dividing. Five
+volumes are ready, and Neale is engaged in a "prospectus"
+which he says will make me blush. I'll send it to you when
+he has it ready.</p>
+
+<p>Gertrude Atherton is sending me picture-postals of
+Berchtesgaden and other scenes of "The Monk and the
+Hangman's Daughter." She found all the places "exactly
+as described"&mdash;the lakes, mountains, St. Bartolomae, the
+cliff-meadow where the edelweiss grows, and so forth. The
+photographs are naturally very interesting to me.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Good night. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Army and Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+September 12,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Mr. Cahill</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for your good wishes for the "Collected
+Works"&mdash;an advertisement of which&mdash;with many blushes!&mdash;I
+enclose.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">P.S.&mdash;The "ad" is not sent in the hope that you will be<span class="pagenum">151</span>
+so foolish as to subscribe&mdash;merely to "show" you. The
+"edition de luxe" business is not at all to my taste&mdash;I
+should prefer a popular edition at a possible price.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">New York,<br />
+November 6,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your letter has just been forwarded from Washington.
+I'm here for a few days only&mdash;"few days and full of trouble,"
+as the Scripture hath it. The "trouble" is mainly
+owling, dining and booze. I'll not attempt an answer to
+your letter till I get home.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm going to read Hopper's book, and if it doesn't show
+him to be a *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* or a *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* I'll call on him. If it does I
+won't. I'm getting pretty particular in my old age; the
+muck-rakers, blood-boilers and little brothers-of-the-bad
+are not congenial.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, why do you speak of my "caning" you. I did
+not suppose that <i>you</i> had joined the innumerable caravan
+of those who find something sarcastic or malicious in my
+good natured raillery in careless controversy. If I choose to
+smile in ink at your inconsistency in weeping for the woes
+of individual "others"&mdash;meaning other <i>humans</i>&mdash;while
+you, of course, don't give a damn for the thousands of lives
+that you crush out every time you set down your foot, or
+eat a berry, why shouldn't <i>I</i> do so? One can't always remember
+to stick to trifles, even in writing a letter. Put on
+your skin, old man, I may want to poke about with my
+finger again.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 11,<br />
+1908.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,<span class="pagenum">152</span></p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm still working at my book. Seven volumes are completed
+and I've read the proofs of Vol. I.</p>
+
+<p>Your account of the "movement" to free the oppressed
+and downtrodden river from the tyranny of the sand-bar
+tickled me in my lonesome rib. Surely no colony of reformers
+ever engaged in a more characteristic crusade against
+the Established Order and Intolerable Conditions. I can
+almost hear you patting yourselves on your aching backs
+as you contemplated your encouraging success in beating
+Nature and promoting the Cause. I believe that if I'd been
+there my cold heart and indurated mind would have
+caught the contagion of the Great Reform. Anyhow, I
+should have appreciated the sunset which (characteristically)
+intervened in the interest of Things as They Are. I
+feel sure that whenever you Socialers shall have found a
+way to make the earth stop "turning over and over like a
+man in bed" (as Joaquin might say) you will accomplish
+all the reforms that you have at heart. All that you need is
+plenty of time&mdash;a few kalpas, more or less, of uninterrupted
+daylight. Meantime I await your new book with impatience
+and expectation.</p>
+
+<p>I have photographs of my brother's shack in the redwoods
+and feel strongly drawn in that direction&mdash;since, as
+you fully infer, Carmel is barred. Probably, though, I shall
+continue in the complicated life of cities while I last.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 9,<br />
+1909.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've been reading your book&mdash;re-reading most of it&mdash;"every
+little while." I don't know that it is better than<span class="pagenum">153</span>
+your first, but to say that it is as good is praise enough.
+You know what I like most in it, but there are some things
+that you <i>don't</i> know I like. For an example, "Night in
+Heaven." It Kipples a bit, but it is great. But I'm not
+going to bore you with a catalogue of titles. The book is <i>all</i>
+good. No, not (in my judgment) all, for it contains lines
+and words that I found objectionable in the manuscript,
+and time has not reconciled me to them. Your retention of
+them, shows, however, that you agree with me in thinking
+that you have passed your 'prentice period and need no
+further criticism. So I welcome them.</p>
+
+<p>I take it that the cover design is Scheff's&mdash;perhaps because
+it is so good, for the little cuss is clever that way.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I rather like your defence of Jack London&mdash;not that I
+think it valid, but because I like loyalty to a friend whom
+one does not believe to be bad. (The "thick-and-thin" loyalty
+never commended itself to me; it is too dog-like.) I
+fail, however, to catch the note of penitence in London's
+narratives of his underlife, and my charge of literary stealing
+was not based on his primeval man book, "Before
+Adam."</p>
+
+<p>As to *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*, as he is not more than a long-range or short-acquaintance
+friend of yours, I'll say that I would not
+believe him under oath on his deathbed. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* The truth
+is, none of these howlers knows the difference between a
+million and a thousand nor between truth and falsehood. I
+could give you instances of their lying about matters here
+at the capital that would make even your hair stand on
+end. It is not only that they are all liars&mdash;they are mere
+children; they don't know anything and don't care to, nor,<span class="pagenum">154</span>
+for prosperity in their specialties, need to. Veracity would
+be a disqualification; if they confined themselves to facts
+they would not get a hearing. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* is the nastiest futilitarian
+of the gang.</p>
+
+<p>It is not the purpose of these gentlemen that I find so
+very objectionable, but the foul means that they employ to
+accomplish it. I would be a good deal of a Socialist myself
+if they had not made the word (and the thing) stink.</p>
+
+<p>Don't imagine that I'll not "enter Carmel" if I come out
+there. I'll visit you till you're sick of me. But I'd not <i>live</i>
+there and be "identified" with it, as the newspapers would
+say. I'm warned by Hawthorne and Brook Farm.</p>
+
+<p>I'm still working&mdash;a little more leisurely&mdash;on my books.
+But I begin to feel the call of New York on the tympani of
+my blood globules. I must go there occasionally, or I should
+die of intellectual torpor. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* "O Lord how long?"&mdash;this
+letter. O well, you need not give it the slightest attention;
+there's nothing, I think, that requires a reply, nor merits
+one.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 6,<br />
+1909.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Did you see Markham's review of the "Wine" in "The
+N. Y. American"? Pretty fair, but&mdash;if a metrical composition
+full of poetry is not a poem what is it? And I wonder
+what he calls Kubla Khan, which has a beginning but
+neither middle nor end. And how about The Faerie Queene
+for absence of "unity"? Guess I'll ask him.</p>
+
+<p>Isn't it funny what happens to critics who would mark
+out meters and bounds for the Muse&mdash;denying the name
+"poem," for example, to a work because it is not like some<span class="pagenum">155</span>
+other work, or like one that is in the minds of them?</p>
+
+<p>I hope you are prosperous and happy and that I shall
+sometimes hear from you.</p>
+
+<p>Howes writes me that the "Lone Hand"&mdash;Sydney&mdash;has
+been commending you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 9,<br />
+1909.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I return the poems with a few random comments and suggestions.</p>
+
+<p>I'm a little alarmed lest you take too seriously my preference
+of your rhyme to your blank&mdash;especially when I
+recall your "Music" and "The Spirit of Beauty." Perhaps
+I should have said only that you are not so <i>likely</i> to write
+well in blank. (I think always of "Tasso to Leonora,"
+which I cannot learn to like.) Doubtless I have too great
+fondness for <i>great</i> lines&mdash;<i>your</i> great lines&mdash;and they occur
+less frequently in your blank verse than in your rhyme&mdash;most
+frequently in your quatrains, those of sonnets included.
+Don't swear off blank&mdash;except as you do drink&mdash;but
+study it more. It's "an hellish thing."</p>
+
+<p>It looks as if I <i>might</i> go to California sooner than I had
+intended. My health has been wretched all summer. I need
+a sea voyage&mdash;one <i>via</i> Panama would be just the thing.
+So if the cool weather of autumn do not restore me I shall
+not await spring here. But I'm already somewhat better.
+If I had been at sea I should have escaped the Cook-Peary
+controversy. We talk nothing but arctic matters here&mdash;I
+enclose my contribution to its horrors.</p>
+
+<p>I'm getting many a good lambasting for my book of essays.
+Also a sop of honey now and then. It's all the same to me;<span class="pagenum">156</span>
+I don't worry about what my contemporaries think of me.
+I made 'em think of <i>you</i>&mdash;that's glory enough for one.
+And the squirrels in the public parks think me the finest
+fellow in the world. They know what I have in every
+pocket. Critics don't know that&mdash;nor nearly so much.</p>
+
+<p>Advice to a young author: Cultivate the good opinion of
+squirrels.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+November 1,<br />
+1909.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>European criticism of your <i>bête noir</i>, old Leopold, is entitled
+to attention; American (of him or any other king) is
+not. It looks as if the wretch may be guilty of indifference.</p>
+
+<p>In condemning as "revolutionary" the two-rhyme sestet,
+I think I could not have been altogether solemn, for (1)
+I'm something of a revolutionist myself regarding the sonnet,
+having frequently expressed the view that its accepted
+forms&mdash;even the number of lines&mdash;were purely arbitrary;
+(2) I find I've written several two-rhyme sestets myself,
+and (3), like yours, my ear has difficulty in catching the
+rhyme effect in a-b-c, a-b-c. The rhyme is delayed till the
+end of the fourth line&mdash;as it is in the quatrain (not of the
+sonnet) with unrhyming first and third lines&mdash;a form of
+which I think all my multitude of verse supplies no example.
+I confess, though, that I did not know that Petrarch
+had made so frequent use of the 2-rhyme sestet.</p>
+
+<p>I learn a little all the time; some of my old notions of
+poetry seem to me now erroneous, even absurd. So I <i>may</i>
+have been at one time a stickler for the "regular" three-rhymer.
+Even now it pleases my ear well enow if the three
+are not so arranged as to elude it. I'm sorry if I misled you.
+You'd better 'fess up to your young friend, as I do to you&mdash;if<span class="pagenum">157</span>
+I really was serious.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Of course I should be glad to see Dick, but don't expect
+to. They never come, and it has long been my habit to ignore
+every "declaration of intention."</p>
+
+<p>I'm greatly pleased to know that you too like those lines
+of Markham that you quote from the "Wharf of Dreams."
+I've repeatedly told him that that sonnet was his greatest
+work, and those were its greatest lines. By the way, my
+young poet, Loveman, sends me a letter from Markham,
+asking for a poem or two for a book, "The Younger Choir,"
+that he (M.) is editing. Loveman will be delighted by your
+good opinion of "Pierrot"&mdash;which still another magazine
+has returned to me. Guess I'll have to give it up.</p>
+
+<p>I'm sending you a booklet on loose locutions. It is vilely
+gotten up&mdash;had to be so to sell for twenty-five cents, the
+price that I favored. I just noted down these things as I
+found them in my reading, or remembered them, until I had
+four hundred. Then I took about fifty from other books, and
+boiled down the needful damnation. Maybe I have done too
+much boiling down&mdash;making the stuff "thick and slab."
+If there is another edition I shall do a little bettering.</p>
+
+<p>I should like some of those mussels, and, please God, shall
+help you cull them next summer. But the abalone&mdash;as a
+Christian comestible he is a stranger to me and the tooth
+o' me.</p>
+
+<p>I think you have had some correspondence with my
+friend Howes of Galveston. Well, here he is "in his habit
+as he lives." Of the two figures in the picture Howes is the
+one on top.<a name="fnanchor_11" id="fnanchor_11"></a><a href="#footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[11]</a> Good night. <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_11" id="footnote_11" href="#fnanchor_11"><span class="label">[11]</span></a> Howes was riding on a burro.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 29,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Here are your fine verses&mdash;I have been too busy to write<span class="pagenum">158</span>
+to you before. In truth, I've worked harder now for more
+than a year than I ever shall again&mdash;and the work will
+bring me nor gain nor glory. Well, I shall take a rest pretty
+soon, partly in California. I thank you for the picture card.
+I have succumbed to the post-card fashion myself.</p>
+
+<p>As to some points in your letter.</p>
+
+<p>I've no recollection of advising young authors to "leave
+all heart and sentiment out of their work." If I did the context
+would probably show that it was because their time
+might better be given to perfect themselves in form,
+against the day when their hearts would be less wild and
+their sentiments truer. You know it has always been my
+belief that one cannot be trusted to feel until one has
+learned to think&mdash;and few youngsters have learned to do
+that. Was it not Dr. Holmes who advised a young writer
+to cut out every passage that he thought particularly good?
+He'd be sure to think the beautiful and sentimental passages
+the best, would he not? *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>If you mean to write really "vituperative" sonnets (why
+sonnets?) let me tell you <i>one</i> secret of success&mdash;name your
+victim and his offense. To do otherwise is to fire blank
+cartridges&mdash;to waste your words in air&mdash;to club a vacuum.
+At least your satire must be so personally applicable
+that there can be no mistake as to the victim's identity.
+Otherwise he is no victim&mdash;just a spectator like all others.
+And that brings us to Watson. His caddishness consisted,
+not in satirizing a woman, which is legitimate, but, first, in
+doing so without sufficient reason, and, second, in saying
+orally (on the safe side of the Atlantic) what he apparently
+did not dare say in the verses. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm enclosing something that will tickle you I hope&mdash;"The<span class="pagenum">159</span>
+Ballade of the Goodly Fere." The author's<a name="fnanchor_12" id="fnanchor_12"></a><a href="#footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[12]</a> father,
+who is something in the Mint in Philadelphia, sent me several
+of his son's poems that were not good; but at last came
+this&mdash;in manuscript, like the others. Before I could do
+anything with it&mdash;meanwhile wearing out the paper and
+the patience of my friends by reading it at them&mdash;the old
+man asked it back rather peremptorily. I reluctantly sent
+it, with a letter of high praise. The author had "placed" it
+in London, where it has made a heap of talk.</p>
+
+<p>It has plenty of faults besides its monotonous rhyme
+scheme; but tell me what you think of it.</p>
+
+<p>God willing, we shall eat Carmel mussels and abalones in
+May or June. Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_12" id="footnote_12" href="#fnanchor_12"><span class="label">[12]</span></a> Ezra Pound.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 7,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>My plan is to leave here before April first, pass a few days
+in New York and then sail for Colon. If I find the canal
+work on the Isthmus interesting I may skip a steamer from
+Panama to see it. I've no notion how long it will take to
+reach San Francisco, and know nothing of the steamers
+and their schedules on the Pacific side.</p>
+
+<p>I shall of course want to see Grizzly first&mdash;that is to say,
+he will naturally expect me to. But if you can pull him
+down to Carmel about the time of my arrival (I shall write
+you the date of my sailing from New York) I would gladly
+come there. Carlt, whom I can see at once on arriving, can
+tell me where he (Grizzly) is. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I don't think you rightly value "The Goodly Fere." Of
+course no ballad written to-day can be entirely good, for it
+must be an imitation; it is now an unnatural form, whereas
+it was once a natural one. We are no longer a primitive<span class="pagenum">160</span>
+people, and a primitive people's forms and methods are not
+ours. Nevertheless, this seems to me an admirable ballad,
+as it is given a modern to write ballads. And I think you
+overlook the best line:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"The hounds of the crimson sky gave tongue."</p>
+
+<p>The poem is complete as I sent it, and I think it stops
+right where and as it should&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"I ha' seen him eat o' the honey comb</span><br />
+Sin' they nailed him to the tree."</p>
+
+<p>The current "Literary Digest" has some queer things
+about (and by) Pound, and "Current Literature" reprints
+the "Fere" with all the wrinkles ironed out of it&mdash;making
+a "capon priest" of it.</p>
+
+<p>Fo' de Lawd's sake! don't apologise for not subscribing
+for my "Works." If you did subscribe I should suspect that
+you were "no friend o' mine"&mdash;it would remove you from
+that gang and put you in a class by yourself. Surely you
+can not think I care who buys or does not buy my books.
+The man who expects anything more than lip-service from
+his friends is a very young man. There are, for example, a
+half-dozen Californians (all loud admirers of Ambrose
+Bierce) editing magazines and newspapers here in the
+East. Every man Jack of them has turned me down. They
+will do everything for me but enable me to live. Friends
+be damned!&mdash;strangers are the chaps for me.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I've given away my beautiful sailing canoe and shall
+never again live a life on the ocean wave&mdash;unless you have
+boats at Carmel.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+Easter Sunday.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Here's a letter from Loveman, with a kindly reference to<span class="pagenum">161</span>
+you&mdash;that's why I send it.</p>
+
+<p>I'm to pull out of here next Wednesday, the 30th, but
+don't know just when I shall sail from New York&mdash;apparently
+when there are no more dinners to eat in that town
+and no more friends to visit. May God in His infinite mercy
+lessen the number of both. I should get into your neck o'
+woods early in May. Till then God be with you instead. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">Easter Sunday.<br />
+[Why couldn't He stay put?]</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 29,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm "all packed up," even my pens; for to-morrow I go
+to New York&mdash;whence I shall write you before embarking.</p>
+
+<p>Neale seems pleased by your "permission to print," as
+Congressmen say who can't make a speech yet want one in
+the Record, for home consumption.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Guerneville, Cal.,<br />
+May 24,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You will probably have learned of my arrival&mdash;this is my
+first leisure to apprise you.</p>
+
+<p>I took Carlt and Lora and came directly up here&mdash;where
+we all hope to see you before I see Carmel. Lora remains
+here for the week, perhaps longer, and Carlt is to come up
+again on Saturday. Of course you do not need an invitation
+to come whenever you feel like it.</p>
+
+<p>I had a pleasant enough voyage and have pretty nearly
+got the "slosh" of the sea out of my ears and its heave out<span class="pagenum">162</span>
+of my bones.</p>
+
+<p>A bushel of letters awaits attention, besides a pair of
+lizards that I have undertaken to domesticate. So good
+morning.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Key Route Inn,<br />
+Oakland,<br />
+June 25,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You'll observe that I acted on your suggestion, and am
+"here."</p>
+
+<p>Your little sisters are most gracious to me, despite my
+candid confession that I extorted your note of introduction
+by violence and intimidation.</p>
+
+<p>Baloo<a name="fnanchor_13" id="fnanchor_13"></a><a href="#footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[13]</a> and his cubs went on to Guerneville the day of
+their return from Carmel. But I saw them.</p>
+
+<p>I'm deep in work, and shall be for a few weeks; then I
+shall be off to Carmel for a lungful of sea air and a bellyful
+of abalones and mussels.</p>
+
+<p>I suppose you'll be going to the Midsummer Jinks. Fail
+not to stop over here&mdash;I don't feel that I have really seen
+you yet.</p>
+
+<p>With best regards to Carrie.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_13" id="footnote_13" href="#fnanchor_13"><span class="label">[13]</span></a> Albert Bierce.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Laguna Vista,<br />
+Oakland,<br />
+Sunday, July 24,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Supposing you to have gone home, I write to send the
+poem. Of course it is a good poem. But I begin to want to
+hear your larger voice again. I want to see you standing
+tall on the heights&mdash;above the flower-belt and the bird-belt.
+I want to hear,<span class="pagenum">163</span></p>
+
+<p class="poem"><span class="i2">"like Ocean on a western beach,</span><br />
+The surge and thunder of the Odyssey,"</p>
+
+<p>as you <i>Odyssate</i>.</p>
+
+<p>I <i>think</i> I met that dog *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* to-day, and as it was a choice
+between kicking him and avoiding him I chose the more
+prudent course.</p>
+
+<p>I've not seen your little sisters&mdash;they seem to have tired
+of me. Why not?&mdash;I have tired of myself.</p>
+
+<p>Fail not to let me know when to expect you for the Guerneville
+trip. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Laguna Vista,<br />
+October 20,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4">I go back to the Inn on Saturday.</p>
+
+<p><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is long since I read the Book of Job, but if I thought it
+better than your addition to it I should not sleep until I
+had read it again&mdash;and again. Such a superb Who's Who in
+the Universe! Not a Homeric hero in the imminence of a personal
+encounter ever did so fine bragging. I hope you will
+let it into your next book, if only to show that the "inspired"
+scribes of the Old Testament are not immatchable
+by modern genius. You know the Jews regard them, not
+as prophets, in our sense, but merely as poets&mdash;and the
+Jews ought to know something of their own literature.</p>
+
+<p>I fear I shall not be able to go to Carmel while you're a
+widow&mdash;I've tangled myself up with engagements again.
+Moreover, I'm just back from the St. Helena cemetery,
+and for a few days shall be too blue for companionship.</p>
+
+<p>"Shifted" is better, I think (in poetry) than "joggled."
+You say you "don't like working." Then write a short
+story. That's work, but you'd like it&mdash;or so I think.<span class="pagenum">164</span>
+Poetry is the highest of arts, but why be a specialist?</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Army and Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+November 11,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is nice to hear from you and learn that despite my rude
+and intolerant ways you manage to slip in a little affection
+for me&mdash;you and the rest of the folk. And really I think I
+left a little piece of my heart out there&mdash;mostly in Berkeley.
+It is funny, by the way, that in falling out of love with
+most of my old sweethearts and semi-sweethearts I should
+fall <i>in</i> love with my own niece. It is positively scandalous!</p>
+
+<p>I return Sloot's letter. It gave me a bit of a shock to have
+him say that he would probably never see me again. Of
+course that is true, but I had not thought of it just that
+way&mdash;had not permitted myself to, I suppose. And, after
+all, if things go as I'm hoping they will, Montesano will
+take me in again some day before he seems likely to leave
+it. We four may see the Grand Cañon together yet. I'd like
+to lay my bones thereabout.</p>
+
+<p>The garments that you persuaded me were mine are not.
+They are probably Sterling's, and he has probably damned
+me for stealing them. I don't care; he has no right to dress
+like the "filthy rich." Hasn't he any "class consciousness"?
+However, I am going to send them back to you by
+express. I'll mail you the paid receipt; so don't pay the
+charge that the company is sure to make. They charged
+me again for the two packages that you paid for, and got
+away with the money from the Secretary of my club,
+where they were delivered. I had to get it back from the
+delivery man at the cannon's mouth&mdash;34 calibre.</p>
+
+<p>With love to Carlt and Sloots,<span class="pagenum">165</span></p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+November 14,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>You asked me about the relative interest of Yosemite and
+the Grand Cañon. It is not easy to compare them, they are
+so different. In Yosemite only the magnitudes are unfamiliar;
+in the Cañon nothing is familiar&mdash;at least, nothing
+would be familiar to you, though I have seen something
+like it on the upper Yellowstone. The "color scheme" is
+astounding&mdash;almost incredible, as is the "architecture."
+As to magnitudes, Yosemite is nowhere. From points on
+the rim of the Cañon you can see fifty, maybe a hundred,
+miles of it. And it is never twice alike. Nobody can describe
+it. Of course you must see it sometime. I wish our
+Yosemite party could meet there, but probably we never
+will; it is a long way from here, and not quite next door to
+Berkeley and Carmel.</p>
+
+<p>I've just got settled in my same old tenement house, the
+Olympia, but the club is my best address.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+November 29,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Thank you very much for the work that you are doing
+for me in photography and china. I know it is great work.
+But take your time about it.</p>
+
+<p>I hope you all had a good Thanksgiving at Upshack.
+(That is my name for Sloots' place. It will be understood
+by anyone that has walked to it from Montesano, carrying<span class="pagenum">166</span>
+a basket of grub on a hot day.)</p>
+
+<p>I trust Sterling got his waistcoat and trousers in time to
+appear at his uncle's dinner in other outer garments than a
+steelpen coat. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* I am glad you like (or like to have)
+the books. You would have had all my books when published
+if I had supposed that you cared for them, or even
+knew about them. I am now encouraged to hope that
+some day you and Carlt and Sloots may be given the light
+to see the truth at the heart of my "views" (which I have
+expounded for half a century) and will cease to ally yourselves
+with what is most hateful to me, socially and politically.
+I shall then feel (in my grave) that perhaps, after all,
+I knew how to write. Meantime, run after your false fool
+gods until you are tired; I shall not believe that your hearts
+are really in the chase, for they are pretty good hearts, and
+those of your gods are nests of nastiness and heavens of
+hate.</p>
+
+<p>Now I feel better, and shall drink a toddy to the tardy
+time when those whom I love shall not think me a perverted
+intelligence; when they shall not affirm my intellect
+and despise its work&mdash;confess my superior understanding
+and condemn all its fundamental conclusions. Then we will
+be a happy family&mdash;you and Carlt in the flesh and Sloots
+and I in our bones.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>My health is excellent in this other and better world than
+California.</p>
+
+<p>God bless you. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 22,<br />
+1910.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Carlt</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You had indeed "something worth writing about"&mdash;not
+only the effect of the impenitent mushroom, but the final<span class="pagenum">167</span>
+and disastrous overthrow of that ancient superstition,
+Sloots' infallibility as a mushroomer. As I had expected to
+be at that dinner, I suppose I should think myself to have
+had "a narrow escape." Still, I wish I could have taken my
+chance with the rest of you.</p>
+
+<p>How would you like three weeks of nipping cold weather,
+with a foot of snow? That's what has been going on here.
+Say, tell Sloots that the front footprints of a rabbit-track</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/tracksa.png" width="66" height="23" alt="rabbit tracks" />
+</div>
+
+<p>are made by the animal's hind feet, straddling his forelegs.
+Could he have learned that important fact in California,
+except by hearsay? Observe (therefore) the superiority of
+this climate.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 26,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have just received a very affectionate letter from *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*
+and now know that I did her an injustice in what I carelessly
+wrote to you about her incivility to me after I had
+left her. It is plain that she did not mean to be uncivil in
+what she wrote me on a postal card which I did not look at
+until I was in the train; she just "didn't know any better."
+So I have restored her to favor, and hope that you will consider
+my unkind remarks about her as unwritten. Guess
+I'm addicted to going off at half-cock anyhow.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 3,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have the Yosemite book, and Miss Christiansen has the
+Mandarin coat. I thank you very much. The pictures are
+beautiful, but of them all I prefer that of Nanny bending
+over the stove. True, the face is not visible, but it looks like<span class="pagenum">168</span>
+you all over.</p>
+
+<p>I'm filling out the book with views of the Grand Cañon,
+so as to have my scenic treasures all together. Also I'm trying
+to get for you a certain book of Cañon pictures, which I
+neglected to obtain when there. You will like it&mdash;if I get it.</p>
+
+<p>Sometime when you have nothing better to do&mdash;don't be
+in a hurry about it&mdash;will you go out to Mountain View
+cemetery with your camera and take a picture of the grave
+of Elizabeth (Lily) Walsh, the little deaf mute that I told
+you of? I think the man in the office will locate it for you.
+It is in the Catholic part of the cemetery&mdash;St. Mary's.
+The name Lily Walsh is on the beveled top of the headstone
+which is shaped like this:</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/headstone.png" width="109" height="115" alt="headstone" />
+</div>
+
+<p>You remember I was going to take you there, but never
+found the time.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Christiansen says she is writing, or has written you.
+I think the coat very pretty.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 15,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>As to the "form of address." A man passing another was
+halted by the words: "You dirty dog!" Turning to the
+speaker, he bowed coldly and said: "Smith is my name,
+sir." <i>My</i> name is Bierce, and I find, on reflection, that I like
+best those who call me just that. If my christen name were
+George I'd want to be called <i>that</i>; but "Ambrose" is fit
+only for mouths of women&mdash;in which it sounds fairly well.</p>
+
+<p><i>How</i> are you my master? I never read one of your poems
+without learning something, though not, alas, how to make<span class="pagenum">169</span>
+one.</p>
+
+<p>Don't worry about "Lilith"; it will work out all right. As
+to the characters not seeming alive, I've always fancied the
+men and women of antiquity&mdash;particularly the kings, and
+great ones generally&mdash;should not be too flesh-and-bloody,
+like the "persons whom one meets." A little coldness and
+strangeness is very becoming to them. I like them to <i>stalk</i>,
+like the ghosts that they are&mdash;our modern passioning
+seems a bit anachronous in them. Maybe I'm wrong, but
+I'm sure you will understand and have some sympathy
+with the error.</p>
+
+<p>Hudson Maxim takes medicine without biting the spoon.
+He had a dose from me and swallowed it smiling. I too gave
+him some citations of great poetry that is outside the confines
+of his "definition"&mdash;poetry in which are no tropes
+at all. He seems to lack the <i>feel</i> of poetry. He even spoils
+some of the "great lines" by not including enough of the
+context. As to his "improvements," fancy his preference
+for "the fiercest spirit of <i>the warrior host</i>" to "the fiercest
+spirit <i>that fought in Heaven</i>"! O my!</p>
+
+<p>Yes, Conrad told me the tale of his rescue by you. He
+gave me the impression of hanging in the sky above billows
+unthinkably huge and rocks inconceivably hard.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Of course I could not but be pleased by your inclusion of
+that sonnet on me in your book. And, by the way, I'm
+including in my tenth volume my <i>Cosmopolitan</i> article on
+the "Wine" and my end of the controversy about it. All the
+volumes of the set are to be out by June, saith the publisher.
+He is certainly half-killing me with proofs&mdash;mountains
+of proofs! *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, you'll doubtless have a recruit in Carlt for your<span class="pagenum">170</span>
+Socialist menagerie&mdash;if he is not already a veteran exhibit.
+Your "party" is recruited from among sore-heads only.
+There are some twenty-five thousand of them (sore-heads)
+in this neck o' woods&mdash;all disloyal&mdash;all growling at the
+Government which feeds and clothes them twice as well as
+they could feed and clothe themselves in private employment.
+They move Heaven and Earth to get in, and they
+never resign&mdash;just "take it out" in abusing the Government.
+If I had my way nobody should remain in the civil
+service more than five years&mdash;at the end of that period all
+are disloyal. Not one of them cares a rap for the good of the
+service or the country&mdash;as we soldiers used to do on thirteen
+dollars a month (with starvation, disease and death
+thrown in). Their grievance is that the Government does
+not undertake to maintain them in the style to which they
+choose to accustom themselves. They fix their standard of
+living just a little higher than they can afford, and would
+do so no matter what salary they got, as all salary-persons
+invariably do. Then they damn their employer for not enabling
+them to live up to it.</p>
+
+<p>If they can do better "outside" why don't they go outside
+and do so; if they can't (which means that they are
+getting more than they are worth) what are they complaining
+about?</p>
+
+<p>What this country needs&mdash;what every country needs
+occasionally&mdash;is a good hard bloody war to revive the vice
+of patriotism on which its existence as a nation depends.
+Meantime, you socialers, anarchists and other sentimentaliters
+and futilitarians will find the civil-service your best
+recruiting ground, for it is the Land of Reasonless Discontent.
+I yearn for the strong-handed Dictator who will swat
+you all on the mouths o' you till you are "heard to cease."<span class="pagenum">171</span>
+Until then&mdash;How? (drinking.)</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Yours sincerely, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 19,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Every evening coffee is made for me in my rooms, but I
+have not yet ventured to take it from <i>your</i> cup for fear of
+an accident to the cup. Some of the women in this house
+are stark, staring mad about that cup and saucer, and the
+plate.</p>
+
+<p>I am very sorry Carlt finds his position in the civil service
+so intolerable. If he can do better outside he should resign.
+If he can't, why, that means that the Government is doing
+better for him than he can do for himself, and you are not
+justified in your little tirade about the oppression of "the
+masses." "The masses" have been unprosperous from time
+immemorial, and always will be. A very simple way to escape
+that condition (and the <i>only</i> way) is to elevate oneself
+out of that incapable class.</p>
+
+<p>You write like an anarchist and say that if you were a
+man you'd <i>be</i> one. I should be sorry to believe that, for I
+should lose a very charming niece, and you a most worthy
+uncle.</p>
+
+<p>You say that Carlt and Grizzly are not Socialists. Does
+that mean that <i>they</i> are anarchists? I draw the line at
+anarchists, and would put them all to death if I lawfully
+could.</p>
+
+<p>But I fancy your intemperate words are just the babbling
+of a thoughtless girl. In any case you ought to know from
+my work in literature that I am not the person to whom to
+address them. I carry my convictions into my life and conduct,
+into my friendships, affections and all my relations
+with my fellow creatures. So I think it would be more considerate<span class="pagenum">172</span>
+to leave out of your letters to <i>me</i> some things that
+you may have in mind. Write them to others.</p>
+
+<p>My own references to socialism, and the like, have been
+jocular&mdash;I did not think you perverted "enough to hurt,"
+though I consider your intellectual environment a mighty
+bad one. As to such matters in future let us make a treaty
+of silence.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 1,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Ruth</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is pleasant to know that the family Robertson is "seeing
+things" and enjoying them. I hate travel, but find it
+delightful when done by you, instead of me. Believe me, I
+have had great pleasure in following you by your trail of
+words, as in the sport known as the "paper chase."</p>
+
+<p>And now about the little story. Your refusal to let your
+father amend it is no doubt dreadfully insubordinate, but I
+brave his wrath by approval. It is <i>your</i> work that I want to
+see, not anybody's else. I've a profound respect for your
+father's talent: as a litérateur, he is the best physician that
+I know; but he must not be coaching my pupil, or he and I
+(as Mark Twain said of Mrs. Astor) "will have a falling
+out."</p>
+
+<p>The story is not a story. It is not narrative, and nothing
+occurs. It is a record of mental mutations&mdash;of spiritual
+vicissitudes&mdash;states of mind. That is the most difficult
+thing that you could have attempted. It can be done acceptably
+by genius and the skill that comes of practice, as
+can anything. You are not quite equal to it&mdash;yet. You
+have done it better than I could have done it at your age,
+but not altogether well; as doubtless you did not expect to
+do it. It would be better to confine yourself at present to
+simple narrative. Write of something done, not of something<span class="pagenum">173</span>
+thought and felt, except incidentally. I'm sure it is in
+you to do great work, but in this writing trade, as in other
+matters, excellence is to be attained no otherwise than by
+beginning at the beginning&mdash;the simple at first, then the
+complex and difficult. You can not go up a mountain by a
+leap at the peak.</p>
+
+<p>I'm retaining your little sketch till your return, for you
+can do nothing with it&mdash;nor can I. If it had been written&mdash;preferably
+typewritten&mdash;with wide lines and margins I
+could do something <i>to</i> it. Maybe when I get the time I
+shall; at present I am swamped with "proofs" and two
+volumes behind the printers. If I knew that I should <i>see</i>
+you and talk it over I should rewrite it and (original in
+hand) point out the reasons for each alteration&mdash;you
+would see them quickly enough when shown. Maybe you
+will all come this way.</p>
+
+<p>You are <i>very</i> deficient in spelling. I hope that is not incurable,
+though some persons&mdash;clever ones, too&mdash;never do
+learn to spell correctly. You will have to learn it from your
+reading&mdash;noting carefully all but the most familiar words.</p>
+
+<p>You have "pet" words&mdash;nearly all of us have. One of
+yours is "flickering." Addiction to certain words is an "upsetting
+sin" most difficult to overcome. Try to overcome it
+by cutting them out where they seem most felicitous.</p>
+
+<p>By the way, your "hero," as you describe him, would not
+have been accessible to all those spiritual impressions&mdash;it
+is <i>you</i> to whom they come. And that confirms my judgment
+of your imagination. Imagination is nine parts of the
+writing trade. With enough of <i>that</i> all things are possible;
+but it is the other things that require the hard work, the
+incessant study, the tireless seeking, the indomitable will.
+It is no "pic-nic," this business of writing, believe me. Success<span class="pagenum">174</span>
+comes by favor of the gods, yes; but O the days and
+nights that you must pass before their altars, prostrate and
+imploring! They are exacting&mdash;the gods; years and years
+of service you must give in the temple. If you are prepared
+to do this go on to your reward. If not, you can not too
+quickly throw away the pen and&mdash;well, marry, for example.</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"Drink deep or taste not the Pierian spring."</p>
+
+<p><i>My</i> vote is that you persevere.</p>
+
+<p>With cordial regards to all good Robertsons&mdash;I think
+there are no others&mdash;I am most sincerely your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 20,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the pictures of the Sloots fire-place and
+"Joe Gans." I can fancy myself cooking a steak in the one,
+and the other eating one better cooked.</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad I've given you the Grand Cañon fever, for I
+hope to revisit the place next summer, and perhaps our
+Yosemite bunch can meet me there. My outing this season
+will be in Broadway in little old New York. That is not as
+good as Monte Sano, but the best that I can do.</p>
+
+<p>You must have had a good time with the Sterlings, and
+doubtless you all suffered from overfeeding.</p>
+
+<p>Carlt's action in denuding the shaggy pelt of his hands
+meets with my highest commendation, but you'd better
+look out. It may mean that he has a girl&mdash;a Jewess descended
+from Jacob, with an hereditary antipathy to anything
+like Esau. Carlt was an Esaurian.</p>
+
+<p>You'll have to overlook some bad errors in Vol. V of the
+C. W. I did not have the page proofs. Some of the verses
+are unintelligible. That's the penalty for philandering in<span class="pagenum">175</span>
+California instead of sticking to my work.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 28,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I've been having noctes ambrosianæ with "The House of
+Orchids," though truly it came untimely, for I've not yet
+done reading your other books. Don't crowd the dancers,
+please. I don't know (and you don't care) what poem in it
+I like best, but I get as much delight out of these lines as
+out of any:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"Such flowers pale as are</span><br />
+Worn by the goddess of a distant star&mdash;<br />
+Before whose holy eyes<br />
+Beauty and evening meet."</p>
+
+<p>And&mdash;but what's the use? I can't quote the entire book.</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad you did see your way to make "Memory" a
+female.</p>
+
+<p>To Hades with Bonnet's chatter of gems and jewels&mdash;among
+the minor poetic properties they are better (to my
+taste) than flowers. By the way, I wonder what "lightness"
+Bonnet found in the "Apothecary" verses. They seem to
+me very serious.</p>
+
+<p>Rereading and rerereading of the Job confirm my first
+opinion of it. I find only one "bad break" in it&mdash;and that
+not inconsistent with God's poetry in the real Job: "ropes
+of adamant." A rope of stone is imperfectly conceivable&mdash;is,
+in truth, mixed metaphor.</p>
+
+<p>I think it was a mistake for you to expound to Ned Hamilton,
+or anybody, how you wrote the "Forty-third Chapter,"
+or anything. When an author explains his methods of<span class="pagenum">176</span>
+composition he cannot expect to be taken seriously. Nine
+writers in ten wish to have it thought that they "dash off"
+things. Nobody believes it, and the judicious would be
+sorry to believe it. Maybe you do, but I guess you work
+hard and honestly enough over the sketch "dashed off."
+If you don't&mdash;do.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>With love to Carrie, I will leave you to your sea-gardens
+and abalones.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">I'm off to Broadway next week for a season of old-gentlemanly
+revelry.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 2,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>In packing (I'm going to New York) I find this "Tidal"
+typoscript, and fear that I was to have returned it. Pray
+God it was not my neglect to do so that kept it out of the
+book. But if not, what did keep it out? Maybe the fact that
+it requires in the reader an uncommon acquaintance with
+the Scriptures.</p>
+
+<p>If Robertson publishes any more books for you don't let
+him use "silver" leaf on the cover. It is not silver, cannot
+be neatly put on, and will come off. The "Wine" book is
+incomparably better and more tasteful than either of the
+others. By the way, I stick to my liking for Scheff's little
+vignette on the "Wine."</p>
+
+<p>In "Duandon" you&mdash;<i>you</i>, Poet of the Heavens!&mdash;come
+perilously near to qualifying yourself for "mention" in a
+certain essay of mine on the blunders of writers and artists
+in matters lunar. You must have observed that immediately
+after the full o' the moon the light of that orb takes
+on a redness, and when it rises after dark is hardly a
+"towering glory," nor a "frozen splendor." Its "web" is
+not "silver." In truth, the gibbous moon, rising, has something<span class="pagenum">177</span>
+of menace in its suggestion. Even twenty-four (or
+rather twenty-five) hours "after the full" this change in
+the quality and quantity of its light is very marked. I don't
+know what causes the sudden alteration, but it has always
+impressed me.</p>
+
+<p>I feel a little like signing this criticism "Gradgrind," but
+anyhow it may amuse you.</p>
+
+<p>Do you mind squandering ten cents and a postage stamp
+on me? I want a copy of <i>Town Talk</i>&mdash;the one in which you
+are a "Varied Type."</p>
+
+<p>I don't know much of some of your poets mentioned in
+that article, but could wish that you had said a word about
+Edith Thomas. Thank you for your too generous mention
+of me&mdash;who brought you so much vilification!</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote"> Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 29,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Ruth,</span></p>
+
+<p>You are a faithful correspondent; I have your postals
+from Athens and Syracuse, and now the letter from Rome.
+The Benares sketch was duly received, and I wrote you
+about it to the address that you gave&mdash;Cairo, I think. As
+you will doubtless receive my letter in due time I will not
+now repeat it&mdash;further than to say that I liked it. If it had
+been accompanied by a few photographs (indispensable
+now to such articles) I should have tried to get it into some
+magazine. True, Benares, like all other Asiatic and European
+cities, is pretty familiar to even the "general reader,"
+but the sketch had something of the writer's personality in
+it&mdash;the main factor in all good writing, as in all forms of
+art.</p>
+
+<p>May I tell you what you already know&mdash;that you are<span class="pagenum">178</span>
+deficient in spelling and punctuation? It is worth while to
+know these things&mdash;and all things that you can acquire.
+Some persons can not acquire orthography, and I don't
+wonder, but every page of every good book is a lesson in
+punctuation. One's punctuation is a necessary part of one's
+style; you cannot attain to precision if you leave that matter
+to editors and printers.</p>
+
+<p>You ask if "stories" must have action. The name "story"
+is preferably used of narrative, not reflection nor mental
+analysis. The "psychological novel" is in great vogue just
+now, for example&mdash;the adventures of the mind, it might be
+called&mdash;but it requires a profounder knowledge of life and
+character than is possible to a young girl of whatever talent;
+and the psychological "short story" is even more difficult.
+Keep to narrative and simple description for a few
+years, until your wings have grown. These descriptions of
+foreign places that you write me are good practice. You are
+not likely to tell me much that I do not know, nor is that
+necessary; but your way of telling what I do know is sometimes
+very interesting as a study of <i>you</i>. So write me all you
+will, and if you would like the letters as a record of your
+travels you shall have them back; I am preserving them.</p>
+
+<p>I judge from your letter that your father went straight
+through without bothering about me. Maybe I should not
+have seen him anyhow, for I was away from Washington
+for nearly a month.</p>
+
+<p>Please give my love to your mother and sister, whom, of
+course, you are to bring here. I shall not forgive you if you
+do not.</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I wish that you lived nearer to me, so that we could
+go over your work together. I could help you more in a few
+weeks <i>that</i> way than in years <i>this</i> way. God never does anything<span class="pagenum">179</span>
+just right.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+July 31,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for that Times "review." It is a trifle less
+malicious than usual&mdash;regarding <i>me</i>, that is all. My publisher,
+Neale, who was here last evening, is about "taking
+action" against that concern for infringement of his copyright
+in my little book, "Write It Right." The wretches
+have been serving it up to their readers for several weeks as
+the work of a woman named Learned. Repeatedly she uses
+my very words&mdash;whole passages of them. They refused
+even to confess the misdeeds of their contributrix, and persist
+in their sin. So they will have to fight.</p>
+
+<p>*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* I have never been hard on women whose hearts go
+with their admiration, and whose bodies follow their hearts&mdash;I
+don't mean that the latter was the case in this instance.
+Nor am I very exacting as to the morality of my men
+friends. I would not myself take another man's woman,
+any more than I would take his purse. Nor, I trust, would
+I seduce the daughter or sister of a friend, nor any maid
+whom it would at all damage&mdash;and as to <i>that</i> there is no
+hard and fast rule.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>A fine fellow, I, to be casting the first stone, or the one-hundredth,
+at a lovelorn woman, weak or strong! By the
+way, I should not believe in the love of a strong one, wife,
+widow or maid.</p>
+
+<p>It looks as if I may get to Sag Harbor for a week or so in
+the middle of the month. It is really not a question of expense,
+but Neale has blocked out a lot of work for me. He
+wants two more volumes&mdash;even five more if I'll make 'em.
+Guess I'll give him two. In a week or so I shall be able to<span class="pagenum">180</span>
+say whether I can go Sagharboring. If so, I think we should
+have a night in New York first, no? You could motor-boat
+up and back.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="flright smcap">Ambrose Bierce.</span><a name="fnanchor_14" id="fnanchor_14"></a><a href="#footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[14]</a></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_14" id="footnote_14" href="#fnanchor_14"><span class="label">[14]</span></a> Addressed to George Sterling at Sag Harbor, Long Island.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+Monday,<br />
+August 7,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>In one of your letters you were good enough to promise
+me a motorboat trip from New York to Sag Harbor. I can
+think of few things more delightful than navigating in a
+motorboat the sea that I used to navigate in an open canoe;
+it will seem like Progress. So if you are still in that mind
+please write me what day <i>after Saturday next</i> you can meet
+me in New York and I'll be there. I should prefer that you
+come the day before the voyage and dine with me that
+evening.</p>
+
+<p>I always stay at the Hotel Navarre, 7th avenue and 38th
+street. If unable to get in there I'll leave my address there.
+Or, tell me where <i>you</i> will be.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">If the motorboat plan is not practicable let me know and
+I'll go by train or steamer; it will not greatly matter. <span class="flright">A. B.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+Tuesday,<br />
+August 8,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Kindly convey to young Smith of Auburn my felicitations
+on his admirable "Ode to the Abyss"&mdash;a large theme,
+treated with dignity and power. It has many striking passages&mdash;such,
+for example, as "The Romes of ruined
+spheres." I'm conscious of my sin against the rhetoricians
+in liking that, for it jolts the reader out of the Abyss and<span class="pagenum">181</span>
+back to earth. Moreover, it is a metaphor which belittles,
+instead of dignifying. But I like it.</p>
+
+<p>He is evidently a student of George Sterling, and being in
+the formative stage, cannot&mdash;why should he?&mdash;conceal
+the fact.</p>
+
+<p>My love to all good Californians of the Sag Harbor colony.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+November 16,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is good to know that you are again happy&mdash;that is to
+say, you are in Carmel. For your <i>future</i> happiness (if success
+and a certain rounding off of your corners would bring
+it, as I think) I could wish you in New York or thereabout.
+As the Scripture hath it: "It is not good for a man to be in
+Carmel"&mdash;<i>Revised Inversion</i>. I note that at the late election
+California damned herself to a still lower degradation
+and is now unfit for a white man to live in. Initiative, referendum,
+recall, employers' liability, woman suffrage&mdash;yah!</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>But you are not to take too seriously my dislike of *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*<a name="fnanchor_15" id="fnanchor_15"></a><a href="#footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[15]</a>
+I like him personally very well; he talks like a normal human
+being. It is only that damned book of his. He was here
+and came out to my tenement a few evenings ago, finding
+me in bed and helpless from lumbago, as I was for weeks. I
+am now able to sit up and take notice, and there are even
+fears for my recovery. My enemies would say, as Byron
+said of Lady B., I am becoming "dangerously well again."</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>As to harlots, there are not ten in a hundred that are such
+for any other reason than that they wanted to be. Their<span class="pagenum">182</span>
+exculpatory stories are mostly lies of magnitude.</p>
+
+<p>Sloots writes me that he will perhaps "walk over" from
+the mine to Yosemite next summer. I can't get there much
+before July first, but if there is plenty of snow in the mountains
+next winter the valley should be visitable then. Later,
+I hope to beguest myself for a few days at the Pine Inn,
+Carmel. Tell it not to the Point Lobos mussel!</p>
+
+<p>My love to Carrie.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_15" id="footnote_15" href="#fnanchor_15"><span class="label">[15]</span></a> Excised by G. S.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 27,<br />
+1911.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>As you do not give me that lady's address I infer that you
+no longer care to have me meet her&mdash;which is a relief to me.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Yes, I'm a bit broken up by the death of Pollard, whose
+body I assisted to burn. He lost his mind, was paralyzed,
+had his head cut open by the surgeons, and his sufferings
+were unspeakable. Had he lived he would have been an
+idiot; so it is all right&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="poem">"But O, the difference to me!"</p>
+
+<p>If you don't think him pretty bright read any of his last
+three books, "Their Day in Court," "Masks and Minstrels,"
+and "Vagabond Journeys." He did not see the
+last one&mdash;Neale brought down copies of it when he came
+to Baltimore to attend the funeral.</p>
+
+<p>I'm hoping that if Carlt and Lora go to Wagner's mine
+and we go to Yosemite, Lora, at least, will come to us out
+there. We shall need her, though Carrie will find that
+Misses C. and S. will be "no deadheads in the enterprise"&mdash;to
+quote a political phrase of long ago. As to me, I shall
+leave my ten-pounds-each books at home and, like St.<span class="pagenum">183</span>
+Jerome, who never traveled with other baggage than a
+skull, be "flying light."
+My love to Carrie.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 5,<br />
+1912.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is good to hear from you again, even if I did have to
+give you a hint that I badly needed a letter.</p>
+
+<p>I am glad that you are going to the mine (if you go)&mdash;though
+Berkeley and Oakland will not be the same without
+you. And where can I have my mail forwarded?&mdash;and be
+permitted to climb in at the window to get it. As to pot-steaks,
+toddies, and the like, I shall simply swear off eating
+and drinking.</p>
+
+<p>If Carlt is a "game sport," and does not require "a dead-sure
+thing," the mining gamble is the best bet for him.
+Anything to get out of that deadening, hopeless grind, the
+"Government service." It kills a man's self-respect, atrophies
+his powers, unfits him for anything, tempts him to
+improvidence and then turns him out to starve.</p>
+
+<p>It is pleasant to know that there is a hope of meeting you
+in Yosemite&mdash;the valley would not be the same without
+you. My girls cannot leave here till the schools close, about
+June 20, so we shall not get into the valley much before
+July first; but if you have a good winter, with plenty of
+snow, that will do. We shall stay as long as we like. George
+says he and Carrie can go, and I hope Sloots can. It is likely
+that Neale, my publisher, will be of my party. I shall hope
+to visit your mine afterward.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>My health, which was pretty bad for weeks after returning
+from Sag Harbor, is restored, and I was never so young<span class="pagenum">184</span>
+in all my life.</p>
+
+<p>Here's wishing you and Carlt plenty of meat on the bone
+that the new year may fling to you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+February 14,<br />
+1912.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm a long time noticing your letter of January fifth,
+chiefly because, like Teddy, "I have nothing to say."
+There's this difference atwixt him and me&mdash;I could say
+something if I tried.</p>
+
+<p>*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* I'm hoping that you are at work and doing something
+worth while, though I see nothing of yours. Battle
+against the encroaching abalone should not engage all your
+powers. That spearing salmon at night interests me, though
+doubtless the "season" will be over before I visit Carmel.</p>
+
+<p>Bear Yosemite in mind for latter part of June, and use
+influence with Lora and Grizzly, even if Carlt should be
+inhumed in his mine.</p>
+
+<p>We've had about seven weeks of snow and ice, the mercury
+around the zero mark most of the time. Once it was 13
+below. You'd not care for that sort of thing, I fancy. Indeed,
+I'm a bit fatigued of it myself, and on Saturday next,
+God willing, shall put out my prow to sea and bring up, I
+hope, in Bermuda, not, of course, to remain long.</p>
+
+<p>You did not send me the Weininger article on "Sex and
+Character"&mdash;I mean the extract that you thought like
+some of my stuff.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+April 25,<br />
+1912.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,<span class="pagenum">185</span></p>
+
+<p>I did not go to Bermuda; so I'm not "back." But I did go
+to Richmond, a city whose tragic and pathetic history, of
+which one is reminded by everything that one sees there,
+always gets on to my nerves with a particular dejection.
+True, the history is some fifty years old, but it is always
+with me when I'm there, making solemn eyes at me.</p>
+
+<p>You're right about "this season in the East." It has indeed
+been penetential. For the first time I am thoroughly
+disgusted and half-minded to stay in California when I go&mdash;a
+land where every prospect pleases, and only labor unions,
+progressives, suffragettes (and socialists) are vile. No, I don't
+think I could stand California, though I'm still in the mind
+to visit it in June. I shall be sorry to miss Carrie at Carmel, but
+hope to have the two of you on some excursion or
+camping trip. We <i>want</i> to go to Yosemite, which the girls
+have not seen, but if there's no water there it may not be
+advisable. Guess we'll have to let you natives decide. How
+would the Big Trees do as a substitute?</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Girls is pizen, but not necessarily fatal. I've taken 'em in
+large doses all my life, and suffered pangs enough to equip
+a number of small Hells, but never has one of them paralyzed
+the inner working man. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* But I'm not a poet.
+Moreover, as I've not yet put off my armor I oughtn't to
+boast.</p>
+
+<p>So&mdash;you've subscribed for the Collected Works. Good!
+that is what you ought to have done a long time ago. It is
+what every personal friend of mine ought to have done, for
+all profess admiration of my work in literature. It is what
+I was fool enough to permit my publisher to think that
+many of them would do. How many do you guess have
+done so? I'll leave you guessing. God help the man with<span class="pagenum">186</span>
+many friends, for <i>they</i> will not. My royalties on the sets
+sold to my friends are less than one-fourth of my outlay in
+free sets for other friends. Tell me not in cheerful numbers
+of the value and sincerity of friendships.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>There! I've discharged my bosom of that perilous stuff
+and shall take a drink. Here's to you.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+June 5,<br />
+1912.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear George</span>,</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the poems, which I've not had the time to
+consider&mdash;being disgracefully busy in order to get away.
+I don't altogether share your reverence for Browning, but
+the primacy of your verses on him over the others printed
+on the same page is almost startling. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Of course it's all nonsense about the waning of your
+power&mdash;though thinking it so might make it so. My notion
+is that you've only <i>begun</i> to do things. But I wish you'd go
+back to your chain in your uncle's office. I'm no believer in
+adversity and privation as a spur to Pegasus. They are
+oftener a "hopple." The "meagre, muse-rid mope, adust
+and thin" will commonly do better work when tucked out
+with three square meals a day, and having the sure and
+certain hope of their continuance.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm expecting to arrive in Oakland (Key Route Inn,
+probably) late in the evening of the 22d of this month and
+dine at Carlt's on the 24th&mdash;my birthday. Anyhow, I've
+invited myself, though it is possible they may be away on
+their vacation. Carlt has promised to try to get his "leave"<span class="pagenum">187</span>
+changed to a later date than the one he's booked for.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">P.S.&mdash;Just learned that we can not leave here until the
+19th&mdash;which will bring me into San Francisco on the 26th.
+Birthday dinner served in diner&mdash;last call!</p>
+
+<p>I've <i>read</i> the Browning poem and I now know why there
+was a Browning. Providence foresaw you and prepared him
+for you&mdash;blessed be Providence! *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Mrs. Havens asks me to come to them at Sag Harbor&mdash;and
+shouldn't I like to! *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* Sure the song of the Sag
+Harbor frog would be music to me&mdash;as would that of the
+indigenous duckling.</p>
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+December 19,<br />
+1912.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Mr. Cahill</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I thank you for the article from <i>The Argonaut</i>, and am
+glad to get it for a special reason, as it gives me your address
+and thereby enables me to explain something.</p>
+
+<p>When, several years ago, you sent me a similar article I
+took it to the editor of The National Geographical Magazine
+(I am a member of the Society that issues it) and suggested
+its publication. I left it with him and hearing nothing
+about it for several months called at his office <i>twice</i> for
+an answer, and for the copy if publication was refused.
+The copy had been "mislaid"&mdash;lost, apparently&mdash;and I
+never obtained it. Meantime, either I had "mislaid" your
+address, or it was only on the copy. So I was unable to
+write you. Indirectly, afterward, I heard that you had left
+California for parts to me unknown.</p>
+
+<p>Twice since then I have been in San Francisco, but confess<span class="pagenum">188</span>
+that I did not think of the matter.</p>
+
+<p>Cahill's projection<a name="fnanchor_16" id="fnanchor_16"></a><a href="#footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[16]</a> is indubitably the right one, but you
+are "up against" the ages and will be a long time dead
+before it finds favor, or I'm no true pessimist.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_16" id="footnote_16" href="#fnanchor_16"><span class="label">[16]</span></a> The Butterfly Map of the World.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia<br />
+Apartments,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 17,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Ruth</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It's "too bad" that I couldn't remain in Oakland and
+Berkeley another month to welcome you, but I fear it will
+"have to go at that," for I've no expectation of ever seeing
+California again. I like the country as well as ever, but I
+<i>don't</i> like the rule of labor unions, the grafters and the suffragettes.
+So far as I am concerned they may stew in their
+own juice; I shall not offer myself as an ingredient.</p>
+
+<p>It is pleasant to know that you are all well, including
+Johnny, poor little chap.</p>
+
+<p>You are right to study philology and rhetoric. Surely
+there must be <i>some</i> provision for your need&mdash;a university
+where one cannot learn one's own language would be a
+funny university.</p>
+
+<p>I think your "Mr. Wells" who gave a course of lectures
+on essay writing may be my friend Wells Drury, of Berkeley.
+If so, mention me to him and he will advise you what
+to do.</p>
+
+<p>Another good friend of mine, whom, however I did not
+succeed in seeing during either of my visits to California, is
+W. C. Morrow, who is a professional teacher of writing and
+himself a splendid writer. He could help you. He lives in
+San Francisco, but I think has a class in Oakland. I don't
+know his address; you'll find it in the directory. He used to<span class="pagenum">189</span>
+write stories splendidly tragic, but I'm told he now teaches
+the "happy ending," in which he is right&mdash;commercially&mdash;but
+disgusting. I can cordially recommend him.</p>
+
+<p>Keep up your German and French of course. If your
+English (your mother speech) is so defective, think what
+<i>they</i> must be.</p>
+
+<p>I'll think of some books that will be helpful to you in your
+English. Meantime send me anything that you care to that
+you write. It will at least show me what progress you make.</p>
+
+<p>I'm returning some (all, I think) of your sketches. Don't
+destroy them&mdash;yet. Maybe some day you'll find them
+worth rewriting.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">My love to you all. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Euclid and 14th Sts.,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+January 20,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Mr. Cahill</span>,</p>
+
+<p>It is pleasant to know that you are not easily discouraged
+by the croaking of such ravens as I, and I confess that the
+matter of the "civic centre" supplies some reason to hope
+for prosperity to the Cahill projection&mdash;which (another
+croak) will doubtless bear some other man's name, probably
+Hayford's or Woodward's.</p>
+
+<p>I sent the "Argonaut" article to my friend Dr. Franklin,
+of Schenectady, a "scientific gent" of some note, but have
+heard nothing from him.</p>
+
+<p>I'm returning the "Chronicle" article, which I found interesting.
+If I were not a writer without an "organ" I'd have
+a say about that projection. For near four years I've been
+out of the newspaper game&mdash;a mere compiler of my collected
+works in twelve volumes&mdash;and shall probably never
+"sit into the game" again, being seventy years old. My
+work is finished, and so am I.</p>
+
+<p>Luck to you in the new year, and in many to follow.<span class="pagenum">190</span></p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia<br />
+Apartments,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+I prefer to get my<br />
+letters at this address.<br />
+Make a memorandum<br />
+of it.<br />
+January 28,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I have been searching for your letter of long ago, fearing
+it contained something that I should have replied to. But I
+don't find it; so I make the convenient assumption that it
+did not.</p>
+
+<p>I'd like to hear from you, however unworthy I am to do
+so, for I want to know if you and Carlt have still a hope of
+going mining. Pray God you do, if there's a half-chance of
+success; for success in the service of the Government is
+failure.</p>
+
+<p>Winter here is two-thirds gone and we have not had a
+cold day, and only one little dash of snow&mdash;on Christmas
+eve. Can California beat that? I'm told it's as cold there as
+in Greenland.</p>
+
+<p>Tell me about yourself&mdash;your health since the operation&mdash;how
+it has affected you&mdash;all about you. My own health
+is excellent; I'm equal to any number of Carlt's toddies. By
+the way, Blanche has made me a co-defendant with you in
+the crime (once upon a time) of taking a drop too much. I
+plead not guilty&mdash;how do <i>you</i> plead? Sloots, at least,
+would acquit us on the ground of inability&mdash;that one
+<i>can't</i> take too much. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, your avuncular, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+March 20,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Ruth</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I'm returning your little sketches with a few markings
+which are to be regarded (or disregarded) as mere suggestions.
+I made them in pencil, so that you can erase them if
+you don't approve. Of course I should make many more if<span class="pagenum">191</span>
+I could have you before me so that I could explain <i>why</i>; in
+this way I can help you but little. You'll observe that I
+have made quite a slaughter of some of the adjectives in
+some of your sentences&mdash;you will doubtless slaughter some
+in others. Nearly all young writers use too many adjectives.
+Indeed, moderation and skill in the use of adjectives
+are about the last things a good writer learns. Don't use
+those that are connoted by the nouns; and rather than
+have all the nouns, or nearly all, in a sentence outfitted
+with them it is better to make separate sentences for some
+of those desired.</p>
+
+<p>In your sketch "Triumph" I would not name the "hero"
+of the piece. To do so not only makes the sketch commonplace,
+but it logically requires you to name his victim too,
+and her offense; in brief, it commits you to a <i>story</i>.</p>
+
+<p>A famous writer (perhaps Holmes or Thackeray&mdash;I don't
+remember) once advised a young writer to cut all the passages
+that he thought particularly good. Your taste I think
+is past the need of so heroic treatment as that, but the advice
+may be profitably borne in memory whenever you are
+in doubt, if ever you are. And sometimes you will be.</p>
+
+<p>I think I know what Mr. Morrow meant by saying that
+your characters are not "humanly significant." He means
+that they are not such persons as one meets in everyday
+life&mdash;not "types." I confess that I never could see why
+one's characters <i>should</i> be. The exceptional&mdash;even "abnormal"&mdash;person
+seems to me the more interesting, but I
+must warn you that he will not seem so to an editor. Nor to
+an editor will the tragic element seem so good as the cheerful&mdash;the
+sombre denouement as the "happy ending." One
+must have a pretty firm reputation as a writer to "send in"
+a tragic or supernatural tale with any hope of its acceptance.<span class="pagenum">192</span>
+The average mind (for which editors purvey, and
+mostly possess) dislikes, or thinks it dislikes, any literature
+that is not "sunny." True, tragedy holds the highest and
+most permanent place in the world's literature and art, but
+it has the divvel's own time getting to it. For immediate
+popularity (if one cares for it) one must write pleasant
+things; though one may put in here and there a bit of
+pathos.</p>
+
+<p>I think well of these two manuscripts, but doubt if you
+can get them into any of our magazines&mdash;if you want to.
+As to that, nobody can help you. About the only good
+quality that a magazine editor commonly has is his firm
+reliance on the infallibility of his own judgment. It is an
+honest error, and it enables him to mull through somehow
+with a certain kind of consistency. The only way to get a
+footing with him is to send him what you think he wants,
+not what you think he ought to want&mdash;and keep sending.
+But perhaps you do not care for the magazines.</p>
+
+<p>I note a great improvement in your style&mdash;probably no
+more than was to be expected of your better age, but a distinct
+improvement. It is a matter of regret with me that I
+have not the training of you; we should see what would
+come of it. You certainly have no reason for discouragement.
+But if you are to be a writer you must "cut out" the
+dances and the teas (a little of the theater may be allowed)
+and <i>work</i> right heartily. The way of the good writer is no
+primrose path.</p>
+
+<p>No, I have not read the poems of Service. What do I
+think of Edith Wharton? Just what Pollard thought&mdash;see
+<i>Their Day in Court</i>, which I think you have.</p>
+
+<p>I fear you have the wanderlust incurably. I never had it
+bad, and have less of it now than ever before. I shall not<span class="pagenum">193</span>
+see California again.</p>
+
+<p>My love to all your family goes with this, and to you all
+that you will have. <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Army and<br />
+Navy Club,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 22,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Editor</span> "<span class="smcap">Lantern</span>",<a name="fnanchor_17" id="fnanchor_17"></a><a href="#footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[17]</a></p>
+
+<p>Will I tell you what I think of your magazine? Sure I will.</p>
+
+<p>It has thirty-six pages of reading matter.</p>
+
+<p>Seventeen are given to the biography of a musician,&mdash;German,
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>Four to the mother of a theologian,&mdash;German, peasant-wench,
+dead.</p>
+
+<p>(The mag. is published in America, to-day.)</p>
+
+<p>Five pages about Eugene Field's ancestors. All dead.</p>
+
+<p>17 + 4 + 5 = 26.</p>
+
+<p>36 - 26 = 10.</p>
+
+<p>Two pages about Ella Wheeler Wilcox.</p>
+
+<p>Three-fourths page about a bad poet and his indifference
+to&mdash;German.</p>
+
+<p>Two pages of his poetry.</p>
+
+<p>2 + &frac34; + 2 = 4&frac34;.</p>
+
+<p>10 - 4&frac34; = 5&frac14;. Not enough to criticise.</p>
+
+<p>What your magazine needs is an editor&mdash;presumably
+older, preferably American, and indubitably alive. At least
+awake. It is your inning.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Sincerely yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_17" id="footnote_17" href="#fnanchor_17"><span class="label">[17]</span></a> The editor was Curtis J. Kirch ("Guido Bruno") and the weekly had a brief career
+in Chicago. It was the forerunner of the many Bruno weeklies and monthlies, later
+published from other cities.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+May 31,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>You were so long in replying to my letter of the century
+before last, and as your letter is not really a reply to anything
+in mine, that I fancy you did not get it. I don't recollect,<span class="pagenum">194</span>
+for example, that you ever acknowledged receipt of
+little pictures of myself, though maybe you did&mdash;I only
+hope you got them. The photographs that you send are
+very interesting. One of them makes me thirsty&mdash;the one
+of that fountainhead of good booze, your kitchen sink.</p>
+
+<p>What you say of the mine and how you are to be housed
+there pleases me mightily. That's how I should like to live,
+and mining is what I should like again to do. Pray God you
+be not disappointed.</p>
+
+<p>Alas, I cannot even join you during Carlt's vacation, for
+the mountain ramble. Please "go slow" in your goating
+this year. I <i>think</i> you are better fitted for it than ever before,
+but you'd better ask your surgeon about that. By the
+way, do you know that since women took to athletics their
+peculiar disorders have increased about fifty per cent? You
+can't make men of women. The truth is, they've taken to
+walking on their hind legs a few centuries too soon. Their
+in'ards have not learned how to suspend the law of gravity.
+Add the jolts of athletics and&mdash;there you are.</p>
+
+<p>I wish I could be with you at Monte Sano&mdash;or anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>Love to Carlt and Sloots.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+September 10,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Your letter was forwarded to me in New York, whence I
+have just returned. I fancy you had a more satisfactory
+outing than I. I never heard of the Big Sur river nor of
+"Arbolado." But I'm glad you went there, for I'm hearing
+so much about Hetch Hetchy that I'm tired of it. I'm helping
+the San Francisco crowd (a little) to "ruin" it.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I'm glad to know that you still expect to go to the mine.
+Success or failure, it is better than the Mint, and you ought<span class="pagenum">195</span>
+to live in the mountains where you can climb things whenever
+you want to.</p>
+
+<p>Of course I know nothing of Neale's business&mdash;you'd
+better write to him if he has not filled your order. I suppose
+you know that volumes eleven and twelve are not included
+in the "set."</p>
+
+<p>If you care to write to me again please do so at once as I
+am going away, probably to South America, but if we have
+a row with Mexico before I start I shall go there first. I
+want to see something going on. I've no notion of how long
+I shall remain away.</p>
+
+<p>With love to Carlt and Sloots,</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Affectionately, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+September 10,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Joe</span>,<a name="fnanchor_18" id="fnanchor_18"></a><a href="#footnote_18" class="fnanchor">[18]</a></p>
+
+<p>The reason that I did not answer your letter sooner is&mdash;I
+have been away (in New York) and did not have it with
+me. I suppose I shall not see your book for a long time, for I
+am going away and have no notion when I shall return. I
+expect to go to, perhaps across, South America&mdash;possibly
+via Mexico, if I can get through without being stood up
+against a wall and shot as a Gringo. But that is better than
+dying in bed, is it not? If Duc did not need you so badly I'd
+ask you to get your hat and come along. God bless and
+keep you.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p><a name="footnote_18" id="footnote_18" href="#fnanchor_18"><span class="label">[18]</span></a> To Mrs. Josephine Clifford McCrackin, San Jose, California.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Washington, D. C.,<br />
+September 13,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Joe</span>,</p>
+
+<p>Thank you for the book. I thank you for your friendship&mdash;and
+much besides. This is to say good-by at the end of a
+pleasant correspondence in which your woman's prerogative
+of having the last word is denied to you. Before I could<span class="pagenum">196</span>
+receive it I shall be gone. But some time, somewhere, I
+hope to hear from you again. Yes, I shall go into Mexico
+with a pretty definite purpose, which, however, is not at
+present disclosable. You must try to forgive my obstinacy
+in not "perishing" where I am. I want to be where something
+worth while is going on, or where nothing whatever
+is going on. Most of what is going on in your own country
+is exceedingly distasteful to me.</p>
+
+<p>Pray for me? Why, yes, dear&mdash;that will not harm either
+of us. I loathe religions, a Christian gives me qualms and a
+Catholic sets my teeth on edge, but pray for me just the
+same, for with all those faults upon your head (it's a nice
+head, too), I am pretty fond of you, I guess. May you live
+as long as you want to, and then pass smilingly into the
+darkness&mdash;the good, good darkness.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Devotedly your friend, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose Bierce.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">The Olympia,<br />
+Euclid Street,<br />
+Washington, D. C.,<br />
+October 1,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I go away tomorrow for a long time, so this is only to say
+good-bye. I think there is nothing else worth saying; <i>therefore</i>
+you will naturally expect a long letter. What an intolerable
+world this would be if we said nothing but what is
+worth saying! And did nothing foolish&mdash;like going into
+Mexico and South America.</p>
+
+<p>I'm hoping that you will go to the mine soon. You must
+hunger and thirst for the mountains&mdash;Carlt likewise. So do
+I. Civilization be dinged!&mdash;it is the mountains and the
+desert for me.</p>
+
+<p>Good-bye&mdash;if you hear of my being stood up against a
+Mexican stone wall and shot to rags please know that I
+think that a pretty good way to depart this life. It beats<span class="pagenum">197</span>
+old age, disease, or falling down the cellar stairs. To be a
+Gringo in Mexico&mdash;ah, that is euthanasia!</p>
+
+<p>With love to Carlt, affectionately yours, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Laredo, Texas,<br />
+November 6,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">My dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I think I owe you a letter, and probably this is my only
+chance to pay up for a long time. For more than a month I
+have been rambling about the country, visiting my old
+battlefields, passing a few days in New Orleans, a week in
+San Antonio, and so forth. I turned up here this morning.
+There is a good deal of fighting going on over on the Mexican
+side of the Rio Grande, but I hold to my intention to
+go into Mexico if I can. In the character of "innocent bystander"
+I ought to be fairly safe if I don't have too much
+money on me, don't you think? My eventual destination is
+South America, but probably I shall not get there this year.</p>
+
+<p>Sloots writes me that you and Carlt still expect to go to
+the mine, as I hope you will.</p>
+
+<p>The Cowdens expect to live somewhere in California
+soon, I believe. They seem to be well, prosperous and
+cheerful.</p>
+
+<p>With love to Carlt and Sloots, I am affectionately yours,<span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<p class="p2">P.S. You need not believe <i>all</i> that these newspapers say
+of me and my purposes. I had to tell them <i>something</i>.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Laredo, Texas,<br />
+November 6,<br />
+1913.</div>
+
+<p class="p4"><span class="smcap">Dear Lora</span>,</p>
+
+<p>I wrote you yesterday at San Antonio, but dated the letter
+here and today, expecting to bring the letter and mail it
+here. That's because I did not know if I would have time
+to write it here. Unfortunately, I forgot and posted it,<span class="pagenum">198</span>
+with other letters, where it was written. Thus does man's
+guile come to naught!</p>
+
+<p>Well, I'm here, anyhow, and have time to explain.</p>
+
+<p>Laredo was a Mexican city before it was an American. It
+is Mexican now, five to one. Nuevo Laredo, opposite, is
+held by the Huertistas and Americans don't go over there.
+In fact a guard on the bridge will not let them. So those
+that sneak across have to wade (which can be done almost
+anywhere) and go at night.</p>
+
+<p>I shall not be here long enough to hear from you, and
+don't know where I shall be next. Guess it doesn't matter
+much.</p>
+
+<p class="left65">Adios, <span class="smcap flright">Ambrose.</span></p>
+
+<div class="figcenter p6">
+<img src="images/section.png" width="300" height="33" alt="new section" />
+<span class="pagenum">199</span>
+</div><hr class="c15" />
+<h2><i>Extracts from Letters</i></h2>
+<hr class="c15" />
+
+<p>You are right too&mdash;dead right about the poetry of Socialism;
+and you might have added the poetry of wailing about
+the woes of the poor generally. Only the second- and the
+third-raters write it&mdash;except "incidentally." You don't
+find the big fellows sniveling over that particular shadow-side
+of Nature. Yet not only are the poor always with us,
+they always <i>were</i> with us, and their state was worse in the
+times of Homer, Virgil, Shakspeare, Milton and the others
+than in the days of Morris and Markham.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p>But what's the use? I have long despaired of convincing
+poets and artists of anything, even that white is not black.
+I'm convinced that all you chaps ought to have a world to
+yourselves, where two and two make whatever you prefer
+that it <i>should</i> make, and cause and effect are remoulded
+"more nearly to the heart's desire." And then I suppose I'd
+want to go and live there too.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Did you ever know so poor satire to make so great a row
+as that of Watson? Compared with certain other verses
+against particular women&mdash;Byron's "Born in a garret, in a
+kitchen bred"; even my own skit entitled "Mad" (pardon
+my modesty) it is infantile. What an interesting book
+might be made of such "attacks" on women! But Watson<span class="pagenum">200</span>
+is the only one of us, so far as I remember, who has had the
+caddishness to <i>name</i> the victim.</p>
+
+<p>Have you seen Percival Pollard's "Their Day in Court"?
+It is amusing, clever&mdash;and more. He has a whole chapter
+on me, "a lot" about Gertrude Atherton, and much else
+that is interesting. And he skins alive certain popular gods
+and goddesses of the day, and is "monstrous naughty."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p>As to *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*'s own character I do not see what that has
+to do with his criticism of London. If only the impeccable
+delivered judgment no judgment would ever be delivered.
+All men could do as they please, without reproof or dissent.
+I wish you would take your heart out of your head, old
+man. The best heart makes a bad head if housed there.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p>The friends that warned you against the precarious nature
+of my friendship were right. To hold my regard one
+must fulfil hard conditions&mdash;hard if one is not what one
+should be; easy if one is. I have, indeed, a habit of calmly
+considering the character of a man with whom I have fallen
+into any intimacy and, whether I have any grievance
+against him or not, informing him by letter that I no
+longer desire his acquaintance. This, I do after deciding
+that he is not truthful, candid, without conceit, and so
+forth&mdash;in brief, honorable. If any one is conscious that he
+is not in all respects worthy of my friendship he would better
+not cultivate it, for assuredly no one can long conceal
+his true character from an observant student of it. Yes, my
+friendship is a precarious possession. It grows more so the
+longer I live, and the less I feel the need of a multitude of
+friends. So, if in your heart you are conscious of being any<span class="pagenum">201</span>
+of the things which you accuse <i>me</i> of being, or anything
+else equally objectionable (to <i>me</i>) I can only advise you to
+drop me before I drop you.</p>
+
+<p>Certainly you have an undoubted right to your opinion
+of my ability, my attainments and my standing. If you
+choose to publish a censorious judgment of these matters,
+do so by all means: I don't think I ever cared a cent for
+what was printed about me, except as it supplied me with
+welcome material for my pen. One may presumably have a
+"sense of duty to the public," and the like. But convincing
+one person (one at a time) of one's friend's deficiencies is
+hardly worth while, and is to be judged differently. It
+comes under another rule. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Maybe, as you say, my work lacks "soul," but my life
+does not, as a man's life is the man. Personally, I hold that
+sentiment has a place in this world, and that loyalty to a
+friend is not inferior as a characteristic to correctness of
+literary judgment. If there is a heaven I think it is more
+valued there. If Mr. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* (your publisher as well as mine)
+had considered you a Homer, a Goethe or a Shakspeare a
+team of horses could not have drawn from <i>me</i> the expression
+of a lower estimate. And let me tell you that if you are
+going through life as a mere thinking machine, ignoring the
+generous promptings of the heart, sacrificing it to the
+brain, you will have a hard row to hoe, and the outcome,
+when you survey it from the vantage ground of age, will
+not please you. You seem to me to be beginning rather
+badly, as regards both your fortune and your peace of
+mind.</p>
+
+<p class="center">*&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>I saw *&nbsp;*&nbsp;* every day while in New York, and he does not
+know that I feel the slightest resentment toward you, nor<span class="pagenum">202</span>
+do I know it myself. So far as he knows, or is likely to know
+(unless you will have it otherwise) you and I are the best of
+friends, or rather, I am the best of friends to you. And I
+guess that is so. I could no more hate you for your disposition
+and character than I could for your hump if you had
+one. You are as Nature has made you, and your defects,
+whether they are great or small, are your misfortunes. I
+would remove them if I could, but I know that I cannot,
+for one of them is inability to discern the others, even when
+they are pointed out.</p>
+
+<p>I must commend your candor in one thing. You confirm
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* words in saying that you commented on "my seeming
+lack of sympathy with certain modern masters," which
+you attribute to my not having read them. That is a conclusion
+to which a low order of mind in sympathy with the
+"modern masters" naturally jumps, but it is hardly
+worthy of a man of your brains. It is like your former lofty
+assumption that I had not read some ten or twelve philosophers,
+naming them, nearly all of whom I had read, and
+laughed at, before you were born. In fact, one of your most
+conspicuous characteristics is the assumption that what a
+man who does not care to "talk shop" does not speak of,
+and vaunt his knowledge of, he does not know. I once
+thought this a boyish fault, but you are no longer a boy.
+Your "modern masters" are Ibsen and Shaw, with both of
+whose works and ways I am thoroughly familiar, and both
+of whom I think very small men&mdash;pets of the drawing-room
+and gods of the hour. No, I am not an "up to date"
+critic, thank God. I am not a literary critic at all, and never,
+or very seldom, have gone into that field except in pursuance
+of a personal object&mdash;to help a good writer (who is
+commonly a friend)&mdash;maybe you can recall such instances&mdash;or<span class="pagenum">203</span>
+laugh at a fool. Surely you do not consider my work
+in the Cosmopolitan (mere badinage and chaff, the only
+kind of stuff that the magazine wants from me, or will
+print) essays in literary criticism. It has never occurred to
+me to look upon myself as a literary critic; if you <i>must</i>
+prick my bubble please to observe that it contains more of
+your breath than of mine. Yet you have sometimes seemed to
+value, I thought, some of my notions about even poetry. *&nbsp;*&nbsp;*</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps I am unfortunate in the matter of keeping
+friends; I know, and have abundant reason to know, that
+you are at least equally luckless in the matter of making
+them. I could put my finger on the very qualities in you
+that make you so, and the best service that I could do you
+would be to point them out and take the consequences.
+That is to say, it would serve you many years hence; at
+present you are like Carlyle's "Mankind"; you "refuse to
+be served." You only consent to be enraged.</p>
+
+<p>I bear you no ill will, shall watch your career in letters
+with friendly solicitude&mdash;have, in fact, just sent to the
+*&nbsp;*&nbsp;* a most appreciative paragraph about your book,
+which may or may not commend itself to the editor; most
+of what I write does not. I hope to do a little, now and then,
+to further your success in letters. I wish you were different
+(and that is the harshest criticism that I ever uttered of
+you except to yourself) and wish it for your sake more than
+for mine. I am older than you and probably more "acquainted
+with grief"&mdash;the grief of disappointment and
+disillusion. If in the future you are convinced that you have
+become different, and I am still living, my welcoming hand
+awaits you. And when I forgive I forgive all over, even the
+new offence.</p>
+
+<p>Miller undoubtedly is sincere in his praise of you, for with<span class="pagenum">204</span>
+all his faults and follies he is always generous and usually
+over generous to other poets. There's nothing little and
+mean in him. Sing ho for Joaquin!</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p>If I "made you famous" please remember that you were
+guilty of contributory negligence by meriting the fame.
+"Eternal vigilance" is the price of its permanence. Don't
+loaf on your job.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/newlettera.png" width="70" height="13" alt="end of letter" />
+</div>
+
+<p>I have told her of a certain "enchanted forest" hereabout
+to which I feel myself sometimes strongly drawn as a fitting
+place to lay down "my weary body and my head." (Perhaps
+you remember your Swinburne:</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<span class="o1">"Ah yet, would God this flesh of mine might be</span><br />
+Where air might wash and long leaves cover me!<br />
+Ah yet, would God that roots and stems were bred<br />
+Out of my weary body and my head.")</p>
+
+<p>The element of enchantment in that forest is supplied by
+my wandering and dreaming in it forty-one years ago when
+I was a-soldiering and there were new things under a new
+sun. It is miles away, but from a near-by summit I can
+overlook the entire region&mdash;ridge beyond ridge, parted by
+purple valleys full of sleep. Unlike me, it has not visibly
+altered in all these years, except that I miss, here and there,
+a thin blue ghost of smoke from an enemy's camp. Can you
+guess my feelings when I view this Dream-land&mdash;my
+Realm of Adventure, inhabited by memories that beckon
+me from every valley? I shall go; I shall retrace my old
+routes and lines of march; stand in my old camps; inspect
+my battlefields to see that all is right and undisturbed. I
+shall go to the Enchanted Forest.</p>
+
+<p class="center p6"><b>PRINTED BY</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>JOHN HENRY NASH AT SAN FRANCISCO</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>IN DECEMBER MDCCCCXXII</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>THE EDITION CONSISTS OF FOUR HUNDRED</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>AND FIFTEEN COPIES</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>FOUR HUNDRED ARE NUMBERED</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>AND FOR SALE</b></p>
+<p class="center"><b>No. 208</b></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
+
+</body>
+</html>
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+Project Gutenberg's The Letters of Ambrose Bierce, by Ambrose Bierce
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+ With a Memoir by George Sterling
+
+Author: Ambrose Bierce
+
+Editor: Bertha Clark Pope
+
+Release Date: May 25, 2011 [EBook #36218]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE LETTERS OF AMBROSE BIERCE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Clarke, Melissa McDaniel and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This
+file was produced from images generously made available
+by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber's Note:
+
+ The two introductory sections, "The Introduction," and
+ "A Memoir of Ambrose Bierce," were originally printed
+ in italics with non-italicized text used for emphasis.
+ This convention has been reversed for ease of reading the
+ e-text.
+
+ Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+ Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original
+ document have been preserved.
+
+
+
+
+ The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+
+ The
+ Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+
+ EDITED BY
+ BERTHA CLARK POPE
+
+ WITH A MEMOIR BY
+ GEORGE STERLING
+
+ [Illustration]
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO
+ THE BOOK CLUB OF CALIFORNIA
+ 1922
+
+
+In reproducing these letters we have followed as nearly as possible
+the original manuscripts. This inevitably has caused a certain lack of
+uniformity throughout the volume, as in the case of the names of
+magazines and newspapers, which are sometimes italicized and sometimes
+in quotation marks.--THE EDITOR.
+
+ COPYRIGHT, 1922, BY THE CALIFORNIA BOOK CLUB
+
+
+
+
+ The Introduction
+
+ by BERTHA CLARK POPE
+
+
+"The question that starts to the lips of ninety-nine readers out of a
+hundred," says Arnold Bennett, in a review in the London _NEW AGE_ in
+1909, "even the best informed, will assuredly be: 'Who is Ambrose
+Bierce?' I scarcely know, but I will say that among what I may term
+'underground reputations' that of Ambrose Bierce is perhaps the most
+striking example. You may wander for years through literary circles
+and never meet anybody who has heard of Ambrose Bierce, and then you
+may hear some erudite student whisper in an awed voice: 'Ambrose
+Bierce is the greatest living prose writer.' I have heard such an
+opinion expressed."
+
+Bierce himself shows his recognition of the "underground" quality of
+his reputation in a letter to George Sterling: "How many times, and
+during a period of how many years must one's unexplainable obscurity
+be pointed out to constitute fame? Not knowing, I am almost disposed
+to consider myself the most famous of authors. I have pretty nearly
+ceased to be 'discovered,' but my notoriety as an obscurian may be
+said to be worldwide and everlasting."
+
+Anything which would throw light on such a figure, at once obscure
+and famous, is valuable. These letters of Ambrose Bierce, here printed
+for the first time, are therefore of unusual interest. They are the
+informal literary work--the term is used advisedly--of a man esteemed
+great by a small but acutely critical group, read enthusiastically by
+a somewhat larger number to whom critical examination of what they
+read seldom occurs, and ignored by the vast majority of readers; a man
+at once more hated and more adored than any on the Pacific Coast; a
+man not ten years off the scene yet already become a tradition and a
+legend; whose life, no less than his death, held elements of mystery,
+baffling contradictions, problems for puzzled conjecture, motives and
+meanings not vouchsafed to outsiders.
+
+Were Ambrose Bierce as well known as he deserves to be, the
+introduction to these letters could be slight; we should not have to
+stop to inquire who he was and what he did. As it is, we must.
+
+Ambrose Bierce, the son of Marcus Aurelius and Laura (Sherwood)
+Bierce, born in Meiggs County, Ohio, June 24, 1842, was at the
+outbreak of the Civil War a youth without formal education, but with a
+mind already trained. "My father was a poor farmer," he once said to a
+friend, "and could give me no general education, but he had a good
+library, and to his books I owe all that I have." He promptly
+volunteered in 1861 and served throughout the war. Twice, at the risk
+of his life, he rescued wounded companions from the battlefield, and
+at Kenesaw Mountain was himself severely wounded in the head. He was
+brevetted Major for distinguished services; but in after life never
+permitted the title to be used in addressing him. There is a story
+that when the war was over he tossed up a coin to determine what
+should be his career. Whatever the determining auguries, he came at
+once to San Francisco to join his favorite brother Albert--there were
+ten brothers and sisters to choose from--and for a short time worked
+with him in the Mint; he soon began writing paragraphs for the
+weeklies, particularly the _ARGONAUT_ and the _NEWS LETTER_.
+
+"I was a slovenly writer in those days," he observes in a letter forty
+years later, "though enough better than my neighbors to have attracted
+my own attention. My knowledge of English was imperfect 'a whole lot.'
+Indeed, my intellectual status (whatever it may be, and God knows it's
+enough to make me blush) was of slow growth--as was my moral. I mean,
+I had not literary sincerity." Apparently, attention other than his
+own was attracted, for he was presently editing the _NEWS LETTER_.
+
+In 1872 he went to London and for four years was on the staff of
+_FUN_. In London Bierce found congenial and stimulating associates.
+The great man of his circle was George Augustus Sala, "one of the most
+skilful, finished journalists ever known," a keen satiric wit, and the
+author of a ballad of which it is said that Swift might have been
+proud. Another notable figure was Tom Hood the younger, mordantly
+humorous. The satiric style in journalism was popular then; and
+"personal" journals were so personal that one "Jimmy" Davis, editor of
+the _CUCKOO_ and the _BAT_ successively, found it healthful to remain
+some years in exile in France. Bierce contributed to several of these
+and to _FIGARO_, the editor of which was James Mortimer. To this
+gentleman Bierce owed what he designated as the distinction of being
+"probably the only American journalist who was ever employed by an
+Empress in so congenial a pursuit as the pursuit of another
+journalist." This other journalist was M. Henri Rochefort, communard,
+formerly editor of _LA LANTERNE_ in Paris, in which he had made
+incessant war upon the Empire and all its personnel, particularly the
+Empress. When, an exile, Rochefort announced his intention of renewing
+_LA LANTERNE_ in London, the exiled Empress circumvented him by
+secretly copyrighting the title, _THE LANTERN_, and proceeding to
+publish a periodical under that name with the purpose of undermining
+his influence. Two numbers were enough; M. Rochefort fled to Belgium.
+Bierce said that in "the field of chromatic journalism" it was the
+finest thing that ever came from a press, but of the literary
+excellence of the twelve pages he felt less qualified for judgment as
+he had written every line.
+
+This was in 1874. Two years earlier, under his journalistic pseudonym
+of "Dod Grile," he had published his first books--two small volumes,
+largely made up of his articles in the San Francisco _NEWS LETTER_,
+called _The Fiend's Delight_, and _Nuggets And Dust Panned Out In
+California_. Now, he used the same pseudonym on the title-page of a
+third volume, _Cobwebs from an Empty Skull_. The _Cobwebs_ were
+selections from his work in _FUN_--satirical tales and fables, often
+inspired by weird old woodcuts given him by the editors with the
+request that he write something to fit. His journalistic associates
+praised these volumes liberally, and a more distinguished admirer was
+Gladstone, who, discovering the _Cobwebs_ in a second-hand bookshop,
+voiced his delight in their cleverness, and by his praise gave a
+certain currency to Bierce's name among the London elect. But despite
+so distinguished a sponsor, the books remained generally unknown.
+
+Congenial tasks and association with the brilliant journalists of the
+day did not prevent Bierce from being undeniably hard up at times. In
+1876 he returned to San Francisco, where he remained for twenty-one
+years, save for a brief but eventful career as general manager of a
+mining company near Deadwood, South Dakota. All this time he got his
+living by writing special articles--for the _WASP_, a weekly whose
+general temper may be accurately surmised from its name, and,
+beginning in 1886, for the _EXAMINER_, in which he conducted every
+Sunday on the editorial page a department to which he gave the title
+he had used for a similar column in _THE LANTERN_--_Prattle_. A partial
+explanation of a mode of feeling and a choice of themes which Bierce
+developed more and more, ultimately to the practical exclusion of all
+others, is to be found in the particular phase through which
+California journalism was just then passing.
+
+In the evolution of the comic spirit the lowest stage, that of delight
+in inflicting pain on others, is clearly manifest in savages, small
+boys, and early American journalism. It was exhibited in all parts of
+America--Mark Twain gives a vivid example in his _Journalistic Wild
+Oats_ of what it was in Tennessee--but with particular intensity in
+San Francisco. As a community, San Francisco exalted personal courage,
+directness of encounter, straight and effective shooting. The social
+group was so small and so homogeneous that any news of importance
+would be well known before it could be reported, set up in type,
+printed, and circulated. It was isolated by so great distances from
+the rest of the world that for years no pretense was made of
+furnishing adequate news from the outside. So the newspapers came to
+rely on other sorts of interest. They were pamphlets for the
+dissemination of the opinions of the groups controlling them, and
+weapons for doing battle, if need be, for those opinions. And there
+was abundant occasion: municipal affairs were corrupt, courts weak or
+venal, or both. Editors and readers enjoyed a good fight; they also
+wanted humorous entertainment; they happily combined the two. In the
+creative dawn of 1847 when the foundations of the journalistic earth
+were laid and those two morning stars, the _CALIFORNIAN_ of Monterey
+and the _CALIFORNIA STAR_ of San Francisco, sang together, we find the
+editors attacking the community generally, and each other
+particularly, with the utmost ferocity, laying about them right and
+left with verbal broad-axes, crow-bars, and such other weapons as
+might be immediately at hand. The _CALIFORNIA STAR'S_ introduction to
+the public of what would, in our less direct day, be known as its
+"esteemed contemporary" is typical:
+
+ "We have received two late numbers of the _CALIFORNIAN_, a dim,
+ dirty little paper printed in Monterey on the worn-out materials
+ of one of the old California _WAR PRESSES_. It is published and
+ edited by Walter Colton and Robert Semple, the one a _WHINING
+ SYCOPHANT_, and the other an _OVER-GROWN LICK-SPITTLE_. At the
+ top of one of the papers we find the words 'please exchange.'
+ This would be considered in almost any other country a bare-faced
+ attempt to swindle us. We should consider it so now were it not
+ for the peculiar situation of our country which induces us to do
+ a great deal for others in order for them to do us a little
+ good.... We have concluded to give our paper to them this year,
+ so as to afford them some insight into the manner in which a
+ Republican newspaper should be conducted. They appear now to be
+ awfully verdant."
+
+Down through the seventies and eighties the tradition persisted,
+newspapers being bought and read, as a historian of journalism
+asserts, not so much for news as to see who was getting "lambasted"
+that day. It is not strange, then, that journals of redoubtable
+pugnacity were popular, or that editors favored writers who were
+likely to excel in the gladiatorial style. It is significant that
+public praise first came to Bierce through his articles in the caustic
+_NEWS LETTER_, widely read on the Pacific Coast during the seventies.
+Once launched in this line, he became locally famous for his fierce
+and witty articles in the _ARGONAUNT_ and the _WASP_, and for many
+years his column _Prattle_ in the _EXAMINER_ was, in the words of Mr.
+Bailey Millard, "the most wickedly clever, the most audaciously
+personal, and the most eagerly devoured column of _causerie_ that ever
+was printed in this country."
+
+In 1896 Bierce was sent to Washington to fight, through the Hearst
+newspapers, the "refunding bill" which Collis P. Huntington was trying
+to get passed, releasing his Central Pacific Railroad from its
+obligations to the government. A year later he went again to
+Washington, where he remained during the rest of his journalistic
+career, as correspondent for the New York _AMERICAN_, conducting also
+for some years a department in the _COSMOPOLITAN_.
+
+Much of Bierce's best work was done in those years in San Francisco.
+Through the columns of the _WASP_ and the _EXAMINER_ his wit played
+free; he wielded an extraordinary influence; his trenchant criticism
+made and unmade reputations--literary and otherwise. But this to
+Bierce was mostly "journalism, a thing so low that it cannot be
+mentioned in the same breath with literature." His real interest lay
+elsewhere. Throughout the early eighties he devoted himself to writing
+stories; all were rejected by the magazine editors to whom he offered
+them. When finally in 1890 he gathered these stories together into
+book form and offered them to the leading publishers of the country,
+they too, would have none of them. "These men," writes Mr. Bailey
+Millard, "admitted the purity of his diction and the magic of his
+haunting power, but the stories were regarded as revolting."
+
+At last, in 1891, his first book of stories, _Tales of Soldiers and
+Civilians_, saw the reluctant light of day. It had this for foreword:
+
+ "Denied existence by the chief publishing houses of the country,
+ this book owes itself to Mr. E. L. G. Steele, merchant, of this
+ city, [San Francisco]. In attesting Mr. Steele's faith in his
+ judgment and his friend, it will serve its author's main and best
+ ambition."
+
+There is Biercean pugnacity in these words; the author flings down the
+gauntlet with a confident gesture. But it cannot be said that anything
+much happened to discomfit the publishing houses of little faith.
+Apparently, Bierce had thought to appeal past the dull and unjust
+verdict of such lower courts to the higher tribunal of the critics and
+possibly an elect group of general readers who might be expected to
+recognize and welcome something rare. But judgment was scarcely
+reversed. Only a few critics were discerning, and the book had no
+vogue. When _The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter_ was published by F.
+J. Schulte and Company, Chicago, the next year, and _Can Such Things
+Be_ by The Cassell Publishing Company, the year following, a few
+enthusiastic critics could find no words strong enough to describe
+Bierce's vivid imagination, his uncanny divination of atavistic
+terrors in man's consciousness, his chiseled perfection of style; but
+the critics who disapproved had even more trouble in finding words
+strong enough for their purposes and, as before, there was no general
+appreciation.
+
+For the next twenty years Ambrose Bierce was a prolific writer but,
+whatever the reason, no further volumes of stories from his pen were
+presented to the world. _Black Beetles in Amber_, a collection of
+satiric verse, had appeared the same year as _The Monk and the
+Hangman's Daughter_; then for seven years, with the exception of a
+republication by G. P. Putnam's Sons of _Tales of Soldiers and
+Civilians_ under the title, _In the Midst of Life_, no books by
+Bierce. In 1899 appeared _Fantastic Fables_; in 1903 _Shapes of Clay_,
+more satiric verse; in 1906 _The Cynic's Word Book_, a dictionary of
+wicked epigrams; in 1909 _Write it Right_, a blacklist of literary
+faults, and _The Shadow on the Dial_, a collection of essays covering,
+to quote from the preface of S. O. Howes, "a wide range of subjects,
+embracing among other things, government, dreams, writers of dialect
+and dogs"--Mr. Howes might have heightened his crescendo by adding
+"emancipated woman"; and finally--1909 to 1912--_The Collected Works
+of Ambrose Bierce_, containing all his work previously published in
+book form, save the two last mentioned, and much more besides, all
+collected and edited by Bierce himself.
+
+On October 2, 1913, Ambrose Bierce, having settled his business
+affairs, left Washington for a trip through the southern states,
+declaring in letters his purpose of going into Mexico and later on to
+South America. The fullest account of his trip and his plans is
+afforded by a newspaper clipping he sent his niece in a letter dated
+November 6, 1913; through the commonplaceness of the reportorial
+vocabulary shines out the vivid personality that was making its final
+exit:
+
+ "Traveling over the same ground that he had covered with General
+ Hazen's brigade during the Civil War, Ambrose Bierce, famed
+ writer and noted critic, has arrived in New Orleans. Not that
+ this city was one of the places figuring in his campaigns, for he
+ was here after and not during the war. He has come to New Orleans
+ in a haphazard, fancy-free way, making a trip toward Mexico. The
+ places that he has visited on the way down have become famous in
+ song and story--places where the greatest battles were fought,
+ where the moon shone at night on the burial corps, and where in
+ day the sun shone bright on polished bayonets and the smoke
+ drifted upward from the cannon mouths.
+
+ "For Mr. Bierce was at Chickamauga; he was at Shiloh; at
+ Murfreesboro; Kenesaw Mountain, Franklin and Nashville. And then
+ when wounded during the Atlanta campaign he was invalided home.
+ He 'has never amounted to much since then,' he said Saturday. But
+ his stories of the great struggle, living as deathless
+ characterizations of the bloody episodes, stand for what he 'has
+ amounted to since then.'
+
+ "Perhaps it was in mourning for the dead over whose battlefields
+ he has been wending his way toward New Orleans that Mr. Bierce
+ was dressed in black. From head to foot he was attired in this
+ color, except where the white cuffs and collar and shirt front
+ showed through. He even carried a walking cane, black as ebony
+ and unrelieved by gold or silver. But his eyes, blue and piercing
+ as when they strove to see through the smoke at Chickamauga,
+ retained all the fire of the indomitable fighter.
+
+ "'I'm on my way to Mexico, because I like the game,' he said, 'I
+ like the fighting; I want to see it. And then I don't think
+ Americans are as oppressed there as they say they are, and I want
+ to get at the true facts of the case. Of course, I'm not going
+ into the country if I find it unsafe for Americans to be there,
+ but I want to take a trip diagonally across from northeast to
+ southwest by horseback, and then take ship for South America, go
+ over the Andes and across that continent, if possible, and come
+ back to America again.
+
+ "'There is no family that I have to take care of; I've retired
+ from writing and I'm going to take a rest. No, my trip isn't for
+ local color. I've retired just the same as a merchant or business
+ man retires. I'm leaving the field for the younger authors.'
+
+ "An inquisitive question was interjected as to whether Mr. Bierce
+ had acquired a competency only from his writings, but he did not
+ take offense.
+
+ "'My wants are few, and modest,' he said, 'and my royalties give
+ me quite enough to live on. There isn't much that I need, and I
+ spend my time in quiet travel. For the last five years I haven't
+ done any writing. Don't you think that after a man has worked as
+ long as I have that he deserves a rest? But perhaps after I have
+ rested I might work some more--I can't tell, there are so many
+ things--' and the straightforward blue eyes took on a faraway
+ look, 'there are so many things that might happen between now and
+ when I come back. My trip might take several years, and I'm an
+ old man now.'
+
+ "Except for the thick, snow-white hair no one would think him
+ old. His hands are steady, and he stands up straight and
+ tall--perhaps six feet."
+
+In December of that same year the last letter he is known to have
+written was received by his daughter. It is dated from Chihuahua, and
+mentions casually that he has attached himself unofficially to a
+division of Villa's army, and speaks of a prospective advance on
+Ojinaga. No further word has ever come from or of Ambrose Bierce.
+Whether illness overtook him, then an old man of seventy-one, and
+death suddenly, or whether, preferring to go foaming over a precipice
+rather than to straggle out in sandy deltas, he deliberately went
+where he knew death was, no one can say. His last letters, dauntless,
+grave, tender, do not say, though they suggest much. "You must try to
+forgive my obstinacy in not 'perishing' where I am," he wrote as he
+left Washington. "I want to be where something worth while is going
+on, or where nothing whatever is going on." "Good-bye--if you hear of
+my being stood up against a Mexican stone wall and shot to rags please
+know that I think that a pretty good way to depart this life. It beats
+old age, disease, or falling down the cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in
+Mexico--ah, that is euthanasia!" Whatever end Ambrose Bierce found in
+Mexico, the lines of George Sterling well express what must have been
+his attitude in meeting it:
+
+ "Dream you he was afraid to live?
+ Dream you he was afraid to die?
+ Or that, a suppliant of the sky,
+ He begged the gods to keep or give?
+ Not thus the shadow-maker stood,
+ Whose scrutiny dissolved so well
+ Our thin mirage of Heaven or Hell--
+ The doubtful evil, dubious good....
+
+ "If now his name be with the dead,
+ And where the gaunt agaves flow'r,
+ The vulture and the wolf devour
+ The lion-heart, the lion-head,
+ Be sure that heart and head were laid
+ In wisdom down, content to die;
+ Be sure he faced the Starless Sky
+ Unduped, unmurmuring, unafraid."
+
+In any consideration of the work of Ambrose Bierce, a central question
+must be why it contains so much that is trivial or ephemeral. Another
+question facing every critic of Bierce, is why the fundamentally
+original point of view, the clarity of workmanship of his best
+things--mainly stories--did not win him immediate and general
+recognition.
+
+A partial answer to both questions is to be found in a certain discord
+between Bierce and his setting. Bierce, paradoxically, combined the
+bizarre in substance, the severely restrained and compressed in form.
+An ironic mask covered a deep-seated sensibility; but sensibility and
+irony were alike subject to an uncompromising truthfulness; he would
+have given deep-throated acclaim to Clough's
+
+ "But play no tricks upon thy soul, O man,
+ Let truth be truth, and life the thing it can."
+
+He had the aristocrat's contempt for mass feeling, a selectiveness
+carried so far that he instinctively chose for themes the picked
+person and experience, the one decisive moment of crisis. He viewed
+his characters not in relation to other men and in normal activities;
+he isolated them--often amid abnormalities.
+
+All this was in sharp contrast to the literary fashion obtaining when
+he dipped his pen to try his luck as a creative artist. The most
+popular novelist of the day was Dickens; the most popular poet,
+Tennyson. Neither looked straight at life; both veiled it: one in
+benevolence, the other in beauty. Direct and painful verities were
+best tolerated by the reading public when exhibited as instances of
+the workings of natural law. The spectator of the macrocosm in action
+could stomach the wanton destruction of a given human atom; one so
+privileged could and did excuse the Creator for small mistakes like
+harrying Hetty Sorrell to the gallow's foot, because of the conviction
+that, taking the Universe by and large, "He was a good fellow, and
+'twould all be well." This benevolent optimism was the offspring of a
+strange pair, evangelicism and evolution; and in the minds of the
+great public whom Bierce, under other circumstances and with a
+slightly different mixture of qualities in himself, might have
+conquered, it became a large, soft insincerity that demanded "happy
+endings," a profuse broadness of treatment prohibitive of harsh
+simplicity, a swathing of elemental emotion in gentility or moral
+edification.
+
+But to Bierce's mind, "noble and nude and antique," this mid-Victorian
+draping and bedecking of "unpleasant truths" was abhorrent. Absolutely
+direct and unafraid--not only in his personal relations but, what is
+more rare, in his thinking--he regarded easy optimism, sure that God
+is in his heaven with consequently good effects upon the world, as
+blindness, and the hopefulness that demanded always the "happy
+ending," as silly. In many significant passages Bierce's attitude is
+the ironic one of Voltaire: "'Had not Pangloss got himself hanged,'
+replied Candide, 'he would have given us most excellent advice in this
+emergency; for he was a profound philosopher.'" Bierce did not fear to
+bring in disconcerting evidence that _a priori_ reasoning may prove a
+not infallible guide, that causes do not always produce the effects
+complacently pre-argued, and that the notion of this as the best of
+all possible worlds is sometimes beside the point.
+
+The themes permitted by such an attitude were certain to displease
+the readers of that period. In _Tales of Soldiers and Civilians_, his
+first book of stories, he looks squarely and grimly at one much
+bedecked subject of the time--war; not the fine gay gallantry of war,
+the music and the marching and the romantic episodes; but the ghastly
+horror of it; through his vivid, dramatic passages beats a hatred of
+war, not merely "unrighteous" war, but all war, the more disquieting
+because never allowed to become articulate. With bitter but beautiful
+truth he brings each tale to its tragic close, always with one last
+turn of the screw, one unexpected horror more. And in this book--note
+the solemn implication of the title he later gave it, _In the Midst of
+Life_--as well as in the next, _Can Such Things Be_, is still another
+subject which Bierce alone in his generation seemed unafraid to
+consider curiously: "Death, in warfare and in the horrid guise of the
+supernatural, was painted over and over. Man's terror in the face of
+death gave the artist his cue for his wonderful physical and
+psychologic microscopics. You could not pin this work down as realism,
+or as romance; it was the greatest human drama--the conflict between
+life and death--fused through genius. Not Zola, in the endless pages
+of his _Debacle_, not the great Tolstoi in his great _War and Peace_
+had ever painted war, horrid war, more faithfully than any of the
+stories of this book; not Maupassant had invented out of war's
+terrible truths more dramatically imagined plots.... There painted an
+artist who had seen the thing itself, and being a genius, had made it
+an art still greater.
+
+Death of the young, the beautiful, the brave, was the closing note of
+every line of the ten stories of war in this book. The brilliant,
+spectacular death that came to such senseless bravery as Tennyson
+hymned for the music-hall intelligence in his _Charge of the Light
+Brigade_; the vision-starting, slow, soul-drugging death by hanging;
+the multiplied, comprehensible death that makes rivers near
+battlefields run red; the death that comes by sheer terror; death
+actual and imagined--every sort of death was on these pages, so
+painted as to make Pierre Loti's _Book of Pity and Death_ seem but
+feeble fumbling."
+
+Now death by the mid-Victorian was considered almost as undesirable an
+element in society as sex itself. Both must be passed over in silence
+or presented decently draped. In the eighties any writer who dealt
+unabashed with death was regarded as an unpleasant person.
+"Revolting!" cried the critics when they read Bierce's _Chickamauga_
+and _The Affair at Coulter's Notch_.
+
+Bierce's style, too, by its very fineness, alienated his public.
+Superior, keen, perfect in detail, finite, compressed--such was his
+manner in the free and easy, prolix, rambling, multitudinous
+nineteenth century.
+
+Bierce himself knew that although it is always the fashion to jeer at
+fashion, its rule is absolute for all that, whether it be fashion in
+boots or books.
+
+"A correspondent of mine," he wrote in 1887 in his _EXAMINER_ column,
+"a well-known and clever writer, appears surprised because I do not
+like the work of Robert Louis Stevenson. I am equally hurt to know
+that he does. If he was ever a boy he knows that the year is
+divided, not into seasons and months, as is vulgarly supposed, but
+into 'top time,' 'marble time,' 'kite time,' et cetera, and woe to the
+boy who ignores the unwritten calendar, amusing himself according to
+the dictates of an irresponsible conscience. I venture to remind my
+correspondent that a somewhat similar system obtains in matters of
+literature--a word which I beg him to observe means fiction. There
+are, for illustration--or rather, there were--James time, Howells
+time, Crawford time, Russell time and Conway time, each epoch--named
+for the immortal novelist of the time being--lasting, generally
+speaking, as much as a year.... All the more rigorous is the law of
+observance. It is not permitted to admire Jones in Smith time. I must
+point out to my heedless correspondent that this is not Stevenson
+time--that was last year." It was decidedly not Bierce time when
+Bierce's stories appeared.
+
+And there was in him no compromise--or so he thought. "A great
+artist," he wrote to George Sterling, "is superior to his world and
+his time, or at least to his parish and his day." His practical
+application of that belief is shown in a letter to a magazine editor
+who had just rejected a satire he had submitted:
+
+"Even _you_ ask for literature--if my stories are literature, as you
+are good enough to imply. (By the way, all the leading publishers of
+the country turned down that book until they saw it published without
+them by a merchant in San Francisco and another sort of publishers in
+London, Leipsig and Paris.) Well, you wouldn't do a thing to one of my
+stories!
+
+"No, thank you; if I have to write rot, I prefer to do it for the
+newspapers, which make no false pretenses and are frankly rotten, and
+in which the badness of a bad thing escapes detection or is forgotten
+as soon as it is cold.
+
+"I know how to write a story (of 'happy ending' sort) for magazine
+readers for whom literature is too good, but I will not do so, so long
+as stealing is more honorable and interesting. I have offered you ...
+the best that I am able to make; and now you must excuse me." In these
+two utterances we have some clue to the secret of his having ceased,
+in 1893, to publish stories. Vigorously refusing to yield in the
+slightest degree to the public so far as his stories were concerned,
+he abandoned his best field of creative effort and became almost
+exclusively a "columnist" and a satirist; he put his world to rout,
+and left his "parish and his day" resplendently the victors.
+
+All this must not be taken to mean that the "form and pressure of the
+time" put into Bierce what was not there. Even in his creative work he
+had a satiric bent; his early training and associations, too, had been
+in journalistic satire. Under any circumstances he undoubtedly would
+have written satire--columns of it for his daily bread, books of it
+for self-expression; but under more favorable circumstances he would
+have kept on writing other sort of books as well. Lovers of literature
+may well lament that Bierce's insistence on going his way and the
+demands of his "parish" forced him to overdevelop one power to the
+almost complete paralysis of another and a perhaps finer.
+
+As a satirist Bierce was the best America has produced, perhaps the
+best since Voltaire. But when he confined himself to "exploring the
+ways of hate as a form of creative energy," it was with a hurt in his
+soul, and with some intellectual and spiritual confusion. There
+resulted a kink in his nature, a contradiction that appears
+repeatedly, not only in his life, but in his writings. A striking
+instance is found in his article _To Train a Writer_:
+
+ "He should, for example, forget that he is an American and
+ remember that he is a man. He should be neither Christian nor
+ Jew, nor Buddhist, nor Mahometan, nor Snake Worshiper. To local
+ standards of right and wrong he should be civilly indifferent. In
+ the virtues, so-called, he should discern only the rough notes of
+ a general expediency; in fixed moral principles only time-saving
+ predecisions of cases not yet before the court of conscience.
+ Happiness should disclose itself to his enlarging intelligence as
+ the end and purpose of life; art and love as the only means to
+ happiness. He should free himself of all doctrines, theories,
+ etiquettes, politics, simplifying his life and mind, attaining
+ clarity with breadth and unity with height. To him a continent
+ should not seem wide nor a century long. And it would be needful
+ that he know and have an ever-present consciousness that this is
+ a world of fools and rogues, blind with superstition, tormented
+ with envy, consumed with vanity, selfish, false, cruel, cursed
+ with illusions--frothing mad!"
+
+Up to that last sentence Ambrose Bierce beholds this world as one
+where tolerance, breadth of view, simplicity of life and mind, clear
+thinking, are at most attainable, at least worthy of the effort to
+attain; he regards life as purposive, as having happiness for its end,
+and art and love as the means to that good end. But suddenly the
+string from which he has been evoking these broad harmonies snaps with
+a snarl. All is evil and hopeless--"frothing mad." Both views cannot
+be held simultaneously by the same mind. Which was the real belief of
+Ambrose Bierce? The former, it seems clear. But he has been hired to
+be a satirist.
+
+On the original fabric of Bierce's mind the satiric strand has
+encroached more than the design allows. There results not only
+considerable obliteration of the main design, but confusion in the
+substituted one. For it is significant that much of the work of Bierce
+seems to be that of what he would have called a futilitarian, that he
+seldom seems able to find a suitable field for his satire, a foeman
+worthy of such perfect steel as he brings to the encounter; he fights
+on all fields, on both sides, against all comers; ubiquitous,
+indiscriminate, he is as one who screams in pain at his own futility,
+one who "might be heard," as he says of our civilization, "from afar
+in space as a scolding and a riot." That Bierce would have spent so
+much of his superb power on the trivial and the ephemeral, breaking
+magnificent vials of wrath on Oakland nobodies, preserving
+insignificant black beetles in the amber of his art, is not merely, as
+it has long been, cause of amazement to the critics; it is cause of
+laughter to the gods, and of weeping among Bierce's true admirers.
+
+Some may argue that Bierce's failure to attain international or even
+national fame cannot be ascribed solely to a lack of concord between
+the man and his time and to the consequent reaction in him. It is true
+that in Bierce's work is a sort of paucity--not a mere lack of
+printed pages, but of the fulness of creative activity that makes
+Byron, for example, though vulgar and casual, a literary mountain
+peak. Bierce has but few themes, few moods; his literary river runs
+clear and sparkling, but confined--a narrow current, not the opulent
+stream that waters wide plains of thought and feeling. Nor has Bierce
+the power to weave individual entities and situations into a broad
+pattern of existence, which is the distinguishing mark of such writers
+as Thackeray, Balzac, and Tolstoi among the great dead, and Bennett
+and Wells among the lesser living. Bierce's interest does not lie in
+the group experience nor even in the experience of the individual
+through a long period. His unit of time is the minute, not the month.
+It is significant that he never wrote a novel--unless _The Monk and
+the Hangman's Daughter_ be reckoned one--and that he held remarkable
+views of the novel as a literary form, witness this passage from
+_Prattle_, written in 1887:
+
+ "English novelists are not great because the English novel is
+ dead--deader than Queen Anne at her deadest. The vein is worked
+ out. It was a thin one and did not 'go down.' A single century
+ from the time when Richardson sank the discovery shaft it had
+ already begun to 'pinch out.' The miners of today have abandoned
+ it altogether to search for 'pockets,' and some of the best of
+ them are merely 'chloriding the dumps.' To expect another good
+ novel in English is to expect the gold to 'grow' again."
+
+It may well be that at the bottom of this sweeping condemnation was an
+instinctive recognition of his own lack of constructive power on a
+large scale.
+
+But an artist, like a nation, should be judged not by what he cannot
+do, but by what he can. That Bierce could not paint the large canvas
+does not make him negligible or even inconsiderable. He is by no means
+a second-rate writer; he is a first-rate writer who could not
+consistently show his first-rateness.
+
+When he did show his first-rateness, what is it? In all his best work
+there is originality, a rare and precious idiosyncracy; his point of
+view, his themes are rich with it. Above all writers Bierce can
+present--brilliantly present--startling fragments of life, carved out
+from attendant circumstance; isolated problems of character and
+action; sharply bitten etchings of individual men under momentary
+stresses and in bizarre situations. Through his prodigious emotional
+perceptivity he has the power of feeling and making us feel some
+strange, perverse accident of fate, destructive of the individual--of
+making us feel it to be real and terrible. This is not an easy thing
+to do. De Maupassant said that men were killed every year in Paris by
+the falling of tiles from the roof, but if he got rid of a principal
+character in that way, he should be hooted at. Bierce can make us
+accept as valid and tragic events more odd than the one de Maupassant
+had to reject. "In the line of the startling,--half Poe, half
+Merimee--he cannot have many superiors," says Arnold Bennett.... "A
+story like _An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge_--well, Edgar Allan Poe
+might have deigned to sign it. And that is something.
+
+"He possesses a remarkable style--what Kipling's would have been had
+Kipling been born with any significance of the word 'art'--and a quite
+strangely remarkable perception of beauty. There is a feeling for
+landscape in _A Horseman in the Sky_ which recalls the exquisite
+opening of that indifferent novel, _Les Freres Zemganno_ by Edmond de
+Goncourt, and which no English novelist except Thomas Hardy, and
+possibly Charles Marriott, could match." The feeling for landscape
+which Bennett notes is but one part of a greater power--the power to
+make concrete and visible, action, person, place. Bierce's
+descriptions of Civil War battles in his _Bits of Autobiography_ are
+the best descriptions of battle ever written. He lays out the field
+with map-like clearness, marshals men and events with precision and
+economy, but his account never becomes exposition--it is drama. Real
+battles move swiftly; accounts make them seem labored and slow. What
+narrator save Bierce can convey the sense of their being lightly
+swift, and, again and again the shock of surprise the event itself
+must have given?
+
+This could not be were it not for his verbal restraint. In his
+descriptions is no welter of adjectives and adverbs; strong exact
+nouns and verbs do the work, and this means that the veritable object
+and action are brought forward, not qualifying talk around and about
+them. And this, again, could not be were it not for what is, beyond
+all others, his greatest quality--absolute precision. "I sometimes
+think," he once wrote playfully about letters of his having been
+misunderstood, "I sometimes think that I am the only man in the world
+who understands the meaning of the written word. Or the only one who
+does not." A reader of Ambrose Bierce comes almost to believe that not
+till now has he found a writer who understands--completely--the
+meaning of the written word. He has the power to bring out new
+meanings in well-worn words, so setting them as to evoke brilliant
+significances never before revealed. He gives to one phrase the
+beauty, the compressed suggestion of a poem; his titles--_Black
+Beetles in Amber_, _Ashes of the Beacon_, _Cobwebs from an Empty
+Skull_ are masterpieces in miniature. That he should have a gift of
+coining striking words naturally follows: in his later years he has
+fallen into his "anecdotage," a certain Socialist is the greatest
+"futilitarian" of them all, "femininies"--and so on infinitely. Often
+the smaller the Biercean gem, the more exquisite the workmanship. One
+word has all the sparkle of an epigram.
+
+In such skill Ambrose Bierce is not surpassed by any writer, ancient
+or modern; it gives him rank among the few masters who afford that
+highest form of intellectual delight, the immediate recognition of a
+clear idea perfectly set forth in fitting words--wit's twin brother,
+evoking that rare joy, the sudden, secret laughter of the mind. So
+much for Bierce the artist; the man is found in these letters. If
+further clue to the real nature of Ambrose Bierce were needed it is to
+be found in a conversation he had in his later years with a young
+girl: "You must be very proud, Mr. Bierce, of all your books and your
+fame?" "No," he answered rather sadly, "you will come to know that all
+that is worth while in life is the love you have had for a few people
+near to you."
+
+
+
+
+ A Memoir of Ambrose Bierce
+
+ by GEORGE STERLING
+
+
+Though from boyhood a lover of tales of the terrible, it was not until
+my twenty-second year that I heard of Ambrose Bierce, I having then
+been for ten months a resident of Oakland, California. But in the fall
+of the year 1891 my friend Roosevelt Johnson, newly arrived from our
+town of birth, Sag Harbor, New York, asked me if I were acquainted
+with his work, adding that he had been told that Bierce was the author
+of stories not inferior in awesomeness to the most terrible of Poe's.
+
+We made inquiry and found that Bierce had for several years been
+writing columns of critical comment, satirically named _Prattle_, for
+the editorial page of the Sunday _EXAMINER_, of San Francisco. As my
+uncle, of whose household I had been for nearly a year a member, did
+not subscribe to that journal, I had unfortunately overlooked these
+weekly contributions to the wit and sanity of our western
+literature--an omission for which we partially consoled ourselves by
+subsequently reading with great eagerness each installment of
+_Prattle_ as it appeared. But, so far as his short stories were
+concerned, we had to content ourselves with the assurance of a
+neighbor that "they'd scare an owl off a tombstone."
+
+However, later in the autumn, while making a pilgrimage to the home of
+our greatly worshipped Joaquin Miller, we became acquainted with
+Albert, an elder brother of Bierce's, a man who was to be one of my
+dearest of friends to the day of his death, in March, 1914. From him
+we obtained much to gratify our not unnatural curiosity as to this
+mysterious being, who, from his isolation on a lonely mountain above
+the Napa Valley, scattered weekly thunderbolts on the fool, the
+pretender, and the knave, and cast ridicule or censure on many that
+sat in the seats of the mighty. For none, however socially or
+financially powerful, was safe from the stab of that aculeate pen, the
+venom of whose ink is to gleam vividly from the pages of literature
+for centuries yet to come.
+
+For Bierce is of the immortals. That fact, known, I think, to him, and
+seeming then more and more evident to some of his admirers, has become
+plainly apparent to anyone who can appraise the matter with eyes that
+see beyond the flimsy artifices that bulk so large and so briefly in
+the literary arena. Bierce was a sculptor who wrought in hardest
+crystal.
+
+I was not to be so fortunate as to become acquainted with him until
+after the publication of his first volume of short stories, entitled
+_Tales of Soldiers and Civilians_. That mild title gives scant
+indication of the terrors that await the unwarned reader. I recall
+that I hung fascinated over the book, unable to lay it down until the
+last of its printed dooms had become an imperishable portion of the
+memory. The tales are told with a calmness and reserve that make most
+of Poe's seem somewhat boyish and melodramatic by comparison. The
+greatest of them seems to me to be _An Occurrence at Owl Creek
+Bridge_, though I am perennially charmed by the weird beauty of _An
+Inhabitant of Carcosa_, a tale of unique and unforgettable quality.
+
+Bierce, born in Ohio in 1842, came to San Francisco soon after the
+close of the Civil War. It is amusing to learn that he was one of a
+family of eleven children, male and female, the Christian name of each
+of whom began with the letter "A!" Obtaining employment at first in
+the United States Mint, whither Albert, always his favorite brother,
+had preceded him, he soon gravitated to journalism, doing his first
+work on the San Francisco _NEWS LETTER_. His brother once told me that
+he (Ambrose) had from boyhood been eager to become a writer and was
+expectant of success at that pursuit.
+
+Isolated from most men by the exalted and austere habit of his
+thought, Bierce finally suffered a corresponding exile of the body,
+and was forced to live in high altitudes, which of necessity are
+lonely. This latter banishment was on account of chronic and utterly
+incurable asthma, an ailment contracted in what might almost be termed
+a characteristic manner. Bierce had no fear of the dead folk and their
+marble city. From occasional strollings by night in Laurel Hill
+Cemetery, in San Francisco, his spirit "drank repose," and was able to
+attain a serenity in which the cares of daytime existence faded to
+nothingness. It was on one of those strolls that he elected to lie for
+awhile in the moonlight on a flat tombstone, and awakening late in the
+night, found himself thoroughly chilled, and a subsequent victim of
+the disease that was to cast so dark a shadow over his following
+years. For his sufferings from asthma were terrible, arising often to
+a height that required that he be put under the influence of
+chloroform.
+
+So afflicted, he found visits to the lowlands a thing not to be
+indulged in with impunity. For many years such trips terminated
+invariably in a severe attack of his ailment, and he was driven back
+to his heights shaken and harassed. But he found such visits both
+necessary and pleasant on occasion, and it was during one that he made
+in the summer of 1892 that I first made his acquaintance, while he was
+temporarily a guest at his brother Albert's camp on a rocky,
+laurel-covered knoll on the eastern shore of Lake Temescal, a spot now
+crossed by the tracks of the Oakland, Antioch and Eastern Railway.
+
+I am not likely to forget his first night among us. A tent being, for
+his ailment, insufficiently ventilated, he decided to sleep by the
+campfire, and I, carried away by my youthful hero-worship, must
+partially gratify it by occupying the side of the fire opposite to
+him. I had a comfortable cot in my tent, and was unaccustomed at the
+time to sleeping on the ground, the consequence being that I awoke at
+least every half-hour. But awake as often as I might, always I found
+Bierce lying on his back in the dim light of the embers, his gaze
+fixed on the stars of the zenith. I shall not forget the gaze of those
+eyes, the most piercingly blue, under yellow shaggy brows, that I have
+ever seen.
+
+After that, I saw him at his brother's home in Berkeley, at irregular
+intervals, and once paid him a visit at his own temporary home at
+Skylands, above Wrights, in Santa Clara County, whither he had moved
+from Howell Mountain, in Napa County. It was on this visit that I was
+emboldened to ask his opinion on certain verses of mine, the ambition
+to become a poet having infected me at the scandalously mature age of
+twenty-six. He was hospitable to my wish, and I was fortunate enough
+to be his pupil almost to the year of his going forth from among us.
+During the greater part of that time he was a resident of Washington,
+D. C., whither he had gone in behalf of the San Francisco _EXAMINER_,
+to aid in defeating (as was successfully accomplished) the Funding
+Bill proposed by the Southern Pacific Company. It was on this occasion
+that he electrified the Senate's committee by repeatedly refusing to
+shake the hand of the proponent of that measure, no less formidable an
+individual than Collis P. Huntington.
+
+For Bierce carried into actual practice his convictions on ethical
+matters. Secure in his own self-respect, and valuing his friendship or
+approval to a high degree, he refused to make, as he put it, "a harlot
+of his friendship." Indeed, he once told me that it was his rule, on
+subsequently discovering the unworth of a person to whom a less
+fastidious friend had without previous warning introduced him, to
+write a letter to that person and assure him that he regarded the
+introduction as a mistake, and that the twain were thenceforth to
+"meet as strangers!" He also once informed me that he did not care
+to be introduced to persons whom he had criticized, or was about to
+criticize, in print. "I might get to like the beggar," was his
+comment, "and then I'd have one less pelt in my collection."
+
+In his criticism of my own work, he seldom used more than suggestion,
+realizing, no doubt, the sensitiveness of the tyro in poetry. It has
+been hinted to me that he laid, as it were, a hand of ice on my
+youthful enthusiasms, but that, to such extent as it may be true, was,
+I think, a good thing for a pupil of the art, youth being apt to gush
+and become over-sentimental. Most poets would give much to be able to
+obliterate some of their earlier work, and he must have saved me a
+major portion of such putative embarrassment. Reviewing the
+manuscripts that bear his marginal counsels, I can now see that such
+suggestions were all "indicated," though at the time I dissented from
+some of them. It was one of his tenets that a critic should "keep his
+heart out of his head" (to use his own words), when sitting in
+judgment on the work of writers whom he knew and liked. But I cannot
+but think that he was guilty of sad violations of that rule,
+especially in my own case.
+
+Bierce lived many years in Washington before making a visit to his old
+home. That happened in 1910, in which year he visited me at Carmel,
+and we afterwards camped for several weeks together with his brother
+and nephew, in Yosemite. I grew to know him better in those days, and
+he found us hospitable, in the main degree, to his view of things,
+socialism being the only issue on which we were not in accord. It
+led to many warm arguments, which, as usual, conduced nowhere but to
+the suspicion that truth in such matters was mainly a question of
+taste.
+
+I saw him again in the summer of 1911, which he spent at Sag Harbor.
+We were much on the water, guests of my uncle in his power-yacht "La
+Mascotte II." He was a devotee of canoeing, and made many trips on the
+warm and shallow bays of eastern Long Island, which he seemed to
+prefer to the less spacious reaches of the Potomac. He revisited
+California in the fall of the next year, a trip on which we saw him
+for the last time. An excursion to the Grand Canyon was occasionally
+proposed, but nothing came of it, nor did he consent to be again my
+guest at Carmel, on the rather surprising excuse that the village
+contained too many anarchists! And in November, 1913, I received my
+last letter from him, he being then in Laredo, Texas, about to cross
+the border into warring Mexico.
+
+Why he should have gone forth on so hazardous an enterprise is for the
+most part a matter of conjecture. It may have been in the spirit of
+adventure, or out of boredom, or he may not, even, have been jesting
+when he wrote to an intimate friend that, ashamed of having lived so
+long, and not caring to end his life by his own hand, he was going
+across the border and let the Mexicans perform for him that service.
+But he wrote to others that he purposed to extend his pilgrimage as
+far as South America, to cross the Andes, and return to New York by
+way of a steamer from Buenos Ayres. At any rate, we know, from letters
+written during the winter months, that he had unofficially attached
+himself to a section of Villa's army, even taking an active part in
+the fighting. He was heard from until the close of 1913; after that
+date the mist closes in upon his trail, and we are left to surmise
+what we may. Many rumors as to his fate have come out of Mexico, one
+of them even placing him in the trenches of Flanders. These rumors
+have been, so far as possible, investigated: all end in nothing. The
+only one that seems in the least degree illuminative is the tale
+brought by a veteran reporter from the City of Mexico, and published
+in the San Francisco _BULLETIN_. It is the story of a soldier in
+Villa's army, one of a detachment that captured, near the village of
+Icamole, an ammunition train of the Carranzistas. One of the prisoners
+was a sturdy, white-haired, ruddy-faced Gringo, who, according to the
+tale, went before the firing squad with an Indian muleteer, as sole
+companion in misfortune. The description of the manner--indifferent,
+even contemptuous--with which the white-haired man met his death seems
+so characteristic of Bierce that one would almost be inclined to give
+credence to the tale, impossible though it may be of verification. But
+the date of the tragedy being given as late in 1915, it seems
+incredible that Bierce could have escaped observation for so long a
+period, with so many persons in Mexico eager to know of his fate. It
+is far more likely that he met his death at the hands of a roving band
+of outlaws or guerrilla soldiery.
+
+I have had often in mind the vision of his capture by such a squad,
+their discovery of the considerable amount of gold coin that he was
+known to carry on his person, and his immediate condemnation and
+execution as a spy in order that they might retain possession of the
+booty. Naturally, such proceedings would not have been reported, from
+fear of the necessity of sharing with those "higher up." And so the
+veil would have remained drawn, and impenetrable to vision. Through
+the efforts of the War Department, all United States Consuls were
+questioned as to Bierce's possible departure from the country; all
+Americans visiting or residing in Mexico were begged for
+information--even prospectors. But the story of the reporter is the
+sole one that seems partially credible. To such darkness did so
+shining and fearless a soul go forth.
+
+It is now over eight years since that disappearance, and though the
+likelihood of his existence in the flesh seems faint indeed, the storm
+of detraction and obloquy that he always insisted would follow his
+demise has never broken, is not even on the horizon. Instead, he seems
+to be remembered with tolerance by even those whom he visited with a
+chastening pen. Each year of darkness but makes the star of his fame
+increase and brighten, but we have, I think, no full conception as yet
+of his greatness, no adequate realization of how wide and permanent a
+fame he has won. It is significant that some of the discerning admire
+him for one phase of his work, some for another. For instance, the
+clear-headed H. L. Mencken acclaims him as the first wit of America,
+but will have none of his tales; while others, somewhat disconcerted
+by the cynicism pervading much of his wit, place him among the
+foremost exponents of the art of the short story. Others again prefer
+his humor (for he was humorist as well as wit), and yet others like
+most the force, clarity and keen insight of his innumerable essays and
+briefer comments on mundane affairs. Personally, I have always
+regarded Poe's _Fall of the House of Usher_ as our greatest tale;
+close to that come, in my opinion, at least a dozen of Bierce's
+stories, whether of the soldier or civilian. He has himself stated in
+_Prattle_: "I am not a poet." And yet he wrote poetry, on occasion, of
+a high order, his _Invocation_ being one of the noblest poems in the
+tongue. Some of his satirical verse seems to me as terrible in its
+withering invective as any that has been written by classic satirists,
+not excepting Juvenal and Swift. Like the victims of their merciless
+pens, his, too, will be forgiven and forgotten. Today no one knows,
+nor cares, whether or not those long-dead offenders gave just offense.
+The grave has closed over accuser and accused, and the only thing that
+matters is that a great mind was permitted to function. One may smile
+or sigh over the satire, but one must also realize that even the
+satirist had his own weaknesses, and could have been as savagely
+attacked by a mentality as keen as his own. Men as a whole will never
+greatly care for satire, each recognizing, true enough, glimpses of
+himself in the invective, but sensing as well its fundamental bias and
+cruelty. However, Bierce thought best of himself as a satirist.
+
+Naturally, Bierce carried his wit and humor into his immediate human
+relationships. I best recall an occasion, when, in my first year of
+acquaintance with him, we were both guests at the home of the painter,
+J. H. E. Partington. It happened that a bowl of nasturtiums adorned
+the center table, and having been taught by Father Tabb, the poet, to
+relish that flower, I managed to consume most of them before the close
+of the evening, knowing there were plenty more to be had in the garden
+outside. Someone at last remarked: "Why, George has eaten all the
+nasturtiums! Go out and bring some more." At which Bierce dryly and
+justly remarked: "No--bring some thistles!" It is an indication,
+however, of his real kindness of heart that, observing my confusion,
+he afterwards apologized to me for what he termed a thoughtless jest.
+It was, nevertheless, well deserved.
+
+I recall even more distinctly a scene of another setting. This
+concerns itself with Bierce's son, Leigh, then a youth in the early
+twenties. At the time (_circa_ 1894) I was a brother lodger with them
+in an Oakland apartment house. Young Bierce had contracted a liaison
+with a girl of his own age, and his father, determined to end the
+affair, had appointed an hour for discussion of the matter. The youth
+entered his father's rooms defiant and resolute: within an hour he
+appeared weeping, and cried out to me, waiting for him in his own
+room: "My father is a greater man than Christ! He has suffered more
+than Christ!" And the affair of the heart was promptly terminated.
+
+One conversant with Bierce only as a controversionalist and _censor
+morum_ was, almost of necessity, constrained to imagine him a
+misanthrope, a soured and cynical recluse. Only when one was
+privileged to see him among his intimates could one obtain glimpses of
+his true nature, which was considerate, generous, even affectionate.
+Only the waving of the red flag of Socialism could rouse in him what
+seemed to us others a certain savageness of intolerance. Needless to
+say, we did not often invoke it, for he was an ill man with whom to
+bandy words. It was my hope, at one time, to involve him and Jack
+London in a controversy on the subject, but London declined the oral
+encounter, preferring one with the written word. Nothing came of the
+plan, which is a pity, as each was a supreme exponent of his point of
+view. Bierce subsequently attended one of the midsummer encampments of
+the Bohemian Club, of which he was once the secretary, in their
+redwood grove near the Russian river. Hearing that London was present,
+he asked why they had not been mutually introduced, and I was forced
+to tell him that I feared that they'd be, verbally, at each other's
+throats, within an hour. "Nonsense!" exclaimed Bierce. "Bring him
+around! I'll treat him like a Dutch Uncle." He kept his word, and
+seemed as much attracted to London as London was to him. But I was
+always ill at ease when they were conversing. I do not think the two
+men ever met again.
+
+Bierce was the cleanest man, personally, of whom I have
+knowledge--almost fanatically so, if such a thing be possible. Even
+during our weeks of camping in the Yosemite, he would spend two hours
+on his morning toilet in the privacy of his tent. His nephew always
+insisted that the time was devoted to shaving himself from face to
+foot! He was also a most modest man, and I still recall his decided
+objections to my bathing attire when at the swimming-pool of the
+Bohemian Club, in the Russian River. Compared to many of those
+visible, it seemed more than adequate; but he had another opinion of
+it. He was a good, even an eminent, tankard-man, and retained a clear
+judgment under any amount of potations. He preferred wine (especially
+a dry _vin du pays_, usually a sauterne) to "hard likker," in this
+respect differing in taste from his elder brother. In the days when I
+first made his acquaintance, I was accustomed to roam the hills beyond
+Oakland and Berkeley from Cordonices Creek to Leona Heights, in
+company with Albert Bierce, his son Carlton, R. L. ("Dick")
+Partington, Leigh Bierce (Ambrose's surviving son) and other youths.
+On such occasions I sometimes hid a superfluous bottle of port or
+sherry in a convenient spot, and Bierce, afterwards accompanying us on
+several such outings, pretended to believe that I had such flagons
+concealed under each bush or rock in the reach and breadth of the
+hills, and would, to carry out the jest, hunt zealously in such
+recesses. I could wish that he were less often unsuccessful in the
+search, now that he has had "the coal-black wine" to drink.
+
+Though an appreciable portion of his satire hints at misanthropy,
+Bierce, while profoundly a pessimist, was, by his own confession to
+me, "a lover of his country and his fellowmen," and was ever ready to
+proffer assistance in the time of need and sympathy in the hour of
+sorrow. His was a great and tender heart, and giving of it greatly, he
+expected, or rather hoped for, a return as great. It may have been
+by reason of the frustration of such hopes that he so often broke with
+old and, despite his doubts, appreciative friends. His brother Albert
+once told me that he (Ambrose) had never been "quite the same," after
+the wound in the head that he received in the battle of Kenesaw
+Mountain, but had a tendency to become easily offended and to show
+that resentment. Such estrangements as he and his friends suffered are
+not, therefore, matters on which one should sit in judgment. It is sad
+to know that he went so gladly from life, grieved and disappointed.
+But the white flame of Art that he tended for nearly half a century
+was never permitted to grow faint nor smoky, and it burned to the last
+with a pure brilliance. Perhaps, he bore witness to what he had found
+most admirable and enduring in life in the following words, the
+conclusion of the finest of his essays:
+
+"Literature and art are about all that the world really cares for in
+the end; those who make them are not without justification in
+regarding themselves as masters in the House of Life and all others as
+their servitors. In the babble and clamor, the pranks and antics of
+its countless incapables, the tremendous dignity of the profession of
+letters is overlooked; but when, casting a retrospective eye into 'the
+dark backward and abysm of time' to where beyond these voices is the
+peace of desolation, we note the majesty of the few immortals and
+compare them with the pygmy figures of their contemporary kings,
+warriors and men of action generally--when across the silent
+battle-fields and hushed _fora_ where the dull destinies of nations
+were determined, nobody cares how, we hear
+
+ like ocean on a western beach
+ The surge and thunder of the Odyssey,
+
+then we appraise literature at its true value, and how little worth
+while seems all else with which Man is pleased to occupy his fussy
+soul and futile hands!"
+
+
+
+
+ The Letters of Ambrose Bierce
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ July 31, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+You will not, I hope, mind my saying that the first part of your
+letter was so pleasing that it almost solved the disappointment
+created by the other part. For _that_ is a bit discouraging. Let me
+explain.
+
+You receive my suggestion about trying your hand * * * at writing,
+with assent and apparently pleasure. But, alas, not for love of the
+art, but for the purpose of helping God repair his botchwork world.
+You want to "reform things," poor girl--to rise and lay about you,
+slaying monsters and liberating captive maids. You would "help to
+alter for the better the position of working-women." You would be a
+missionary--and the rest of it. Perhaps I shall not make myself
+understood when I say that this discourages me; that in such aims
+(worthy as they are) I would do nothing to assist you; that such
+ambitions are not only impracticable but incompatible with the spirit
+that gives success in art; that such ends are a prostitution of art;
+that "helpful" writing is dull reading. If you had had more experience
+of life I should regard what you say as entirely conclusive against
+your possession of any talent of a literary kind. But you are so young
+and untaught in that way--and I have the testimony of little
+felicities and purely literary touches (apparently unconscious) in
+your letters--perhaps your unschooled heart and hope should not be
+held as having spoken the conclusive word. But surely, my child--as
+surely as anything in mathematics--Art will laurel no brow having a
+divided allegiance. Love the world as much as you will, but serve it
+otherwise. The best service you can perform by writing is to write
+well with no care for anything but that. Plant and water and let God
+give the increase if he will, and to whom it shall please him.
+
+Suppose your father were to "help working-women" by painting no
+pictures but such (of their ugly surroundings, say) as would incite
+them to help themselves, or others to help them. Suppose you should
+play no music but such as--but I need go no further. Literature (I
+don't mean journalism) is an _art_;--it is not a form of benevolence.
+It has nothing to do with "reform," and when used as a means of reform
+suffers accordingly and justly. Unless you can _feel_ that way I
+cannot advise you to meddle with it.
+
+It would be dishonest in me to accept your praise for what I wrote of
+the Homestead Works quarrel--unless you should praise it for being
+well written and true. I have no sympathies with that savage fight
+between the two kinds of rascals, and no desire to assist
+either--except to better hearts and manners. The love of truth is good
+enough motive for me when I write of my fellowmen. I like many things
+in this world and a few persons--I like you, for example; but after
+they are served I have no love to waste upon the irreclaimable mass of
+brutality that we know as "mankind." Compassion, yes--I am sincerely
+sorry that they are brutes.
+
+Yes, I wrote the article "The Human Liver." Your criticism is
+erroneous. My opportunities of knowing women's feelings toward Mrs.
+Grundy are better than yours. They hate her with a horrible
+antipathy; but they cower all the same. The fact that they are a part
+of her mitigates neither their hatred nor their fear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After next Monday I shall probably be in St. Helena, but if you will
+be so good as still to write to me please address me here until I
+apprise you of my removal; for I shall intercept my letters at St.
+Helena, wherever addressed. And maybe you will write before Monday. I
+need not say how pleasant it is for me to hear from you. And I shall
+want to know what you think of what I say about your "spirit of
+reform."
+
+How I should have liked to pass that Sunday in camp with you all. And
+to-day--I wonder if you are there to-day. I feel a peculiar affection
+for that place.
+
+Please give my love to all your people, and forgive my intolerably
+long letters--or retaliate in kind.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ August 15, 1892.]
+
+I KNOW, DEAR BLANCHE, of the disagreement among men as to the nature
+and aims of literature; and the subject is too "long" to discuss. I
+will only say that it seems to me that men holding Tolstoi's view are
+not properly literary men (that is to say, artists) at all. They are
+"missionaries," who, in their zeal to lay about them, do not scruple
+to seize any weapon that they can lay their hands on; they would grab
+a crucifix to beat a dog. The dog is well beaten, no doubt (which
+makes him a worse dog than he was before) but note the condition of
+the crucifix! The work of these men is better, of course, than the
+work of men of truer art and inferior brains; but always you see the
+possibilities--possibilities to _them_--which they have missed or
+consciously sacrificed to their fad. And after all they do no good.
+The world does not wish to be helped. The poor wish only to be rich,
+which is impossible, not to be better. They would like to be rich in
+order to be worse, generally speaking. And your working woman (also
+generally speaking) does not wish to be virtuous; despite her
+insincere deprecation she would not let the existing system be altered
+if she could help it. Individual men and women can be assisted; and
+happily some are worthy of assistance. No _class_ of mankind, no
+tribe, no nation is worth the sacrifice of one good man or woman; for
+not only is their average worth low, but they like it that way; and in
+trying to help them you fail to help the good individuals. Your
+family, your immediate friends, will give you scope enough for all
+your benevolence. I must include your _self_.
+
+In timely illustration of some of this is an article by Ingersoll in
+the current _North American Review_--I shall send it you. It will be
+nothing new to you; the fate of the philanthropist who gives out of
+his brain and heart instead of his pocket--having nothing in that--is
+already known to you. It serves him richly right, too, for his low
+taste in loving. He who dilutes, spreads, subdivides, the love which
+naturally _all_ belongs to his family and friends (if they are good)
+should not complain of non-appreciation. Love those, help those, whom
+from personal knowledge you know to be worthy. To love and help others
+is treason to _them_. But, bless my soul! I did not mean to say all
+this.
+
+But while you seem clear as to your own art, you seem undecided as to
+the one you wish to take up. I know the strength and sweetness of the
+illusions (that is, _de_lusions) that you are required to forego. I
+know the abysmal ignorance of the world and human character which,
+as a girl, you necessarily have. I know the charm that inheres in the
+beckoning of the Britomarts, as they lean out of their dream to
+persuade you to be as like them as is compatible with the fact that
+you exist. But I believe, too, that if you are set thinking--not
+reading--you will find the light.
+
+You ask me of journalism. It is so low a thing that it _may_ be
+legitimately used as a means of reform or a means of anything deemed
+worth accomplishing. It is not an art; art, except in the greatest
+moderation, is damaging to it. The man who can write well must not
+write as well as he can; the others may, of course. Journalism has
+many purposes, and the people's welfare _may_ be one of them; though
+that is not the purpose-in-chief, by much.
+
+I don't mind your irony about my looking upon the unfortunate as
+merely "literary material." It is true in so far as I consider them
+_with reference to literature_. Possibly I might be willing to help
+them otherwise--as your father might be willing to help a beggar with
+money, who is not picturesque enough to go into a picture. As you
+might be willing to give a tramp a dinner, yet unwilling to play "The
+Sweet Bye-and-Bye," or "Ta-ra-ra-boom-de-ay," to tickle his ear.
+
+You call me "master." Well, it is pleasant to think of you as a pupil,
+but--you know the young squire had to watch his arms all night before
+the day of his accolade and investiture with knighthood. I think I'll
+ask you to contemplate yours a little longer before donning them--not
+by way of penance but instruction and consecration. When you are quite
+sure of the nature of your _call_ to write--quite sure that it is
+_not_ the voice of "duty"--then let me do you such slight, poor
+service as my limitations and the injunctions of circumstance
+permit. In a few ways I can help you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Since coming here I have been ill all the time, but it seems my duty
+to remain as long as there is a hope that I _can_ remain. If I get
+free from my disorder and the fear of it I shall go down to San
+Francisco some day and then try to see your people and mine. Perhaps
+you would help me to find my brother's new house--if he is living in
+it.
+
+With sincere regards to all your family, I am most truly your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Your letters are very pleasing to me. I think it nice of you to write
+them.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ August 17, 1892.]
+
+DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+It was not that I forgot to mail you the magazine that I mentioned; I
+could not find it; but now I send it.
+
+My health is bad again, and I fear that I shall have to abandon my
+experiment of living here, and go back to the mountain--or some
+mountain. But not directly.
+
+You asked me what books would be useful to you--I'm assuming that
+you've repented your sacrilegious attitude toward literature, and will
+endeavor to thrust your pretty head into the crown of martyrdom
+otherwise. I may mention a few from time to time as they occur to me.
+There is a little book entitled (I think) simply "English
+Composition." It is by Prof. John Nichol--elementary, in a few places
+erroneous, but on the whole rather better than the ruck of books on
+the same subject.
+
+Read those of Landor's "Imaginary Conversations" which relate to
+literature.
+
+Read Longinus, Herbert Spencer on Style, Pope's "Essay on Criticism"
+(don't groan--the detractors of Pope are not always to have things
+their own way), Lucian on the writing of history--though you need not
+write history. Read poor old obsolete Kames' notions; some of them are
+not half bad. Read Burke "On the Sublime and Beautiful."
+
+Read--but that will do at present. And as you read don't forget that
+the rules of the literary art are deduced from the work of the masters
+who wrote in ignorance of them or in unconsciousness of them. That
+fixes their value; it is secondary to that of _natural_
+qualifications. None the less, it is considerable. Doubtless you have
+read many--perhaps most--of these things, but to read them with a view
+to profit _as a writer_ may be different. If I could get to San
+Francisco I could dig out of those artificial memories, the catalogues
+of the libraries, a lot of titles additional--and get you the books,
+too. But I've a bad memory, and am out of the Book Belt.
+
+I wish you would write some little thing and send it me for
+examination. I shall not judge it harshly, for this I _know_: the good
+writer (supposing him to be born to the trade) is not made by reading,
+but by observing and experiencing. You have lived so little, seen so
+little, that your range will necessarily be narrow, but within its
+lines I know no reason why you should not do good work. But it is all
+conjectural--you may fail. Would it hurt if I should tell you that I
+thought you had failed? Your absolute and complete failure would not
+affect in the slightest my admiration of your intellect. I have always
+half suspected that it is only second rate minds, and minds below the
+second rate, that hold their cleverness by so precarious a tenure that
+they can detach it for display in words.
+
+ God bless you,
+ A. B.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ August 28, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I positively shall not bore you with an interminated screed this time.
+But I thought you might like to know that I have recovered my health,
+and hope to be able to remain here for a few months at least. And if I
+remain well long enough to make me reckless I shall visit your town
+some day, and maybe ask your mother to command you to let me drive you
+to Berkeley. It makes me almost sad to think of the camp at the lake
+being abandoned.
+
+So you liked my remarks on the "labor question." That is nice of you,
+but aren't you afraid your praise will get me into the disastrous
+literary habit of writing for some _one_ pair of eyes?--your eyes? Or
+in resisting the temptation I may go too far in the opposite error.
+But you do not see that it is "Art for Art's sake"--hateful phrase!
+Certainly not, it is not Art at all. Do you forget the distinction I
+pointed out between journalism and literature? Do you not remember
+that I told you that the former was of so little value that it might
+be used for anything? My newspaper work is in _no_ sense literature.
+It is nothing, and only becomes something when I give it the very use
+to which I would put nothing literary. (Of course I refer to my
+editorial and topical work.)
+
+If you want to learn to write that kind of thing, so as to do good
+with it, you've an easy task. _Only_ it is not worth learning and the
+good that you can do with it is not worth doing. But literature--the
+desire to do good with _that_ will not help you to your means. It is
+not a sufficient incentive. The Muse will not meet you if you have any
+work for her to do. Of course I sometimes like to do good--who does
+not? And sometimes I am glad that access to a great number of minds
+every week gives me an opportunity. But, thank Heaven, I don't make
+a business of it, nor use in it a tool so delicate as to be ruined by
+the service.
+
+Please do not hesitate to send me anything that you may be willing to
+write. If you try to make it perfect before you let me see it, it will
+never come. My remarks about the kind of mind which holds its thoughts
+and feelings by so precarious a tenure that they are detachable for
+use by others were not made with a forethought of your failure.
+
+Mr. Harte of the New England Magazine seems to want me to know his
+work (I asked to) and sends me a lot of it cut from the magazine. I
+pass it on to you, and most of it is just and true.
+
+But I'm making another long letter.
+
+I wish I were not an infidel--so that I could say: "God bless you,"
+and mean it literally. I wish there _were_ a God to bless you, and
+that He had nothing else to do.
+
+Please let me hear from you. Sincerely,
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ September 28, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I have been waiting for a full hour of leisure to write you a letter,
+but I shall never get it, and so I'll write you anyhow. Come to think
+of it, there is nothing to say--nothing that _needs_ be said, rather,
+for there is always so much that one would like to say to you, best
+and most patient of _sayees_.
+
+I'm sending you and your father copies of my book. Not that I think
+you (either of you) will care for that sort of thing, but merely
+because your father is my co-sinner in making the book, and you in
+sitting by and diverting my mind from the proof-sheets of a part of
+it. Your part, therefore, in the work is the typographical errors. So
+you are in literature in spite of yourself.
+
+I appreciate what you write of my girl. She is the best of girls to
+me, but God knoweth I'm not a proper person to direct her way of life.
+However, it will not be for long. A dear friend of mine--the widow of
+another dear friend--in London wants her, and means to come out here
+next spring and try to persuade me to let her have her--for a time at
+least. It is likely that I shall. My friend is wealthy, childless and
+devoted to both my children. I wish that in the meantime she (the
+girl) could have the advantage of association with _you_.
+
+Please say to your father that I have his verses, which I promise
+myself pleasure in reading.
+
+_You_ appear to have given up your ambition to "write things." I'm
+sorry, for "lots" of reasons--not the least being the selfish one that
+I fear I shall be deprived of a reason for writing you long dull
+letters. Won't you _play_ at writing things?
+
+My (and Danziger's) book, "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter," is to
+be out next month. The Publisher--I like to write it with a reverent
+capital letter--is unprofessional enough to tell me that he regards it
+as the very best piece of English composition that he ever saw, and he
+means to make the world know it. Now let the great English classics
+hide their diminished heads and pale their ineffectual fires!
+
+So you begin to suspect that books do not give you the truth of life
+and character. Well, that suspicion is the beginning of wisdom, and,
+so far as it goes, a preliminary qualification for writing--books. Men
+and women are certainly not what books represent them to be, nor what
+_they_ represent--and sometimes believe--themselves to be. They are
+better, they are worse, and far more interesting.
+
+With best regards to all your people, and in the hope that we may
+frequently hear from you, I am very sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Both the children send their _love_ to you. And they mean just that.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ October 6, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I send you by this mail the current _New England Magazine_--merely
+because I have it by me and have read all of it that I shall have
+leisure to read. Maybe it will entertain you for an idle hour.
+
+I have so far recovered my health that I hope to do a little
+pot-boiling to-morrow. (Is that properly written with a hyphen?--for
+the life o' me I can't say, just at this moment. There is a story of
+an old actor who having played one part half his life had to cut out
+the name of the person he represented wherever it occurred in his
+lines: he could never remember which syllable to accent.) My illness
+was only asthma, which, unluckily, does not kill me and so should not
+alarm my friends.
+
+Dr. Danziger writes that he has ordered your father's sketch sent me.
+And I've ordered a large number of extra impressions of it--if it is
+still on the stone. So you see I like it.
+
+Let me hear from you and about you.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+ I enclose Bib.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ October 7, 1892.]
+
+DEAR MR. PARTINGTON,
+
+I've been too ill all the week to write you of your manuscripts, or
+even read them understandingly.
+
+I think "Honest Andrew's Prayer" far and away the best. _It_ is
+witty--the others hardly more than earnest, and not, in my judgment,
+altogether fair. But then you know you and I would hardly be likely
+to agree on a point of that kind,--I refuse my sympathies in some
+directions where I extend my sympathy--if that is intelligible. You, I
+think, have broader sympathies than mine--are not only sorry for the
+Homestead strikers (for example) but approve them. I do not. But we
+are one in detesting their oppressor, the smug-wump, Carnegie.
+
+If you had not sent "Honest Andrew's Prayer" elsewhere I should try to
+place it here. It is so good that I hope to see it in print. If it is
+rejected please let me have it again if the incident is not then
+ancient history.
+
+I'm glad you like some things in my book. But you should not condemn
+me for debasing my poetry with abuse; you should commend me for
+elevating my abuse with a little poetry, here and there. I am not a
+poet, but an abuser--that makes all the difference. It is "how you
+look at it."
+
+But I'm still too ill to write. With best regards to all your family,
+I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I've been reading your pamphlet on Art Education. You write best when
+you write most seriously--and your best is very good.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ October 15, 1892.]
+
+DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I send you this picture in exchange for the one that you have--I'm
+"redeeming" all those with these. But I asked you to return that a
+long time ago. Please say if you like this; to me it looks like a
+dude. But I hate the other--the style of it.
+
+It is very good of your father to take so much trouble as to go over
+and work on that stone. I want the pictures--lithographs--only for
+economy: so that when persons for whom I do not particularly care want
+pictures of me I need not bankrupt myself in orders to the
+photographer. And I do not like photographs anyhow. How long, O Lord,
+how long am I to wait for that sketch of _you_?
+
+My dear girl, I do not see that folk like your father and me have any
+just cause of complaint against an unappreciative world; nobody
+compels us to make things that the world does not want. We merely
+choose to because the pay, _plus_ the satisfaction, exceeds the pay
+alone that we get from work that the world does want. Then where is
+our grievance? We get what we prefer when we do good work; for the
+lesser wage we do easier work. It has never seemed to me that the
+"unappreciated genius" had a good case to go into court with, and I
+think he should be promptly non-suited. Inspiration from Heaven is all
+very fine--the mandate of an attitude or an instinct is good; but when
+A works for B, yet insists on taking his orders from C, what can he
+expect? So don't distress your good little heart with compassion--not
+for me, at least; whenever I tire of pot-boiling, wood-chopping is
+open to me, and a thousand other honest and profitable employments.
+
+I have noted Gertrude's picture in the Examiner with a peculiar
+interest. That girl has a bushel of brains, and her father and brother
+have to look out for her or she will leave them out of sight. I would
+suggest as a measure of precaution against so monstrous a perversion
+of natural order that she have her eyes put out. The subjection of
+women must be maintained.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bib and Leigh send love to you. Leigh, I think, is expecting Carlt.
+I've permitted Leigh to join the band again, and he is very peacocky
+in his uniform. God bless you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[St. Helena,
+ November 6, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I am glad you will consent to tolerate the new photograph--all my
+other friends are desperately delighted with it. I prefer your
+tolerance.
+
+But I don't like to hear that you have been "ill and blue"; that is a
+condition which seems more naturally to appertain to me. For, after
+all, whatever cause you may have for "blueness," you can always
+recollect that you are _you_, and find a wholesome satisfaction in
+your identity; whereas I, alas, am _I_!
+
+I'm sure you performed your part of that concert creditably despite
+the ailing wrist, and wish that I might have added myself to your
+triumph.
+
+I have been very ill again but hope to get away from here (back to my
+mountain) before it is time for another attack from my friend the
+enemy. I shall expect to see you there sometime when my brother and
+his wife come up. They would hardly dare to come without you.
+
+No, I did not read the criticism you mention--in the _Saturday
+Review_. Shall send you all the _Saturdays_ that I get if you will
+have them. Anyhow, they will amuse (and sometimes disgust) your
+father.
+
+I have awful arrears of correspondence, as usual.
+
+The children send love. They had a pleasant visit with Carlt, and we
+hope he will come again.
+
+May God be very good to you and put it into your heart to write to
+your uncle often.
+
+Please give my best respects to all Partingtons, jointly and
+severally.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ November 29, 1892.]
+
+DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Only just a word to say that I have repented of my assent to your
+well-meant proposal for your father to write of _me_. If there is
+anything in my work in letters that engages his interest, or in my
+_literary_ history--that is well enough, and I shall not mind. But
+"biography" in the other sense is distasteful to me. I never read
+biographical "stuff" of other writers--of course you know "stuff" is
+literary slang for "matter"--and think it "beside the question."
+Moreover, it is distinctly mischievous to letters. It throws no light
+on one's work, but on the contrary "darkens counsel." The only reason
+that posterity judges work with some slight approach to accuracy is
+that posterity knows less, and cares less, about the author's
+personality. It considers his work as impartially as if it had found
+it lying on the ground with no footprints about it and no initials on
+its linen.
+
+My brother is not "fully cognizant" of my history, anyhow--not of the
+part that is interesting.
+
+So, on the whole, I'll ask that it be not done. It was only my wish to
+please that made me consent. That wish is no weaker now, but I would
+rather please otherwise.
+
+I trust that you arrived safe and well, and that your memory of those
+few stormy days is not altogether disagreeable. Sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ December 25, 1892.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Returning here from the city this morning, I find your letter. And I
+had not replied to your last one before that! But _that_ was because I
+hoped to see you at your home. I was unable to do so--I saw no one
+(but Richard) whom I really wanted to see, and had not an hour
+unoccupied by work or "business" until this morning. And then--it was
+Christmas, and my right to act as skeleton at anybody's feast by even
+so much as a brief call was not clear. I hope my brother will be as
+forgiving as I know you will be.
+
+When I went down I was just recovering from as severe an attack of
+illness as I ever had in my life. Please consider unsaid all that I
+have said in praise of this mountain, its air, water, and everything
+that is its.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was uncommonly nice of Hume to entertain so good an opinion of me;
+if you had seen him a few days later you would have found a different
+state of affairs, probably; for I had been exhausting relays of vials
+of wrath upon him for delinquent diligence in securing copyright for
+my little story--whereby it is uncopyrighted. I ought to add that he
+has tried to make reparation, and is apparently contrite to the limit
+of his penitential capacity.
+
+No, there was no other foundation for the little story than its
+obvious naturalness and consistency with the sentiments "appropriate
+to the season." When Christendom is guzzling and gorging and clowning
+it has not time to cease being cruel; all it can do is to augment its
+hypocrisy a trifle.
+
+Please don't lash yourself and do various penances any more for your
+part in the plaguing of poor Russell; he is quite forgotten in the
+superior affliction sent upon James Whitcomb Riley. _That_ seems a
+matter of genuine public concern, if I may judge by what I heard in
+town (and I heard little else) and by my letters and "esteemed"
+(though testy) "contemporaries." Dear, dear, how sensitive people are
+becoming!
+
+Richard has promised me the Blanchescape that I have so patiently
+waited for while you were practicing the art of looking pretty in
+preparation for the sitting, so now I am happy. I shall put you
+opposite Joaquin Miller, who is now framed and glazed in good shape. I
+have also your father's sketch of me--that is, I got it and left it in
+San Francisco to be cleaned if possible; it was in a most unregenerate
+state of dirt and grease.
+
+Seeing Harry Bigelow's article in the _Wave_ on women who write (and
+it's unpleasantly near to the truth of the matter) I feel almost
+reconciled to the failure of my gorgeous dream of making a writer of
+_you_. I wonder if you would have eschewed the harmless, necessary tub
+and danced upon the broken bones of the innocuous toothbrush. Fancy
+you with sable nails and a soiled cheek, uttering to the day what God
+taught in the night! Let us be thankful that the peril is past.
+
+The next time I go to "the Bay" I shall go to 1019 _first_.
+
+God bless you for a good girl.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[First part of this letter missing.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I know Blackburn Harte has a weakness for the proletariat of
+letters * * * and doubtless thinks Riley good _because_ he is "of the
+people," peoply. But he will have to endure me as well as he can. You
+ask my opinion of Burns. He has not, I think, been translated into
+English, and I do not (that is, I can but _will_ not) read that
+gibberish. I read Burns once--that was once too many times; but
+happily it was before I knew any better, and so my time, being
+worthless, was not wasted.
+
+I wish you could be up here this beautiful weather. But I dare say it
+would rain if you came. In truth, it is "thickening" a trifle just
+because of my wish. And I wish I _had_ given you, for your father,
+all the facts of my biography from the cradle--downward. When you come
+again I shall, if you still want them. For I'm worried half to death
+with requests for them, and when I refuse am no doubt considered surly
+or worse. And my refusal no longer serves, for the biography men are
+beginning to write my history from imagination. So the next time I see
+you I shall give you (orally) that "history of a crime," my life.
+Then, if your father is still in the notion, he can write it from your
+notes, and I can answer all future inquiries by enclosing his article.
+
+Do you know?--you will, I think, be glad to know--that I have many
+more offers for stories at good prices, than I have the health to
+accept. (For I am less nearly well than I have told you.) Even the
+_Examiner_ has "waked up" (I woke it up) to the situation, and now
+pays me $20 a thousand words; and my latest offer from New York is
+$50.
+
+I hardly know why I tell you this unless it is because you tell me of
+any good fortune that comes to your people, and because you seem to
+take an interest in my affairs such as nobody else does in just the
+same unobjectionable and, in fact, agreeable way. I wish you were my
+"real, sure-enough" niece. But in that case I should expect you to
+pass all your time at Howell Mountain, with your uncle and cousin.
+Then I should teach you to write, and you could expound to me the
+principles underlying the art of being the best girl in the world.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ January 4, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Not hearing from [you] after writing you last week, I fear you are
+ill--may I not know? I am myself ill, as I feared. On Thursday last I
+was taken violently ill indeed, and have but just got about. In
+truth, I'm hardly able to write you, but as I have to go to work on
+Friday, _sure_, I may as well practice a little on you. And the
+weather up here is Paradisaical. Leigh and I took a walk this morning
+in the woods. We scared up a wild deer, but I did not feel able to run
+it down and present you with its antlers.
+
+I hope you are well, that you are all well. And I hope Heaven will put
+it into your good brother's heart to send me that picture of the
+sister who is so much too good for him--or anybody.
+
+In the meantime, and always, God bless you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+My boy (who has been an angel of goodness to me in my illness) sends
+his love to you and all your people.
+
+
+[Angwin, Cal.,
+ January 14, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+You see the matter is this way. You can't come up here and go back the
+same day--at least that would give you but about an hour here. You
+must remain over night. Now I put it to you--how do you think I'd feel
+if you came and remained over night and I, having work to do, should
+have to leave you to your own devices, mooning about a place that has
+nobody to talk to? When a fellow comes a long way to see me I want to
+see a good deal of him, however _he_ may feel about it. It is not the
+same as if he lived in the same bailiwick and "dropped in." That is
+why, in the present state of my health and work, I ask all my friends
+to give me as long notice of their coming as possible. I'm sure you'll
+say I am right, inasmuch as certain work if undertaken must be done by
+the time agreed upon.
+
+My relations with Danziger are peculiar--as any one's relations with
+him must be. In the matter of which you wished to speak I could say
+nothing. For this I must ask you to believe there are reasons. It
+would not have been fair not to let you know, before coming, that I
+would not talk of him.
+
+I thought, though, that you would probably come up to-day if I wrote
+you. Well, I should like you to come and pass a week with me. But if
+you come for a day I naturally want it to be an "off" day with me.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ January 23, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I should have written you sooner; it has been ten whole days since the
+date of your last letter. But I have not been in the mood of letter
+writing, and am prepared for maledictions from all my neglected
+friends but you. My health is better. Yesterday I returned from
+Napa, where I passed twenty-six hours, buried, most of the time, in
+fog; but apparently it has not harmed me. The weather here remains
+heavenly. * * *
+
+If I grow better in health I shall in time feel able to extend my next
+foray into the Lowlands as far as Oakland and Berkeley.
+
+Here are some fronds of maiden-hair fern that I have just brought in.
+The first wild flowers of the season are beginning to venture out and
+the manzanitas are a sight to see.
+
+With warmest regards to all your people, I am, as ever, your most
+unworthy uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ February 5, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+What an admirable reporter you would be! Your account of the meeting
+with Miller in the restaurant and of the "entertainment" are amusing
+no end. * * * By the way, I observe a trooly offle "attack" on me in
+the Oakland _Times_ of the 3rd (I think) * * * (I know of course it
+means me--I always know that when they pull out of their glowing minds
+that old roasted chestnut about "tearing down" but not "building
+up"--that is to say, effacing one imposture without giving them
+another in place of it.) The amusing part of the business is that he
+points a contrast between me and Realf (God knows there's unlikeness
+enough) quite unconscious of the fact that it is I and no other who
+have "built up" Realf's reputation as a poet--published his work, and
+paid him for it, when nobody else would have it; repeatedly pointed
+out its greatness, and when he left that magnificent crown of sonnets
+behind him protested that posterity would know California better by
+the incident of his death than otherwise--not a soul, until now,
+concurring in my view of the verses. Believe me, my trade is not
+without its humorous side.
+
+Leigh and I went down to the waterfall yesterday. It was almost
+grand--greater than I had ever seen it--and I took the liberty to wish
+that you might see it in that state. My wish must have communicated
+itself, somehow, though imperfectly, to Leigh, for as I was indulging
+it he expressed the same wish with regard to Richard.
+
+I wish too that you might be here to-day to see the swirls of snow. It
+is falling rapidly, and I'm thinking that this letter will make its
+way down the mountain to-morrow morning through a foot or two of it.
+Unluckily, it has a nasty way of turning to rain.
+
+My health is very good now, and Leigh and I take long walks. And after
+the rains we look for Indian arrow-heads in the plowed fields and on
+the gravel bars of the creek. My collection is now great; but I fear I
+shall tire of the fad before completing it. One in the country must
+have a fad or die of dejection and oxidation of the faculties. How
+happy is he who can make a fad of his work!
+
+By the way, my New York publishers (The United States Book Company)
+have failed, owing me a pot of money, of which I shall probably get
+nothing. I'm beginning to cherish an impertinent curiosity to know
+what Heaven means to do to me next. If your function as one of the
+angels gives you a knowledge of such matters please betray your trust
+and tell me where I'm to be hit, and how hard.
+
+But this is an intolerable deal of letter.
+
+With best regards to all good Partingtons--and I think there are no
+others--I remain your affectionate uncle by adoption,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Leigh has brought in some manzanita blooms which I shall try to
+enclose. But they'll be badly smashed.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ February 14, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I thank you many times for the picture, which is a monstrous good
+picture, whatever its shortcomings as a portrait may be. On the
+authority of the great art critic, Leigh Bierce, I am emboldened to
+pronounce some of the work in it equal to Gribayedoff at his best; and
+that, according to the g. a. c. aforesaid, is to exhaust eulogium.
+But--it isn't altogether the Blanche that I know, as I know her. Maybe
+it is the hat--I should prefer you hatless, and so less at the mercy
+of capricious fortune. Suppose hats were to "go out"--I tremble to
+think of what would happen to that gorgeous superstructure which now
+looks so beautiful. O, well, when I come down I shall drag you to the
+hateful photographer and get something that looks quite like you--and
+has no other value.
+
+And I mean to "see Oakland and die" pretty soon. I have not dared go
+when the weather was bad. It promises well now, but I am to have
+visitors next Sunday, so must stay at home. God and the weather bureau
+willing, you may be bothered with me the Saturday or Sunday after. We
+shall see.
+
+I hope your father concurs in my remarks on picture "borders"--I did
+not think of him until the remarks had been written, or I should have
+assured myself of his practice before venturing to utter my mind o'
+the matter. If it were not for him and Gertrude and the _Wave_ I
+should snarl again, anent "half-tones," which I abhor. Hume tried to
+get me to admire his illustrations, but I would not, so far as the
+process is concerned, and bluntly told him he would not get your
+father's best work that way.
+
+If you were to visit the Mountain now I should be able to show you a
+redwood forest (newly discovered) and a picturesque gulch to match.
+
+The wild flowers are beginning to put up their heads to look for you,
+and my collection of Indian antiquities is yearning to have you see
+it.
+
+Please convey my thanks to Richard for the picture--the girlscape--and
+my best regards to your father and all the others.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ February 21, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I'm very sorry indeed that I cannot be in Oakland Thursday evening to
+see you "in your glory," arrayed, doubtless, like a lily of the field.
+However glorious you may be in public, though, I fancy I should like
+you better as you used to be out at camp.
+
+Well, I mean to see you on Saturday afternoon if you are at home, and
+think I shall ask you to be my guide to Grizzlyville; for surely I
+shall never be able to find the wonderful new house alone. So if your
+mamma will let you go out there with me I promise to return you to her
+instead of running away with you. And, possibly, weather permitting,
+we can arrange for a Sunday in the redwoods or on the hills. Or don't
+your folks go out any more o' Sundays?
+
+Please give my thanks to your mother for the kind invitation to put up
+at your house; but I fear that would be impossible. I shall have to be
+where people can call on me--and such a disreputable crowd as my
+friends are would ruin the Partingtonian reputation for
+respectability. In your new neighborhood you will all be very
+proper--which you could hardly be with a procession of pirates and
+vagrants pulling at your door-bell.
+
+So--if God is good--I shall call on you Saturday afternoon. In the
+meantime and always be thou happy--thou and thine. Your unworthy
+uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ March 18, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+It is good to have your letters again. If you will not let me teach
+you my trade of writing stories it is right that you practice your own
+of writing letters. You are mistress of that. Byron's letters to Moore
+are dull in comparison with yours to me. Some allowance, doubtless,
+must be made for my greater need of your letters than of Byron's. For,
+truth to tell, I've been a trifle dispirited and noncontent. In that
+mood I peremptorily resigned from the _Examiner_, for one thing--and
+permitted myself to be coaxed back by Hearst, for another. My other
+follies I shall not tell you. * * *
+
+We had six inches of snow up here and it has rained steadily ever
+since--more than a week. And the fog is of superior opacity--quite
+peerless that way. It is still raining and fogging. Do you wonder that
+your unworthy uncle has come perilously and alarmingly near to
+loneliness? Yet I have the companionship, at meals, of one of your
+excellent sex, from San Francisco. * * *
+
+Truly, I should like to attend one of your at-homes, but I fear it
+must be a long time before I venture down there again. But when this
+brumous visitation is past I can _look_ down, and that assists the
+imagination to picture you all in your happy (I hope) home. But if
+that woolly wolf, Joaquin Miller, doesn't keep outside the fold I
+_shall_ come down and club him soundly. I quite agree with your mother
+that his flattery will spoil you. You said I would spoil Phyllis, and
+now, you bad girl, you wish to be spoiled yourself. Well, you can't
+eat four Millerine oranges.--My love to all your family.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ March 26, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+I am very glad indeed to get the good account of Leigh that you give
+me. I've feared that he might be rather a bore to you, but you make me
+easy on that score. Also I am pleased that you think he has a
+sufficient "gift" to do something in the only direction in which he
+seems to care to go.
+
+He is anxious to take the place at the _Examiner_, and his uncle
+thinks that would be best--if they will give it him. I'm a little
+reluctant for many reasons, but there are considerations--some of them
+going to the matter of character and disposition--which point to that
+as the best arrangement. The boy needs discipline, control, and work.
+He needs to learn by experience that life is not all beer and
+skittles. Of course you can't quite know him as I do. As to his
+earning anything on the _Examiner_ or elsewhere, that cuts no
+figure--he'll spend everything he can get his fingers on anyhow; but I
+feel that he ought to have the advantage of a struggle for existence
+where the grass is short and the soil stony.
+
+Well, I shall let him live down there somehow, and see what can be
+done with him. There's a lot of good in him, and a lot of the other
+thing, naturally.
+
+I hope Hume has, or will, put you in authority in the _Post_ and give
+you a decent salary. He seems quite enthusiastic about the _Post_
+and--about you.
+
+With sincere regards to Mrs. Partington and all the Partingtonettes, I
+am very truly yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ April 10, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+If you are undertaking to teach my kid (which, unless it is entirely
+agreeable to you, you must not do) I hope you will regard him as a
+pupil whose tuition is to be paid for like any other pupil. And you
+should, I think, name the price. Will you kindly do so?
+
+Another thing. Leigh tells me you paid him for something he did for
+the _Wave_. That is not right. While you let him work with you, and
+under you, his work belongs to you--is a part of yours. I mean the
+work that he does in your shop for the _Wave_.
+
+I don't wish to feel that you are bothering with him for nothing--will
+you not tell me your notion of what I should pay you?
+
+I fancy you'll be on the _Examiner_ pretty soon--if you wish.
+
+With best regards to your family I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ April 10, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+As I was writing to your father I was, of course, strongly impressed
+with a sense of _you_; for you are an intrusive kind of creature,
+coming into one's consciousness in the most lawless way--Phyllis-like.
+(Phyllis is my "type and example" of lawlessness, albeit I'm devoted
+to her--a Phyllistine, as it were.)
+
+Leigh sends me a notice (before the event) of your concert. I hope it
+was successful. Was it?
+
+It rains or snows here all the time, and the mountain struggles in
+vain to put on its bravery of leaf and flower. When this kind of thing
+stops I'm going to put in an application for you to come up and get
+your bad impressions of the place effaced. It is insupportable that my
+earthly paradise exist in your memory as a "bad eminence," like
+Satan's primacy.
+
+I'm sending you the _New England Magazine_--perhaps I have sent it
+already--and a _Harper's Weekly_ with a story by Mrs. * * *, who is a
+sort of pupil of mine. She used to do bad work--does now sometimes;
+but she will do great work by-and-by.
+
+I wish you had not got that notion that you cannot learn to write. You
+see I'd like you to do _some_ art work that I can understand and
+enjoy. I wonder why it is that no note or combination of notes can be
+struck out of a piano that will touch me--give me an emotion of any
+kind. It is not wholly due to my ignorance and bad ear, for other
+instruments--the violin, organ, zither, guitar, etc., sometimes affect
+me profoundly. Come, read me the riddle if you know. What have I done
+that I should be inaccessible to your music? I know it is good; I can
+hear that it is, but not feel that it is. Therefore to me it is not.
+
+Now that, you will confess, is a woeful state--"most tolerable and not
+to be endured." Will you not cultivate some art within the scope of my
+capacity? Do you think you could learn to walk on a wire (if it lay on
+the ground)? Can you not ride three horses at once if they are
+suitably dead? Or swallow swords? Really, you should have some way to
+entertain your uncle.
+
+True, you can talk, but you never get the chance; I always "have the
+floor." Clearly you must learn to write, and I mean to get Miller to
+teach you how to be a poet.
+
+I hope you will write occasionally to me,--letter-writing is an art
+that you do excel in--as I in "appreciation" of your excellence in it.
+
+Do you see my boy? I hope he is good, and diligent in his work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You must write to me or I shall withdraw my avuncular relation to you.
+
+With good will to all your people--particularly Phyllis--I am
+sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin, Calif.,
+ April 16, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR PARTINGTON,
+
+I think you wrong. On your own principle, laid down in your letter,
+that "every man has a right to the full value of his labor"--pardon
+me, good Englishman, I meant "laboUr"--you have a right to your wage
+for the labo_u_r of teaching Leigh. And what work would _he_ get to do
+but for you?
+
+I can't hold you and inject shekels into your pocket, but if the voice
+of remonstrance has authority to enter at your ear without a ticket I
+pray you to show it hospitality.
+
+Leigh doubtless likes to see his work in print, but I hope you will
+not let him put anything out until it is as good as he can make
+it--nor then if it is not good _enough_. And that whether he signs it
+or not. I have talked to him about the relation of conscience to
+lab-work, but I don't know if my talk all came out at the other ear.
+
+O--that bad joke o' mine. Where do you and Richard expect to go when
+death do you part? You were neither of you present that night on the
+dam, nor did I know either of you. Blanche, thank God, retains the
+old-time reverence for truth: it was to her that I said it. Richard
+evidently dreamed it, and you--you've been believing that confounded
+_Wave_! Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin,
+ April 18, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I take a few moments from work to write you in order (mainly) to say
+that your letter of March 31st did not go astray, as you seem to
+fear--though why _you_ should care if it did I can't conjecture. The
+loss to me--that is probably what would touch your compassionate
+heart.
+
+So you _will_ try to write. That is a good girl. I'm almost sure you
+can--not, of course, all at once, but by-and-by. And if not, what
+matter? You are not of the sort, I am sure, who would go on despite
+everything, determined to succeed by dint of determining to succeed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+We are blessed with the most amiable of all conceivable weathers up
+here, and the wild flowers are putting up their heads everywhere to
+look for you. Lying in their graves last autumn, they overheard
+(_under_heard) your promise to come in the spring, and it has
+stimulated and cheered them to a vigorous growth.
+
+I'm sending you some more papers. Don't think yourself obliged to read
+all the stuff I send you--_I_ don't read it.
+
+Condole with me--I have just lost another publisher--by failure.
+Schulte, of Chicago, publisher of "The Monk" etc., has "gone under," I
+hear. Danziger and I have not had a cent from him. I put out three
+books in a year, and lo! each one brings down a publisher's gray hair
+in sorrow to the grave! for Langton, of "Black Beetles," came to
+grief--that is how Danziger got involved. "O that mine enemy would
+_publish_ one of my books!"
+
+I am glad to hear of your success at your concert. If I could have
+reached you you should have had the biggest basket of pretty
+vegetables that was ever handed over the footlights. I'm sure you
+merited it all--what do you _not_ merit?
+
+Your father gives me good accounts of my boy. He _must_ be doing well,
+I think, by the way he neglects all my commissions.
+
+Enclosed you will find my contribution to the Partington art gallery,
+with an autograph letter from the artist. You can hang them in any
+light you please and show them to Richard. He will doubtless be
+pleased to note how the latent genius of his boss has burst into
+bloom.
+
+I have been wading in the creek this afternoon for pure love of it;
+the gravel looked so clean under the water. I was for the moment at
+least ten years younger than your father. To whom, and to all the rest
+of your people, my sincere regards, Your uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Angwin, Cala.,
+ April 26, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I accept your sympathy for my misfortunes in publishing. It serves me
+right (I don't mean the sympathy does) for publishing. I should have
+known that if a publisher cannot beat an author otherwise, or is too
+honest to do so, he will do it by failing. Once in London a publisher
+gave me a check dated two days ahead, and then (the only thing he
+could do to make the check worthless)--ate a pork pie and died. That
+was the late John Camden Hotten, to whose business and virtues my
+present London publishers, Chatto and Windus, have succeeded. They
+have not failed, and they refuse pork pie, but they deliberately
+altered the title of my book.
+
+All this for your encouragement in "learning to write." Writing books
+is a noble profession; it has not a shade of selfishness in
+it--nothing worse than conceit.
+
+O yes, you shall have your big basket of flowers if ever I catch you
+playing in public. I wish I could give you the carnations,
+lilies-of-the-valley, violets, and first-of-the-season sweet peas now
+on my table. They came from down near you--which fact they are trying
+triumphantly and as hard as they can to relate in fragrance.
+
+I trust your mother is well of her cold--that you are all well and
+happy, and that Phyllis will not forget me. And may the good Lord
+bless you regularly every hour of every day for your merit, and every
+minute of every hour as a special and particular favor to Your uncle,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Berkeley,
+ October 2, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I accept with pleasure your evidence that the Piano is not as black as
+I have painted, albeit the logical inference is that I'm pretty black
+myself. Indubitably I'm "in outer darkness," and can only say to you:
+"Lead, kindly light." Thank you for the funny article on the luxury
+question--from the funny source. But you really must not expect me
+to answer it, nor show you wherein it is "wrong." I cannot discern the
+expediency of you having any "views" at all in those matters--even
+correct ones. If I could have my way you should think of more
+profitable things than the (conceded) "wrongness" of a world which is
+the habitat of a wrongheaded and wronghearted race of irreclaimable
+savages. * * * When woman "broadens her sympathies" they become
+annular. Don't.
+
+Cosgrave came over yesterday for a "stroll," but as he had a dinner
+engagement to keep before going home, he was in gorgeous gear. So I
+kindly hoisted him atop of Grizzly Peak and sent him back across the
+Bay in a condition impossible to describe, save by the aid of a wet
+dishclout for illustration.
+
+Please ask your father when and where he wants me to sit for the
+portrait. If that picture is not sold, and ever comes into my
+possession, I shall propose to swap it for yours. I have always wanted
+to lay thievish hands on that, and would even like to come by it
+honestly. But what under the sun would I do with either that or mine?
+Fancy me packing large paintings about to country hotels and places of
+last resort!
+
+Leigh is living with me now. Poor chap, the death of his aunt has made
+him an orphan. I feel a profound compassion for any one whom an
+untoward fate compels to live with _me_. However, such a one is sure
+to be a good deal alone, which is a mitigation.
+
+With good wishes for all your people, I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Berkeley,
+ December 27, 1893.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+I'm sending you (by way of pretext for writing you) a magazine that I
+asked Richard to take to you last evening, but which he forgot.
+There's an illustrated article on gargoyles and the like, which will
+interest you. Some of the creatures are delicious--more so than I had
+the sense to perceive when I saw them alive on Notre Dame.
+
+I want to thank you too for the beautiful muffler before I take to my
+willow chair, happy in the prospect of death. For at this hour, 10:35
+p. m., I "have on" a very promising case of asthma. If I come out of
+it decently alive in a week or so I shall go over to your house and
+see the finished portrait if it is "still there," like the flag in our
+national anthem.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Oakland,
+ July 31, 1894.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+If you are not utterly devoured by mosquitoes perhaps you'll go to the
+postoffice and get this. In that hope I write, not without a strong
+sense of the existence of the clerks in the Dead Letter Office at
+Washington.
+
+I hope you are (despite the mosquitoes) having "heaps" of rest and
+happiness. As to me, I have only just recovered sufficiently to be
+out, and "improved the occasion" by going to San Francisco yesterday
+and returning on the 11:15 boat. I saw Richard, and he seemed quite
+solemn at the thought of the dispersal of his family to the four
+winds.
+
+I have a joyous letter from Leigh dated "on the road," nearing
+Yosemite. He has been passing through the storied land of Bret Harte,
+and is permeated with a sense of its beauty and romance. When shall
+you return? May I hope, then, to see you?
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. Here are things that I cut out for memoranda. On second thought
+_I_ know all that; so send them to you for the betterment of your mind
+and heart.
+
+ B.
+
+
+[San Jose,
+ October 17, 1894.]
+
+MY DEAR BLANCHE,
+
+Your kindly note was among a number which I put into my pocket at the
+postoffice and forgot until last evening when I returned from Oakland.
+(I dared remain up there only a few hours, and the visit did me no
+good.)
+
+Of course I should have known that your good heart would prompt the
+wish to hear from your patient, but I fear I was a trifle misanthropic
+all last week, and indisposed to communicate with my species.
+
+I came here on Monday of last week, and the change has done me good. I
+have no asthma and am slowly getting back my strength.
+
+Leigh and Ina Peterson passed Sunday with me, and Leigh recounted his
+adventures in the mountains. I had been greatly worried about him; it
+seems there was abundant reason. The next time he comes I wish he
+would bring you. It is lovely down here. Perhaps you and Katie can
+come some time, and I'll drive you all over the valley--if you care to
+drive.
+
+If I continue well I shall remain here or hereabout; if not I don't
+know where I shall go. Probably into the Santa Cruz mountains or to
+Gilroy. If I could have my way I'd live at Piedmont.
+
+Do you know I lost Pin the Reptile? I brought him along in my bicycle
+bag (I came the latter half of the way bike-back) and the ungrateful
+scoundrel wormed himself out and took to the weeds just before we got
+to San Jose. So I've nothing to lavish my second-childhoodish
+affection upon--nothing but just myself.
+
+My permanent address is Oakland, as usual, but _you_ may address me
+here at San Jose if you will be so good as to address me anywhere.
+Please do, and tell me of your triumphs and trials at the Conservatory
+of Music. I do fervently hope it may prove a means of prosperity to
+you, for, behold, you are The Only Girl in the World Who Merits
+Prosperity!
+
+Please give my friendly regards to your people; and so--Heaven be good
+to you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[San Jose,
+ October 28, 1894.]
+
+O, BEST OF POETS,
+
+How have you the heart to point out what you deem an imperfection in
+those lines. Upon my soul, I swear they are faultless, and "moonlight"
+is henceforth and forever a rhyme to "delight." Also, likewise,
+moreover and furthermore, a ---- is henceforth ----; and ---- are
+forever ----; and to ---- shall be ----; and so forth. You have
+established new canons of literary criticism--more liberal ones--and
+death to the wretch who does not accept them! Ah, I always knew you
+were a revolutionist.
+
+Yes, I am in better health, worse luck! For I miss the beef-teaing
+expeditions more than you can by trying.
+
+By the way, if you again encounter your fellow practitioner, Mrs.
+Hirshberg, please tell her what has become of her patient, and that I
+remember her gratefully.
+
+It is not uninteresting to me to hear of your progress in your art,
+albeit I am debarred from entrance into the temple where it is
+worshiped. After all, art finds its best usefulness in its reaction
+upon the character; and in that work I can trace your proficiency in
+the art that you love. As you become a better artist you grow a nicer
+girl, and if your music does not cause my tympana to move themselves
+aright, yet the niceness is not without its effect upon the soul o'
+me. So I'm not so _very_ inert a clod, after all.
+
+No, Leigh has not infected me with the exploring fad. I exhausted my
+capacity in that way years before I had the advantage of his
+acquaintance and the contagion of his example. But I don't like to
+think of that miserable mountain sitting there and grinning in the
+consciousness of having beaten the Bierce family.
+
+So--apropos of my brother--_I_ am "odd" after a certain fashion! My
+child, that is blasphemy. You grow hardier every day of your life, and
+you'll end as a full colonel yet, and challenge Man to mortal combat
+in true Stetsonian style. Know thy place, thou atom!
+
+Speaking of colonels reminds me that one of the most eminent of the
+group had the assurance to write me, asking for an "audience" to
+consult about a benefit that she--_she!_--is getting up for my friend
+Miss * * *, a glorious writer and eccentric old maid whom you do not
+know. * * * evidently wants more notoriety and proposes to shine by
+Miss * * * light. I was compelled to lower the temperature of the
+situation with a letter curtly courteous. Not even to assist Miss * * *
+shall my name be mixed up with those of that gang. But of course all
+that does not amuse you.
+
+I wish I could have a chat with you. I speak to nobody but my
+chambermaid and the waiter at my restaurant. By the time I see you I
+shall have lost the art of speech altogether and shall communicate
+with you by the sign language.
+
+God be good to you and move you to write to me sometimes.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[First part of this letter missing.]
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You may, I think, expect my assistance in choosing between (or among)
+your suitors next month, early. I propose to try living in Oakland
+again for a short time beginning about then. But I shall have much to
+do the first few days--possibly in settling my earthly affairs for it
+is my determination to be hanged for killing all those suitors. That
+seems to me the simplest way of disembarrassing you. As to me--it is
+the "line of least resistance"--unless they fight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So you have been ill. You must not be ill, my child--it disturbs my
+Marcus Aurelian tranquillity, and is most selfishly inconsiderate of
+you.
+
+Mourn with me: the golden leaves of my poplars are now underwheel. I
+sigh for the perennial eucalyptus leaf of Piedmont.
+
+I hope you are all well. Sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[San Jose,
+ November 20, 1894.]
+
+Since writing you yesterday, dear Blanche, I have observed that the
+benefit to * * * is not abandoned--it is to occur in the evening of
+the 26th, at Golden Gate Hall, San Francisco. I recall your kind offer
+to act for me in any way that I might wish to assist Miss * * *. Now,
+I will not have my name connected with anything that the * * * woman
+and her sister-in-evidence may do for their own glorification, but I
+enclose a Wells, Fargo & Co. money order for all the money I can
+presently afford--wherewith you may do as you will; buy tickets, or
+hand it to the treasurer in your own name. I know Miss * * * must be
+awfully needy to accept a benefit--you have no idea how sensitive and
+suspicious and difficult she is. She is almost impossible. But there
+are countless exactions on my lean purse, and I must do the rest with
+my pen. So--I thank you.
+
+ Sincerely your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[18 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 1, 1901.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+This is just a hasty note to acknowledge receipt of your letter and
+the poems. I hope to reach those pretty soon and give them the
+attention which I am sure they will prove to merit--which I cannot do
+now. By the way, I wonder why most of you youngsters so persistently
+tackle the sonnet. For the same reason, I suppose, that a fellow
+always wants to make his first appearance on the stage in the role of
+"Hamlet." It is just the holy cheek of you.
+
+Yes, Leigh prospers fairly well, and I--well, I don't know if it is
+prosperity; it is a pretty good time.
+
+I suppose I shall have to write to that old scoundrel Grizzly,[1] to
+give him my new address, though I supposed he had it; and the old one
+would do, anyhow. Now that his cub has returned he probably doesn't
+care for the other plantigrades of his kind.
+
+[1] Albert Bierce.
+
+Thank you for telling me so much about some of our companions and
+companionesses of the long ago. I fear that not all my heart was in my
+baggage when I came over here. There's a bit of it, for example, out
+there by that little lake in the hills.
+
+So I may have a photograph of one of your pretty sisters. Why, of
+course I want it--I want the entire five of them; their pictures, I
+mean. If you had been a nice fellow you would have let me know them
+long ago. And how about that other pretty girl, your infinitely better
+half? You might sneak into the envelope a little portrait of _her_,
+lest I forget, lest I forget. But I've not yet forgotten.
+
+The new century's best blessings to the both o' you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--In your studies of poetry have you dipped into Stedman's new
+"American Anthology"? It is the most notable collection of American
+verse that has been made--on the whole, a book worth having. In saying
+so I rather pride myself on my magnanimity; for of course I don't
+think he has done as well by me as he might have done. That, I
+suppose, is what every one thinks who happens to be alive to think it.
+So I try to be in the fashion.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[18 Iowa Circle, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 19, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I've been a long while getting to your verses, but there were many
+reasons--including a broken rib. They are pretty good verses, with
+here and there _very_ good lines. I'd a strong temptation to steal one
+or two for my "Passing Show," but I knew what an avalanche of verses
+it would bring down upon me from other poets--as every mention of a
+new book loads my mail with new books for a month.
+
+If I ventured to advise you I should recommend to you the simple,
+ordinary meters and forms native to our language.
+
+I await the photograph of the pretty sister--don't fancy I've
+forgotten.
+
+It is 1 a. m. and I'm about to drink your health in a glass of
+Riesling and eat it in a pate.
+
+My love to Grizzly if you ever see him. Yours ever,
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 23, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR DOYLE,
+
+Your letter of the 16th has just come and as I am waiting at my office
+(where I seldom go) I shall amuse myself by replying "to onct." See
+here, I don't purpose that your attack on poor Morrow's book shall
+become a "continuous performance," nor even an "annual ceremony." It
+is not "rot." It is not "filthy." It does not "suggest bed-pans,"--at
+least it did not to me, and I'll wager something that Morrow never
+thought of them. Observe and consider: If his hero and heroine had
+been man and wife, the bed-pan would have been there, just the same;
+yet you would not have thought of it. Every reader would have been
+touched by the husband's devotion. A physician has to do with many
+unpleasant things; whom do his ministrations disgust? A trained nurse
+lives in an atmosphere of bed-pans--to whom is her presence or work
+suggestive of them? I'm thinking of the heroic Father Damien and his
+lepers; do you dwell upon the rotting limbs and foul distortions of
+his unhappy charges? Is not his voluntary martyrdom one of the sanest,
+cleanest, most elevating memories in all history? Then it is _not_ the
+bed-pan necessity that disgusts you; it is something else. It is the
+fact that the hero of the story, being neither physician, articled
+nurse, nor certificated husband, nevertheless performed _their_ work.
+He ministered to the helpless in a natural way without authority from
+church or college, quite irregular and improper and all that. My noble
+critic, there speaks in your blood the Untamed Philistine. You were
+not caught young enough. You came into letters and art with all your
+beastly conventionalities in full mastery of you. Take a purge. Forget
+that there are Philistines. Forget that they have put their abominable
+pantalettes upon the legs of Nature. Forget that their code of
+morality and manners (it stinks worse than a bed-pan) does _not_ exist
+in the serene altitude of great art, toward which you have set your
+toes and into which I want you to climb. I know about this thing. I,
+too, tried to rise with all that dead weight dragging at my feet.
+Well, I could not--now I could if I cared to. In my mind I do. It is
+not freedom of act--not freedom of living, for which I contend, but
+freedom of thought, of mind, of spirit; the freedom to see in the
+horrible laws, prejudices, custom, conventionalities of the multitude,
+something good for them, but of no value to you _in your art._ In your
+life and conduct defer to as much of it as you will (you'll find it
+convenient to defer to a whole lot), but in your mind and art let not
+the Philistine enter, nor even speak a word through the keyhole. My
+own chief objection to Morrow's story is (as I apprised him) its
+unnaturalness. He did not dare to follow the logical course of his
+narrative. He was too cowardly (or had too keen an eye upon his market
+of prudes) to make hero and heroine join in the holy bonds of
+_bed_lock, as they naturally, inevitably and rightly would have done
+long before she was able to be about. I daresay that, too, would have
+seemed to you "filthy," without the parson and his fee. When you
+analyze your objection to the story (as I have tried to do for you)
+you will find that it all crystallizes into that--the absence of the
+parson. I don't envy you your view of the matter, and I really don't
+think you greatly enjoy it yourself. I forgot to say: Suppose they had
+been two men, two partners in hunting, mining, or exploring, as
+frequently occurs. Would the bed-pan suggestion have come to you? Did
+it come to you when you read of the slow, but not uniform, starvation
+of Greeley's party in the arctic? Of course not. Then it is a matter,
+not of bed-pans, but of sex-exposure (unauthorized by the church), of
+prudery--of that artificial thing, the "sense of shame," of which the
+great Greeks knew nothing; of which the great Japanese know nothing;
+of which Art knows nothing. Dear Doctor, do you really put trousers on
+your piano-legs? Does your indecent intimacy with your mirror make you
+blush?
+
+There, there's the person whom I've been waiting for (I'm to take her
+to dinner, and I'm not married to even so much of her as her little
+toe) has come; and until you offend again, you are immune from the
+switch. May all your brother Philistines have to "Kiss the place to
+make it well."
+
+Pan is dead! Long live Bed-Pan!
+
+ Yours ever,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ February 17, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I send back the poems, with a few suggestions. You grow great so
+rapidly that I shall not much longer dare to touch your work. I mean
+that.
+
+Your criticisms of Stedman's Anthology are just. But equally just ones
+can be made of any anthology. None of them can suit any one. I fancy
+Stedman did not try to "live up" to his standard, but to make
+_representative_, though not always the _best_, selections. It would
+hardly do to leave out Whitman, for example. _We_ may not like him;
+thank God, we don't; but many others--the big fellows too--do; and in
+England he is thought great. And then Stedman has the bad luck to know
+a lot of poets personally--many bad poets. Put yourself in his place.
+Would you leave out me if you honestly thought my work bad?
+
+In any compilation we will all miss some of our favorites--and find
+some of the public's favorites. You miss from Whittier "Joseph
+Sturge"--I the sonnet "Forgiveness," and so forth. Alas, there is no
+universal standard!
+
+Thank you for the photographs. Miss * * * is a pretty girl, truly, and
+has the posing instinct as well. She has the place of honor on my
+mantel. * * * But what scurvy knave has put the stage-crime into her
+mind? If you know that life as I do you will prefer that she die, poor
+girl.
+
+It is no trouble, but a pleasure, to go over your verses--I am as
+proud of your talent as if I'd made it.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+[over]
+
+About the rhymes in a sonnet:
+
+ "Regular", or "English" Modern
+ Italian form form English
+ (Petrarch): (Shakspear's): 1
+ 1 1 2
+ 2 2 2
+ 2 1 1
+ 1 2 1
+ 1 3 2
+ 2 4 2
+ 2 3 1
+ 1 4 Two or three
+ 3 5 rhymes; any
+ 4 6 arrangement
+ 5 5
+ 3 6
+ 4 7
+ 5 7
+
+There are good reasons for preferring the regular Italian form created
+by Petrarch--who knew a thing or two; and sometimes good reasons for
+another arrangement--of the sestet rhymes. If one should sacrifice a
+great thought to be like Petrarch one would not resemble him.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 2, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I am sending to the "Journal" your splendid poem on Memorial Day. Of
+course I can't say what will be its fate. I am not even personally
+acquainted with the editor of the department to which it goes. But if
+he has not the brains to like it he is to send it back and I'll try to
+place it elsewhere. It is great--great!--the loftiest note that you
+have struck and _held_.
+
+Maybe I owe you a lot of letters. I don't know--my correspondence all
+in arrears and I've not the heart to take it up.
+
+Thank you for your kind words of sympathy.[2] I'm hit harder than any
+one can guess from the known facts--am a bit broken and gone gray of
+it all.
+
+[2] Concerning the death of his son Leigh.
+
+But I remember you asked the title of a book of synonyms. It is
+"Roget's Thesaurus," a good and useful book.
+
+The other poems I will look up soon and consider. I've made no
+alterations in the "Memorial Day" except to insert the omitted stanza.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ May 9, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I send the poems with suggestions. There's naught to say about 'em
+that I've not said of your other work. Your "growth in grace" (and
+other poetic qualities) is something wonderful. You are leaving my
+other "pupils" so far behind that they are no longer "in it."
+Seriously, you "promise" better than any of the new men in our
+literature--and perform better than all but Markham in his lucid
+intervals, alas, too rare.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ May 22, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I enclose a proof of the poem[3]--all marked up. The poem was offered
+to the Journal, but to the wrong editor. I would not offer it to him
+in whose department it could be used, for he once turned down some
+admirable verses of my friend Scheffauer which I sent him. I'm glad
+the Journal is _not_ to have it, for it now goes into the Washington
+Post--and the Post into the best houses here and elsewhere--a good,
+clean, unyellow paper. I'll send you some copies with the poem.
+
+[3] "Memorial Day."
+
+I think my marks are intelligible--I mean my _re_marks. Perhaps you'll
+not approve all, or anything, that I did to the poem; I'll only ask
+you to endure. When you publish in covers you can restore to the
+original draft if you like. I had not time (after my return from New
+York) to get your approval and did the best and the least I could.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My love to your pretty wife and sister. Let me know how hard you hate
+me for monkeying with your sacred lines.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Yes, your poem recalled my "Invocation" as I read it; but it is
+better, and not too much like--hardly like at all except in the
+"political" part. Both, in that, are characterized, I think, by decent
+restraint. How * * * would, at those places, have ranted and chewed
+soap!--a superior quality of soap, I confess.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[1825 Nineteenth St., N. W., Washington, D. C.,
+ June 30, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I am glad my few words of commendation were not unpleasing to you. I
+meant them all and more. You ought to have praise, seeing that it is
+all you got. The "Post," like most other newspapers, "don't pay for
+poetry." What a damning confession! It means that the public is as
+insensible to poetry as a pig to--well, to poetry. To any sane mind
+such a poem as yours is worth more than all the other contents of a
+newspaper for a year.
+
+I've not found time to consider your "bit of blank" yet--at least not
+as carefully as it probably merits.
+
+My relations with the present editor of the Examiner are not
+unfriendly, I hope, but they are too slight to justify me in
+suggesting anything to him, or even drawing his attention to anything.
+I hoped you would be sufficiently "enterprising" to get your poem into
+the paper if you cared to have it there. I wrote Dr. Doyle about you.
+He is a dear fellow and you should know each other. As to Scheffauer,
+he is another. If you want him to see your poem why not send it to
+him? But the last I heard he was very ill. I'm rather anxious to hear
+more about him.
+
+It was natural to enclose the stamps, but I won't have it so--so
+there! as the women say.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[1825 Nineteenth St., N. W., Washington, D. C.,
+ July 15, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+Here is the bit of blank. When are we to see the book? Needless
+question--when you can spare the money to pay for publication, I
+suppose, if by that time you are ambitious to achieve public
+inattention. That's my notion of encouragement--I like to cheer up the
+young author as he sets his face toward "the peaks of song."
+
+Say, that photograph of the pretty sister--the one with a downward
+slope of the eyes--is all faded out. That is a real misfortune: it
+reduces the sum of human happiness hereabout. Can't you have one done
+in fast colors and let me have it? The other is all right, but that is
+not the one that I like the better for my wall. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 16, 1901.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I enclose the poems with a few suggestions. They require little
+criticism of the sort that would be "helpful." As to their merit I
+think them good, but not great. I suppose you do not expect to write
+great things every time. Yet in the body of your letter (of Oct. 22)
+you do write greatly--and say that the work is "egoistic" and
+"unprintable." If it[4] were addressed to another person than myself I
+should say that it is "printable" exceedingly. Call it what you will,
+but let me tell you it will probably be long before you write anything
+better than some--many--of these stanzas.
+
+[4] "Dedication" poem to Ambrose Bierce.
+
+You ask if you have correctly answered your own questions. Yes; in
+four lines of your running comment:
+
+"I suppose that I'd do the greater good in the long run by making my
+work as good poetry as possible."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course I deplore your tendency to dalliance with the demagogic
+muse. I hope you will not set your feet in the dirty paths--leading
+nowhither--of social and political "reform".... I hope you will not
+follow * * * in making a sale of your poet's birthright for a mess of
+"popularity." If you do I shall have to part company with you, as I
+have done with him and at least _one_ of his betters, for I draw the
+line at demagogues and anarchists, however gifted and however
+beloved.
+
+Let the "poor" alone--they are oppressed by nobody but God. Nobody
+hates them, nobody despises. "The rich" love them a deal better than
+they love one another. But I'll not go into these matters; your own
+good sense must be your salvation if you are saved. I recognise the
+temptations of environment: you are of San Francisco, the paradise of
+ignorance, anarchy and general yellowness. Still, a poet is not
+altogether the creature of his place and time--at least not of his
+to-day and his parish.
+
+By the way, you say that * * * is your only associate that knows
+anything of literature. She is a dear girl, but look out for her; she
+will make you an anarchist if she can, and persuade you to kill a
+President or two every fine morning. I warrant you she can pronounce
+the name of McKinley's assassin to the ultimate zed, and has a little
+graven image of him next her heart.
+
+Yes, you can republish the Memorial Day poem without the _Post's_
+consent--could do so in "book form" even if the _Post_ had copyrighted
+it, which it did not do. I think the courts have held that in
+purchasing work for publication in his newspaper or magazine the
+editor acquires no right in it, _except for that purpose_. Even if he
+copyright it that is only to protect him from other newspapers or
+magazines; the right to publish in a book remains with the author.
+Better ask a lawyer though--preferably without letting him know
+whether you are an editor or an author.
+
+I ought to have answered (as well as able) these questions before, but
+I have been ill and worried, and have written few letters, and even
+done little work, and that only of the pot-boiling sort.
+
+My daughter has recovered and returned to Los Angeles.
+
+Please thank Miss * * * for the beautiful photographs--I mean for
+being so beautiful as to "take" them, for doubtless I owe their
+possession to you.
+
+I wrote Doyle about you and he cordially praised your work as
+incomparably superior to his own and asked that you visit him. He's a
+lovable fellow and you'd not regret going to Santa Cruz and boozing
+with him.
+
+Thank you for the picture of Grizzly and the cub of him.
+
+Sincerely yours, with best regards to the pretty ever-so-much-better
+half of you,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. * * * * * * * * * * *
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 15, 1902.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+Where are you going to stop?--I mean at what stage of development? I
+presume you have not a "whole lot" of poems really writ, and have not
+been feeding them to me, the least good first, and not in the order of
+their production. So it must be that you are advancing at a stupendous
+rate. This last[5] beats any and all that went before--or I am
+bewitched and befuddled. I dare not trust myself to say what I think
+of it. In manner it is great, but the greatness of the theme!--that is
+beyond anything.
+
+[5] "The Testimony of the Suns."
+
+It is a new field, the broadest yet discovered. To paraphrase
+Coleridge,
+
+ You are the first that ever burst
+ Into that silent [unknown] sea--
+
+a silent sea _because_ no one else has burst into it in full song.
+True, there have been short incursions across the "border," but only
+by way of episode. The tremendous phenomena of Astronomy have never
+had adequate poetic treatment, their meaning adequate expression. You
+must make it your own domain. You shall be the poet of the skies,
+the prophet of the suns. Don't fiddle-faddle with such infinitesimal
+and tiresome trivialities as (for example) the immemorial squabbles of
+"rich" and "poor" on this "mote in the sun-beam." (Both "classes,"
+when you come to that, are about equally disgusting and
+unworthy--there's not a pin's moral difference between them.) Let them
+cheat and pick pockets and cut throats to the satisfaction of their
+base instincts, but do thou regard them not. Moreover, by that great
+law of change which you so clearly discern, there can be no permanent
+composition of their nasty strife. "Settle" it how they will--another
+beat of the pendulum and all is as before; and ere another, Man will
+again be savage, sitting on his naked haunches and gnawing raw bones.
+
+Yes, circumstances make the "rich" what they are. And circumstances
+make the poor what _they_ are. I have known both, long and well. The
+rich--_while_ rich--are a trifle better. There's nothing like poverty
+to nurture badness. But in this country there are no such "classes" as
+"rich" and "poor": as a rule, the wealthy man of to-day was a poor
+devil yesterday; the poor devils of to-day have an equal chance to be
+rich to-morrow--or would have if they had equal brains and providence.
+The system that gives them the chance is not an oppressive one. Under
+a really oppressive system a salesman in a village grocery could not
+have risen to a salary of one million dollars a year because he was
+worth it to his employers, as Schwab has done. True, some men get rich
+by dishonesty, but the poor commonly cheat as hard as they can and
+remain poor--thereby escaping observation and censure. The moral
+difference between cheating to the limit of a small opportunity and
+cheating to the limit of a great one is to me indiscernable. The
+workman who "skimps his work" is just as much a rascal as the
+"director" who corners a crop.
+
+As to "Socialism." I am something of a Socialist myself; that is, I
+think that the principle, which has always coexisted with competition,
+each safeguarding the other, may be advantageously extended. But those
+who rail against "the competitive system," and think they suffer from
+it, really suffer from their own unthrift and incapacity. For the
+competent and provident it is an ideally perfect system. As the other
+fellows are not of those who effect permanent reforms, or reforms of
+any kind, pure Socialism is the dream of a dream.
+
+But why do I write all this. One's opinions on such matters are
+unaffected by reason and instance; they are born of feeling and
+temperament. There is a Socialist diathesis, as there is an Anarchist
+diathesis. Could you teach a bulldog to retrieve, or a sheep to fetch
+and carry? Could you make a "born artist" comprehend a syllogism? As
+easily persuade a poet that black is not whatever color he loves.
+Somebody has defined poetry as "glorious nonsense." It is not an
+altogether false definition, albeit I consider poetry the flower and
+fruit of speech and would rather write gloriously than sensibly. But
+if poets saw things as they are they would write no more poetry.
+
+Nevertheless, I venture to ask you: _Can't_ you see in the prosperity
+of the strong and the adversity of the weak a part of that great
+beneficent law, "the survival of the fittest"? Don't you see that such
+evils as inhere in "the competitive system" are evils only to
+individuals, but blessings to the race by gradually weeding out the
+incompetent and their progeny?
+
+I've done, i' faith. Be any kind of 'ist or 'er that you will, but
+don't let it get into your ink. Nobody is calling you to deliver your
+land from Error's chain. What we want of you is poetry, not politics.
+And if you care for fame just have the goodness to consider if any
+"champion of the poor" has ever obtained it. From the earliest days
+down to Massanielo, Jack Cade and Eugene Debs the leaders and prophets
+of "the masses" have been held unworthy. And with reason too, however
+much injustice is mixed in with the right of it. Eventually the most
+conscientious, popular and successful "demagogue" comes into a
+heritage of infamy. The most brilliant gifts cannot save him. That
+will be the fate of Edwin Markham if he does not come out o' that, and
+it will be the fate of George Sterling if he will not be warned.
+
+You think that "the main product of that system" (the "competitive")
+"is the love of money." What a case of the cart before the horse! The
+love of money is not the product, but the root, of the system--not the
+effect, but the cause. When one man desires to be better off than
+another he competes with him. You can abolish the system when you can
+abolish the desire--when you can make man as Nature did _not_ make
+him, content to be as poor as the poorest. Do away with the desire to
+excel and you may set up your Socialism at once. But what kind of a
+race of sloths and slugs will you have?
+
+But, bless me, I shall _never_ have done if I say all that comes to
+me.
+
+Why, of course my remarks about * * * were facetious--playful. She
+really is an anarchist, and her sympathies are with criminals, whom
+she considers the "product" of the laws, but--well, she inherited the
+diathesis and can no more help it than she can the color of her pretty
+eyes. But she is a child--and except in so far as her convictions
+make her impossible they do not count. She would not hurt a fly--not
+even if, like the toad, it had a precious jewel in its head that it
+did not work for. But I am speaking of the * * * that _I_ knew. If I
+did not know that the anarchist leopard's spots "will wash," your
+words would make me think that she might have changed. It does not
+matter what women think, if thinking it may be called, and * * * will
+never be other than lovable.
+
+Lest you have _not_ a copy of the verses addressed to me I enclose one
+that I made myself. Of course their publication could not be otherwise
+than pleasing to me if you care to do it. You need not fear the
+"splendid weight" expression, and so forth--there is nothing
+"conceited" in the poem. As it was addressed to me, I have not
+criticised it--I _can't_. And I guess it needs no criticism.
+
+I fear for the other two-thirds of this latest poem. If you descend
+from Arcturus to Earth, from your nebulae to your neighbors, from Life
+to lives, from the measureless immensities of space to the petty
+passions of us poor insects, won't you incur the peril of anti-climax?
+I doubt if you can touch the "human interest" after those high themes
+without an awful tumble. I should be sorry to see the poem "peter
+out," or "soak in." It would be as if Goethe had let his "Prologue in
+Heaven" expire in a coon song. You have reached the "heights of dream"
+all right, but how are you to stay there to the end? By the way, you
+must perfect yourself in Astronomy, or rather get a general knowledge
+of it, which I fear you lack. Be sure about the pronunciation of
+astronomical names.
+
+I have read some of Jack London's work and think it clever. Of
+Whitaker I never before heard, I fear. If London wants to criticise
+your "Star poem" what's the objection? I should not think, though,
+from his eulogism of * * *, that he is very critical. * * *
+
+Where are you to place Browning? Among thinkers. In his younger days,
+when he wrote in English, he stood among the poets. I remember writing
+once--of the thinker: "There's nothing more obscure than Browning
+except blacking." I'll stand to that.
+
+No, don't take the trouble to send me a copy of these verses: I expect
+to see them in a book pretty soon. * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours, AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 31, 1902.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I am glad to know that you too have a good opinion of that poem.[6]
+One should know about one's own work. Most writers think their work
+good, but good writers know it. Pardon me if I underrated your
+astronomical knowledge. My belief was based on your use of those
+names. I never met with the spelling "Betelgeux"; and even if it is
+correct and picturesque I'd not use it if I were you, for it does not
+quite speak itself, and you can't afford to jolt the reader's
+attention from your thought to a matter of pronunciation. In my
+student days we, I am sure, were taught to say Procy'on. I don't think
+I've heard it pronounced since, and I've no authority at hand. If you
+are satisfied with Pro'cyon I suppose it is that. But your
+pronunciation was Aldeb'aran or your meter very crazy indeed. I asked
+(with an interrogation point) if it were not Aldeba'ran--and I think
+it is. Fomalhaut I don't know about; I thought it French and
+masculine. In that case it would, I suppose, be "ho," not "hote."
+
+[6] "The Testimony of the Suns."
+
+Don't cut out that stanza, even if "clime" doesn't seem to me to have
+anything to do with duration. The stanza is good enough to stand a
+blemish.
+
+"Ye stand rebuked by suns who claim"--I was wrong in substituting
+"that" for "who," not observing that it would make it ambiguous. I
+merely yielded to a favorite impulse: to say "that" instead of "who,"
+and did not count the cost.
+
+Don't cut out _any_ stanza--if you can't perfect them let them go
+imperfect.
+
+ "Without or genesis or end."
+ "Devoid of birth, devoid of end."
+
+These are not so good as
+
+"Without beginning, without end";--I submit them to suggest a way to
+overcome that identical rhyme. All you have to do is get rid of the
+second "without." I should not like "impend."
+
+Yes, I vote for Orion's _sword_ of suns. "Cimetar" sounds better, but
+it is more specific--less generic. It is modern--or, rather, less
+ancient than "sword," and makes one think of Turkey and the Holy Land.
+But "sword"--there were swords before Homer. And I don't think the man
+who named this constellation ever saw a curved blade. And yet, and
+yet--"cimetar of suns" is "mighty catchin'."
+
+No, indeed, I could not object to your considering the heavens in a
+state of war. I have sometimes fancied I could hear the rush and roar
+of it. Why, a few months ago I began a sonnet thus:
+
+ "Not as two erring spheres together grind,
+ With monstrous ruin, in the vast of space,
+ Destruction born of that malign embrace--
+ Their hapless peoples all to death consigned--" etc.
+
+I've been a star-gazer all my life--from my habit of being "out late,"
+I guess; and the things have always seemed to me _alive_.
+
+The change in the verses _ad meum_, from "_thy_ clearer light" to
+"_the_ clearer light" may have been made modestly or inadvertently--I
+don't recollect. It is, of course, no improvement and you may do as
+you please. I'm uniformly inadvertent, but intermittently modest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A class of stuff that I can't (without "trouble in the office") write
+my own way I will not write at all. So I'm writing very little of
+anything but nonsense. * * *
+
+With best regards to Mrs. Sterling and Miss Marian I am
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Leigh died a year ago this morning. I wish I could stop counting the
+days.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 15, 1902.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+All right--I only wanted you to be _sure_ about those names of stars;
+it would never do to be less than sure.
+
+After all our talk (made by me) I guess that stanza would better stand
+as first written. "Clime"--climate--connotes temperature, weather, and
+so forth, in ordinary speech, but a poet may make his own definitions,
+I suppose, and compel the reader to study them out and accept them.
+
+Your misgiving regarding your inability to reach so high a plane again
+as in this poem is amusing, but has an element of the pathetic. It
+certainly is a misfortune for a writer to do his _best_ work early;
+but I fancy you'd better trust your genius and do its bidding whenever
+the monkey chooses to bite. "The Lord will provide." Of course you
+have read Stockton's story "His Wife's Deceased Sister." But Stockton
+gets on very well, despite "The Lady or the Tiger." I've a notion that
+you'll find other tragedies among the stars if earth doesn't supply
+you with high enough themes.
+
+Will I write a preface for the book? Why, yes, if you think me
+competent. Emerson commands us to "hitch our wagon to a star?" and,
+egad! here's a whole constellation--a universe--of stars to draw mine!
+It makes me blink to think of it.
+
+O yes, I'd like well enough to "leave the Journal," but--
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Washington, D. C.,
+ July 10, 1902.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+If rejection wounded, all writers would bleed at every pore.
+Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done. Of course I shall be glad
+to go over your entire body of work again and make suggestions if any
+occur to me. It will be no trouble--I could not be more profitably
+employed than in critically reading you, nor more agreeably.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course your star poem has one defect--if it is a defect--that
+limits the circle of understanding and admiring readers--its lack of
+"_human_ interest." We human insects, as a rule, care for nothing but
+ourselves, and think that is best which most closely touches such
+emotions and sentiments as grow out of our relations, the one with
+another. I don't share the preference, and a few others do not,
+believing that there are things more interesting than men and women.
+The Heavens, for example. But who knows, or cares anything about
+them--even knows the name of a single constellation? Hardly any one
+but the professional astronomers--and there are not enough of them to
+buy your books and give you fame. I should be sorry not to have that
+poem published--sorry if you did not write more of the kind. But while
+it may impress and dazzle "the many" it will not win them. They want
+you to finger their heart-strings and pull the cord that works their
+arms and legs. So you must finger and pull--too.
+
+The Chateau Yquem came all right, and is good. Thank you for
+it--albeit I'm sorry you feel that you must do things like that. It is
+very conventional and, I fear, "proper." However, I remember that you
+used to do so when you could not by any stretch of imagination have
+felt that you were under an "obligation." So I guess it is all
+right--just your way of reminding me of the old days. Anyhow, the wine
+is so much better than my own that I've never a scruple when drinking
+it.
+
+Has "Maid Marian" a photograph of me?--I don't remember. If not I'll
+send her one; I've just had some printed from a negative five or six
+years old. I've renounced the photograph habit, as one renounces other
+habits when age has made them ridiculous--or impossible.
+
+Send me the typewritten book when you have it complete.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ August 19, 1902.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I suppose you are in Seattle, but this letter will keep till your
+return.
+
+I am delighted to know that I am to have "the book" so soon, and will
+give it my best attention and (if you still desire) some prefatory
+lines. Think out a good title and I shall myself be hospitable to any
+suggestion of my daemon in the matter. He has given me nothing for the
+star poem yet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You'll "learn in suffering what you teach in song," all right; but let
+us hope the song will be the richer for it. It _will_ be. For that
+reason I never altogether "pity the sorrows" of a writer--knowing they
+are good for him. He needs them in his business. I suspect you must
+have shed a tear or two since I knew you.
+
+I'm sending you a photograph, but you did not tell me if Maid Marian
+the Superb already has one--that's what I asked you, and if you don't
+answer I shall ask her.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I am fairly well, and, though not "happy," content. But I'm
+dreadfully sorry about Peterson.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I am about to break up my present establishment and don't know where
+my next will be. Better address me "Care N. Y. American and Journal
+Bureau, Washington, D. C."
+
+You see I'm still chained to the oar of yellow journalism, but it is a
+rather light servitude.
+
+
+[Address me at 1321 Yale Street, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 20, 1902.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I fancy you must fear by this time that I did not get the poems, but I
+did. I'll get at them, doubtless, after awhile, though a good deal of
+manuscript--including a couple of novels!--is ahead of them; and one
+published book of bad poems awaits a particular condemnation.
+
+I'm a little embarrassed about the preface which I'm to write. I fear
+you must forego the preface or I the dedication. That kind of
+"cooperation" doesn't seem in very good taste: it smacks of "mutual
+admiration" in the bad sense, and the reviewers would probably call it
+"log-rolling." Of course it doesn't matter too much what the reviewers
+say, but it matters a lot what the intelligent readers think; and your
+book will have no others. I really shouldn't like to write the preface
+of a book dedicated to me, though I did not think of that at first.
+
+The difficulty could be easily removed by _not_ dedicating the book to
+me were it not that that would sacrifice the noble poem with my name
+atop of it. That poem is itself sufficiently dedicatory if printed by
+itself in the forepages of the book and labeled "Dedication--To
+Ambrose Bierce." I'm sure that vanity has nothing to do, or little to
+do, with my good opinion of the verses. And, after all, they _show_
+that I have said _to you_ all that I could say to the reader in your
+praise and encouragement. What do you think?
+
+As to dedicating individual poems to other fellows, I have not the
+slightest hesitancy in advising you against it. The practice smacks of
+the amateur and is never, I think, pleasing to anybody but the person
+so honored. The custom has fallen into "innocuous desuetude" and there
+appears to be no call for its revival. Pay off your obligations (if
+such there be) otherwise. You may put it this way if you like: The
+whole book being dedicated to me, no part of it _can_ be dedicated to
+another. Or this way: Secure in my exalted position I don't purpose
+sharing the throne with rival (and inferior) claimants. They be gam
+doodled!
+
+Seriously--but I guess it is serious enough as it stands. It occurs to
+me that in saying: "no part of it _can_ be dedicated to another" I
+might be understood as meaning: "no part of it _must_ be," etc. No; I
+mean only that the dedication to another would contradict the
+dedication to me. The two things are (as a matter of fact)
+incompatible.
+
+Well, if you think a short preface by me preferable to the verses with
+my name, all right; I will cheerfully write it, and that will leave
+you free to honor your other friends if you care to. But those are
+great lines, and implying, as they do, all that a set preface could
+say, it seems to me that they ought to stand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Maid Marian shall have the photograph.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[1321 Yale Street, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 1, 1903.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+You are a brick. You shall do as you will. My chief reluctance is that
+if it become known, or _when_ it becomes known, there may ensue a
+suspicion of my honesty in praising you and _your_ book; for critics
+and readers are not likely to look into the matter of dates. For your
+sake I should be sorry to have it thought that my commendation was
+only a log-rolling incident; for myself, I should care nothing about
+it. This eel is accustomed to skinning.
+
+It is not the least pleasing of my reflections that my friends have
+always liked my work--or me--well enough to want to publish my books
+at their own expense. Everything that I have written could go to the
+public that way if I would consent. In the two instances in which I
+did consent they got their money back all right, and I do not doubt
+that it will be so in this; for if I did not think there was at least
+a little profit in a book of mine I should not offer it to a
+publisher. "Shapes of Clay" _ought_ to be published in California,
+and it would have been long ago if I had not been so lazy and so
+indisposed to dicker with the publishers. Properly advertised--which
+no book of mine ever has been--it should sell there if nowhere else.
+Why, then, do _I_ not put up the money? Well, for one reason, I've
+none to put up. Do you care for the other reasons?
+
+But I must make this a condition. If there is a loss, _I_ am to bear
+it. To that end I shall expect an exact accounting from your Mr. Wood,
+and the percentage that Scheff. purposes having him pay to me is to go
+to you. The copyright is to be mine, but nothing else until you are
+entirely recouped. But all this I will arrange with Scheff., who, I
+take it, is to attend to the business end of the matter, with, of
+course, your assent to the arrangements that he makes.
+
+I shall write Scheff. to-day to go ahead and make his contract with
+Mr. Wood on these lines. Scheff. appears not to know who the "angel"
+in the case is, and he need not, unless, or until, you want him to.
+
+I've a pretty letter from Maid Marian in acknowledgment of the
+photograph. I shall send one to Mrs. Sterling at once, in the sure and
+certain hope of getting another. It is good of her to remember my
+existence, considering that your scoundrelly monopoly of her permitted
+us to meet so seldom. I go in for a heavy tax on married men who live
+with their wives.
+
+"She holds no truce with Death _or_ Peace" means that with _one_ of
+them she holds no truce; "nor" makes it mean that she holds no truce
+with _either_. The misuse of "or" (its use to mean "nor") is nearly
+everybody's upsetting sin. So common is it that "nor" instead usually
+sounds harsh.
+
+I omitted the verses on "Puck," not because Bunner is dead, but
+because his work is dead too, and the verses appear to lack intrinsic
+merit to stand alone. I shall perhaps omit a few more when I get the
+proofs (I wish you could see the bushels I've left out already) and
+add a few serious ones.
+
+I'm glad no end that you and Scheff. have met. I'm fond of the boy and
+he likes me, I think. He too has a book of verses on the ways, and I
+hope for it a successful launching. I've been through it all; some of
+it is great in the matter of thews and brawn; some fine.
+
+Pardon the typewriter; I wanted a copy of this letter.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The New York "American" Bureau, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 13, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+It is good to hear from you again and to know that the book is so
+nearly complete as to be in the hands of the publishers. I dare say
+they will not have it, and you'll have to get it out at your own
+expense. When it comes to that I shall hope to be of service to you,
+as you have been to me.
+
+So you like Scheff. Yes, he is a good boy and a good friend. I wish
+you had met our friend Dr. Doyle, who has now gone the long, lone
+journey. It has made a difference to me, but that matters little, for
+the time is short in which to grieve. I shall soon be going his way.
+
+No, I shall not put anything about the * * * person into "Shapes of
+Clay." His offence demands another kind of punishment, and until I
+meet him he goes unpunished. I once went to San Francisco to punish
+him (but that was in hot blood) but * * * of "The Wave" told me the
+man was a hopeless invalid, suffering from locomotor ataxia. I have
+always believed that until I got your letter and one from Scheff. Is
+it not so?--or _was_ it not? If not he has good reason to think me a
+coward, for his offence was what men are killed for; but of course
+one does not kill a helpless person, no matter what the offence is.
+If * * * lied to me I am most anxious to know it; he has always
+professed himself a devoted friend.
+
+The passage that you quote from Jack London strikes me as good. I
+don't dislike the word "penetrate"--rather like it. It is in frequent
+use regarding exploration and discovery. But I think you right about
+"rippling"; it is too lively a word to be outfitted with such an
+adjective as "melancholy." I see London has an excellent article in
+"The Critic" on "The Terrible and Tragic in Fiction." He knows how to
+think a bit.
+
+What do I think of Cowley-Brown and his "Goosequill"? I did not know
+that he had revived it; it died several years ago. I never met him,
+but in both Chicago and London (where he had "The Philistine," or "The
+Anti-Philistine," I do not at the moment remember which) he was most
+kind to me and my work. In one number of his magazine--the London
+one--he had four of my stories and a long article about me which
+called the blushes to my maiden cheek like the reflection of a red
+rose in the petal of a violet. Naturally I think well of Cowley-Brown.
+
+You make me sad to think of the long leagues and the monstrous
+convexity of the earth separating me from your camp in the redwoods.
+There are few things that I would rather do than join that party; and
+I'd be the last to strike my tent and sling my swag. Alas, it cannot
+be--not this year. My outings are limited to short runs along this
+coast. I was about to set out on one this morning; and wrote a hasty
+note to Scheff in consequence of my preparations. In five hours I was
+suffering from asthma, and am now confined to my room. But for eight
+months of the year here I am immune--as I never was out there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You will have to prepare yourself to endure a good deal of praise when
+that book is out. One does not mind when one gets accustomed to it. It
+neither pleases nor bores; you will have just no feeling about it at
+all. But if you really care for _my_ praise I hope you have quoted a
+bit of it at the head of those dedicatory verses, as I suggested. That
+will give them a _raison d'etre_.
+
+With best regards to Mrs. Sterling and Katie I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--If not too much trouble you may remind Dick Partington and wife
+that I continue to exist and to remember them pleasantly.
+
+
+[N. Y. "American" Bureau, Washington, D. C.,
+ [July, 1903].]
+
+DEAR SCHEFF:
+
+I got the proofs yesterday, and am returning them by this mail. The
+"report of progress" is every way satisfactory, and I don't doubt that
+a neat job is being done.
+
+The correction that you made is approved. I should have wanted and
+expected you to make many corrections and suggestions, but that I have
+had a purpose in making this book--namely, that it should represent my
+work at its average. In pursuance of this notion I was not hospitable
+even to suggestions, and have retained much work that I did not myself
+particularly approve; some of it trivial. You know I have always been
+addicted to trifling, and no book from which trivialities were
+excluded would fairly represent me.
+
+I could not commend this notion in another. In your work and
+Sterling's I have striven hard to help you to come as near to
+perfection as we could, because perfection is what you and he want,
+and as young writers ought to want, the character of your work being
+higher than mine. I reached my literary level long ago, and seeing
+that it is not a high one there would seem to be a certain
+affectation, even a certain dishonesty, in making it seem higher than
+it is by republication of my best only. Of course I have not carried
+out this plan so consistently as to make the book dull: I had to "draw
+the line" at that.
+
+I say all this because I don't want you and Sterling to think that I
+disdain assistance: I simply decided beforehand not to avail myself of
+its obvious advantages. You would have done as much for the book in
+one way as you have done in another.
+
+I'll have to ask you to suggest that Mr. Wood have a man go over all
+the matter in the book, and see that none of the pieces are
+duplicated, as I fear they are. Reading the titles will not be enough:
+I might have given the same piece two titles. It will be necessary to
+compare first lines, I think. That will be drudgery which I'll not ask
+you to undertake: some of Wood's men, or some of the printer's men,
+will do it as well; it is in the line of their work.
+
+The "Dies Irae" is the most earnest and sincere of religious poems; my
+travesty of it is mere solemn fooling, which fact is "given away" in
+the prose introduction, where I speak of my version being of possible
+service in the church! The travesty is not altogether unfair--it was
+inevitably suggested by the author's obvious inaccessibility to humor
+and logic--a peculiarity that is, however, observable in all religious
+literature, for it is a fundamental necessity to the religious mind.
+Without logic and a sense of the ludicrous a man is religious as
+certainly as without webbed feet a bird has the land habit.
+
+It is funny, but I am a "whole lot" more interested in seeing your
+cover of the book than my contents of it. I don't at all doubt--since
+you dared undertake it--that your great conception will find a fit
+interpreter in your hand; so my feeling is not anxiety. It is just
+interest--pure interest in what is above my powers, but in which _you_
+can work. By the way, Keller, of the old "Wasp" was _not_ the best of
+its cartoonists. The best--the best of _all_ cartoonists if he had not
+died at eighteen--was another German, named Barkhaus. I have all his
+work and have long cherished a wish to republish it with the needed
+explanatory text--much of it being "local" and "transient." Some day,
+perhaps--most likely not. But Barkhaus was a giant.
+
+How I envy you! There are few things that would please me so well as
+to "drop in" on you folks in Sterling's camp. Honestly, I think all
+that prevents is the (to me) killing journey by rail. And two months
+would be required, going and returning by sea. But the rail trip
+across the continent always gives me a horrible case of asthma, which
+lasts for weeks. I shall never take _that_ journey again if I can
+avoid it. What times you and they will have about the campfire and the
+table! I feel like an exile, though I fear I don't look and act the
+part.
+
+I did not make the little excursion I was about to take when I wrote
+you recently. Almost as I posted the letter I was taken ill and have
+not been well since.
+
+Poor Doyle! how thoughtful of him to provide for the destruction of my
+letters! But I fear Mrs. Doyle found some of them queer reading--if
+she read them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Great Scott! if ever they begin to publish mine there will be a
+circus! For of course the women will be the chief sinners,
+and--well, they have material a-plenty; they can make many volumes,
+and your poor dead friend will have so bad a reputation that you'll
+swear you never knew him. I dare say, though, you have sometimes been
+indiscreet, too. _My_ besetting sin has been in writing to my girl
+friends as if they were sweethearts--the which they'll doubtless not
+be slow to affirm. The fact that they write to me in the same way will
+be no defense; for when I'm worm's meat I can't present the proof--and
+wouldn't if I could. Maybe it won't matter--if I don't turn in my
+grave and so bother the worms.
+
+As Doyle's "literary executor" I fear your duties will be light: he
+probably did not leave much manuscript. I judge from his letters that
+he was despondent about his work and the narrow acceptance that it
+had. So I assume that he did not leave much more than the book of
+poems, which no publisher would (or will) take.
+
+You are about to encounter the same stupid indifference of the
+public--so is Sterling. I'm sure of Sterling, but don't quite know how
+it will affect _you_. You're a pretty sturdy fellow, physically and
+mentally, but this _may_ hurt horribly. I pray that it do not, and
+could give you--perhaps have given you--a thousand reasons why it
+_should_ not. You are still young and your fame may come while you
+live; but you must not expect it now, and doubtless do not. To me, and
+I hope to you, the approval of one person who knows is sweeter than
+the acclaim of ten thousand who do not--whose acclaim, indeed, I would
+rather not have. If you do not _feel_ this in every fibre of your
+brain and heart, try to learn to feel it--practice feeling it, as one
+practices some athletic feat necessary to health and strength.
+
+Thank you very much for the photograph. You are growing too
+infernally handsome to be permitted to go about unchained. If I had
+your "advantages" of youth and comeliness I'd go to the sheriff and
+ask him to lock me up. That would be the honorable thing for you to
+do, if you don't mind. God be with you--but inattentive.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Aurora, Preston Co., West Virginia,
+ August 15, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I fear that among the various cares incident to my departure from
+Washington I forgot, or neglected, to acknowledge the Joaquin Miller
+book that you kindly sent me. I was glad to have it. It has all his
+characteristic merits and demerits--among the latter, his interminable
+prolixity, the thinness of the thought, his endless repetition of
+favorite words and phrases, many of them from his other poems, his
+mispronunciation, his occasional flashes of prose, and so forth.
+
+Scheff tells me his book is out and mine nearly out. But what of
+yours? I do fear me it never will be out if you rely upon its
+"acceptance" by any American publisher. If it meets with no favor
+among the publisher tribe we must nevertheless get it out; and you
+will of course let me do what I can. That is only tit for tat. But
+tell me about it.
+
+I dare say Scheff, who is clever at getting letters out of me--the
+scamp!--has told you of my being up here atop of the Alleghenies, and
+why I _am_ here. I'm having a rather good time. * * * Can you fancy me
+playing croquet, cards, lawn--no, thank God, I've escaped lawn tennis
+and golf! In respect of other things, though, I'm a glittering
+specimen of the Summer Old Man.
+
+Did _you_ have a good time in the redwoods?
+
+Please present my compliments to Madame (and Mademoiselle) Sterling.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Aurora, West Virginia,
+ September 8, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I return the verses with a few suggestions.
+
+I'm sorry your time for poetry is so brief. But take your pencil and
+figure out how much you would write in thirty years (I hope you'll
+live that long) at, say, six lines a day. You'll be surprised by the
+result--and encouraged. Remember that 50,000 words make a fairly long
+book.
+
+You make me shudder when you say you are reading the "Prattle" of
+years. I haven't it and should hardly dare to read it if I had. There
+is so much in it to deplore--so much that is not wise--so much that
+was the expression of a mood or a whim--so much was not altogether
+sincere--so many half-truths, and so forth. Make allowances, I beg,
+and where you cannot, just forgive.
+
+Scheff has mentioned his great desire that you join the Bohemian Club.
+I know he wants me to advise you to do so. So I'm between two fires
+and would rather not advise at all. There are advantages (obvious
+enough) in belonging; and to one of your age and well grounded in
+sobriety and self-restraint generally, the disadvantages are not so
+great as to a youngster like Scheff. (Of course he is not so young as
+he seems to me; but he is younger by a few years and a whole lot of
+thought than you.)
+
+The trouble with that kind of club--with any club--is the temptation
+to waste of time and money; and the danger of the drink habit. If one
+is proof against these a club is all right. I belong to one myself in
+Washington, and at one time came pretty near to "running" it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I don't think Scheff's view of Kipling just. He asked me about
+putting that skit in the book. It _was_ his view and, that being so, I
+could see no reason for suppressing it in deference to those who do
+not hold it. I like free speech, though I'd not accord it to my
+enemies if I were Dictator. I should not think it for the good of the
+State to let * * * write verses, for example. The modern fad Tolerance
+does not charm me, but since it is all the go I'm willing that my
+friends should have their fling.
+
+I dare say Scheff is unconscious of Kipling's paternity in the fine
+line in "Back, back to Nature":
+
+ "Loudly to the shore cries the surf upon the sea."
+
+But turn to "The Last Chanty," in "The Seven Seas," fill your ears
+with it and you'll write just such a line yourself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+God be decent to you, old man.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Aurora, West Virginia,
+ September 12, 1903.]
+
+DEAR STERLING,
+
+I have yours of the 5th. Before now you have mine of _some_ date.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm glad you like London; I've heard he is a fine fellow and have read
+one of his books--"The Son of the Wolf," I think is the title--and it
+seemed clever work mostly. The general impression that remains with me
+is that it is always winter and always night in Alaska.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+* * * will probably be glad to sell his scrap-book later, to get
+bread. He can't make a living out of the labor unions alone. I wish he
+were not a demgagoue and would not, as poor Doyle put it, go a-whoring
+after their Muse. When he returns to truth and poetry I'll receive him
+back into favor and he may kick me if he wants to.
+
+No, I can't tell you how to get "Prattle"; if I could I'd not be
+without it myself. You ask me when I began it in the "Examiner." Soon
+after Hearst got the paper--I don't know the date--they can tell you
+at the office and will show you the bound volumes.
+
+I have the bound volumes of the "Argonaut" and "Wasp" during the years
+when I was connected with them, but my work in the "Examiner" (and
+previously in the "News Letter" and the London "Fun" and "Figaro" and
+other papers) I kept only in a haphazard and imperfect way.
+
+I don't recollect giving Scheff any "epigram" on woman or anything
+else. So I can't send it to you. I amuse myself occasionally with that
+sort of thing in the "Journal" ("American") and suppose Hearst's other
+papers copy them, but the "environment" is uncongenial and
+uninspiring.
+
+Do I think extracts from "Prattle" would sell? I don't think anything
+of mine will sell. I could make a dozen books of the stuff that I have
+"saved up"--have a few ready for publication now--but all is vanity so
+far as profitable publication is concerned. Publishers want nothing
+from me but novels--and I'll die first.
+
+Who is * * *--and why? It is good of London to defend me against him.
+I fancy all you fellows have a-plenty of defending me to do, though
+truly it is hardly worth while. All my life I have been hated and
+slandered by all manner of persons except good and intelligent ones;
+and I don't greatly mind. I knew in the beginning what I had to
+expect, and I know now that, like spanking, it hurts (sometimes) but
+does not harm. And the same malevolence that has surrounded my life
+will surround my memory if I am remembered. Just run over in your mind
+the names of men who have told the truth about their unworthy fellows
+and about human nature "as it was given them to see it." They are
+the bogie-men of history. None of them has escaped vilification. Can
+poor little I hope for anything better? When you strike you are
+struck. The world is a skunk, but it has rights; among them that of
+retaliation. Yes, you deceive yourself if you think the little fellows
+of letters "like" you, or rather if you think they will like you when
+they know how big you are. They will lie awake nights to invent new
+lies about you and new means of spreading them without detection. But
+you have your revenge: in a few years they'll all be dead--just the
+same as if you had killed them. Better yet, you'll be dead yourself.
+So--you have my entire philosophy in two words: "Nothing matters."
+
+Reverting to Scheff. What he has to fear (if he cares) is not
+incompetent criticism, but public indifference. That does not bite,
+but poets are an ambitious folk and like the limelight and the center
+of the stage. Maybe Scheff is different, as I know you are. Try to
+make him so if he isn't. * * * Wise poets write for one another. If
+the public happens to take notice, well and good. Sometimes it
+does--and then the wise poet would a blacksmith be. But this screed is
+becoming an essay.
+
+Please give my love to all good Sterlings--those by birth and those by
+marriage. * * *
+
+My friends have returned to Washington, and I'm having great times
+climbing peaks (they are knobs) and exploring gulches and canyons--for
+which these people have no names--poor things. My dreamland is still
+unrevisited. They found a Confederate soldier over there the other
+day, with his rifle alongside. I'm going over to beg his pardon.
+
+ Ever yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.
+ [Postmarked October 12, 1903.]]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I have Jack London's books--the one from you and the one from him. I
+thank you and shall find the time to read them. I've been back but a
+few days and find a brace of dozen of books "intitualed" "Shapes of
+Clay." That the splendid work done by Scheff and Wood and your other
+associates in your labor of love is most gratifying to me should "go
+without saying." Surely _I_ am most fortunate in having so good
+friends to care for my interests. Still, there will be an aching void
+in the heart of me until _your_ book is in evidence. Honest, I feel
+more satisfaction in the work of you and Scheff than in my own. It is
+through you two that I expect my best fame. And how generously you
+accord it!--unlike certain others of my "pupils," whom I have assisted
+far more than I did you.
+
+My trip through the mountains has done my health good--and my heart
+too. It was a "sentimental journey" in a different sense from
+Sterne's. Do you know, George, the charm of a new emotion? Of course
+you do, but at my age I had thought it impossible. Well, I had it
+repeatedly. Bedad, I think of going again into my old "theatre of
+war," and setting up a cabin there and living the few days that remain
+to me in meditation and sentimentalizing. But I should like you to be
+near enough to come up some Saturday night with some'at to drink.
+Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[N. Y. Journal Office, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 21, 1903.]
+
+MY DEAR STERLING,
+
+I'm indebted to you for two letters--awfully good ones. In the last
+you tell me that your health is better, and I can see for myself that
+your spirits are. This you attribute to exercise, correctly, no doubt.
+You need a lot of the open air--we all do. I can give myself
+hypochondria in forty-eight hours by staying in-doors. The sedentary
+life and abstracted contemplation of one's own navel are good for
+Oriental gods only. We spirits of a purer fire need sunlight and the
+hills. My own recent wanderings afoot and horseback in the mountains
+did me more good than a sermon. And you have "the hills back of
+Oakland"! God, what would I not give to help you range them, the dear
+old things! Why, I know every square foot of them from Walnut Creek to
+Niles Canyon. Of course they swarm with ghosts, as do all places out
+there, even the streets of San Francisco; but I and my ghosts always
+get on well together. With the female ones my relations are sometimes
+a bit better than they were with the dear creatures when they lived.
+
+I guess I did not acknowledge the splendidly bound "Shapes" that you
+kindly sent, nor the Jack London books. Much thanks.
+
+I'm pleased to know that Wood expects to sell the whole edition of my
+book, but am myself not confident of that.
+
+So we are to have your book soon. Good, but I don't like your
+indifference to its outward and visible aspect. Some of my own books
+have offended, and continue to offend, in that way. At best a book is
+not too beautiful; at worst it is hideous. Be advised a bit by Scheff
+in this matter; his taste seems to me admirable and I'm well pleased
+by his work on the "Shapes"; even his covers, which I'm sorry to learn
+do not please Wood, appear to me excellent. I approved the design
+before he executed it--in fact chose it from several that he
+submitted. Its only fault seems to me too much gold leaf, but that is
+a fault "on the right side." In that and all the rest of the work
+(except my own) experts here are delighted. I gave him an absolutely
+free hand and am glad I did. I don't like the ragged leaves, but he
+does not either, on second thought. The public--the reading public--I
+fear does, just now.
+
+I'll get at your new verses in a few days. It will be, as always it
+is, a pleasure to go over them.
+
+About "Prattle." I should think you might get help in that matter from
+Oscar T. Schuck, 2916 Laguna St. He used to suffer from "Prattle" a
+good deal, but is very friendly, and the obtaining it would be in the
+line of his present business.
+
+How did you happen to hit on Markham's greatest two lines--but I need
+not ask that--from "The Wharf of Dreams"?
+
+Well, I wish I could think that those lines of mine in "Geotheos" were
+worthy to be mentioned with Keats' "magic casements" and Coleridge's
+"woman wailing for her demon lover." But I don't think any lines of
+anybody are. I laugh at myself to remember that Geotheos, never before
+in print I believe, was written for E. L. G. Steele to read before a
+"young ladies' seminary" somewhere in the cow counties! Like a man of
+sense he didn't read it. I don't share your regret that I have not
+devoted myself to serious poetry. I don't think of myself as a poet,
+but as a satirist; so I'm entitled to credit for what little gold
+there may be in the mud I throw. But if I professed gold-throwing, the
+mud which I should surely mix with the missiles would count against
+me. Besides, I've a preference for being the first man in a village,
+rather than the second man in Rome. Poetry is a ladder on which there
+is now no room at the top--unless you and Scheff throw down some of
+the chaps occupying the upper rung. It looks as if you might, but I
+could not. When old Homer, Shakspeare and that crowd--building
+better than Ozymandias--say: "Look on my works, ye mighty, and
+despair!" I, considering myself specially addressed, despair. The
+challenge of the wits does not alarm me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to your problems in grammar.
+
+If you say: "There is no hope _or_ fear" you say that _one_ of them
+does not exist. In saying: "There is no hope _nor_ fear" you say that
+_both_ do not exist--which is what you mean.
+
+"Not to weary you, I shall say that I fetched the book from his
+cabin." Whether that is preferable to "I will say" depends on just
+what is meant; both are grammatical. The "shall" merely indicates an
+intention to say; the "will" implies a certain shade of concession in
+saying it.
+
+It is no trouble to answer such questions, _nor_ to do anything else
+to please you. I only hope I make it clear.
+
+I don't know if all my "Journal" work gets into the "Examiner," for I
+don't see all the issues of either paper. I'm not writing much anyhow.
+They don't seem to want much from me, and their weekly check is about
+all that I want from them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I don't know any better poem of Kipling than "The Last Chanty."
+Did you see what stuff of his Prof. Harry Thurston Peck, the Hearst
+outfit's special literary censor, chose for a particular commendation
+the other day? Yet Peck is a scholar, a professor of Latin and a
+writer of merited distinction. Excepting the ability to write poetry,
+the ability to understand it is, I think, the rarest of intellectual
+gifts. Let us thank "whatever gods may be" that we have it, if we
+haven't so very much else.
+
+I've a lovely birch stick a-seasoning for you--cut it up in the
+Alleghanies.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ October 29, 1903.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I return the verses--with apology for tardiness. I've been "full up"
+with cares.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I would not change "Religion" to "Dogma" (if I were you) for all "the
+pious monks of St. Bernard." Once you begin to make concessions to the
+feelings of this person or that there is no place to stop and you may
+as well hang up the lyre. Besides, Dogma does not "seek"; it just
+impudently declares something to have been found. However, it is a
+small matter--nothing can destroy the excellence of the verses. I only
+want to warn you against yielding to a temptation which will assail
+you all your life--the temptation to "edit" your thought for somebody
+whom it may pain. Be true to Truth and let all stand from under.
+
+Yes, I think the quatrain that you wrote in Col. Eng's book good
+enough to go in your own. But I'd keep "discerning," instead of
+substituting "revering." In art discernment _carries_ reverence.
+
+_Of course_ I expect to say something of Scheff's book, but in no
+paper with which I have a present connection can I regularly "review"
+it. Hearst's papers would give it incomparably the widest publicity,
+but they don't want "reviews" from me. They have Millard, who has
+already reviewed it--right well too--and Prof. Peck--who possibly
+might review it if it were sent to him. "Prof. Harry Thurston Peck,
+care of 'The American,' New York City." Mention it to Scheff. I'm
+trying to find out what I can do.
+
+I'm greatly pleased to observe your ability to estimate the relative
+value of your own poems--a rare faculty. "To Imagination" is, _I_
+think, the best of all your short ones.
+
+I'm impatient for the book. It, too, I shall hope to write something
+about. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Navarre Hotel and Importation Co., Seventh Avenue and 38th St.,
+ New York,
+ December 26, 1903.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+A thousand cares have prevented my writing to you--and Scheff. And
+this is to be a "busy day." But I want to say that I've not been
+unmindful of your kindness in sending the book--which has hardly left
+my pocket since I got it. And I've read nothing in it more than once,
+excepting the "Testimony." _That_ I've studied, line by line--and
+"precept by precept"--finding in it always "something rich and
+strange." It is greater than I knew; it is the greatest "ever"!
+
+I'm saying a few words about it in tomorrow's "American"--would that I
+had a better place for what I say and more freedom of saying. But they
+don't want, and won't have, "book reviews" from me; probably because I
+will not undertake to assist their advertising publishers. So I have
+to disguise my remarks and work up to them as parts of another topic.
+In this case I have availed myself of my favorite "horrible example,"
+Jim Riley, who ought to be proud to be mentioned on the same page with
+you. After all, the remarks may not appear; I have the _littlest_
+editor that ever blue-penciled whatever he thought particularly dear
+to the writer. I'm here for only a few days, I hope.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I want to say that you seem to me greatest when you have the greatest
+subject--not flowers, women and all that,--but something above the
+flower-and-woman belt--something that you see from altitudes from
+which _they_ are unseen and unsmelled. Your poetry is incomparable
+with that of our other poets, but your thought, philosophy,--that is
+greater yet. But I'm writing this at a desk in the reading room of a
+hotel; when I get home I'll write you again.
+
+I'm concerned about your health, of which I get bad reports. Can't you
+go to the mesas of New Mexico and round up cattle for a year or
+two--or do anything that will permit, or compel, you to sleep
+out-of-doors under your favorite stars--something that will _not_
+permit you to enter a house for even ten minutes? You say no. Well,
+some day you'll _have_ to--when it is too late--like Peterson, my
+friend Charley Kaufman and so many others, who might be living if they
+had gone into that country in time and been willing to make the
+sacrifice when it would have done good. You can go _now_ as well as
+_then_; and if now you'll come back well, if then, you'll not only
+sacrifice your salary, "prospects," and so forth, but lose your life
+as well. I _know_ that kind of life would cure you. I've talked with
+dozens of men whom it did cure.
+
+You'll die of consumption if you don't. Twenty-odd years ago I was
+writing articles on the out-of-doors treatment for consumption.
+Now--only just now--the physicians are doing the same, and
+establishing out-of-door sanitaria for consumption.
+
+You'll say you haven't consumption. I don't say that you have. But you
+will have if you listen to yourself saying: "I can't do it." * * *
+
+Pardon me, my friend, for this rough advice as to your personal
+affairs: I am greatly concerned about you. Your life is precious to me
+and to the world. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 8, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Thank you so much for the books and the inscription--which (as do all
+other words of praise) affects me with a sad sense of my shortcomings
+as writer and man. Things of that kind from too partial friends point
+out to me with a disquieting significance what I ought to be; and the
+contrast with what I am hurts. Maybe you feel enough that way
+sometimes to understand. You are still young enough to profit by the
+pain; _my_ character is made--_my_ opportunities are gone. But it does
+not greatly matter--nothing does. I have some little testimony from
+you and Scheff and others that I have not lived altogether in vain,
+and I know that I have greater satisfaction in my slight connection
+with your and their work than in my own. Also a better claim to the
+attention and consideration of my fellow-men.
+
+Never mind about the "slow sale" of my book; I did not expect it to be
+otherwise, and my only regret grows out of the fear that some one may
+lose money by the venture. _It is not to be you._ You know I am still
+a little "in the dark" as to what _you_ have really done in the
+matter. I wish you would tell me if any of your own money went into
+it. The contract with Wood is all right; it was drawn according to my
+instructions and I shall not even accept the small royalty allowed me
+if anybody is to be "out." If _you_ are to be out I shall not only not
+accept the royalty, but shall reimburse you to the last cent. Do you
+mind telling me about all that? In any case don't "buy out Wood" and
+don't pay out anything for advertising nor for anything else.
+
+The silence of the reviewers does not trouble me, any more than it
+would you. Their praise of my other books never, apparently, did me
+any good. No book published in this country ever received higher
+praise from higher sources than my first collection of yarns. But the
+book was never a "seller," and doubtless never will be. That _I_ like
+it fairly well is enough. You and I do not write books to sell; we
+write--or rather publish--just because we like to. We've no right to
+expect a profit from fun.
+
+It is odd and amusing that you could have supposed that I had any
+other reason for not writing to you than a fixed habit of
+procrastination, some preoccupation with my small affairs and a very
+burdensome correspondence. Probably you _could_ give me a grievance by
+trying hard, but if you ever are conscious of not having tried you may
+be sure that I haven't the grievance.
+
+I should have supposed that the author of "Viverols" and several
+excellent monographs on fish would have understood your poems. (O no;
+I don't mean that your Muse is a mermaid.) Perhaps he did, but you
+know how temperate of words men of science are by habit. Did you send
+a book to Garrett Serviss? I should like to know what he thinks of the
+"Testimony." As to Joaquin, it is his detestable habit, as it was
+Longfellow's, to praise all poetry submitted to him, and he said of
+Madge Morris's coyote poem the identical thing that he says of your
+work. Sorry to disillusionize you, but it is so.
+
+As to your health. You give me great comfort. * * * But it was not only
+from Scheff that I had bad accounts of you and "your cough." Scheff,
+indeed, has been reticent in the matter, but evidently anxious; and
+you yourself have written despondently and "forecasted" an early
+passing away. If nothing is the matter with you and your lungs some of
+your friends are poor observers. I'm happy to have your testimony, and
+beg to withdraw my project for your recovery. You whet my appetite for
+that new poem. The lines
+
+ "The blue-eyed vampire, sated at her feast,
+ Smiles bloodily against the leprous moon"
+
+give me the shivers. Gee! they're awful! Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 5, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You should not be irritated by the "conspiracy of silence" about me on
+the part of the "Call," the "Argonaut" and other papers. Really my
+enemies are under no obligation to return good for evil; I fear I
+should not respect them if they did. * * *, his head still sore from
+my many beatings of that "distracted globe," would be a comic figure
+stammering his sense of my merit and directing attention to the
+excellence of the literary wares on my shelf.
+
+As to the pig of a public, its indifference to a diet of pearls--_our_
+pearls--was not unknown to me, and truly it does not trouble me
+anywhere except in the pocket. _That_ pig, too, is not much beholden
+to me, who have pounded the snout of it all my life. Why should it
+assist in the rite? Its indifference to _your_ work constitutes a new
+provocation and calls for added whacks, but not its indifference to
+mine.
+
+The Ashton Stevens interview was charming. His finding you and Scheff
+together seems too idyllic to be true--I thought it a fake. He put in
+quite enough--too much--about me. As to Joaquin's hack at me--why,
+that was magnanimity itself in one who, like most of us, does not
+offset blame against praise, subtract the latter from the former and
+find matter for thanks in the remainder. You know "what fools we
+mortals be"; criticism that is not all honey is all vinegar. Nobody
+has more delighted than I in pointing out the greatness of Joaquin's
+great work; but nobody than I has more austerely condemned * * *,
+his vanity and the general humbugery that makes his prose so
+insupportable. Joaquin is a good fellow, all the same, and you should
+not demand of him impossible virtues and a reach of reasonableness
+that is alien to him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have the books you kindly sent and have planted two or three in what
+I think fertile soil which I hope will produce a small crop of
+appreciation.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And the poem![7] I hardly know how to speak of it. No poem in English
+of equal length has so bewildering a wealth of imagination. Not
+Spenser himself has flung such a profusion of jewels into so small a
+casket. Why, man, it takes away the breath! I've read and reread--read
+it for the expression and read it for the thought (always when I speak
+of the "thought" in your work I mean the meaning--which is another
+thing) and I shall read it many times more. And pretty soon I'll get
+at it with my red ink and see if I can suggest anything worth your
+attention. I fear not.
+
+[7] "A Wine of Wizardry."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+["New York American" Office, Washington, D. C.,
+ February 29, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I wrote you yesterday. Since then I have been rereading your letter. I
+wish you would not say so much about what I have done for you, and how
+much it was worth to you, and all that. I should be sorry to think
+that I did not do a little for you--I tried to. But, my boy, you
+should know that I don't keep that kind of service _on sale_.
+Moreover, I'm amply repaid by what _you_ have done for _me_--I mean
+with your pen. Do you suppose _I_ do not value such things? Does it
+seem reasonable to think me unpleasured by those magnificent
+dedicatory verses in your book? Is it nothing to me to be called
+"Master" by such as you? Is my nature so cold that I have no pride in
+such a pupil? There is no obligation in the matter--certainly none
+that can be suffered to satisfy itself out of your pocket.
+
+You greatly overestimate the sums I spend in "charity." I sometimes
+help some poor devil of an unfortunate over the rough places, but not
+to the extent that you seem to suppose. I couldn't--I've too many
+regular, constant, _legitimate_ demands on me. Those, mostly, are what
+keep me poor.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Maybe you think it odd that I've not said a word in print about any of
+your work except the "Testimony." It is not that I don't appreciate
+the minor poems--I do. But I don't like to scatter; I prefer to hammer
+on a single nail--to push one button until someone hears the bell.
+When the "Wine" is published I'll have another poem that is not only
+great, but striking--notable--to work on. However good, or even great,
+a short poem with such a title as "Poesy," "Music," "To a Lily," "A
+White Rose," and so forth, cannot be got into public attention. Some
+longer and more notable work, of the grander manner, may _carry_ it,
+but of itself it will not go. Even a bookful of its kind will not. Not
+till you're famous.
+
+Your letter regarding your brother (who has not turned up) was
+needless--I could be of no assistance in procuring him employment.
+I've tried so often to procure it for others, and so vainly, that
+nobody could persuade me to try any more. I'm not fond of the
+character of suppliant, nor of being "turned down" by the little men
+who run this Government. Of course I'm not in favor with this
+Administration, not only because of my connection with Democratic
+newspapers, but because, also, I sometimes venture to dissent
+openly from the doctrine of the divinity of those in high
+station--particularly Teddy.
+
+I'm sorry you find your place in the office intolerable. That is "the
+common lot of all" who work for others. I have chafed under the yoke
+for many years--a heavier yoke, I think, than yours. It does not fit
+my neck anywhere. Some day perhaps you and I will live on adjoining
+ranches in the mountains--or in adjoining caves--"the world
+forgetting, by the world forgot." I have really been on the point of
+hermitizing lately, but I guess I'll have to continue to live like a
+reasonable human being a little longer until I can release myself with
+a conscience void of offense to my creditors and dependents. But "the
+call of the wild" sounds, even in my dreams.
+
+You ask me if you should write in "A Wine of Wizardry" vein, or in
+that of "The Testimony of the Suns." Both. I don't know in which you
+have succeeded the better. And I don't know anyone who has succeeded
+better in either. To succeed in both is a marvelous performance. You
+may say that the one is fancy, the other imagination, which is true,
+but not the whole truth. The "Wine" has as true imagination as the
+other, and fancy into the bargain. I like your grandiose manner, and I
+like the other as well. In terms of another art I may say--rear great
+towers and domes. Carve, also, friezes. But I'd not bother to cut
+single finials and small decorations. However exquisite the
+workmanship, they are not worth your present attention. If you were a
+painter (as, considering your wonderful sense of color, you doubtless
+could have been) your large canvases would be your best.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I don't care if that satire of Josephare refers to me or not; it was
+good. He may jump on me if he wants to--I don't mind. All I ask is
+that he do it well.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I passed yesterday with Percival Pollard, viewing the burnt district
+of Baltimore. He's a queer duck whom I like, and he likes your work.
+I'm sending you a copy of "The Papyrus," with his "rehabilitation" of
+the odious Oscar Wilde. Wilde's work is all right, but what can one do
+with the work of one whose name one cannot speak before women?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 19, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+The "belatedness" of your letter only made _me_ fear that _I_ had
+offended _you_. Odd that we should have such views of each other's
+sensitiveness.
+
+About Wood. No doubt that he is doing all that he can, but--well, he
+is not a publisher. For example: He sent forty or fifty "Shapes" here.
+They lie behind a counter at the bookseller's--not even _on_ the
+counter. There are probably not a dozen persons of my acquaintance in
+Washington who know that I ever wrote a book. Now _how_ are even these
+to know about _that_ book? The bookseller does not advertise the books
+he has on sale and the public does not go rummaging behind his
+counters. A publisher's methods are a bit different, naturally.
+
+Only for your interest I should not care if my books sold or not; they
+exist and will not be destroyed; every book will eventually get to
+_somebody_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It seems to be a matter for you to determine--whether Wood continues
+to try to sell the book or it is put in other hands if he is ever
+tired of it. Remember, I don't care a rap what happens to the book
+except as a means of reimbursing you; I want no money and I want no
+glory. If you and Wood can agree, do in all things as you please.
+
+I return Wood's letters; they show what I knew before: that the public
+and the librarians would not buy that book. Let us discuss this matter
+no more, but at some time in the future you tell me how much you are
+out of pocket.
+
+_Your_ book shows that a fellow can get a good deal of glory with very
+little profit. You are now famous--at least on the Pacific Coast; but
+I fancy you are not any "for'arder" in the matter of wealth than you
+were before. I too have some reputation--a little wider, as yet, than
+yours. Well, my work sells tremendously--in Mr. Hearst's newspapers,
+at the price of a small fraction of one cent! Offered by itself, in
+one-dollar and two-dollar lots, it tempts nobody to fall over his own
+feet in the rush to buy. A great trade, this of ours!
+
+I note with interest the "notices" you send. The one by Monahan is
+amusing with its gabble about your "science." To most men, as to him,
+a mention of the stars suggests astronomy, with its telescopes,
+spectroscopes and so forth. Therefore it is "scientific." To tell such
+men that there is nothing of science in your poem would puzzle them
+greatly.
+
+I don't think poor Lang meant to do anything but his best and
+honestest. He is a rather clever and rather small fellow and not to be
+blamed for the limitations of his insight. I have repeatedly pointed
+out in print that it requires genius to discern genius at first hand.
+Lang has written almost the best, if not quite the best, sonnet in the
+language--yet he is no genius.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Why, of course--why should you not help the poor devil, * * *; I used
+to help him myself--introduced him to the public and labored to
+instruct him. Then--but it is unspeakable and so is he. He will bite
+your hand if you feed him, but I think I'd throw a crust to him
+myself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I don't agree with you about Homer, nor "stand for" your implied
+view that narrative poetry is not "pure poetry." Poetry seems to me to
+speak with a thousand voices--"a various language." The miners have a
+saying: "Gold is where you find it." So is poetry; I'm expecting to
+find it some fine day in the price list of a grocery store. I fancy
+_you_ could put it there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to Goethe, the more you read him, the better you will love Heine.
+
+Thank you for "A Wine of Wizardry"--amended. It seems to me that the
+fake dictum of "Merlin-sage" (I don't quite perceive the necessity of
+the hyphen) is better than the hackneyed Scriptural quotation. It is
+odd, but my recollection is that it was the "sick enchantress" who
+cried "unto Betelgeuse a mystic word." Was it not so in the copy that
+I first had, or do I think so merely because the cry of one is more
+lone and awful than the cry of a number?
+
+I am still of the belief that the poem should have at least a few
+breaks in it, for I find myself as well as the public more or less--I,
+doubtless, less than the public--indisposed to tackle solid columns
+of either verse or prose. I told you this poem "took away one's
+breath,"--give a fellow, can't you, a chance to recover it now and
+again.
+
+ "Space to breathe, how short soever."
+
+Nevertheless, not my will but thine be done, on earth as it is in San
+Francisco. Sincerely yours, AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 11, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+To begin at the beginning, I shall of course be pleased to meet
+Josephare if he come this way; if only to try to solve the problem of
+what is in a fellow who started so badly and in so short a time was
+running well, with a prospect of winning "a place." Byron, you know,
+was the same way and Tennyson not so different. Still their start was
+not so bad as Josephare's. I freely confess that I thought him a fool.
+It is "one on me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I wonder if a London house would publish "Shapes of Clay."
+Occasionally a little discussion about me breaks out in the London
+press, blazes up for a little while and "goes up in smoke." I enclose
+some evidences of the latest one--which you may return if you remember
+to do so. The letter of "a deeply disappointed man" was one of
+rollicking humor suggested by some articles of Barr about me and a
+private intimation from him that I should publish some more books in
+London.
+
+Yes, I've dropped "The Passing Show" again, for the same old
+reason--wouldn't stand the censorship of my editor. I'm writing for
+the daily issues of The American, mainly, and, as a rule, anonymously.
+It's "dead easy" work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is all right--that "cry unto Betelgeuse"; the "sick enchantress"
+passage is good enough without it. I like the added lines of the poem.
+Here's another criticism: The "Without" and "Within," beginning the
+first and third lines, respectively, _seem_ to be antithetic, when
+they are not, the latter having the sense of "into," which I think
+might, for clearness, be substituted for it without a displeasing
+break of the metre--a trochee for an iambus.
+
+Why should I not try "The Atlantic" with this poem?--if you have not
+already done so. I could write a brief note about it, saying what
+_you_ could not say, and possibly winning attention to the work. If
+you say so I will. It is impossible to imagine a magazine editor
+rejecting that amazing poem. I have read it at least twenty times with
+ever increasing admiration.
+
+Your book, by the way, is still my constant companion--I carry it in
+my pocket and read it over and over, in the street cars and
+everywhere. _All_ the poems are good, though the "Testimony" and
+"Memorial Day" are supreme--the one in grandeur, the other in feeling.
+
+I send you a criticism in a manuscript letter from a friend who
+complains of your "obscurity," as many have the candor to do. It
+requires candor to do that, for the fault is in the critic's
+understanding. Still, one who understands Shakspeare and Milton is not
+without standing as a complaining witness in the court of literature.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My favorite translation of Homer is that of Pope, of whom it is the
+present fashion to speak disparagingly, as it is of Byron. I know all
+that can be said against them, and say _some_ of it myself, but I wish
+their detractors had a little of their brains. I know too that Pope's
+translations of The Iliad and The Odyssey are rather paraphrases than
+translations. But I love them just the same, while wondering (with
+you, doubtless) what so profoundly affected Keats when he "heard
+Chapman speak out loud and bold." Whatever it was, it gave us what
+Coleridge pronounced the best sonnet in our language; and Lang's
+admiration of Homer has given us at least the next best. Of course
+there must be something in poems that produce poems--in a poet whom
+most poets confess their king. I hold (with Poe) that there is no such
+thing as a _long_ poem--a poem of the length of an Epic. It must
+consist of poetic passages connected by _recitativo_, to use an opera
+word; but it is perhaps better for that. If the writer cannot write
+"sustained" poetry the reader probably could not read it. Anyhow, I
+vote for Homer.
+
+I am passing well, but shall soon seek the mountains, though I hope to
+be here when Scheff points his prow this way. Would that you were
+sailing with him!
+
+I've been hearing all about all of you, for Eva Crawford has been
+among you "takin' notes," and Eva's piquant comments on what and whom
+she sees are delicious reading. I should suppose that _you_ would
+appreciate Eva--most persons don't. She is the best letter writer of
+her sex--who are all good letter writers--and she is much beside. I
+may venture to whisper that you'd find her estimate of your work and
+personality "not altogether displeasing."
+
+Now that I'm about such matters, I shall enclose a note to my friend
+Dr. Robertson, who runs an insanery at Livermore and is an interesting
+fellow with a ditto family and a library that will make you pea-green
+with envy. Go out and see him some day and take Scheff, or any friend,
+along--he wants to know you. You won't mind the facts that he thinks
+all poetry the secretion of a diseased brain, and that the only
+reason he doesn't think all brains (except his own) diseased is the
+circumstance that not all secrete poetry.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Seriously, he is a good fellow and full of various knowledges that
+most of us wot not of.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ June 14, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have a letter from * * *, who is in St. Louis, to which his progress
+has been more leisurely than I liked, considering that I am remaining
+away from my mountains only to meet him. However, he intimates an
+intention to come in a week. I wish you were with him.
+
+I am sending the W. of W. to Scribner's, as you suggest, and if it is
+not taken shall try the other mags in the order of your preference.
+But it's funny that you--_you_--should prefer the "popular" magazines
+and wish the work "illustrated." Be assured the illustrations will
+shock you if you get them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I understand what you say about being bored by the persons whom your
+work in letters brings about your feet. The most _contented_ years of
+my life lately were the two or three that I passed here before
+Washington folk found out that I was an author. The fact has leaked
+out, and although not a soul of them buys and reads my books some of
+them bore me insupportably with their ignorant compliments and
+unwelcome attentions. I fancy I'll have to "move on."
+
+Tell Maid Marian to use gloves when modeling, or the clay will enter
+into her soul through her fingers and she become herself a Shape of
+Clay. My notion is that she should work in a paste made of
+ashes-of-roses moistened with nectar.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. Does it bore you that I like you to know my friends? Professor
+* * *'s widow (and daughter) are very dear to me. She knows about you,
+and I've written her that I'd ask you to call on her. You'll like them
+all right, but I have another purpose. I want to know how they
+prosper; and they are a little reticent about that. Maybe you could
+ascertain indirectly by seeing how they live. I asked Grizzly to do
+this but of course he didn't, the shaggy brute that he is.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Haines' Falls, Greene Co., N. Y.,
+ August 4, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I haven't written a letter, except on business, since leaving
+Washington, June 30--no, not since Scheff's arrival there. I now
+return to earth, and my first call is on you.
+
+You'll be glad to know that I'm having a good time here in the
+Catskills. I shall not go back so long as I can find an open hotel.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I should like to hear from you about our--or rather your--set in
+California, and especially about _you_. Do you still dally with the
+Muse? Enclosed you will find two damning evidences of additional
+incapacity. _Harper's_ now have "A Wine of Wizardry," and they too
+will indubitably turn it down. I shall then try _The Atlantic_, where
+it should have gone in the first place; and I almost expect its
+acceptance.
+
+I'm not working much--just loafing on my cottage porch; mixing an
+occasional cocktail; infesting the forests, knife in hand, in pursuit
+of the yellow-birch sapling that furnishes forth the walking stick
+like yours; and so forth. I knocked off work altogether for a month
+when Scheff came, and should like to do so for _you_. Are you never
+going to visit the scenes of your youth?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It is awfully sad--that latest visit of Death to the heart and home of
+poor Katie Peterson. Will you kindly assure her of my sympathy?
+
+Love to all the Piedmontese. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Haines' Falls, Greene Co., N. Y.,
+ August 27, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+First, thank you for the knife and the distinction of membership in
+the Ancient and Honorable Order of Knifers. I have made little use of
+the blades and other appliances, but the corkscrew is in constant use.
+
+I'm enclosing a little missive from the editor of _Harper's_. Please
+reserve these things awhile and sometime I may ask them of you to
+"point a moral or adorn a tale" about that poem. If we can't get it
+published I'd like to write for some friendly periodical a review of
+an unpublished poem, with copious extracts and a brief history of it.
+I think that would be unique.
+
+I find the pictures of Marian interesting, but have the self-denial to
+keep only one of them--the prettiest one of course. Your own is rather
+solemn, but it will do for the title page of the Testimony, which is
+still my favorite reading.
+
+Scheff showed me your verses on Katie's baby, and Katie has since sent
+them. They are very tender and beautiful. I would not willingly spare
+any of your "personal" poems--least of all, naturally, the one
+personal to me. Your success with them is exceptional. Yet the habit
+of writing them is perilous, as the many failures of great poets
+attest--Milton, for example, in his lines to Syriack Skinner, his
+lines to a baby that died a-bornin' and so forth. The reason is
+obvious, and you have yourself, with sure finger, pointed it out:
+
+ "Remiss the ministry they bear
+ Who serve her with divided heart;
+ She stands reluctant to impart
+ Her strength to purpose, end, or care."
+
+When one is intent upon pleasing some mortal, one is less intent upon
+pleasing the immortal Muse. All this is said only by way of admonition
+for the future, not in criticism of the past. I'm a sinner myself in
+that way, but then I'm not a saint in any way, so my example doesn't
+count.
+
+I don't mind * * * calling me a "dignified old gentleman"--indeed,
+that is what I have long aspired to be, but have succeeded only in the
+presence of strangers, and not always then. * * *
+
+(I forgot to say that your poem is now in the hands of the editor of
+the Atlantic.)
+
+Your determination to "boom" me almost frightens me. Great Scott!
+you've no notion of the magnitude of the task you undertake; the
+labors of Hercules were as nothing to it. Seriously, don't make any
+enemies that way; it is not worth while. And you don't know how
+comfortable I am in my obscurity. It is like being in "the shadow of a
+great rock in a weary land."
+
+How goes the no sale of Shapes of Clay? I am slowly saving up a bit of
+money to recoup your friendly outlay. That's a new thing for me to
+do--the saving, I mean--and I rather enjoy the sensation. If it
+results in making a miser of me you will have to answer for it to
+many a worthy complainant.
+
+Get thee behind me, Satan!--it is not possible for me to go to
+California yet. For one thing, my health is better here in the East; I
+have utterly escaped asthma this summer, and summer is my only "sickly
+season" here. In California I had the thing at any time o' year--even
+at Wright's. But it is my hope to end my days out there.
+
+I don't think Millard was too hard on Kipling; it was no "unconscious"
+plagiarism; just a "straight steal."
+
+About Prentice Mulford. I knew him but slightly and used to make mild
+fun of him as "Dismal Jimmy." That expressed my notion of his
+character and work, which was mostly prose platitudes. I saw him last
+in London, a member of the Joaquin Miller-Charles Warren
+Stoddard-Olive Harper outfit at 11 Museum Street, Bloomsbury Square.
+He married there a fool girl named Josie--forget her other name--with
+whom I think he lived awhile in hell, then freed himself, and some
+years afterward returned to this country and was found dead one
+morning in a boat at Sag Harbor. Peace to the soul of him. No, he was
+not a faker, but a conscientious fellow who mistook his vocation.
+
+My friends have returned to Washington, but I expect to remain here a
+few weeks yet, infesting the woods, devastating the mountain larders,
+supervising the sunsets and guiding the stars in their courses. Then
+to New York, and finally to Washington. Please get busy with that fame
+o' yours so as to have the wealth to come and help me loaf.
+
+I hope you don't mind the typewriter--_I_ don't.
+
+Convey my love to all the sweet ladies of your entourage and make my
+compliments also to the Gang. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ October 5, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your latest was dated Sept. 10. I got it while alone in the mountains,
+but since then I have been in New York City and at West Point
+and--here. New York is too strenuous for me; it gets on my nerves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Please don't persuade me to come to California--I mean don't _try_ to,
+for I can't, and it hurts a little to say nay. There's a big bit of my
+heart there, but--O never mind the reasons; some of them would not
+look well on paper. One of them I don't mind telling; I would not live
+in a state under union labor rule. There is still one place where the
+honest American laboring man is not permitted to cut throats and strip
+bodies of women at his own sweet will. That is the District of
+Columbia.
+
+I am anxious to read Lilith; please complete it.
+
+I have another note of rejection for you. It is from * * *. Knowing
+that you will not bank on what he says about the Metropolitan, I
+enclose it. I've acted on his advising and sent the poem. It is about
+time for it to come back. Then I shall try the other magazines until
+the list is exhausted.
+
+Did I return your Jinks verses? I know I read them and meant to send
+them back, but my correspondence and my papers are in such hopeless
+disorder that I'm all at sea on these matters. For aught I know I may
+have elaborately "answered" the letter that I think myself to be
+answering now. I liked the verses very temperately, not madly.
+
+Of course you are right about the magazine editors not knowing poetry
+when they see it. But who does? I have not known more than a
+half-dozen persons in America that did, and none of them edited a
+magazine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, I did not write the "Urus-Agricola-Acetes stuff," though it was
+written _for_ me and, I believe, at my suggestion. The author was
+"Jimmy" Bowman, of whose death I wrote a sonnet which is in Black
+Beetles. He and I used to have a lot of fun devising literary
+mischiefs, fighting sham battles with each other and so forth. He was
+a clever chap and a good judge of whiskey.
+
+Yes, in The Cynic's Dictionary I did "jump from A to M." I had
+previously done the stuff in various papers as far as M, then lost the
+beginning. So in resuming I re-did that part (quite differently, of
+course) in order to have the thing complete if I should want to make a
+book of it. I guess the Examiner isn't running much of it, nor much of
+anything of mine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I like your love of Keats and the early Coleridge.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The N. Y. American Office, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 12, 1904.]
+
+MY DEAR DAVIS,
+
+The "bad eminence" of turning down Sterling's great poem is one that
+you will have to share with some of your esteemed fellow
+magazinists--for examples, the editors of the Atlantic, Harper's,
+Scribner's, The Century, and now the Metropolitan, all of the elite.
+All of these gentlemen, I believe, profess, as you do not, to know
+literature when they see it, and to deal in it.
+
+Well I profess to deal in it in a small way, and if Sterling will let
+me I propose some day to ask judgment between them and me.
+
+Even _you_ ask for literature--if my stories are literature, as you
+are good enough to imply. (By the way, all the leading publishers of
+the country turned down that book until they saw it published without
+them by a merchant in San Francisco and another sort of publishers in
+London, Leipzig and Paris.) Well, you wouldn't do a thing to one of my
+stories!
+
+No, thank you; if I have to write rot, I prefer to do it for the
+newspapers, which make no false pretences and are frankly rotten, and
+in which the badness of a bad thing escapes detection or is forgotten
+as soon as it is cold.
+
+I know how to write a story (of the "happy ending" sort) for magazine
+readers for whom literature is too good, but I will not do so so long
+as stealing is more honorable and interesting.
+
+I've offered you the best stuff to be had--Sterling's poem--and the
+best that I am able to make; and now you must excuse me. I do not
+doubt that you really think that you would take "the kind of fiction
+that made 'Soldiers and Civilians' the most readable book of its kind
+in this country," and it is nice of you to put it that way; but
+neither do I doubt that you would find the story sent a different kind
+of fiction and, like the satire which you return to me, "out of the
+question." An editor who has a preformed opinion of the kind of stuff
+that he is going to get will always be disappointed with the stuff
+that he does get.
+
+I know this from my early experience as an editor--before I learned
+that what I needed was, not any particular kind of stuff, but just the
+stuff of a particular kind of writer.
+
+All this without any feeling, and only by way of explaining why I must
+ask you to excuse me.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 6, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I got and read that fool thing in the August Critic. I found in
+it nothing worse than stupidity--no malice. Doubtless you have not
+sounded the deeper deeps of stupidity in critics, and so are driven to
+other motives to explain their unearthly errors. I know from my own
+experience of long ago how hard it is to accept abominable criticism,
+obviously (to the criticee) unfair, without attributing a personal
+mean motive; but the attribution is nearly always erroneous, even in
+the case of a writer with so many personal enemies as I. You will do
+well to avoid that weakness of the tyro. * * * has the infirmity in an
+apparently chronic form. Poets, by reason of the sensibilities that
+_make_ them poets, are peculiarly liable to it. I can't see any
+evidence that the poor devil of the Critic knew better.
+
+The Wine of Wizardry is at present at the Booklovers'. It should have
+come back ere this, but don't you draw any happy augury from that: I'm
+sure they'll turn it down, and am damning them in advance.
+
+I had a postal from * * * a few days ago. He was in Paris. I've
+written him only once, explaining by drawing his attention to the fact
+that one's reluctance to write a letter increases in the ratio of the
+square of the distance it has to go. I don't know why that is so, but
+it is--at least in my case.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I'm in perfect health, barring a bit of insomnia at times, and
+enjoy life as much as I ever did--except when in love and the love
+prospering; that is to say, when it was new.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 8, 1904.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+This is the worst yet! This jobbernowl seems to think "The Wine of
+Wizardry" a story. It should "arrive" and be "dramatic"--the
+denouement being, I suppose, a particularly exciting example of the
+"happy ending."
+
+My dear fellow, I'm positively ashamed to throw your pearls before any
+more of these swine, and I humbly ask your pardon for having done it
+at all. I guess the "Wine" will have to await the publication of your
+next book.
+
+But I'd like to keep this fellow's note if you will kindly let me have
+it. Sometime, when the poem is published, I shall paste it into a
+little scrap book, with all the notes of rejection, and then if I know
+a man or two capable of appreciating the humor of the thing I can make
+merry over it with them.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ My permanent address,
+ February 18, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+It's a long time since the date of your latest letter, but I've been
+doing two men's work for many weeks and have actually not found the
+leisure to write to my friends. As it is the first time that I've
+worked really hard for several years I ought not to complain, and
+don't. But I hope it will end with this session of Congress.
+
+I think I did not thank you for the additional copies of your new
+book--the new edition. I wish it contained the new poem, "A Wine of
+Wizardry." I've given up trying to get it into anything. I related my
+failure to Mackay, of "Success," and he asked to be permitted to see
+it. "No," I replied, "you too would probably turn it down, and I will
+take no chances of losing the respect that I have for you." And I'd
+not show it to him. He declared his intention of getting it,
+though--which was just what I wanted him to do. But I dare say he
+didn't.
+
+Yes, you sent me "The Sea Wolf." My opinion of it? Certainly--or a
+part of it. It is a most disagreeable book, as a whole. London has a
+pretty bad style and no sense of proportion. The story is a perfect
+welter of disagreeable incidents. Two or three (of the kind) would
+have sufficed to _show_ the character of the man Larsen; and his own
+self-revealings by word of mouth would have "done the rest." Many of
+these incidents, too, are impossible--such as that of a man mounting a
+ladder with a dozen other men--more or less--hanging to his leg, and
+the hero's work of rerigging a wreck and getting it off a beach where
+it had stuck for weeks, and so forth. The "love" element, with its
+absurd suppressions and impossible proprieties, is awful. I confess to
+an overwhelming contempt for both the sexless lovers.
+
+Now as to the merits. It is a rattling good story in one way;
+something is "going on" all the time--not always what one would wish,
+but _something_. One does not go to sleep over the book. But the great
+thing--and it is among the greatest of things--is that tremendous
+creation, Wolf Larsen. If that is not a permanent addition to
+literature, it is at least a permanent figure in the memory of the
+reader. You "can't lose" Wolf Larsen. He will be with you to the end.
+So it does not really matter how London has hammered him into you. You
+may quarrel with the methods, but the result is almost incomparable.
+The hewing out and setting up of such a figure is enough for a man to
+do in one life-time. I have hardly words to impart my good judgment of
+_that_ work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That is a pretty picture of Phyllis as Cleopatra--whom I think you
+used to call "the angel child"--as the Furies were called Eumenides.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm enclosing a review of your book in the St. Louis "Mirror," a paper
+always kindly disposed toward our little group of gifted obscurians. I
+thought you might not have seen it; and it is worth seeing. Percival
+Pollard sends it me; and to him we owe our recognition by the
+"Mirror."
+
+I hope you prosper apace. I mean mentally and spiritually; all other
+prosperity is trash.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 17, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've reached your letter on my file. I wonder that I did, for truly
+I'm doing a lot of work--mostly of the pot-boiler, newspaper sort,
+some compiling of future--probably _very_ future--books and a little
+for posterity.
+
+Valentine has not returned the "Wine of Wizardry," but I shall tell
+him to in a few days and will then try it on the magazines you
+mention. If that fails I can see no objection to offering it to the
+English periodicals.
+
+I don't know about Mackay. He has a trifle of mine which he was going
+to run months ago. He didn't and I asked it back. He returned it and
+begged that it go back to him for immediate publication. It went back,
+but publication did not ensue. In many other ways he has been
+exceedingly kind. Guess he can't always have his way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I read that other book to the bitter end--the "Arthur Sterling" thing.
+He is the most disagreeable character in fiction, though Marie
+Bashkirtseff and Mary McLean in real life could give him cards and
+spades. Fancy a poet, or any kind of writer, whom it hurts to think!
+What the devil are his agonies all about--his writhings and twistings
+and foaming at all his mouths? What would a poem by an intellectual
+epileptic like that be? Happily the author spares us quotation. I
+suppose there are Arthur Sterlings among the little fellows, but if
+genius is not serenity, fortitude and reasonableness I don't know what
+it is. One cannot even imagine Shakespeare or Goethe bleeding over his
+work and howling when "in the fell clutch of circumstance." The great
+ones are figured in my mind as ever smiling--a little sadly at times,
+perhaps, but always with conscious inaccessibility to the pinpricking
+little Titans that would storm their Olympus armed with ineffectual
+disasters and pop-gun misfortunes. Fancy a fellow wanting, like Arthur
+Sterling, to be supported by his fellows in order that he may write
+what they don't want to read! Even Jack London would gag at such
+Socialism as _that_.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm going to pass a summer month or two with the Pollards, at
+Saybrook, Conn. How I wish you could be of the party. But I suppose
+you'll be chicken-ranching then, and happy enough where you are. I
+wish you joy of the venture and, although I fear it means a meagre
+living, it will probably be more satisfactory than doubling over a
+desk in your uncle's office. The very name Carmel Bay is enchanting.
+I've a notion I shall see that ranch some day. I don't quite recognize
+the "filtered-through-the-emasculated-minds-of-about-six-fools"
+article from which you say I quote--don't remember it, nor remember
+quoting from it.
+
+I don't wonder at your surprise at my high estimate of Longfellow in a
+certain article. It is higher than my permanent one. I was thinking
+(while writing for a newspaper, recollect) rather of his fame than of
+his genius--I had to have a literary equivalent to Washington or
+Lincoln. Still, we must not forget that Longfellow wrote "Chrysaor"
+and, in narrative poetry (which you don't care for) "Robert of
+Sicily." Must one be judged by his average, or may he be judged, on
+occasion, by his highest? He is strongest who can lift the greatest
+weight, not he who habitually lifts lesser ones.
+
+As to your queries. So far as I know, Realf _did_ write his great
+sonnets on the night of his death. Anyhow, they were found with the
+body. Your recollection that I said they were written before he came
+to the Coast is faulty. Some of his other things were in print when he
+submitted them to me (and took pay for them) as new; but not the "De
+Mortuis."
+
+I got the lines about the echoes (I _think_ they go this way:
+
+ "the loon
+ Laughed, and the echoes, huddling in affright,
+ Like Odin's hounds went baying down the night")
+
+from a poem entitled, I think, "The Washers of the Shroud." I found it
+in the "Atlantic," in the summer of 1864, while at home from the war
+suffering from a wound, and--disgraceful fact!--have never seen nor
+heard of it since. If the magazine was a current number, as I suppose,
+it should be easy to find the poem. If you look it up tell me about
+it. I don't even know the author--had once a vague impression that it
+was Lowell but don't know.
+
+The compound "mulolatry," which I made in "Ashes of the Beacon," would
+not, of course, be allowable in composition altogether serious. I used
+it because I could not at the moment think of the right word,
+"gyneolatry," or "gynecolatry," according as you make use of the
+nominative or the accusative. I once made "caniolatry" for a similar
+reason--just laziness. It's not nice to do things o' that kind, even
+in newspapers.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I had intended to write you something of "beesness," but time is up
+and it must wait. This letter is insupportably long already.
+
+My love to Carrie and Katie. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ May 16, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Bailey Millard is editor of "The Cosmopolitan Magazine," which Mr.
+Hearst has bought. I met him in New York two weeks ago. He had just
+arrived and learning from Hearst that I was in town looked me up. I
+had just recommended him to Hearst as editor. He had intended him for
+associate editor. I think that will give you a chance, such as it is.
+Millard dined with me and I told him the adventures of "A Wine of
+Wizardry." I shall send it to him as soon as he has warmed his seat,
+unless you would prefer to send it yourself. He already knows my whole
+good opinion of it, and he shares my good opinion of you.
+
+I suppose you are at your new ranch, but I shall address this letter
+as usual.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If you hear of my drowning know that it is the natural (and desirable)
+result of the canoe habit. I've a dandy canoe and am tempting fate and
+alarming my friends by frequenting, not the margin of the upper river,
+but the broad reaches below town, where the wind has miles and miles
+of sweep and kicks up a most exhilarating combobbery. If I escape I'm
+going to send my boat up to Saybrook, Connecticut, and navigate Long
+Island Sound.
+
+Are you near enough to the sea to do a bit of boating now and then?
+When I visit you I shall want to bring my canoe.
+
+I've nearly given up my newspaper work, but shall do something each
+month for the Magazine. Have not done much yet--have not been in the
+mind. Death has been striking pretty close to me again, and you know
+how that upsets a fellow.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington,
+ June 16, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm your debtor for two good long letters. You err in thinking your
+letters, of whatever length and frequency, can be otherwise than
+delightful to me.
+
+No, you had not before sent me Upton Sinclair's article explaining why
+American literature is "bourgeois." It is amusingly grotesque. The
+political and economical situation has about as much to do with it as
+have the direction of our rivers and the prevailing color of our hair.
+But it is of the nature of the faddist (and of all faddists the ultra
+socialist is the most untamed by sense) to see in everything his
+hobby, with its name writ large. He is the humorist of observers. When
+Sinclair transiently forgets his gospel of the impossible he can see
+well enough.
+
+I note what you say of * * * and know that he did not use to like me,
+though I doubt if he ever had any antipathy to you. Six or eight years
+ago I tackled him on a particularly mean fling that he had made at me
+while I was absent from California. (I think I had not met him
+before.) I told him, rather coarsely, what I thought of the matter. He
+candidly confessed himself in the wrong, expressed regret and has
+ever since, so far as I know, been just and even generous to me. I
+think him sincere now, and enclose a letter which seems to show it.
+You may return it if you will--I send it mainly because it concerns
+your poem. The trouble--our trouble--with * * * is that he has
+voluntarily entered into slavery to the traditions and theories of the
+magazine trade, which, like those of all trades, are the product of
+small men. The big man makes his success by ignoring them. Your
+estimate of * * * I'm not disposed to quarrel with, but do think him
+pretty square.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Bless you, don't take the trouble to go through the Iliad and Odyssey
+to pick out the poetical parts. I grant you they are brief and
+infrequent--I mean in the translation. I hold, with Poe, that there
+are no long poems--only bursts of poetry in long spinnings of metrical
+prose. But even the "recitativo" of the translated Grecian poets has a
+charm to one that it may not have to another. I doubt if anyone who
+has always loved "the glory that was Greece"--who has been always in
+love with its jocund deities, and so forth, can say accurately just
+how much of his joy in Homer (for example) is due to love of poetry,
+and how much to a renewal of mental youth and young illusions. Some
+part of the delight that we get from verse defies analysis and
+classification. Only a man without a memory (and memories) could say
+just what pleased him in poetry and be sure that it was the poetry
+only. For example, I never read the opening lines of the Pope
+Iliad--and I don't need the book for much of the first few hundred, I
+guess--without seeming to be on a sunny green hill on a cold windy
+day, with the bluest of skies above me and billows of pasture below,
+running to a clean-cut horizon. There's nothing in the text
+warranting that illusion, which is nevertheless to me a _part_ of the
+Iliad; a most charming part, too. It all comes of my having first read
+the thing under such conditions at the age of about ten. I _remember_
+that; but how many times I must be powerfully affected by the poets
+_without_ remembering why. If a fellow could cut out all that
+extrinsic interest he would be a fool to do so. But he would be a
+better critic.
+
+You ought to be happy in the contemplation of a natural, wholesome
+life at Carmel Bay--the "prospect pleases," surely. But I fear, I
+fear. Maybe you can get a newspaper connection that will bring you in
+a small income without compelling you to do violence to your literary
+conscience. I doubt if you can get your living out of the ground. But
+I shall watch the experiment with sympathetic interest, for it
+"appeals" to me. I'm a trifle jaded with age and the urban life, and
+maybe if you can succeed in that other sort of thing I could.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to * * * the Superb. Isn't Sag Harbor somewhere near Saybrook,
+Connecticut, at the mouth of the river of that name? I'm going there
+for a month with Percival Pollard. Shall leave here about the first of
+July. If Sag Harbor is easily accessible from there, and * * * would
+care to see me, I'll go and call on her. * * * But maybe I'd fall in
+love with her and, being now (alas) eligible, just marry her
+alive!--or be turned down by her, to the unspeakable wrecking of my
+peace! I'm only a youth--63 on the 24th of this month--and it would be
+too bad if I got started wrong in life. But really I don't know about
+the good taste of being jocular about * * *. I'm sure she must be a
+serious enough maiden, with the sun of a declining race yellow on her
+hair. Eva Crawford thinks her most lovable--and Eva has a clear,
+considering eye upon you all.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm going to send up my canoe to Saybrook and challenge the rollers of
+the Sound. Don't you fear--I'm an expert canoeist from boyhood. * * *
+
+ Sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 3, 1905.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have at last the letter that I was waiting for--didn't answer the
+other, for one of mine was on the way to you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You need not worry yourself about your part of the business. You have
+acted "mighty white," as was to have been expected of you; and, caring
+little for any other feature of the matter, I'm grateful to you for
+giving my pessimism and growing disbelief in human disinterestedness a
+sound wholesome thwack on the mazzard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I was sorry to whack London, for whom, in his character as
+author, I have a high admiration, and in that of publicist and
+reformer a deep contempt. Even if he had been a personal friend, I
+should have whacked him, and doubtless much harder. I'm not one of
+those who give their friends carte blanche to sin. If my friend
+dishonors himself he dishonors me; if he makes a fool of himself he
+makes a fool of me--which another cannot do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Your description of your new environment, in your other letter, makes
+me "homesick" to see it. I cordially congratulate you and Mrs.
+Sterling on having the sense to do what I have always been too
+indolent to do--namely as you please. Guess I've been always too busy
+"warming both hands before the fire of life." And now, when
+
+ "It sinks and I am ready to depart,"
+
+I find that the damned fire was in _me_ and ought to have been
+quenched with a dash of cold sense. I'm having my canoe decked and
+yawl-rigged for deep water and live in the hope of being drowned
+according to the dictates of my conscience.
+
+By way of proving my power of self-restraint I'm going to stop this
+screed with a whole page unused.
+
+ Sincerely yours, as ever,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 3, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I don't know why I've not written to you--that is, I don't know why
+God made me what I have the misfortune to be: a sufferer from
+procrastination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I have read Mary Austin's book with unexpected interest. It is
+pleasing exceedingly. You may not know that I'm familiar with the
+_kind_ of country she writes of, and reading the book was like
+traversing it again. But the best of her is her style. That is
+delicious. It has a slight "tang" of archaism--just enough to suggest
+"lucent sirups tinct with cinnamon," or the "spice and balm" of
+Miller's sea-winds. And what a knack at observation she has! Nothing
+escapes her eye. Tell me about her. What else has she written? What is
+she going to write? If she is still young she will do great work; if
+not--well, she _has_ done it in that book. But she'll have to hammer
+and hammer again and again before the world will hear and heed.
+
+As to me I'm pot-boiling. My stuff in the N. Y. American (I presume
+that the part of it that you see is in the Examiner) is mere piffle,
+written without effort, purpose or care. My department in the
+Cosmopolitan is a failure, as I told Millard it would be. It is
+impossible to write topical stuff for a magazine. How can one discuss
+with heart or inspiration a thing that happens two months or so before
+one's comments on it will be read? The venture and the title were
+Hearst's notion, but the title so handicaps me that I can do nothing
+right. I shall drop it.
+
+I've done three little stories for the March number (they may be
+postponed) that are ghastly enough to make a pig squeal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 12, 1906.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+First, about the "Wine," I dislike the "privately printed" racket. Can
+you let the matter wait a little longer? Neale has the poem, and Neale
+is just now inaccessible to letters, somewhere in the South in the
+interest of his magazine-that-is-to-be. I called when in New York, but
+he had flown and I've been unable to reach him; but he is due here on
+the 23rd. Then if his mag is going to hold fire, or if he doesn't want
+the poem for it, let Robertson or Josephare have a hack at it.
+
+Barr is amusing. I don't care to have a copy of his remarks.
+
+About the pirating of my stories. That is a matter for Chatto and
+Windus, who bought the English copyright of the book from which that
+one story came. I dare say, though, the publication was done by
+arrangement with them. Anyhow my interests are not involved.
+
+I was greatly interested in your account of Mrs. Austin. She's a
+clever woman and should write a good novel--if there is such a thing
+as a good novel. I won't read novels.
+
+Yes, the "Cosmopolitan" cat-story is Leigh's and is to be credited to
+him if ever published in covers. I fathered it as the only way to get
+it published at all. Of course I had to rewrite it; it was very crude
+and too horrible. A story may be terrible, but must not be
+horrible--there is a difference. I found the manuscript among his
+papers.
+
+It is disagreeable to think of the estrangement between * * * and his
+family. Doubtless the trouble arises from his being married. Yes, it
+is funny, his taking his toddy along with you old soakers. I remember
+he used to kick at my having wine in camp and at your having a bottle
+hidden away in the bushes.
+
+I had seen that group of you and Joaquin and Stoddard and laughed at
+your lifelike impersonation of the Drowsy Demon.
+
+I passed the first half of last month in New York. Went there for a
+dinner and stayed to twelve. Sam Davis and Homer Davenport were of the
+party.
+
+Sam was here for a few days--but maybe you don't know Sam. He's a
+brother to Bob, who swears you got your Dante-like solemnity of
+countenance by coming into his office when he was editing a newspaper.
+
+You are not to think I have thrown * * * over. There are only two or
+three matters of seriousness between us and they cannot profitably be
+discussed in letters, so they must wait until he and I meet if we ever
+do. I shall mention them to no one else and I don't suppose he will to
+anyone but me. Apart from these--well, our correspondence was
+disagreeable, so the obvious thing to do was to put an end to it. To
+unlike a friend is not an easy thing to do, and I've not attempted to
+do it.
+
+Of course I approve the new lines in the "Wine" and if Neale or
+anybody else will have the poem I shall insert them in their place.
+That "screaming thing" stays with one almost as does "the blue-eyed
+vampire," and is not only visible, as is she, but audible as well. If
+you go on adding lines to the poem I shall not so sharply deplore our
+failure to get it into print. As Mark Twain says: "Every time you draw
+you fill."
+
+The "Night in Heaven" is fine work in the grand style and its swing is
+haunting when one gets it. I get a jolt or two in the reading, but I
+dare say you purposely contrived them and I can't say they hurt. Of
+course the rhythm recalls Kipling's "The Last Chanty" (I'm not sure I
+spell the word correctly--if there's a correct way) but that is
+nothing. Nobody has the copyright of any possible metre or rhythm in
+English prosody. It has been long since anybody was "first." When are
+you coming to Washington to sail in my canoe?
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 5, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've been in New York again but am slowly recovering. I saw Neale. He
+assures me that the magazine will surely materialize about June, and
+he wants the poem, "A Wine of Wizardry," with an introduction by me. I
+think he means it; if so that will give it greater publicity than what
+you have in mind, even if the mag eventually fail. Magazines if well
+advertised usually sell several hundred thousand of the first issue;
+the trick is to keep them going. Munsey's "Scrap Book" disposed of a
+half-million. * * *
+
+* * * was to start for a few weeks in California about now. I hope
+you will see him. He is not a bad lot when convinced that one respects
+him. He has been treated pretty badly in this neck o' the woods, as is
+every Western man who breaks into this realm of smugwumps.
+
+My benediction upon Carmelites all and singular--if any are all.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Doubleday, Page & Co. are to publish my "Cynic's Dictionary."
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 20, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I write in the hope that you are alive and the fear that you are
+wrecked.[8]
+
+[8] The San Francisco earthquake and fire had occurred April 18, 1906.
+
+Please let me know if I can help--I need not say how glad I shall be
+to do so. "Help" would go with this were I sure about you and the
+post-office. It's a mighty bad business and one does not need to own
+property out there to be "hit hard" by it. One needs only to have
+friends there.
+
+We are helpless here, so far as the telegraph is concerned--shall not
+be able to get anything on the wires for many days, all private
+dispatches being refused.
+
+Pray God you and yours may be all right. Of course anything that you
+may be able to tell me of my friends will be gratefully received.
+Sincerely yours, AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 6, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your letter relieves me greatly. I had begun to fear that you had
+"gone before." Thank you very much for your news of our friends. I had
+already heard from Eva Croffie. Also from Grizzly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thank you for Mr. Eddy's review of "Shapes." But he is misinformed
+about poor Flora Shearer. Of course I helped her--who would not help a
+good friend in adversity? But she went to Scotland to a brother long
+ago, and at this time I do not know if she is living or dead.
+
+But here am I forgetting (momentarily) that awful wiping out of San
+Francisco. It "hit" me pretty hard in many ways--mostly indirectly,
+through my friends. I had rather hoped to have to "put up" for you and
+your gang, and am a trifle disappointed to know that you are all
+right--except the chimneys. I'm glad that tidal wave did not come, but
+don't you think you'd better have a canoe ready? You could keep it on
+your veranda stacked with provisions and whiskey.
+
+My letter from Ursus (written during the conflagration) expresses a
+keen solicitude for the Farallones, as the fire was working westward.
+
+If this letter is a little disconnected and incoherent know, O King,
+that I have just returned from a dinner in Atlantic City, N. J. I saw
+Markham there, also Bob Davis, Sam Moffett, Homer Davenport, Bob
+Mackay and other San Franciscans. (Can there be a San Franciscan when
+there is no San Francisco? I don't want to go back. Doubtless the new
+San Francisco--while it lasts--will be a finer town than the old, but
+it will not be _my_ San Francisco and I don't want to see it. It has
+for many years been, to me, full of ghosts. Now it is itself a ghost.)
+
+I return the sonnets. Destruction of "Town Talk" has doubtless saved
+you from having the one on me turned down. Dear old fellow, don't take
+the trouble to defend my memory when--or at least until--
+
+ "I am fled
+ From this vile world, with vilest worms to dwell."
+
+I'm not letting my enemies' attitude trouble me at all. On the
+contrary, I'm rather sorry for them and their insomnia--lying awake o'
+nights to think out new and needful lies about me, while I sleep
+sweetly. O, it is all right, truly.
+
+No, I never had any row (nor much acquaintance) with Mark Twain--met
+him but two or three times. Once with Stoddard in London. I think
+pretty well of him, but doubt if he cared for me and can't, at the
+moment, think of any reason why he _should_ have cared for me.
+
+"The Cynic's Dictionary" is a-printing. I shall have to call it
+something else, for the publishers tell me there is a "Cynic's
+Dictionary" already out. I dare say the author took more than my
+title--the stuff has been a rich mine for a plagiarist for many a
+year. They (the publishers) won't have "The Devil's Dictionary." Here
+in the East the Devil is a sacred personage (the Fourth Person of the
+Trinity, as an Irishman might say) and his name must not be taken in
+vain.
+
+No, "The Testimony of the Suns" has not "palled" on me. I still read
+it and still think it one of the world's greatest poems.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Well, God be wi' ye and spare the shack at Carmel,
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ June 11, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your poem, "A Dream of Fear" was so good before that it needed no
+improvement, though I'm glad to observe that you have "the passion for
+perfection." Sure--you shall have your word "colossal" applied to a
+thing of two dimensions, an you will.
+
+I have no objection to the publication of that sonnet on me. It may
+give my enemies a transient feeling that is disagreeable, and if I can
+do that without taking any trouble in the matter myself it is worth
+doing. I think they must have renewed their activity, to have provoked
+you so--got up a new and fascinating lie, probably. Thank you for
+putting your good right leg into action themward.
+
+What a "settlement" you have collected about you at Carmel! All manner
+of cranks and curios, to whom I feel myself drawn by affinity. Still I
+suppose I shall not go. I should have to see the new San
+Francisco--when it has foolishly been built--and I'd rather not. One
+does not care to look upon either the mutilated face of one's mashed
+friend or an upstart imposter bearing his name. No, _my_ San Francisco
+is gone and I'll have no other.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You are wrong about Gorky--he has none of the "artist" in him. He is
+not only a peasant, but an anarchist and an advocate of
+assassination--by others; like most of his tribe, he doesn't care to
+take the risk himself. His "career" in this country has been that of a
+yellow dog. Hearst's newspapers and * * * are the only friends that
+remain to him of all those that acclaimed him when he landed. And all
+the sturdy lying of the former cannot rehabilitate him. It isn't
+merely the woman matter. You'd understand if you were on this side of
+the country. I was myself a dupe in the matter. He had expressed high
+admiration of my books (in an interview in Russia) and when his
+Government released him from prison I cabled him congratulations. O,
+my!
+
+Yes, I've observed the obviously lying estimates of the San Franciscan
+dead; also that there was no earthquake--just a fire; also the
+determination to "beat" the insurance companies. Insurance is a hog
+game, and if they (the companies) can be beaten out of their dishonest
+gains by superior dishonesty I have no objection; but in my judgment
+they are neither legally nor morally liable for the half that is
+claimed of them. Those of them that took no earthquake risks don't owe
+a cent.
+
+Please don't send * * *'s verses to me if you can decently decline. I
+should be sorry to find them bad, and my loathing of the Whitmaniacal
+"form" is as deep as yours. Perhaps I should find them good otherwise,
+but the probability is so small that I don't want to take the chance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've just finished reading the first proofs of "The Cynic's Word
+Book," which Doubleday, Page & Co. are to bring out in October. My
+dealings with them have been most pleasant and one of them whom I met
+the other day at Atlantic City seems a fine fellow.
+
+I think I told you that S. O. Howes, of Galveston, Texas, is compiling
+a book of essays and sich from some of my stuff that I sent him. I've
+left the selection entirely to him and presented him with the profits
+if there be any. He'll probably not even find a publisher. He has the
+work about half done. By the way, he is an enthusiastic admirer of
+you. For that I like him, and for much else.
+
+I mean to stay here all summer if I die for it, as I probably shall.
+Luck and love to you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 20, 1906.]
+
+DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+I am more sorry than I can say to be unable to send you the copy of
+the Builder's Review that you kindly sent _me_. But before receiving
+your note I had, in my own interest, searched high and low for it, in
+vain. Somebody stole it from my table. I especially valued it after
+the catastrophe, but should have been doubly pleased to have it for
+you.
+
+It was indeed a rough deal you San Franciscans got. I had always
+expected to go back to the good old town some day, but I have no
+desire to see the new town, if there is to be one. I fear the fire
+consumed even the ghosts that used to meet me at every street
+corner--ghosts of dear dead friends, oh, so many of them!
+
+Please accept my sympathy for your losses. I too am a "sufferer," a
+whole edition of my latest book, plates and all, having gone up in
+smoke and many of my friends being now in the "dependent class." It
+hit us all pretty hard, I guess, wherever we happened to be.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C,
+ August 11, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+If your neighbor Carmelites are really "normal" and respectable I'm
+sorry for you. They will surely (remaining cold sober themselves)
+drive you to drink. Their sort affects _me_ that way. God bless the
+crank and the curio!--what would life in this desert be without its
+mullahs and its dervishes? A matter of merchants and camel drivers--no
+one to laugh with and at.
+
+Did you see Gorky's estimate of us in "Appleton's"? Having been a few
+weeks in the land, whose language he knows not a word of, he knows (by
+intuition of genius and a wee-bit help from Gaylord Wilshire and his
+gang) all about us, and tells it in generalities of vituperation as
+applicable to one country as to another. He's a dandy bomb-thrower,
+but he handles the stink-pot only indifferently well. He should write
+(for "The Cosmopolitan") on "The Treason of God."
+
+Sorry you didn't like my remarks in that fool "symposium." If I said
+enough to make it clear that I don't care a damn for any of the
+matters touched upon, nor for the fellows who _do_ care, I satisfied
+my wish. It was not intended to be an "argument" at all--at least not
+on my part; I don't argue with babes and sucklings. Hunter is a
+decentish fellow, for a dreamer, but the Hillquit person is a
+humorless anarchist. When I complimented him on the beauty of his neck
+and expressed the hope of putting a nice, new rope about it he nearly
+strangled on the brandy that I was putting down it at the hotel bar.
+And it wasn't with merriment. His anarchist sentiments were all cut
+out.
+
+I'm not familiar with the poetry of William Vaughan Moody. Can you
+"put me on"?
+
+I'm sending you an odd thing by Eugene Wood, of Niagara Falls, where I
+met him two or three years ago. I'm sure you will appreciate it. The
+poor chap died the other day and might appropriately--as he doubtless
+will--lie in a neglected grave. You may return the book when you have
+read it enough. I'm confident you never heard of it.
+
+Enclosed is your sonnet, with a few suggestions of no importance. I
+had not space on it to say that the superfluity of superlatives noted,
+is accentuated by the words "west" and "quest" immediately following,
+making a lot of "ests." The verses are pleasing, but if any villain
+prefer them to "In Extremis" may he bite himself with a Snake!
+
+If you'll send me that shuddery thing on Fear--with the "clangor of
+ascending chains" line--and one or two others that you'd care to have
+in a magazine, I'll try them on Maxwell. I suspect he will fall dead
+in the reading, or possibly dislocate the jaw of him with a yawn, but
+even so you will not have written in vain.
+
+Have you tried anything on "Munsey"? Bob Davis is the editor, and we
+talked you over at dinner (where would you could have been). I think
+he values my judgment a little. * * *
+
+I wish I could be blown upon by your Carmel sea-breeze; the weather
+here is wicked! I don't even canoe.
+
+My "Cynic" book is due in October. Shall send it to you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 28, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Both your letters at hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Be a "magazine poet" all you can--that is the shortest road to
+recognition, and all our greater poets have travelled it. You need not
+compromise with your conscience, however, by writing "magazine
+poetry." You couldn't.
+
+What's your objection to * * *? I don't observe that it is greatly
+worse than others of its class. But a fellow who has for nigh upon
+twenty years written for yellow newspapers can't be expected to say
+much that's edifying on that subject. So I dare say I'm wrong in my
+advice about the _kind_ of swine for your pearls. There are probably
+more than the two kinds of pigs--live ones and dead ones.
+
+Yes, I'm a colonel--in Pennsylvania Avenue. In the neighborhood of my
+tenement I'm a Mister. At my club I'm a major--which is my real title
+by an act of Congress. I suppressed it in California, but couldn't
+here, where I run with the military gang.
+
+You need not blackguard your poem, "A Visitor," though I could wish
+you had not chosen blank verse. That form seems to me suitable (in
+serious verse) only to lofty, not lowly, themes. Anyhow, I always
+expect something pretty high when I begin an unknown poem in blank.
+Moreover, it is not your best "medium." Your splendid poem, "Music,"
+does not wholly commend itself to me for that reason. May I say that
+it is a little sing-songy--the lines monotonously alike in their
+caesural pauses and some of their other features?
+
+By the way, I'd like to see what you could do in more unsimple meters
+than the ones that you handle so well. The wish came to me the other
+day in reading Lanier's "The Marshes of Glynn" and some of his other
+work. Lanier did not often equal his master, Swinburne, in getting the
+most out of the method, but he did well in the poem mentioned. Maybe
+you could manage the dangerous thing. It would be worth doing and is,
+therefore, worth trying.
+
+Thank you for the Moody book, which I will return. He pleaseth me
+greatly and I could already fill pages with analyses of him for the
+reasons therefore. But for you to say that he has _you_
+"skinned"--that is magnanimity. An excellent thing in poets, I grant
+you, and a rare one. There is something about him and his book in the
+current "Atlantic," by May Sinclair, who, I dare say, has never heard
+of _you_. Unlike you, she thinks his dramatic work the best of what he
+does. I've not seen that. To be the best it must be mighty good.
+
+Yes, poor White's poetry is all you say--and worse, but, faith! he
+"had it in him." What struck me was his candid apotheosis of piracy on
+the high seas. I'd hate the fellow who hadn't some sneaking sympathy
+with that--as Goethe confessed to some sympathy with every vice.
+Nobody'll ever hear of White, but (pray observe, ambitious bard!) he
+isn't caring. How wise are the dead!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My friend Howes, of Galveston, has, I think, nearly finished compiling
+his book of essaylets from my stuff. Neale has definitely decided to
+bring out "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter." He has the plates of
+my two luckless Putnam books, and is figuring on my "complete works,"
+to be published by subscription. I doubt if he will undertake it right
+away.
+
+_Au reste_, I'm in good health and am growing old not altogether
+disgracefully.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington,
+ October 30, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm pained by your comments on my book. I always feel that way when
+praised--"just plunged in a gulf of dark despair" to think that I took
+no more trouble to make the commendation truer. I shall try harder
+with the Howes book.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I can't supply the missing link between pages 101 and 102 of the "Word
+Book," having destroyed the copy and proofs. Supply it yourself.
+
+You err: the book is getting me a little glory, but that will be
+all--it will have no sale, for it has no slang, no "dialect" and no
+grinning through a horse-collar. By the, way, please send me any
+"notices" of it that you may chance to see out there.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've done a ghost story for the January "Cosmopolitan," which I think
+pretty well of. That's all I've done for more than two months.
+
+I return your poem and the Moody book. Sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington,
+ December 5, 1906.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your letter of Nov. 28 has just come to my breakfast table. It is the
+better part of the repast.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, my dictionary will not sell. I so assured the publishers.
+
+I lunched with Neale the other day--he comes down here once a month.
+His magazine (I think he is to call it "The Southerner," or something
+like that) will not get out this month, as he expected it to. And for
+an ominous reason: He had relied largely on Southern writers, and
+finds that they can't write! He assures me that it _will_ appear this
+winter and asked me not to withdraw your poem and my remarks on it
+unless you asked it. So I did not.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In your character of bookseller carrying a stock of my books you have
+a new interest. May Heaven promote you to publisher!
+
+Thank you for the Moody books--which I'll return soon. "The Masque of
+Judgment" has some great work in its final pages--quite as great as
+anything in Faust. The passages that you marked are good too, but some
+of them barely miss being entirely satisfying. It would trouble you to
+find many such passages in the other book, which is, moreover, not
+distinguished for clarity. I found myself frequently prompted to ask
+the author: "What the devil are you driving at?"
+
+I'm going to finish this letter at home where there is less talk of
+the relative military strength of Japan and San Francisco and the
+latter power's newest and most grievous affliction, Teddy Roosevelt.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S. Guess the letter is finished.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 27, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I suppose I owe you letters and letters--but you don't particularly
+like to write letters yourself, so you'll understand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hanging before me is a water-color of a bit of Carmel Beach, by Chris
+Jorgensen, for which I blew in fifty dollars the other day. He had a
+fine exhibition of his Californian work here. I wanted to buy it all,
+but compromised with my desire by buying what I could. The picture has
+a sentimental value to me, apart from its artistic.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I am to see Neale in a few days and shall try to learn definitely when
+his magazine is to come out--if he knows. If he does not I'll withdraw
+your poem. Next month he is to republish "The Monk and the Hangman's
+Daughter," with a new preface which somebody will not relish. I'll
+send you a copy. The Howes book is on its travels among the
+publishers, and so, doubtless, will long continue.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ February 5, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Our letters "crossed"--a thing that "happens" oftener than not in my
+correspondence, when neither person has written for a long time. I
+have drawn some interesting inferences from this fact, but have no
+time now to state them. Indeed, I have no time to do anything but send
+you the stuff on the battle of Shiloh concerning which you inquire.
+
+I should write it a little differently now, but it may entertain you
+as it is.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+[Washington,
+ February 21, 1907]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+If you desert Carmel I shall destroy my Jorgensen picture, build a
+bungalow in the Catskills and cut out California forever. (Those are
+the footprints of my damned canary, who will neither write himself nor
+let me write. Just now he is perched on my shoulder, awaiting the
+command to sing--then he will deafen me with a song without sense. O
+he's a poet all right.)
+
+I entirely approve your allegiance to Mammon. If I'd had brains enough
+to make a decision like that I could now, at 65, have the leisure to
+make a good book or two before I go to the waste-dump. * * * Get
+yourself a fat bank account--there's no such friend as a bank account,
+and the greatest book is a check-book; "You may lay to that!" as one
+of Stevenson's pirates puts it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No, sir, your boss will not bring you East next June; or if he does
+you will not come to Washington. How do I know? I don't know how I
+know, but concerning all (and they are many) who were to come from
+California to see me I have never once failed in my forecast of their
+coming or not coming. Even in the case of * * *, although I wrote to
+you, and to her, as if I expected her, I _said_ to one of my friends:
+"She will not come." I don't think it's a gift of divination--it just
+happens, somehow. Yours is not a very good example, for you have not
+said you were coming, "sure."
+
+So your colony of high-brows is re-establishing itself at the old
+stand--Piedmont. * * * But Piedmont--it must be in the heart of
+Oakland. I could no longer shoot rabbits in the gulch back of it and
+sleep under a tree to shoot more in the morning. Nor could I traverse
+that long ridge with various girls. I dare say there's a boulevard
+running the length of it,
+
+ "A palace and a prison on each hand."
+
+If I could stop you from reading that volume of old "Argonauts" I'd do
+so, but I suppose an injunction would not "lie." Yes, I was a slovenly
+writer in those days, though enough better than my neighbors to have
+attracted my own attention. My knowledge of English was imperfect "a
+whole lot." Indeed, my intellectual status (whatever it may be, and
+God knows it's enough to make me blush) was of slow growth--as was my
+moral. I mean, I had not literary sincerity.
+
+Yes, I wrote of Swinburne the distasteful words that you quote. But
+they were not altogether untrue. He used to set my teeth on
+edge--could _not_ stand still a minute, and kept you looking for the
+string that worked his legs and arms. And he had a weak face that gave
+you the memory of chinlessness. But I have long renounced the views
+that I once held about his poetry--held, or thought I held. I don't
+remember, though, if it was as lately as '78 that I held them.
+
+You write of Miss Dawson. Did she survive the 'quake? And do you know
+about her? Not a word of her has reached me. Notwithstanding your
+imported nightingale (upon which I think you should be made to pay a
+stiff duty) your Ina Coolbrith poem is so good that I want to keep it
+if you have another copy. I find no amendable faults in it. * * *
+
+The fellow that told you that I was an editor of "The Cosmopolitan"
+has an impediment in his veracity. I simply write for it, * * *, and
+the less of my stuff the editor uses the better I'm pleased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+O, you ask about the "Ursus-Aborn-Gorgias-Agrestis-Polyglot" stuff. It
+was written by James F. ("Jimmie") Bowman--long dead. (See a pretty
+bad sonnet on page 94, "Shapes of Clay.") My only part in the matter
+was to suggest the papers and discuss them with him over many mugs of
+beer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+By the way, Neale says he gets almost enough inquiries for my books
+(from San Francisco) to justify him in republishing them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+That's all--and, as George Augustus Sala wrote of a chew of tobacco as
+the price of a certain lady's favors, "God knows it's enough!"
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 23, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have your letter of the 13th. The enclosed slip from the Pacific
+Monthly (thank you for it) is amusing. Yes, * * * is an insufferable
+pedant, but I don't at all mind his pedantry. Any critic is welcome to
+whack me all he likes if he will append to his remarks (as * * * had
+the thoughtfulness to do) my definition of "Critic" from the "Word
+Book."
+
+Please don't bother to write me when the spirit does not move you
+thereto. You and I don't need to write to each other for any other
+reason than that we want to. As to coming East, abstain, O, abstain
+from promises, lest you resemble all my other friends out there, who
+promise always and never come. It would be delightful to see you here,
+but I know how those things arrange themselves without reference to
+our desires. We do as we must, not as we will.
+
+I think that uncle of yours must be a mighty fine fellow. Be good to
+him and don't kick at his service, even when you feel the chain. It
+beats poetry for nothing a year.
+
+Did you get the "Shiloh" article? I sent it to you. I sent it also to
+Paul Elder & Co. (New York branch) for their book of "Western
+Classics," and hope it will meet their need. They wanted something,
+and it seemed to me as good, with a little revision, as any of my
+stuff that I control. Do you think it would be wise to offer them for
+republication "In the Midst of Life"? It is now "out of print" and on
+my hands.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm glad of your commendation of my "Cosmopolitan" stuff. They don't
+give me much of a "show"--the editor doesn't love me personally as he
+should, and lets me do only enough to avert from himself the attention
+of Mr. Hearst and that gentleman's interference with the mutual
+admiration game as played in the "Cosmopolitan" office. As I'm rather
+fond of light work I'm not shrieking.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You don't speak of getting the book that I sent, "The Monk and the
+Hangman's Daughter"--new edition. 'Tisn't as good as the old. * * *
+
+I'm boating again. How I should like to put out my prow on Monterey
+Bay.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 8, 1907.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Your letter, with the yerba buena and the spray of redwood, came like
+a breeze from the hills. And the photographs are most pleasing. I note
+that Sloot's moustache is decently white at last, as becomes a fellow
+of his years. I dare say his hair is white too, but I can't see under
+his hat. And I think he never removes it. That backyard of yours is a
+wonder, but I sadly miss the appropriate ash-heaps, tin cans, old
+packing-boxes, and so forth. And that palm in front of the
+house--gracious, how she's grown! Well, it has been more than a day
+growing, and I've not watched it attentively.
+
+I hope you'll have a good time in Yosemite, but Sloots is an idiot not
+to go with you--nineteen days is as long as anybody would want to stay
+there.
+
+I saw a little of Phyllis Partington in New York. She told me much of
+you and seems to be fond of you. That is very intelligent of her,
+don't you think?
+
+No, I shall not wait until I'm rich before visiting you. I've no
+intention of being rich, but do mean to visit you--some day. Probably
+when Grizzly has visited _me_. Love to you all.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ June 25, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So * * * showed you his article on me. He showed it to me also, and
+some of it amused me mightily, though I didn't tell him so. That
+picture of me as a grouchy and disappointed old man occupying the
+entire cave of Adullam is particularly humorous, and so poetic that I
+would not for the world "cut it out." * * * seems incapable (like a
+good many others) of estimating success in other terms than those of
+popularity. He gives a rather better clew to his own character than to
+mine. The old man is fairly well pleased with the way that he has
+played the game, and with his share of the stakes, thank'ee.
+
+I note with satisfaction _your_ satisfaction with my article on you
+and your poem. I'll correct the quotation about the "timid
+sapphires"--don't know how I happened to leave out the best part of
+it. But I left out the line about "harlot's blood" because I didn't
+(and don't) think a magazine would "stand for it" if I called the
+editor's attention to it. You don't know what magazines are if you
+haven't tested them. However, I'll try it on Chamberlain if you like.
+And I'll put in "twilight of the year" too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It's pleasing to know that you've "cut out" your clerical work if you
+can live without it. Now for some great poetry! Carmel has a
+fascination for me too--because of your letters. If I did not fear
+illness--a return of my old complaint--I'd set out for it at once.
+I've nothing to do that would prevent--about two day's work a month.
+But I'd never set foot in San Francisco. Of all the Sodoms and
+Gomorrahs in our modern world it is the worst. There are not ten
+righteous (and courageous) men there. It needs another quake, another
+whiff of fire, and--more than all else--a steady tradewind of
+grapeshot. When * * * gets done blackguarding New York (as it
+deserves) and has shaken the dung of San Francisco from his feet I'm
+going to "sick him onto" that moral penal colony of the world. * * *
+
+I've two "books" seeking existence in New York--the Howes book and
+some satires. Guess they are cocks that will not fight.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I was sixty-five yesterday.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ July 11, 1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've just finished reading proofs of my stuff about you and your poem.
+Chamberlain, as I apprised you, has it slated for September. But for
+that month also he has slated a longish spook story of mine, besides
+my regular stuff. Not seeing how he can run it all in one issue, I
+have asked him to run your poem (with my remarks) and hold the spook
+yarn till some other time. I _hope_ he'll do so, but if he doesn't,
+don't think it my fault. An editor never does as one wants him to. I
+inserted in my article another quotation or two, and restored some
+lines that I had cut out of the quotations to save space.
+
+It's grilling hot here--I envy you your Carmel.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I guess several of your good letters are unanswered, as are many
+others of other correspondents. I've been gadding a good deal
+lately--to New York principally. When I want a royal good time I go to
+New York; and I get it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to Miller being "about the same age" as I, why, no. The rascal is
+long past seventy, although nine or ten years ago he wrote from Alaska
+that he was "in the middle fifties." I've known him for nearly thirty
+years and he can't fool me with his youthful airs and tales. May he
+live long and repent.
+
+Thank you for taking the trouble to send Conan Doyle's opinion of me.
+No, it doesn't turn my head; I can show you dozens of "appreciations"
+from greater and more famous men. I return it to you corrected--as he
+really wrote it. Here it is:
+
+"Praise from Sir Hugo is praise indeed." In "Through the Magic Door,"
+an exceedingly able article on short stories that have interested him,
+Conan Doyle pays the following well-deserved tribute to Ambrose
+Bierce, whose wonderful short stories have so often been praised in
+these columns: "Talking of weird American stories, have you ever read
+any of the works of Ambrose Bierce? I have one of his books before me,
+'In the Midst of Life.' This man (has)[9] had a flavor quite his own,
+and (is)[9] was a great artist. It is not cheerful reading, but it
+leaves its mark upon you, and that is the proof of good work."
+
+[9] Crossed out by A. B.
+
+Thank you also for the Jacobs story, which I will read. As a
+_humorist_ he is no great thing.
+
+I've not read your Bohemian play to a finish yet, * * *. By the way,
+I've always wondered why they did not "put on" Comus. Properly done it
+would be great woodland stuff. Read it with a view to that and see if
+I'm not right. And then persuade them to "stage it" next year.
+
+I'm being awfully pressed to return to California. No San Francisco
+for me, but Carmel sounds good. For about how much could I get ground
+and build a bungalow--for one? That's a pretty indefinite question;
+but then the will to go is a little hazy at present. It consists, as
+yet, only of the element of desire. * * *
+
+The "Cosmopolitan," with your poem, has not come to hand but is nearly
+due--I'm a little impatient--eager to see the particular kind of
+outrage Chamberlain's artist has wrought upon it. He (C.) asked for
+your address the other day; so he will doubtless send you a check.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now please go to work at "Lilith"; it's bound to be great stuff, for
+you'll have to imagine it all. I'm sorry that anybody ever invented
+Lilith; it makes her too much of an historical character.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"The other half of the Devil's Dictionary" is in the fluid state--not
+even liquid. And so, doubtless, it will remain.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ September 7, 1907.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm awfully glad that you don't mind Chamberlain's yellow nonsense in
+coupling Ella's name with yours. But when you read her natural opinion
+of your work you'll acquit her of complicity in the indignity. I'm
+sending a few things from Hearst's newspapers--written by the
+slangers, dialecters and platitudinarians of the staff, and by some of
+the swine among the readers.
+
+Note the deliberate and repeated lying of Brisbane in quoting me as
+saying the "Wine" is "the greatest poem ever written in America." Note
+his dishonesty in confessing that he has commendatory letters, yet not
+publishing a single one of them. But the end is not yet--my inning is
+to come, in the magazine. Chamberlain (who professes an enthusiastic
+admiration of the poem) promises me a free hand in replying to these
+ignorant asses. If he does not give it to me I quit. I've writ a
+paragraph or two for the November number (too late now for the
+October) by way of warning them what they'll get when December comes.
+So you see you must patiently endure the befouling till then.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Did you notice in the last line of the "Wine" that I restored the word
+"smile" from your earlier draft of the verses? In one of your later (I
+don't remember if in the last) you had it "sigh." That was wrong;
+"smile" seems to me infinitely better as a definition of the poet's
+attitude toward his dreams. So, considering that I had a choice, I
+chose it. Hope you approve.
+
+I am serious in wishing a place in Carmel as a port of refuge from the
+storms of age. I don't know that I shall ever live there, but should
+like to feel that I can if I want to. Next summer I hope to go out
+there and spy out the land, and if I then "have the price" (without
+sacrificing any of my favorite stocks) I shall buy. I don't care for
+the grub question--should like to try the simple life, for I have
+already two gouty finger points as a result of the other kind of life.
+(Of course if they all get that way I shan't mind, for I love
+uniformity.) Probably if I attempted to live in Carmel I should have
+asthma again, from which I have long been free.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 9, 1907.]
+
+MY DEAR MORROW,
+
+Whether you "prosper" or not I'm glad you write instead of teaching. I
+have done a bit of teaching myself, but as the tuition was gratuitous
+I could pick my pupils; so it was a labor of love. I'm pretty well
+satisfied with the results.
+
+No, I'm not "toiling" much now. I've written all I care to, and having
+a pretty easy berth (writing for The Cosmopolitan only, and having no
+connection with Mr. Hearst's newspapers) am content.
+
+I have observed your story in Success, but as I never never (sic) read
+serials shall await its publication in covers before making a meal of
+it.
+
+You seem to be living at the old place in Vallejo Street, so I judge
+that it was spared by the fire. I had some pretty good times in that
+house, not only with you and Mrs. Morrow (to whom my love, please) but
+with the dear Hogan girls. Poor Flodie! she is nearly a sole survivor
+now. I wonder if she ever thinks of us.
+
+I hear from California frequently through a little group of
+interesting folk who foregather at Carmel--whither I shall perhaps
+stray some day and there leave my bones. Meantime, I am fairly happy
+here.
+
+I wish you would add yourself to the Carmel crowd. You would be a
+congenial member of the gang and would find them worth while. You must
+know George Sterling: he is the high panjandrum and a gorgeously good
+fellow. Go get thee a bungalow at Carmel, which is indubitably the
+charmingest place in the State. As to San Francisco, with its
+labor-union government, its thieves and other impossibilities, I could
+not be drawn into it by a team of behemoths. But California--ah, I
+dare not permit myself to remember it. Yet this Eastern country is not
+without charm. And my health is good here, as it never was there.
+Nothing ails me but age, which brings its own cure.
+
+God keep thee!--go and live at Carmel.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 29, 1907.]
+
+JAMES D. BLAKE, ESQ.,
+
+DEAR SIR:
+
+It is a matter of no great importance to me, but the republication of
+the foolish books that you mention would not be agreeable to me. They
+have no kind of merit or interest. One of them, "The Fiend's Delight,"
+was published against my protest; the utmost concession that the
+compiler and publisher (the late John Camden Hatten, London) would
+make was to let me edit his collection of my stuff and write a
+preface. You would pretty surely lose money on any of them.
+
+If you care to republish anything of mine you would, I think, do
+better with "Black Beetles in Amber," or "Shapes of Clay." The former
+sold well, and the latter would, I think, have done equally well if
+the earthquake-and-fire had not destroyed it, including the plates.
+Nearly all of both books were sold in San Francisco, and the sold, as
+well as the unsold, copies--I mean the unsold copies of the
+latter--perished in the fire. There is much inquiry for them (mainly
+from those who lost them) and I am told that they bring fancy prices.
+You probably know about that better than I.
+
+I should be glad to entertain proposals from you for their
+republication--in San Francisco--and should not be exacting as to
+royalties, and so forth.
+
+But the other books are "youthful indiscretions" and are "better
+dead."
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 28,1907.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Please send me a copy of the new edition of "The Testimony." I
+borrowed one of the first edition to give away, and want to replace
+it. Did you add the "Wine" to it? I'd not leave off the indefinite
+article from the title of that; it seems to dignify the tipple
+by hinting that it was no ordinary tope. It may have been
+witch-fermented.
+
+I don't "dislike" the line: "So terribly that brilliance shall
+enhance"; it seems merely less admirable than the others. Why didn't I
+tell you so? I could not tell you _all_ I thought of the poem--for
+another example, how I loved the lines:
+
+ "Where Dawn upon a pansy's breast hath laid
+ A single tear, and _whence the wind hath flown
+ And left a silence_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm returning you, under another cover (as the ceremonial slangers
+say) some letters that have come to me and that I have answered. I
+have a lot more, most of them abusive, I guess, that I'll dig out
+later. But the most pleasing ones I can't send, for I sent them to
+Brisbane on his promise to publish them, which the liar did not, nor
+has he had the decency to return them. I'm hardly sorry, for it gave
+me good reason to call him a peasant and a beast of the field. I'm
+always grateful for the chance to prod somebody.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I detest the "limited edition" and "autograph copies" plan of
+publication, but for the sake of Howes, who has done a tremendous lot
+of good work on my book, have assented to Blake's proposal in all
+things and hope to be able to laugh at this brilliant example of the
+"irony of fate." I've refused to profit in any way by the book. I want
+Howes to "break even" for his labor.
+
+By the way, Pollard and I had a good time in Galveston, and on the
+way I took in some of my old battlefields. At Galveston they nearly
+killed me with hospitality--so nearly that Pollard fled. I returned
+via Key West and Florida.
+
+You'll probably see Howes next Summer--I've persuaded him to go West
+and renounce the bookworm habit for some other folly. Be good to him;
+he is a capital fellow in his odd, amusing way.
+
+I didn't know there was an American edition of "The Fiends' Delight."
+Who published it and when?
+
+Congratulations on acceptance of "Tasso and Leonora." But I wouldn't
+do much in blank verse if I were you. It betrays you (somehow) into
+mere straightaway expression, and seems to repress in you the glorious
+abundance of imagery and metaphor that enriches your rhyme-work. This
+is not a criticism, particularly, of "Tasso," which is good enough for
+anybody, but--well, it's just _so_.
+
+I'm not doing much. My stuff in the Cosmo. comes last, and when
+advertisements crowd some of it is left off. Most of it gets in later
+(for of course I don't replace it with more work) but it is sadly
+antiquated. My checks, though, are always up to date.
+
+ Sincerely[10] yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+[10] I can almost say "sinecurely."
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 19, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I have just come upon a letter of yours that I got at Galveston and (I
+fear) did not acknowledge. But I've written you since, so I fancy all
+is well.
+
+You mention that sonnet that Chamberlain asked for. You should not
+have let him have it--it was, as you say, the kind of stuff that
+magazines like. Nay, it was even better. But I wish you'd sent it
+elsewhere. You owed it to me not to let the Cosmopolitan's readers
+see anything of yours (for awhile, at least) that was less than
+_great_. Something as great as the sonnet that you sent to McClure's
+was what the circumstances called for.
+
+"And strict concern of relativity"--O bother! that's not poetry. It's
+the slang of philosophy.
+
+I am still awaiting my copy of the new "Testimony." That's why I'm
+scolding.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ April 18, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR LORA,
+
+I'm an age acknowledging your letter; but then you'd have been an age
+writing it if you had not done it for "Sloots." And the other day I
+had one from him, written in his own improper person.
+
+I think it abominable that he and Carlt have to work so hard--at
+_their_ age--and I quite agree with George Sterling that Carlt ought
+to go to Carmel and grow potatoes. I'd like to do that myself, but
+for the fact that so many objectionable persons frequent the place:
+* * *, * * * and the like. I'm hoping, however, that the ocean will
+swallow * * * and be unable to throw him up.
+
+I trust you'll let Sloots "retire" at seventy, which is really quite
+well along in life toward the years of discretion and the age of
+consent. But when he is retired I know that he will bury himself in
+the redwoods and never look upon the face of man again. That, too, I
+should rather like to do myself--for a few months.
+
+I've laid out a lot of work for myself this season, and doubt if I
+shall get to California, as I had hoped. So I shall never, never see
+you. But you might send me a photograph.
+
+God be with you.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ July 11, 1908.]
+
+N.B. If you follow the pages you'll be able to make _some_ sense of
+this screed.
+
+MY DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I am sorry to learn that you have not been able to break your
+commercial chains, since you wish to, though I don't at all know that
+they are bad for you. I've railed at mine all my life, but don't
+remember that I ever made any good use of leisure when I had
+it--unless the mere "having a good time" is such. I remember once
+writing that one's career, or usefulness, was about ended when one
+thought less about how best to do his work than about the hardship of
+having to do it. I might have said the hardship of having so little
+leisure to do it. As I grow older I see more and more clearly the
+advantages of disadvantage, the splendid urge of adverse conditions,
+the uplifting effect of repression. And I'm ashamed to note how little
+_I_ profited by them. I wasn't the right kind, that is all; but I
+indulge the hope that _you_ are.
+
+No I don't think it of any use, your trying to keep * * * and me
+friends. But don't let that interfere with your regard for him if you
+have it. We are not required to share one another's feelings in such
+matters. I should not expect you to like my friends nor hate my
+enemies if they seemed to you different from what they seem to me; nor
+would I necessarily follow _your_ lead. For example, I loathe your
+friend * * * and expect his safe return because the ocean will refuse
+to swallow him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I congratulate you on the Gilder acceptance of your sonnet, and on
+publication of the "Tasso to Leonora." I don't think it your best work
+by much--don't think any of your blank verse as good as most of your
+rhyme--but it's not a thing to need apology.
+
+Certainly, I shall be pleased to see Hopper. Give me his address, and
+when I go to New York--this month or the next--I'll look him up. I
+think well of Hopper and trust that he will not turn out to be an 'ist
+of some kind, as most writers and artists do. That is because they are
+good feelers and poor thinkers. It is the emotional element in them,
+not the logical, that makes them writers and artists. They have, as a
+rule, sensibility and no sense. Except the _big_ fellows.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Neale has in hand already three volumes of the "Collected Works," and
+will have two more in about a month; and all (I hope) this year. I'm
+revising all the stuff and cutting it about a good deal, taking from
+one book stuff for another, and so forth. If Neale gets enough
+subscriptions he will put out all the ten volumes next year; if not I
+shall probably not be "here" to see the final one issued.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Glad you think better of my part in the Hunter-Hillquit "symposium."
+_I_ think I did very well considering, first, that I didn't care a
+damn about the matter; second, that I knew nothing of the men I was to
+meet, nor what we were to talk about, whereas they came cocked and
+primed for the fray; and, third, that the whole scheme was to make a
+Socialist holiday at my expense. Of all 'ists the Socialist is perhaps
+the damnedest fool for (in this country) he is merely the cat that
+pulls chestnuts from the fire for the Anarchist. His part of the
+business is to talk away the country's attention while the Anarchist
+places the bomb. In some countries Socialism is clean, but not in
+this. And everywhere the Socialist is a dreamer and futilitarian.
+
+But I guess I'll call a halt on this letter, the product of an idle
+hour in garrulous old age.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ August 7, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+Your note inquiring about "Ashes of the Beacon" interests me. You
+mention it as a "pamphlet." I have no knowledge of its having appeared
+otherwise than as an article in the Sunday edition of the "N. Y.
+American"--I do not recall the date. If it has been published as a
+pamphlet, or in any other form, separately--that is by itself--I
+should like "awfully" to know by whom, if _you_ know.
+
+I should be pleased to send it to you--in the "American"--if I had a
+copy of the issue containing it, but I have not. It will be included
+in Vol. I of my "Collected Works," to be published by the Neale
+Publishing Company, N. Y. That volume will be published probably early
+next year.
+
+But the work is to be in ten or twelve costly volumes, and sold by
+subscription only. That buries it fathoms deep so far as the public is
+concerned.
+
+Regretting my inability to assist you, I am sincerely yours,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ August 14, 1908.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I am amused by your attitude toward the spaced sonnet, and by the
+docility of Gilder. If I had been your editor I guess you'd have got
+back your sonnets. I never liked the space. If the work naturally
+divides itself into two parts, as it should, the space is needless; if
+not, it is worse than that. The space was the invention of printers of
+a comparatively recent period, neither Petrarch nor Dante (as Gilder
+points out) knew of it. Every magazine has its own _system_ of
+printing, and Gilder's good-natured compliance with your wish, or
+rather demand, shows him to be a better fellow, though not a better
+poet, than I have thought him to be. As a victory of author over
+editor, the incident pleases.
+
+I've not yet been in New York, but expect to go soon. I shall be glad
+to meet Hopper if he is there.
+
+Thank you for the article from "Town Talk." It suggests this question:
+How many times, and covering a period of how many years, must one's
+unexplainable obscurity be pointed out to constitute fame? Not
+knowing, I am almost disposed to consider myself the most famous of
+authors. I have pretty nearly ceased to be "discovered," but my
+notoriety as an obscurian may be said to be worldwide and apparently
+everlasting.
+
+The trouble, I fancy, is with our vocabulary--the lack of a word
+meaning something intermediate between "popular" and "obscure"--and
+the ignorance of writers as to the reading of readers. I seldom meet a
+person of education who is not acquainted with some of my work; my
+clipping bureau's bills were so heavy that I had to discontinue my
+patronage, and Blake tells me that he sells my books at one hundred
+dollars a set. Rather amusing all this to one so widely unknown.
+
+I sometimes wonder what you think of Scheff's new book. Does it
+perform the promise of the others? In the dedicatory poem it seems to
+me that it does, and in some others. As a good Socialist you are bound
+to like _that_ poem because of its political-economic-views. I like it
+despite them.
+
+ "The dome of the Capitol roars
+ With the shouts of the Caesars of crime"
+
+is great poetry, but it is not true. I am rather familiar with what
+goes on in the Capitol--not through the muck-rakers, who pass a few
+days here "investigating," and then look into their pockets and write,
+but through years of personal observation and personal acquaintance
+with the men observed. There are no Caesars of crime, but about a
+dozen rascals, all told, mostly very small fellows; I can name them
+all. They are without power or influence enough to count in the scheme
+of legislation. The really dangerous and mischievous chaps are the
+demagogues, friends of the pee-pul. And they do all the "shouting."
+Compared with the Congress of our forefathers, the Congress of to-day
+is as a flock of angels to an executive body of the Western Federation
+of Miners.
+
+When I showed the "dome" to * * * (who had been reading his own
+magazine) the tears came into his voice, and I guess his eyes, as he
+lamented the decay of civic virtue, "the treason of the Senate," and
+the rest of it. He was so affected that I hastened to brace him up
+with whiskey. He, too, was "squirming" about "other persons'
+troubles," and with about as good reason as you.
+
+I think "the present system" is not "frightful." It is all right--a
+natural outgrowth of human needs, limitations and capacities, instinct
+with possibilities of growth in goodness, elastic, and progressively
+better. Why don't you study humanity as you do the suns--not from the
+viewpoint of time, but from that of eternity. The middle ages were
+yesterday, Rome and Greece the day before. The individual man is
+nothing, as a single star is nothing. If this earth were to take fire
+you would smile to think how little it mattered in the scheme of the
+universe; all the wailing of the egoist mob would not affect you. Then
+why do you squirm at the minute catastrophe of a few thousands or
+millions of pismires crushed under the wheels of evolution. Must the
+new heavens and the new earth of prophecy and science come in _your_
+little instant of life in order that you may not go howling and
+damning with Jack London up and down the earth that we happen to have?
+Nay, nay, read history to get the long, large view--to learn to think
+in centuries and cycles. Keep your eyes off your neighbors and fix
+them on the nations. What poetry we shall have when you get, and give
+us, The Testimony of the Races!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I peg away at compilation and revision. I'm cutting-about my stuff a
+good deal--changing things from one book to another, adding,
+subtracting and dividing. Five volumes are ready, and Neale is engaged
+in a "prospectus" which he says will make me blush. I'll send it to
+you when he has it ready.
+
+Gertrude Atherton is sending me picture-postals of Berchtesgaden and
+other scenes of "The Monk and the Hangman's Daughter." She found all
+the places "exactly as described"--the lakes, mountains, St.
+Bartolomae, the cliff-meadow where the edelweiss grows, and so forth.
+The photographs are naturally very interesting to me.
+
+ Good night.
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ September 12, 1908.]
+
+MY DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+Thank you for your good wishes for the "Collected Works"--an
+advertisement of which--with many blushes!--I enclose.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--The "ad" is not sent in the hope that you will be so foolish as
+to subscribe--merely to "show" you. The "edition de luxe" business is
+not at all to my taste--I should prefer a popular edition at a
+possible price.
+
+
+[New York,
+ November 6, 1908.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Your letter has just been forwarded from Washington. I'm here for a
+few days only--"few days and full of trouble," as the Scripture hath
+it. The "trouble" is mainly owling, dining and booze. I'll not attempt
+an answer to your letter till I get home.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm going to read Hopper's book, and if it doesn't show him to be a
+* * * or a * * * I'll call on him. If it does I won't. I'm getting
+pretty particular in my old age; the muck-rakers, blood-boilers and
+little brothers-of-the-bad are not congenial.
+
+By the way, why do you speak of my "caning" you. I did not suppose
+that _you_ had joined the innumerable caravan of those who find
+something sarcastic or malicious in my good natured raillery in
+careless controversy. If I choose to smile in ink at your
+inconsistency in weeping for the woes of individual "others"--meaning
+other _humans_--while you, of course, don't give a damn for the
+thousands of lives that you crush out every time you set down your
+foot, or eat a berry, why shouldn't _I_ do so? One can't always
+remember to stick to trifles, even in writing a letter. Put on your
+skin, old man, I may want to poke about with my finger again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 11, 1908.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm still working at my book. Seven volumes are completed and I've
+read the proofs of Vol. I.
+
+Your account of the "movement" to free the oppressed and downtrodden
+river from the tyranny of the sand-bar tickled me in my lonesome rib.
+Surely no colony of reformers ever engaged in a more characteristic
+crusade against the Established Order and Intolerable Conditions. I
+can almost hear you patting yourselves on your aching backs as you
+contemplated your encouraging success in beating Nature and promoting
+the Cause. I believe that if I'd been there my cold heart and
+indurated mind would have caught the contagion of the Great
+Reform. Anyhow, I should have appreciated the sunset which
+(characteristically) intervened in the interest of Things as They Are.
+I feel sure that whenever you Socialers shall have found a way to make
+the earth stop "turning over and over like a man in bed" (as Joaquin
+might say) you will accomplish all the reforms that you have at heart.
+All that you need is plenty of time--a few kalpas, more or less, of
+uninterrupted daylight. Meantime I await your new book with impatience
+and expectation.
+
+I have photographs of my brother's shack in the redwoods and feel
+strongly drawn in that direction--since, as you fully infer, Carmel is
+barred. Probably, though, I shall continue in the complicated life of
+cities while I last.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 9, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've been reading your book--re-reading most of it--"every little
+while." I don't know that it is better than your first, but to say
+that it is as good is praise enough. You know what I like most in it,
+but there are some things that you _don't_ know I like. For an
+example, "Night in Heaven." It Kipples a bit, but it is great. But I'm
+not going to bore you with a catalogue of titles. The book is _all_
+good. No, not (in my judgment) all, for it contains lines and words
+that I found objectionable in the manuscript, and time has not
+reconciled me to them. Your retention of them, shows, however, that
+you agree with me in thinking that you have passed your 'prentice
+period and need no further criticism. So I welcome them.
+
+I take it that the cover design is Scheff's--perhaps because it is so
+good, for the little cuss is clever that way.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I rather like your defence of Jack London--not that I think it valid,
+but because I like loyalty to a friend whom one does not believe to be
+bad. (The "thick-and-thin" loyalty never commended itself to me; it is
+too dog-like.) I fail, however, to catch the note of penitence in
+London's narratives of his underlife, and my charge of literary
+stealing was not based on his primeval man book, "Before Adam."
+
+As to * * *, as he is not more than a long-range or short-acquaintance
+friend of yours, I'll say that I would not believe him under oath on
+his deathbed. * * * The truth is, none of these howlers knows the
+difference between a million and a thousand nor between truth and
+falsehood. I could give you instances of their lying about matters
+here at the capital that would make even your hair stand on end. It is
+not only that they are all liars--they are mere children; they don't
+know anything and don't care to, nor, for prosperity in their
+specialties, need to. Veracity would be a disqualification; if they
+confined themselves to facts they would not get a hearing. * * * is
+the nastiest futilitarian of the gang.
+
+It is not the purpose of these gentlemen that I find so very
+objectionable, but the foul means that they employ to accomplish it. I
+would be a good deal of a Socialist myself if they had not made the
+word (and the thing) stink.
+
+Don't imagine that I'll not "enter Carmel" if I come out there. I'll
+visit you till you're sick of me. But I'd not _live_ there and be
+"identified" with it, as the newspapers would say. I'm warned by
+Hawthorne and Brook Farm.
+
+I'm still working--a little more leisurely--on my books. But I begin
+to feel the call of New York on the tympani of my blood globules. I
+must go there occasionally, or I should die of intellectual torpor.
+* * * "O Lord how long?"--this letter. O well, you need not give it
+the slightest attention; there's nothing, I think, that requires a
+reply, nor merits one.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 6, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Did you see Markham's review of the "Wine" in "The N. Y. American"?
+Pretty fair, but--if a metrical composition full of poetry is not a
+poem what is it? And I wonder what he calls Kubla Khan, which has a
+beginning but neither middle nor end. And how about The Faerie Queene
+for absence of "unity"? Guess I'll ask him.
+
+Isn't it funny what happens to critics who would mark out meters and
+bounds for the Muse--denying the name "poem," for example, to a work
+because it is not like some other work, or like one that is in the
+minds of them?
+
+I hope you are prosperous and happy and that I shall sometimes hear
+from you.
+
+Howes writes me that the "Lone Hand"--Sydney--has been commending you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ October 9, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I return the poems with a few random comments and suggestions.
+
+I'm a little alarmed lest you take too seriously my preference of your
+rhyme to your blank--especially when I recall your "Music" and "The
+Spirit of Beauty." Perhaps I should have said only that you are not so
+_likely_ to write well in blank. (I think always of "Tasso to
+Leonora," which I cannot learn to like.) Doubtless I have too great
+fondness for _great_ lines--_your_ great lines--and they occur less
+frequently in your blank verse than in your rhyme--most frequently in
+your quatrains, those of sonnets included. Don't swear off
+blank--except as you do drink--but study it more. It's "an hellish
+thing."
+
+It looks as if I _might_ go to California sooner than I had intended.
+My health has been wretched all summer. I need a sea voyage--one _via_
+Panama would be just the thing. So if the cool weather of autumn do
+not restore me I shall not await spring here. But I'm already somewhat
+better. If I had been at sea I should have escaped the Cook-Peary
+controversy. We talk nothing but arctic matters here--I enclose my
+contribution to its horrors.
+
+I'm getting many a good lambasting for my book of essays. Also a sop
+of honey now and then. It's all the same to me; I don't worry about
+what my contemporaries think of me. I made 'em think of _you_--that's
+glory enough for one. And the squirrels in the public parks think me
+the finest fellow in the world. They know what I have in every pocket.
+Critics don't know that--nor nearly so much.
+
+Advice to a young author: Cultivate the good opinion of squirrels.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ November 1, 1909.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+European criticism of your _bete noir_, old Leopold, is entitled to
+attention; American (of him or any other king) is not. It looks as if
+the wretch may be guilty of indifference.
+
+In condemning as "revolutionary" the two-rhyme sestet, I think I could
+not have been altogether solemn, for (1) I'm something of a
+revolutionist myself regarding the sonnet, having frequently expressed
+the view that its accepted forms--even the number of lines--were
+purely arbitrary; (2) I find I've written several two-rhyme sestets
+myself, and (3), like yours, my ear has difficulty in catching the
+rhyme effect in a-b-c, a-b-c. The rhyme is delayed till the end of the
+fourth line--as it is in the quatrain (not of the sonnet) with
+unrhyming first and third lines--a form of which I think all my
+multitude of verse supplies no example. I confess, though, that I did
+not know that Petrarch had made so frequent use of the 2-rhyme sestet.
+
+I learn a little all the time; some of my old notions of poetry seem
+to me now erroneous, even absurd. So I _may_ have been at one time a
+stickler for the "regular" three-rhymer. Even now it pleases my ear
+well enow if the three are not so arranged as to elude it. I'm sorry
+if I misled you. You'd better 'fess up to your young friend, as I do
+to you--if I really was serious.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course I should be glad to see Dick, but don't expect to. They
+never come, and it has long been my habit to ignore every "declaration
+of intention."
+
+I'm greatly pleased to know that you too like those lines of Markham
+that you quote from the "Wharf of Dreams." I've repeatedly told him
+that that sonnet was his greatest work, and those were its greatest
+lines. By the way, my young poet, Loveman, sends me a letter from
+Markham, asking for a poem or two for a book, "The Younger Choir,"
+that he (M.) is editing. Loveman will be delighted by your good
+opinion of "Pierrot"--which still another magazine has returned to me.
+Guess I'll have to give it up.
+
+I'm sending you a booklet on loose locutions. It is vilely gotten
+up--had to be so to sell for twenty-five cents, the price that I
+favored. I just noted down these things as I found them in my reading,
+or remembered them, until I had four hundred. Then I took about fifty
+from other books, and boiled down the needful damnation. Maybe I have
+done too much boiling down--making the stuff "thick and slab." If
+there is another edition I shall do a little bettering.
+
+I should like some of those mussels, and, please God, shall help you
+cull them next summer. But the abalone--as a Christian comestible he
+is a stranger to me and the tooth o' me.
+
+I think you have had some correspondence with my friend Howes of
+Galveston. Well, here he is "in his habit as he lives." Of the two
+figures in the picture Howes is the one on top.[11] Good night.
+
+[11] Howes was riding on a burro.
+
+ A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 29, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Here are your fine verses--I have been too busy to write to you
+before. In truth, I've worked harder now for more than a year than I
+ever shall again--and the work will bring me nor gain nor glory. Well,
+I shall take a rest pretty soon, partly in California. I thank you for
+the picture card. I have succumbed to the post-card fashion myself.
+
+As to some points in your letter.
+
+I've no recollection of advising young authors to "leave all heart and
+sentiment out of their work." If I did the context would probably show
+that it was because their time might better be given to perfect
+themselves in form, against the day when their hearts would be less
+wild and their sentiments truer. You know it has always been my belief
+that one cannot be trusted to feel until one has learned to think--and
+few youngsters have learned to do that. Was it not Dr. Holmes who
+advised a young writer to cut out every passage that he thought
+particularly good? He'd be sure to think the beautiful and sentimental
+passages the best, would he not? * * *
+
+If you mean to write really "vituperative" sonnets (why sonnets?) let
+me tell you _one_ secret of success--name your victim and his offense.
+To do otherwise is to fire blank cartridges--to waste your words in
+air--to club a vacuum. At least your satire must be so personally
+applicable that there can be no mistake as to the victim's identity.
+Otherwise he is no victim--just a spectator like all others. And that
+brings us to Watson. His caddishness consisted, not in satirizing a
+woman, which is legitimate, but, first, in doing so without sufficient
+reason, and, second, in saying orally (on the safe side of the
+Atlantic) what he apparently did not dare say in the verses. * * *
+
+I'm enclosing something that will tickle you I hope--"The Ballade of
+the Goodly Fere." The author's[12] father, who is something in the Mint
+in Philadelphia, sent me several of his son's poems that were not
+good; but at last came this--in manuscript, like the others. Before I
+could do anything with it--meanwhile wearing out the paper and the
+patience of my friends by reading it at them--the old man asked it
+back rather peremptorily. I reluctantly sent it, with a letter of high
+praise. The author had "placed" it in London, where it has made a heap
+of talk.
+
+[12] Ezra Pound.
+
+It has plenty of faults besides its monotonous rhyme scheme; but tell
+me what you think of it.
+
+God willing, we shall eat Carmel mussels and abalones in May or June.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 7, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+My plan is to leave here before April first, pass a few days in New
+York and then sail for Colon. If I find the canal work on the Isthmus
+interesting I may skip a steamer from Panama to see it. I've no notion
+how long it will take to reach San Francisco, and know nothing of the
+steamers and their schedules on the Pacific side.
+
+I shall of course want to see Grizzly first--that is to say, he will
+naturally expect me to. But if you can pull him down to Carmel about
+the time of my arrival (I shall write you the date of my sailing from
+New York) I would gladly come there. Carlt, whom I can see at once on
+arriving, can tell me where he (Grizzly) is. * * *
+
+I don't think you rightly value "The Goodly Fere." Of course no ballad
+written to-day can be entirely good, for it must be an imitation; it
+is now an unnatural form, whereas it was once a natural one. We are
+no longer a primitive people, and a primitive people's forms and
+methods are not ours. Nevertheless, this seems to me an admirable
+ballad, as it is given a modern to write ballads. And I think you
+overlook the best line:
+
+ "The hounds of the crimson sky gave tongue."
+
+The poem is complete as I sent it, and I think it stops right where
+and as it should--
+
+ "I ha' seen him eat o' the honey comb
+ Sin' they nailed him to the tree."
+
+The current "Literary Digest" has some queer things about (and by)
+Pound, and "Current Literature" reprints the "Fere" with all the
+wrinkles ironed out of it--making a "capon priest" of it.
+
+Fo' de Lawd's sake! don't apologise for not subscribing for my
+"Works." If you did subscribe I should suspect that you were "no
+friend o' mine"--it would remove you from that gang and put you in a
+class by yourself. Surely you can not think I care who buys or does
+not buy my books. The man who expects anything more than lip-service
+from his friends is a very young man. There are, for example, a
+half-dozen Californians (all loud admirers of Ambrose Bierce) editing
+magazines and newspapers here in the East. Every man Jack of them has
+turned me down. They will do everything for me but enable me to live.
+Friends be damned!--strangers are the chaps for me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I've given away my beautiful sailing canoe and shall never again live
+a life on the ocean wave--unless you have boats at Carmel.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ Easter Sunday.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Here's a letter from Loveman, with a kindly reference to you--that's
+why I send it.
+
+I'm to pull out of here next Wednesday, the 30th, but don't know just
+when I shall sail from New York--apparently when there are no more
+dinners to eat in that town and no more friends to visit. May God in
+His infinite mercy lessen the number of both. I should get into your
+neck o' woods early in May. Till then God be with you instead.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+Easter Sunday.
+
+[Why couldn't He stay put?]
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 29, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm "all packed up," even my pens; for to-morrow I go to New
+York--whence I shall write you before embarking.
+
+Neale seems pleased by your "permission to print," as Congressmen say
+who can't make a speech yet want one in the Record, for home
+consumption.
+
+ Sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Guerneville, Cal.,
+ May 24, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+You will probably have learned of my arrival--this is my first leisure
+to apprise you.
+
+I took Carlt and Lora and came directly up here--where we all hope to
+see you before I see Carmel. Lora remains here for the week, perhaps
+longer, and Carlt is to come up again on Saturday. Of course you do
+not need an invitation to come whenever you feel like it.
+
+I had a pleasant enough voyage and have pretty nearly got the "slosh"
+of the sea out of my ears and its heave out of my bones.
+
+A bushel of letters awaits attention, besides a pair of lizards that I
+have undertaken to domesticate. So good morning.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Key Route Inn, Oakland,
+ June 25, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+You'll observe that I acted on your suggestion, and am "here."
+
+Your little sisters are most gracious to me, despite my candid
+confession that I extorted your note of introduction by violence and
+intimidation.
+
+Baloo[13] and his cubs went on to Guerneville the day of their return
+from Carmel. But I saw them.
+
+[13] Albert Bierce.
+
+I'm deep in work, and shall be for a few weeks; then I shall be off to
+Carmel for a lungful of sea air and a bellyful of abalones and
+mussels.
+
+I suppose you'll be going to the Midsummer Jinks. Fail not to stop
+over here--I don't feel that I have really seen you yet.
+
+With best regards to Carrie.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Laguna Vista, Oakland,
+ Sunday, July 24, 1910.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Supposing you to have gone home, I write to send the poem. Of course
+it is a good poem. But I begin to want to hear your larger voice
+again. I want to see you standing tall on the heights--above the
+flower-belt and the bird-belt. I want to hear,
+
+ "like Ocean on a western beach,
+ The surge and thunder of the Odyssey,"
+
+as you _Odyssate_.
+
+I _think_ I met that dog * * * to-day, and as it was a choice between
+kicking him and avoiding him I chose the more prudent course.
+
+I've not seen your little sisters--they seem to have tired of me. Why
+not?--I have tired of myself.
+
+Fail not to let me know when to expect you for the Guerneville trip.
+* * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Laguna Vista,
+ October 20, 1910.]
+
+I go back to the Inn on Saturday.
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+It is long since I read the Book of Job, but if I thought it better
+than your addition to it I should not sleep until I had read it
+again--and again. Such a superb Who's Who in the Universe! Not a
+Homeric hero in the imminence of a personal encounter ever did so fine
+bragging. I hope you will let it into your next book, if only to show
+that the "inspired" scribes of the Old Testament are not immatchable
+by modern genius. You know the Jews regard them, not as prophets, in
+our sense, but merely as poets--and the Jews ought to know something
+of their own literature.
+
+I fear I shall not be able to go to Carmel while you're a widow--I've
+tangled myself up with engagements again. Moreover, I'm just back from
+the St. Helena cemetery, and for a few days shall be too blue for
+companionship.
+
+"Shifted" is better, I think (in poetry) than "joggled." You say you
+"don't like working." Then write a short story. That's work, but
+you'd like it--or so I think. Poetry is the highest of arts, but why
+be a specialist?
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ November 11, 1910.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+It is nice to hear from you and learn that despite my rude and
+intolerant ways you manage to slip in a little affection for me--you
+and the rest of the folk. And really I think I left a little piece of
+my heart out there--mostly in Berkeley. It is funny, by the way, that
+in falling out of love with most of my old sweethearts and
+semi-sweethearts I should fall _in_ love with my own niece. It is
+positively scandalous!
+
+I return Sloot's letter. It gave me a bit of a shock to have him say
+that he would probably never see me again. Of course that is true, but
+I had not thought of it just that way--had not permitted myself to, I
+suppose. And, after all, if things go as I'm hoping they will,
+Montesano will take me in again some day before he seems likely to
+leave it. We four may see the Grand Canyon together yet. I'd like to
+lay my bones thereabout.
+
+The garments that you persuaded me were mine are not. They are
+probably Sterling's, and he has probably damned me for stealing them.
+I don't care; he has no right to dress like the "filthy rich." Hasn't
+he any "class consciousness"? However, I am going to send them back to
+you by express. I'll mail you the paid receipt; so don't pay the
+charge that the company is sure to make. They charged me again for the
+two packages that you paid for, and got away with the money from the
+Secretary of my club, where they were delivered. I had to get it back
+from the delivery man at the cannon's mouth--34 calibre.
+
+With love to Carlt and Sloots,
+
+ Affectionately yours,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ November 14, 1910.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+You asked me about the relative interest of Yosemite and the Grand
+Canyon. It is not easy to compare them, they are so different. In
+Yosemite only the magnitudes are unfamiliar; in the Canyon nothing is
+familiar--at least, nothing would be familiar to you, though I have
+seen something like it on the upper Yellowstone. The "color scheme" is
+astounding--almost incredible, as is the "architecture." As to
+magnitudes, Yosemite is nowhere. From points on the rim of the Canyon
+you can see fifty, maybe a hundred, miles of it. And it is never twice
+alike. Nobody can describe it. Of course you must see it sometime. I
+wish our Yosemite party could meet there, but probably we never will;
+it is a long way from here, and not quite next door to Berkeley and
+Carmel.
+
+I've just got settled in my same old tenement house, the Olympia, but
+the club is my best address.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ November 29, 1910.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Thank you very much for the work that you are doing for me in
+photography and china. I know it is great work. But take your time
+about it.
+
+I hope you all had a good Thanksgiving at Upshack. (That is my name
+for Sloots' place. It will be understood by anyone that has walked to
+it from Montesano, carrying a basket of grub on a hot day.)
+
+I trust Sterling got his waistcoat and trousers in time to appear at
+his uncle's dinner in other outer garments than a steelpen coat. * * *
+I am glad you like (or like to have) the books. You would have had all
+my books when published if I had supposed that you cared for them, or
+even knew about them. I am now encouraged to hope that some day you
+and Carlt and Sloots may be given the light to see the truth at the
+heart of my "views" (which I have expounded for half a century) and
+will cease to ally yourselves with what is most hateful to me,
+socially and politically. I shall then feel (in my grave) that
+perhaps, after all, I knew how to write. Meantime, run after your
+false fool gods until you are tired; I shall not believe that your
+hearts are really in the chase, for they are pretty good hearts, and
+those of your gods are nests of nastiness and heavens of hate.
+
+Now I feel better, and shall drink a toddy to the tardy time when
+those whom I love shall not think me a perverted intelligence; when
+they shall not affirm my intellect and despise its work--confess my
+superior understanding and condemn all its fundamental conclusions.
+Then we will be a happy family--you and Carlt in the flesh and Sloots
+and I in our bones.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My health is excellent in this other and better world than California.
+
+God bless you.
+
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 22, 1910.]
+
+DEAR CARLT,
+
+You had indeed "something worth writing about"--not only the effect
+of the impenitent mushroom, but the final and disastrous overthrow of
+that ancient superstition, Sloots' infallibility as a mushroomer. As I
+had expected to be at that dinner, I suppose I should think myself to
+have had "a narrow escape." Still, I wish I could have taken my chance
+with the rest of you.
+
+How would you like three weeks of nipping cold weather, with a foot of
+snow? That's what has been going on here. Say, tell Sloots that the
+front footprints of a rabbit-track
+
+[Illustration: Rabbit tracks]
+
+are made by the animal's hind feet, straddling his forelegs. Could he
+have learned that important fact in California, except by hearsay?
+Observe (therefore) the superiority of this climate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 26, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I have just received a very affectionate letter from * * * and now
+know that I did her an injustice in what I carelessly wrote to you
+about her incivility to me after I had left her. It is plain that she
+did not mean to be uncivil in what she wrote me on a postal card which
+I did not look at until I was in the train; she just "didn't know any
+better." So I have restored her to favor, and hope that you will
+consider my unkind remarks about her as unwritten. Guess I'm addicted
+to going off at half-cock anyhow.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 3, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I have the Yosemite book, and Miss Christiansen has the Mandarin coat.
+I thank you very much. The pictures are beautiful, but of them all I
+prefer that of Nanny bending over the stove. True, the face is not
+visible, but it looks like you all over.
+
+I'm filling out the book with views of the Grand Canyon, so as to have
+my scenic treasures all together. Also I'm trying to get for you a
+certain book of Canyon pictures, which I neglected to obtain when
+there. You will like it--if I get it.
+
+Sometime when you have nothing better to do--don't be in a hurry about
+it--will you go out to Mountain View cemetery with your camera and
+take a picture of the grave of Elizabeth (Lily) Walsh, the little deaf
+mute that I told you of? I think the man in the office will locate it
+for you. It is in the Catholic part of the cemetery--St. Mary's. The
+name Lily Walsh is on the beveled top of the headstone which is shaped
+like this:
+
+[Illustration: Headstone]
+
+You remember I was going to take you there, but never found the time.
+
+Miss Christiansen says she is writing, or has written you. I think the
+coat very pretty.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 15, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+As to the "form of address." A man passing another was halted by the
+words: "You dirty dog!" Turning to the speaker, he bowed coldly and
+said: "Smith is my name, sir." _My_ name is Bierce, and I find, on
+reflection, that I like best those who call me just that. If my
+christen name were George I'd want to be called _that_; but "Ambrose"
+is fit only for mouths of women--in which it sounds fairly well.
+
+_How_ are you my master? I never read one of your poems without
+learning something, though not, alas, how to make one.
+
+Don't worry about "Lilith"; it will work out all right. As to the
+characters not seeming alive, I've always fancied the men and women of
+antiquity--particularly the kings, and great ones generally--should
+not be too flesh-and-bloody, like the "persons whom one meets." A
+little coldness and strangeness is very becoming to them. I like them
+to _stalk_, like the ghosts that they are--our modern passioning seems
+a bit anachronous in them. Maybe I'm wrong, but I'm sure you will
+understand and have some sympathy with the error.
+
+Hudson Maxim takes medicine without biting the spoon. He had a dose
+from me and swallowed it smiling. I too gave him some citations of
+great poetry that is outside the confines of his "definition"--poetry
+in which are no tropes at all. He seems to lack the _feel_ of poetry.
+He even spoils some of the "great lines" by not including enough of
+the context. As to his "improvements," fancy his preference for "the
+fiercest spirit of _the warrior host_" to "the fiercest spirit _that
+fought in Heaven_"! O my!
+
+Yes, Conrad told me the tale of his rescue by you. He gave me the
+impression of hanging in the sky above billows unthinkably huge and
+rocks inconceivably hard.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Of course I could not but be pleased by your inclusion of that sonnet
+on me in your book. And, by the way, I'm including in my tenth volume
+my _Cosmopolitan_ article on the "Wine" and my end of the controversy
+about it. All the volumes of the set are to be out by June, saith the
+publisher. He is certainly half-killing me with proofs--mountains of
+proofs! * * *
+
+Yes, you'll doubtless have a recruit in Carlt for your Socialist
+menagerie--if he is not already a veteran exhibit. Your "party" is
+recruited from among sore-heads only. There are some twenty-five
+thousand of them (sore-heads) in this neck o' woods--all disloyal--all
+growling at the Government which feeds and clothes them twice as well
+as they could feed and clothe themselves in private employment. They
+move Heaven and Earth to get in, and they never resign--just "take it
+out" in abusing the Government. If I had my way nobody should remain
+in the civil service more than five years--at the end of that period
+all are disloyal. Not one of them cares a rap for the good of the
+service or the country--as we soldiers used to do on thirteen dollars
+a month (with starvation, disease and death thrown in). Their
+grievance is that the Government does not undertake to maintain them
+in the style to which they choose to accustom themselves. They fix
+their standard of living just a little higher than they can afford,
+and would do so no matter what salary they got, as all salary-persons
+invariably do. Then they damn their employer for not enabling them to
+live up to it.
+
+If they can do better "outside" why don't they go outside and do so;
+if they can't (which means that they are getting more than they are
+worth) what are they complaining about?
+
+What this country needs--what every country needs occasionally--is a
+good hard bloody war to revive the vice of patriotism on which its
+existence as a nation depends. Meantime, you socialers, anarchists and
+other sentimentaliters and futilitarians will find the civil-service
+your best recruiting ground, for it is the Land of Reasonless
+Discontent. I yearn for the strong-handed Dictator who will swat you
+all on the mouths o' you till you are "heard to cease." Until
+then--How? (drinking.)
+
+ Yours sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 19, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Every evening coffee is made for me in my rooms, but I have not yet
+ventured to take it from _your_ cup for fear of an accident to the
+cup. Some of the women in this house are stark, staring mad about that
+cup and saucer, and the plate.
+
+I am very sorry Carlt finds his position in the civil service so
+intolerable. If he can do better outside he should resign. If he
+can't, why, that means that the Government is doing better for him
+than he can do for himself, and you are not justified in your little
+tirade about the oppression of "the masses." "The masses" have been
+unprosperous from time immemorial, and always will be. A very simple
+way to escape that condition (and the _only_ way) is to elevate
+oneself out of that incapable class.
+
+You write like an anarchist and say that if you were a man you'd _be_
+one. I should be sorry to believe that, for I should lose a very
+charming niece, and you a most worthy uncle.
+
+You say that Carlt and Grizzly are not Socialists. Does that mean that
+_they_ are anarchists? I draw the line at anarchists, and would put
+them all to death if I lawfully could.
+
+But I fancy your intemperate words are just the babbling of a
+thoughtless girl. In any case you ought to know from my work in
+literature that I am not the person to whom to address them. I carry
+my convictions into my life and conduct, into my friendships,
+affections and all my relations with my fellow creatures. So I think
+it would be more considerate to leave out of your letters to _me_ some
+things that you may have in mind. Write them to others.
+
+My own references to socialism, and the like, have been jocular--I did
+not think you perverted "enough to hurt," though I consider your
+intellectual environment a mighty bad one. As to such matters in
+future let us make a treaty of silence.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ March 1, 1911.]
+
+MY DEAR RUTH,
+
+It is pleasant to know that the family Robertson is "seeing things"
+and enjoying them. I hate travel, but find it delightful when done by
+you, instead of me. Believe me, I have had great pleasure in following
+you by your trail of words, as in the sport known as the "paper
+chase."
+
+And now about the little story. Your refusal to let your father amend
+it is no doubt dreadfully insubordinate, but I brave his wrath by
+approval. It is _your_ work that I want to see, not anybody's else.
+I've a profound respect for your father's talent: as a literateur, he
+is the best physician that I know; but he must not be coaching my
+pupil, or he and I (as Mark Twain said of Mrs. Astor) "will have a
+falling out."
+
+The story is not a story. It is not narrative, and nothing occurs. It
+is a record of mental mutations--of spiritual vicissitudes--states of
+mind. That is the most difficult thing that you could have attempted.
+It can be done acceptably by genius and the skill that comes of
+practice, as can anything. You are not quite equal to it--yet. You
+have done it better than I could have done it at your age, but not
+altogether well; as doubtless you did not expect to do it. It would be
+better to confine yourself at present to simple narrative. Write of
+something done, not of something thought and felt, except
+incidentally. I'm sure it is in you to do great work, but in this
+writing trade, as in other matters, excellence is to be attained no
+otherwise than by beginning at the beginning--the simple at first,
+then the complex and difficult. You can not go up a mountain by a leap
+at the peak.
+
+I'm retaining your little sketch till your return, for you can do
+nothing with it--nor can I. If it had been written--preferably
+typewritten--with wide lines and margins I could do something _to_ it.
+Maybe when I get the time I shall; at present I am swamped with
+"proofs" and two volumes behind the printers. If I knew that I should
+_see_ you and talk it over I should rewrite it and (original in hand)
+point out the reasons for each alteration--you would see them quickly
+enough when shown. Maybe you will all come this way.
+
+You are _very_ deficient in spelling. I hope that is not incurable,
+though some persons--clever ones, too--never do learn to spell
+correctly. You will have to learn it from your reading--noting
+carefully all but the most familiar words.
+
+You have "pet" words--nearly all of us have. One of yours is
+"flickering." Addiction to certain words is an "upsetting sin" most
+difficult to overcome. Try to overcome it by cutting them out where
+they seem most felicitous.
+
+By the way, your "hero," as you describe him, would not have been
+accessible to all those spiritual impressions--it is _you_ to whom
+they come. And that confirms my judgment of your imagination.
+Imagination is nine parts of the writing trade. With enough of _that_
+all things are possible; but it is the other things that require the
+hard work, the incessant study, the tireless seeking, the indomitable
+will. It is no "pic-nic," this business of writing, believe me.
+Success comes by favor of the gods, yes; but O the days and nights
+that you must pass before their altars, prostrate and imploring! They
+are exacting--the gods; years and years of service you must give in
+the temple. If you are prepared to do this go on to your reward. If
+not, you can not too quickly throw away the pen and--well, marry, for
+example.
+
+ "Drink deep or taste not the Pierian spring."
+
+_My_ vote is that you persevere.
+
+With cordial regards to all good Robertsons--I think there are no
+others--I am most sincerely your friend,
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 20, 1911.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Thank you for the pictures of the Sloots fire-place and "Joe Gans." I
+can fancy myself cooking a steak in the one, and the other eating one
+better cooked.
+
+I'm glad I've given you the Grand Canyon fever, for I hope to revisit
+the place next summer, and perhaps our Yosemite bunch can meet me
+there. My outing this season will be in Broadway in little old New
+York. That is not as good as Monte Sano, but the best that I can do.
+
+You must have had a good time with the Sterlings, and doubtless you
+all suffered from overfeeding.
+
+Carlt's action in denuding the shaggy pelt of his hands meets with my
+highest commendation, but you'd better look out. It may mean that he
+has a girl--a Jewess descended from Jacob, with an hereditary
+antipathy to anything like Esau. Carlt was an Esaurian.
+
+You'll have to overlook some bad errors in Vol. V of the C. W. I did
+not have the page proofs. Some of the verses are unintelligible.
+That's the penalty for philandering in California instead of sticking
+to my work.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 28, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I've been having noctes ambrosianae with "The House of Orchids," though
+truly it came untimely, for I've not yet done reading your other
+books. Don't crowd the dancers, please. I don't know (and you don't
+care) what poem in it I like best, but I get as much delight out of
+these lines as out of any:
+
+ "Such flowers pale as are
+ Worn by the goddess of a distant star--
+ Before whose holy eyes
+ Beauty and evening meet."
+
+And--but what's the use? I can't quote the entire book.
+
+I'm glad you did see your way to make "Memory" a female.
+
+To Hades with Bonnet's chatter of gems and jewels--among the minor
+poetic properties they are better (to my taste) than flowers. By the
+way, I wonder what "lightness" Bonnet found in the "Apothecary"
+verses. They seem to me very serious.
+
+Rereading and rerereading of the Job confirm my first opinion of it. I
+find only one "bad break" in it--and that not inconsistent with God's
+poetry in the real Job: "ropes of adamant." A rope of stone is
+imperfectly conceivable--is, in truth, mixed metaphor.
+
+I think it was a mistake for you to expound to Ned Hamilton, or
+anybody, how you wrote the "Forty-third Chapter," or anything. When
+an author explains his methods of composition he cannot expect to be
+taken seriously. Nine writers in ten wish to have it thought that they
+"dash off" things. Nobody believes it, and the judicious would be
+sorry to believe it. Maybe you do, but I guess you work hard and
+honestly enough over the sketch "dashed off." If you don't--do.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With love to Carrie, I will leave you to your sea-gardens and
+abalones.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+I'm off to Broadway next week for a season of old-gentlemanly revelry.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 2, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+In packing (I'm going to New York) I find this "Tidal" typoscript, and
+fear that I was to have returned it. Pray God it was not my neglect to
+do so that kept it out of the book. But if not, what did keep it out?
+Maybe the fact that it requires in the reader an uncommon acquaintance
+with the Scriptures.
+
+If Robertson publishes any more books for you don't let him use
+"silver" leaf on the cover. It is not silver, cannot be neatly put on,
+and will come off. The "Wine" book is incomparably better and more
+tasteful than either of the others. By the way, I stick to my liking
+for Scheff's little vignette on the "Wine."
+
+In "Duandon" you--_you_, Poet of the Heavens!--come perilously near to
+qualifying yourself for "mention" in a certain essay of mine on the
+blunders of writers and artists in matters lunar. You must have
+observed that immediately after the full o' the moon the light of that
+orb takes on a redness, and when it rises after dark is hardly a
+"towering glory," nor a "frozen splendor." Its "web" is not
+"silver." In truth, the gibbous moon, rising, has something of menace
+in its suggestion. Even twenty-four (or rather twenty-five) hours
+"after the full" this change in the quality and quantity of its light
+is very marked. I don't know what causes the sudden alteration, but it
+has always impressed me.
+
+I feel a little like signing this criticism "Gradgrind," but anyhow it
+may amuse you.
+
+Do you mind squandering ten cents and a postage stamp on me? I want a
+copy of _Town Talk_--the one in which you are a "Varied Type."
+
+I don't know much of some of your poets mentioned in that article, but
+could wish that you had said a word about Edith Thomas. Thank you for
+your too generous mention of me--who brought you so much vilification!
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 29, 1911.]
+
+MY DEAR RUTH,
+
+You are a faithful correspondent; I have your postals from Athens and
+Syracuse, and now the letter from Rome. The Benares sketch was duly
+received, and I wrote you about it to the address that you
+gave--Cairo, I think. As you will doubtless receive my letter in due
+time I will not now repeat it--further than to say that I liked it. If
+it had been accompanied by a few photographs (indispensable now to
+such articles) I should have tried to get it into some magazine. True,
+Benares, like all other Asiatic and European cities, is pretty
+familiar to even the "general reader," but the sketch had something of
+the writer's personality in it--the main factor in all good writing,
+as in all forms of art.
+
+May I tell you what you already know--that you are deficient in
+spelling and punctuation? It is worth while to know these things--and
+all things that you can acquire. Some persons can not acquire
+orthography, and I don't wonder, but every page of every good book is
+a lesson in punctuation. One's punctuation is a necessary part of
+one's style; you cannot attain to precision if you leave that matter
+to editors and printers.
+
+You ask if "stories" must have action. The name "story" is preferably
+used of narrative, not reflection nor mental analysis. The
+"psychological novel" is in great vogue just now, for example--the
+adventures of the mind, it might be called--but it requires a
+profounder knowledge of life and character than is possible to a young
+girl of whatever talent; and the psychological "short story" is even
+more difficult. Keep to narrative and simple description for a few
+years, until your wings have grown. These descriptions of foreign
+places that you write me are good practice. You are not likely to tell
+me much that I do not know, nor is that necessary; but your way of
+telling what I do know is sometimes very interesting as a study of
+_you_. So write me all you will, and if you would like the letters as
+a record of your travels you shall have them back; I am preserving
+them.
+
+I judge from your letter that your father went straight through
+without bothering about me. Maybe I should not have seen him anyhow,
+for I was away from Washington for nearly a month.
+
+Please give my love to your mother and sister, whom, of course, you
+are to bring here. I shall not forgive you if you do not.
+
+Yes, I wish that you lived nearer to me, so that we could go over your
+work together. I could help you more in a few weeks _that_ way than
+in years _this_ way. God never does anything just right.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ July 31, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+Thank you for that Times "review." It is a trifle less malicious than
+usual--regarding _me_, that is all. My publisher, Neale, who was here
+last evening, is about "taking action" against that concern for
+infringement of his copyright in my little book, "Write It Right." The
+wretches have been serving it up to their readers for several weeks as
+the work of a woman named Learned. Repeatedly she uses my very
+words--whole passages of them. They refused even to confess the
+misdeeds of their contributrix, and persist in their sin. So they will
+have to fight.
+
+* * * I have never been hard on women whose hearts go with their
+admiration, and whose bodies follow their hearts--I don't mean that
+the latter was the case in this instance. Nor am I very exacting as to
+the morality of my men friends. I would not myself take another man's
+woman, any more than I would take his purse. Nor, I trust, would I
+seduce the daughter or sister of a friend, nor any maid whom it would
+at all damage--and as to _that_ there is no hard and fast rule.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A fine fellow, I, to be casting the first stone, or the one-hundredth,
+at a lovelorn woman, weak or strong! By the way, I should not believe
+in the love of a strong one, wife, widow or maid.
+
+It looks as if I may get to Sag Harbor for a week or so in the middle
+of the month. It is really not a question of expense, but Neale has
+blocked out a lot of work for me. He wants two more volumes--even five
+more if I'll make 'em. Guess I'll give him two. In a week or so I
+shall be able to say whether I can go Sagharboring. If so, I think we
+should have a night in New York first, no? You could motor-boat up and
+back.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.[14]
+
+[14] Addressed to George Sterling at Sag Harbor, Long Island.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ Monday, August 7, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+In one of your letters you were good enough to promise me a motorboat
+trip from New York to Sag Harbor. I can think of few things more
+delightful than navigating in a motorboat the sea that I used to
+navigate in an open canoe; it will seem like Progress. So if you are
+still in that mind please write me what day _after Saturday next_ you
+can meet me in New York and I'll be there. I should prefer that you
+come the day before the voyage and dine with me that evening.
+
+I always stay at the Hotel Navarre, 7th avenue and 38th street. If
+unable to get in there I'll leave my address there. Or, tell me where
+_you_ will be.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+If the motorboat plan is not practicable let me know and I'll go by
+train or steamer; it will not greatly matter. A. B.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ Tuesday, August 8, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kindly convey to young Smith of Auburn my felicitations on his
+admirable "Ode to the Abyss"--a large theme, treated with dignity and
+power. It has many striking passages--such, for example, as "The Romes
+of ruined spheres." I'm conscious of my sin against the rhetoricians
+in liking that, for it jolts the reader out of the Abyss and back to
+earth. Moreover, it is a metaphor which belittles, instead of
+dignifying. But I like it.
+
+He is evidently a student of George Sterling, and being in the
+formative stage, cannot--why should he?--conceal the fact.
+
+My love to all good Californians of the Sag Harbor colony.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ November 16, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+It is good to know that you are again happy--that is to say, you are
+in Carmel. For your _future_ happiness (if success and a certain
+rounding off of your corners would bring it, as I think) I could wish
+you in New York or thereabout. As the Scripture hath it: "It is not
+good for a man to be in Carmel"--_Revised Inversion_. I note that at
+the late election California damned herself to a still lower
+degradation and is now unfit for a white man to live in. Initiative,
+referendum, recall, employers' liability, woman suffrage--yah!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But you are not to take too seriously my dislike of * * *[15] I like
+him personally very well; he talks like a normal human being. It is
+only that damned book of his. He was here and came out to my tenement
+a few evenings ago, finding me in bed and helpless from lumbago, as I
+was for weeks. I am now able to sit up and take notice, and there are
+even fears for my recovery. My enemies would say, as Byron said of
+Lady B., I am becoming "dangerously well again."
+
+[15] Excised by G. S.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As to harlots, there are not ten in a hundred that are such for any
+other reason than that they wanted to be. Their exculpatory stories
+are mostly lies of magnitude.
+
+Sloots writes me that he will perhaps "walk over" from the mine to
+Yosemite next summer. I can't get there much before July first, but if
+there is plenty of snow in the mountains next winter the valley should
+be visitable then. Later, I hope to beguest myself for a few days at
+the Pine Inn, Carmel. Tell it not to the Point Lobos mussel!
+
+My love to Carrie.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ December 27, 1911.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+As you do not give me that lady's address I infer that you no longer
+care to have me meet her--which is a relief to me.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, I'm a bit broken up by the death of Pollard, whose body I
+assisted to burn. He lost his mind, was paralyzed, had his head cut
+open by the surgeons, and his sufferings were unspeakable. Had he
+lived he would have been an idiot; so it is all right--
+
+ "But O, the difference to me!"
+
+If you don't think him pretty bright read any of his last three books,
+"Their Day in Court," "Masks and Minstrels," and "Vagabond Journeys."
+He did not see the last one--Neale brought down copies of it when he
+came to Baltimore to attend the funeral.
+
+I'm hoping that if Carlt and Lora go to Wagner's mine and we go to
+Yosemite, Lora, at least, will come to us out there. We shall need
+her, though Carrie will find that Misses C. and S. will be "no
+deadheads in the enterprise"--to quote a political phrase of long ago.
+As to me, I shall leave my ten-pounds-each books at home and, like
+St. Jerome, who never traveled with other baggage than a skull, be
+"flying light." My love to Carrie.
+
+ Sincerely,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ January 5, 1912.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+It is good to hear from you again, even if I did have to give you a
+hint that I badly needed a letter.
+
+I am glad that you are going to the mine (if you go)--though Berkeley
+and Oakland will not be the same without you. And where can I have my
+mail forwarded?--and be permitted to climb in at the window to get it.
+As to pot-steaks, toddies, and the like, I shall simply swear off
+eating and drinking.
+
+If Carlt is a "game sport," and does not require "a dead-sure thing,"
+the mining gamble is the best bet for him. Anything to get out of that
+deadening, hopeless grind, the "Government service." It kills a man's
+self-respect, atrophies his powers, unfits him for anything, tempts
+him to improvidence and then turns him out to starve.
+
+It is pleasant to know that there is a hope of meeting you in
+Yosemite--the valley would not be the same without you. My girls
+cannot leave here till the schools close, about June 20, so we shall
+not get into the valley much before July first; but if you have a good
+winter, with plenty of snow, that will do. We shall stay as long as we
+like. George says he and Carrie can go, and I hope Sloots can. It is
+likely that Neale, my publisher, will be of my party. I shall hope to
+visit your mine afterward.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+My health, which was pretty bad for weeks after returning from Sag
+Harbor, is restored, and I was never so young in all my life.
+
+Here's wishing you and Carlt plenty of meat on the bone that the new
+year may fling to you.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ February 14, 1912.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I'm a long time noticing your letter of January fifth, chiefly
+because, like Teddy, "I have nothing to say." There's this difference
+atwixt him and me--I could say something if I tried.
+
+* * * I'm hoping that you are at work and doing something worth while,
+though I see nothing of yours. Battle against the encroaching abalone
+should not engage all your powers. That spearing salmon at night
+interests me, though doubtless the "season" will be over before I
+visit Carmel.
+
+Bear Yosemite in mind for latter part of June, and use influence with
+Lora and Grizzly, even if Carlt should be inhumed in his mine.
+
+We've had about seven weeks of snow and ice, the mercury around the
+zero mark most of the time. Once it was 13 below. You'd not care for
+that sort of thing, I fancy. Indeed, I'm a bit fatigued of it myself,
+and on Saturday next, God willing, shall put out my prow to sea and
+bring up, I hope, in Bermuda, not, of course, to remain long.
+
+You did not send me the Weininger article on "Sex and Character"--I
+mean the extract that you thought like some of my stuff.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ April 25, 1912.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+I did not go to Bermuda; so I'm not "back." But I did go to Richmond,
+a city whose tragic and pathetic history, of which one is reminded by
+everything that one sees there, always gets on to my nerves with a
+particular dejection. True, the history is some fifty years old, but
+it is always with me when I'm there, making solemn eyes at me.
+
+You're right about "this season in the East." It has indeed been
+penetential. For the first time I am thoroughly disgusted and
+half-minded to stay in California when I go--a land where every
+prospect pleases, and only labor unions, progressives, suffragettes
+(and socialists) are vile. No, I don't think I could stand California,
+though I'm still in the mind to visit it in June. I shall be sorry to
+miss Carrie at Carmel, but hope to have the two of you on some
+excursion or camping trip. We _want_ to go to Yosemite, which the
+girls have not seen, but if there's no water there it may not be
+advisable. Guess we'll have to let you natives decide. How would the
+Big Trees do as a substitute?
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Girls is pizen, but not necessarily fatal. I've taken 'em in large
+doses all my life, and suffered pangs enough to equip a number of
+small Hells, but never has one of them paralyzed the inner working
+man. * * * But I'm not a poet. Moreover, as I've not yet put off my
+armor I oughtn't to boast.
+
+So--you've subscribed for the Collected Works. Good! that is what you
+ought to have done a long time ago. It is what every personal friend
+of mine ought to have done, for all profess admiration of my work in
+literature. It is what I was fool enough to permit my publisher to
+think that many of them would do. How many do you guess have done
+so? I'll leave you guessing. God help the man with many friends, for
+_they_ will not. My royalties on the sets sold to my friends are less
+than one-fourth of my outlay in free sets for other friends. Tell me
+not in cheerful numbers of the value and sincerity of friendships.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There! I've discharged my bosom of that perilous stuff and shall take
+a drink. Here's to you.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ June 5, 1912.]
+
+DEAR GEORGE,
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Thank you for the poems, which I've not had the time to
+consider--being disgracefully busy in order to get away. I don't
+altogether share your reverence for Browning, but the primacy of your
+verses on him over the others printed on the same page is almost
+startling. * * *
+
+Of course it's all nonsense about the waning of your power--though
+thinking it so might make it so. My notion is that you've only _begun_
+to do things. But I wish you'd go back to your chain in your uncle's
+office. I'm no believer in adversity and privation as a spur to
+Pegasus. They are oftener a "hopple." The "meagre, muse-rid mope,
+adust and thin" will commonly do better work when tucked out with
+three square meals a day, and having the sure and certain hope of
+their continuance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm expecting to arrive in Oakland (Key Route Inn, probably) late in
+the evening of the 22d of this month and dine at Carlt's on the
+24th--my birthday. Anyhow, I've invited myself, though it is possible
+they may be away on their vacation. Carlt has promised to try to get
+his "leave" changed to a later date than the one he's booked for.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+P.S.--Just learned that we can not leave here until the 19th--which
+will bring me into San Francisco on the 26th. Birthday dinner served
+in diner--last call!
+
+I've _read_ the Browning poem and I now know why there was a Browning.
+Providence foresaw you and prepared him for you--blessed be
+Providence! * * *
+
+Mrs. Havens asks me to come to them at Sag Harbor--and shouldn't I
+like to! * * * Sure the song of the Sag Harbor frog would be music to
+me--as would that of the indigenous duckling.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ December 19, 1912.]
+
+MY DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+I thank you for the article from _The Argonaut_, and am glad to get it
+for a special reason, as it gives me your address and thereby enables
+me to explain something.
+
+When, several years ago, you sent me a similar article I took it to
+the editor of The National Geographical Magazine (I am a member of the
+Society that issues it) and suggested its publication. I left it with
+him and hearing nothing about it for several months called at his
+office _twice_ for an answer, and for the copy if publication was
+refused. The copy had been "mislaid"--lost, apparently--and I never
+obtained it. Meantime, either I had "mislaid" your address, or it was
+only on the copy. So I was unable to write you. Indirectly, afterward,
+I heard that you had left California for parts to me unknown.
+
+Twice since then I have been in San Francisco, but confess that I did
+not think of the matter.
+
+Cahill's projection[16] is indubitably the right one, but you are "up
+against" the ages and will be a long time dead before it finds favor,
+or I'm no true pessimist.
+
+[16] The Butterfly Map of the World.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia Apartments, Washington, D. C.,
+ January 17, 1913.]
+
+MY DEAR RUTH,
+
+It's "too bad" that I couldn't remain in Oakland and Berkeley another
+month to welcome you, but I fear it will "have to go at that," for
+I've no expectation of ever seeing California again. I like the
+country as well as ever, but I _don't_ like the rule of labor unions,
+the grafters and the suffragettes. So far as I am concerned they may
+stew in their own juice; I shall not offer myself as an ingredient.
+
+It is pleasant to know that you are all well, including Johnny, poor
+little chap.
+
+You are right to study philology and rhetoric. Surely there must be
+_some_ provision for your need--a university where one cannot learn
+one's own language would be a funny university.
+
+I think your "Mr. Wells" who gave a course of lectures on essay
+writing may be my friend Wells Drury, of Berkeley. If so, mention me
+to him and he will advise you what to do.
+
+Another good friend of mine, whom, however I did not succeed in seeing
+during either of my visits to California, is W. C. Morrow, who is a
+professional teacher of writing and himself a splendid writer. He
+could help you. He lives in San Francisco, but I think has a class in
+Oakland. I don't know his address; you'll find it in the directory.
+He used to write stories splendidly tragic, but I'm told he now
+teaches the "happy ending," in which he is right--commercially--but
+disgusting. I can cordially recommend him.
+
+Keep up your German and French of course. If your English (your mother
+speech) is so defective, think what _they_ must be.
+
+I'll think of some books that will be helpful to you in your English.
+Meantime send me anything that you care to that you write. It will at
+least show me what progress you make.
+
+I'm returning some (all, I think) of your sketches. Don't destroy
+them--yet. Maybe some day you'll find them worth rewriting.
+
+ My love to you all.
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Euclid and 14th Sts., Washington, D. C.,
+ January 20, 1913.]
+
+DEAR MR. CAHILL,
+
+It is pleasant to know that you are not easily discouraged by the
+croaking of such ravens as I, and I confess that the matter of the
+"civic centre" supplies some reason to hope for prosperity to the
+Cahill projection--which (another croak) will doubtless bear some
+other man's name, probably Hayford's or Woodward's.
+
+I sent the "Argonaut" article to my friend Dr. Franklin, of
+Schenectady, a "scientific gent" of some note, but have heard nothing
+from him.
+
+I'm returning the "Chronicle" article, which I found interesting. If I
+were not a writer without an "organ" I'd have a say about that
+projection. For near four years I've been out of the newspaper game--a
+mere compiler of my collected works in twelve volumes--and shall
+probably never "sit into the game" again, being seventy years old. My
+work is finished, and so am I.
+
+Luck to you in the new year, and in many to follow.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia Apartments, Washington, D. C.,
+ I prefer to get my letters at this address. Make a memorandum of it.
+ January 28, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I have been searching for your letter of long ago, fearing it
+contained something that I should have replied to. But I don't find
+it; so I make the convenient assumption that it did not.
+
+I'd like to hear from you, however unworthy I am to do so, for I want
+to know if you and Carlt have still a hope of going mining. Pray God
+you do, if there's a half-chance of success; for success in the
+service of the Government is failure.
+
+Winter here is two-thirds gone and we have not had a cold day, and
+only one little dash of snow--on Christmas eve. Can California beat
+that? I'm told it's as cold there as in Greenland.
+
+Tell me about yourself--your health since the operation--how it has
+affected you--all about you. My own health is excellent; I'm equal to
+any number of Carlt's toddies. By the way, Blanche has made me a
+co-defendant with you in the crime (once upon a time) of taking a drop
+too much. I plead not guilty--how do _you_ plead? Sloots, at least,
+would acquit us on the ground of inability--that one _can't_ take too
+much. * * *
+
+ Affectionately, your avuncular,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ March 20, 1913.]
+
+DEAR RUTH,
+
+I'm returning your little sketches with a few markings which are to be
+regarded (or disregarded) as mere suggestions. I made them in pencil,
+so that you can erase them if you don't approve. Of course I should
+make many more if I could have you before me so that I could explain
+_why_; in this way I can help you but little. You'll observe that I
+have made quite a slaughter of some of the adjectives in some of your
+sentences--you will doubtless slaughter some in others. Nearly all
+young writers use too many adjectives. Indeed, moderation and skill in
+the use of adjectives are about the last things a good writer learns.
+Don't use those that are connoted by the nouns; and rather than have
+all the nouns, or nearly all, in a sentence outfitted with them it is
+better to make separate sentences for some of those desired.
+
+In your sketch "Triumph" I would not name the "hero" of the piece. To
+do so not only makes the sketch commonplace, but it logically requires
+you to name his victim too, and her offense; in brief, it commits you
+to a _story_.
+
+A famous writer (perhaps Holmes or Thackeray--I don't remember) once
+advised a young writer to cut all the passages that he thought
+particularly good. Your taste I think is past the need of so heroic
+treatment as that, but the advice may be profitably borne in memory
+whenever you are in doubt, if ever you are. And sometimes you will be.
+
+I think I know what Mr. Morrow meant by saying that your characters
+are not "humanly significant." He means that they are not such persons
+as one meets in everyday life--not "types." I confess that I never
+could see why one's characters _should_ be. The exceptional--even
+"abnormal"--person seems to me the more interesting, but I must warn
+you that he will not seem so to an editor. Nor to an editor will the
+tragic element seem so good as the cheerful--the sombre denouement as
+the "happy ending." One must have a pretty firm reputation as a writer
+to "send in" a tragic or supernatural tale with any hope of its
+acceptance. The average mind (for which editors purvey, and mostly
+possess) dislikes, or thinks it dislikes, any literature that is not
+"sunny." True, tragedy holds the highest and most permanent place in
+the world's literature and art, but it has the divvel's own time
+getting to it. For immediate popularity (if one cares for it) one must
+write pleasant things; though one may put in here and there a bit of
+pathos.
+
+I think well of these two manuscripts, but doubt if you can get them
+into any of our magazines--if you want to. As to that, nobody can help
+you. About the only good quality that a magazine editor commonly has
+is his firm reliance on the infallibility of his own judgment. It is
+an honest error, and it enables him to mull through somehow with a
+certain kind of consistency. The only way to get a footing with him is
+to send him what you think he wants, not what you think he ought to
+want--and keep sending. But perhaps you do not care for the magazines.
+
+I note a great improvement in your style--probably no more than was to
+be expected of your better age, but a distinct improvement. It is a
+matter of regret with me that I have not the training of you; we
+should see what would come of it. You certainly have no reason for
+discouragement. But if you are to be a writer you must "cut out" the
+dances and the teas (a little of the theater may be allowed) and
+_work_ right heartily. The way of the good writer is no primrose path.
+
+No, I have not read the poems of Service. What do I think of Edith
+Wharton? Just what Pollard thought--see _Their Day in Court_, which I
+think you have.
+
+I fear you have the wanderlust incurably. I never had it bad, and
+have less of it now than ever before. I shall not see California
+again.
+
+My love to all your family goes with this, and to you all that you
+will have.
+
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Army and Navy Club, Washington, D. C.,
+ May 22, 1913.]
+
+EDITOR "LANTERN",[17]
+
+[17] The editor was Curtis J. Kirch ("Guido Bruno") and the weekly had
+a brief career in Chicago. It was the forerunner of the many Bruno
+weeklies and monthlies, later published from other cities.
+
+Will I tell you what I think of your magazine? Sure I will.
+
+It has thirty-six pages of reading matter.
+
+Seventeen are given to the biography of a musician,--German, dead.
+
+Four to the mother of a theologian,--German, peasant-wench, dead.
+
+(The mag. is published in America, to-day.)
+
+Five pages about Eugene Field's ancestors. All dead.
+
+17 + 4 + 5 = 26.
+
+36 - 26 = 10.
+
+Two pages about Ella Wheeler Wilcox.
+
+Three-fourths page about a bad poet and his indifference to--German.
+
+Two pages of his poetry.
+
+2 + 3/4 + 2 = 4-3/4.
+
+10 - 4-3/4 = 5-1/4. Not enough to criticise.
+
+What your magazine needs is an editor--presumably older, preferably
+American, and indubitably alive. At least awake. It is your inning.
+
+ Sincerely yours,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ May 31, 1913.]
+
+MY DEAR LORA,
+
+You were so long in replying to my letter of the century before last,
+and as your letter is not really a reply to anything in mine, that I
+fancy you did not get it. I don't recollect, for example, that you
+ever acknowledged receipt of little pictures of myself, though maybe
+you did--I only hope you got them. The photographs that you send are
+very interesting. One of them makes me thirsty--the one of that
+fountainhead of good booze, your kitchen sink.
+
+What you say of the mine and how you are to be housed there pleases me
+mightily. That's how I should like to live, and mining is what I
+should like again to do. Pray God you be not disappointed.
+
+Alas, I cannot even join you during Carlt's vacation, for the mountain
+ramble. Please "go slow" in your goating this year. I _think_ you are
+better fitted for it than ever before, but you'd better ask your
+surgeon about that. By the way, do you know that since women took to
+athletics their peculiar disorders have increased about fifty per
+cent? You can't make men of women. The truth is, they've taken to
+walking on their hind legs a few centuries too soon. Their in'ards
+have not learned how to suspend the law of gravity. Add the jolts of
+athletics and--there you are.
+
+I wish I could be with you at Monte Sano--or anywhere.
+
+Love to Carlt and Sloots.
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 10, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+Your letter was forwarded to me in New York, whence I have just
+returned. I fancy you had a more satisfactory outing than I. I never
+heard of the Big Sur river nor of "Arbolado." But I'm glad you went
+there, for I'm hearing so much about Hetch Hetchy that I'm tired of
+it. I'm helping the San Francisco crowd (a little) to "ruin" it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I'm glad to know that you still expect to go to the mine. Success or
+failure, it is better than the Mint, and you ought to live in the
+mountains where you can climb things whenever you want to.
+
+Of course I know nothing of Neale's business--you'd better write to
+him if he has not filled your order. I suppose you know that volumes
+eleven and twelve are not included in the "set."
+
+If you care to write to me again please do so at once as I am going
+away, probably to South America, but if we have a row with Mexico
+before I start I shall go there first. I want to see something going
+on. I've no notion of how long I shall remain away.
+
+With love to Carlt and Sloots,
+
+ Affectionately,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 10, 1913.]
+
+DEAR JOE,[18]
+
+[18] To Mrs. Josephine Clifford McCrackin, San Jose, California.
+
+The reason that I did not answer your letter sooner is--I have been
+away (in New York) and did not have it with me. I suppose I shall not
+see your book for a long time, for I am going away and have no notion
+when I shall return. I expect to go to, perhaps across, South
+America--possibly via Mexico, if I can get through without being stood
+up against a wall and shot as a Gringo. But that is better than dying
+in bed, is it not? If Duc did not need you so badly I'd ask you to get
+your hat and come along. God bless and keep you.
+
+
+[Washington, D. C.,
+ September 13, 1913.]
+
+DEAR JOE,
+
+Thank you for the book. I thank you for your friendship--and much
+besides. This is to say good-by at the end of a pleasant
+correspondence in which your woman's prerogative of having the last
+word is denied to you. Before I could receive it I shall be gone. But
+some time, somewhere, I hope to hear from you again. Yes, I shall go
+into Mexico with a pretty definite purpose, which, however, is not at
+present disclosable. You must try to forgive my obstinacy in not
+"perishing" where I am. I want to be where something worth while is
+going on, or where nothing whatever is going on. Most of what is going
+on in your own country is exceedingly distasteful to me.
+
+Pray for me? Why, yes, dear--that will not harm either of us. I loathe
+religions, a Christian gives me qualms and a Catholic sets my teeth on
+edge, but pray for me just the same, for with all those faults upon
+your head (it's a nice head, too), I am pretty fond of you, I guess.
+May you live as long as you want to, and then pass smilingly into the
+darkness--the good, good darkness.
+
+ Devotedly your friend,
+ AMBROSE BIERCE.
+
+
+[The Olympia, Euclid Street, Washington, D. C.,
+ October 1, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I go away tomorrow for a long time, so this is only to say good-bye. I
+think there is nothing else worth saying; _therefore_ you will
+naturally expect a long letter. What an intolerable world this would
+be if we said nothing but what is worth saying! And did nothing
+foolish--like going into Mexico and South America.
+
+I'm hoping that you will go to the mine soon. You must hunger and
+thirst for the mountains--Carlt likewise. So do I. Civilization be
+dinged!--it is the mountains and the desert for me.
+
+Good-bye--if you hear of my being stood up against a Mexican stone
+wall and shot to rags please know that I think that a pretty good way
+to depart this life. It beats old age, disease, or falling down the
+cellar stairs. To be a Gringo in Mexico--ah, that is euthanasia!
+
+ With love to Carlt, affectionately yours,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+[Laredo, Texas,
+ November 6, 1913.]
+
+MY DEAR LORA,
+
+I think I owe you a letter, and probably this is my only chance to pay
+up for a long time. For more than a month I have been rambling about
+the country, visiting my old battlefields, passing a few days in New
+Orleans, a week in San Antonio, and so forth. I turned up here this
+morning. There is a good deal of fighting going on over on the Mexican
+side of the Rio Grande, but I hold to my intention to go into Mexico
+if I can. In the character of "innocent bystander" I ought to be
+fairly safe if I don't have too much money on me, don't you think? My
+eventual destination is South America, but probably I shall not get
+there this year.
+
+Sloots writes me that you and Carlt still expect to go to the mine, as
+I hope you will.
+
+The Cowdens expect to live somewhere in California soon, I believe.
+They seem to be well, prosperous and cheerful.
+
+ With love to Carlt and Sloots, I am affectionately yours,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+P.S. You need not believe _all_ that these newspapers say of me and my
+purposes. I had to tell them _something_.
+
+
+[Laredo, Texas,
+ November 6, 1913.]
+
+DEAR LORA,
+
+I wrote you yesterday at San Antonio, but dated the letter here and
+today, expecting to bring the letter and mail it here. That's because
+I did not know if I would have time to write it here. Unfortunately,
+I forgot and posted it, with other letters, where it was written. Thus
+does man's guile come to naught!
+
+Well, I'm here, anyhow, and have time to explain.
+
+Laredo was a Mexican city before it was an American. It is Mexican
+now, five to one. Nuevo Laredo, opposite, is held by the Huertistas
+and Americans don't go over there. In fact a guard on the bridge will
+not let them. So those that sneak across have to wade (which can be
+done almost anywhere) and go at night.
+
+I shall not be here long enough to hear from you, and don't know where
+I shall be next. Guess it doesn't matter much.
+
+ Adios,
+ AMBROSE.
+
+
+
+
+ _Extracts from Letters_
+
+
+You are right too--dead right about the poetry of Socialism; and you
+might have added the poetry of wailing about the woes of the poor
+generally. Only the second- and the third-raters write it--except
+"incidentally." You don't find the big fellows sniveling over that
+particular shadow-side of Nature. Yet not only are the poor always
+with us, they always _were_ with us, and their state was worse in the
+times of Homer, Virgil, Shakspeare, Milton and the others than in the
+days of Morris and Markham.
+
+
+But what's the use? I have long despaired of convincing poets and
+artists of anything, even that white is not black. I'm convinced that
+all you chaps ought to have a world to yourselves, where two and two
+make whatever you prefer that it _should_ make, and cause and effect
+are remoulded "more nearly to the heart's desire." And then I suppose
+I'd want to go and live there too.
+
+
+Did you ever know so poor satire to make so great a row as that of
+Watson? Compared with certain other verses against particular
+women--Byron's "Born in a garret, in a kitchen bred"; even my own skit
+entitled "Mad" (pardon my modesty) it is infantile. What an
+interesting book might be made of such "attacks" on women! But Watson
+is the only one of us, so far as I remember, who has had the
+caddishness to _name_ the victim.
+
+Have you seen Percival Pollard's "Their Day in Court"? It is amusing,
+clever--and more. He has a whole chapter on me, "a lot" about Gertrude
+Atherton, and much else that is interesting. And he skins alive
+certain popular gods and goddesses of the day, and is "monstrous
+naughty."
+
+
+As to * * *'s own character I do not see what that has to do with his
+criticism of London. If only the impeccable delivered judgment no
+judgment would ever be delivered. All men could do as they please,
+without reproof or dissent. I wish you would take your heart out of
+your head, old man. The best heart makes a bad head if housed there.
+
+
+The friends that warned you against the precarious nature of my
+friendship were right. To hold my regard one must fulfil hard
+conditions--hard if one is not what one should be; easy if one is. I
+have, indeed, a habit of calmly considering the character of a man
+with whom I have fallen into any intimacy and, whether I have any
+grievance against him or not, informing him by letter that I no longer
+desire his acquaintance. This, I do after deciding that he is not
+truthful, candid, without conceit, and so forth--in brief, honorable.
+If any one is conscious that he is not in all respects worthy of my
+friendship he would better not cultivate it, for assuredly no one can
+long conceal his true character from an observant student of it. Yes,
+my friendship is a precarious possession. It grows more so the longer
+I live, and the less I feel the need of a multitude of friends. So,
+if in your heart you are conscious of being any of the things which
+you accuse _me_ of being, or anything else equally objectionable (to
+_me_) I can only advise you to drop me before I drop you.
+
+Certainly you have an undoubted right to your opinion of my ability,
+my attainments and my standing. If you choose to publish a censorious
+judgment of these matters, do so by all means: I don't think I ever
+cared a cent for what was printed about me, except as it supplied me
+with welcome material for my pen. One may presumably have a "sense of
+duty to the public," and the like. But convincing one person (one at a
+time) of one's friend's deficiencies is hardly worth while, and is to
+be judged differently. It comes under another rule. * * *
+
+Maybe, as you say, my work lacks "soul," but my life does not, as a
+man's life is the man. Personally, I hold that sentiment has a place
+in this world, and that loyalty to a friend is not inferior as a
+characteristic to correctness of literary judgment. If there is a
+heaven I think it is more valued there. If Mr. * * * (your publisher
+as well as mine) had considered you a Homer, a Goethe or a Shakspeare
+a team of horses could not have drawn from _me_ the expression of a
+lower estimate. And let me tell you that if you are going through life
+as a mere thinking machine, ignoring the generous promptings of the
+heart, sacrificing it to the brain, you will have a hard row to hoe,
+and the outcome, when you survey it from the vantage ground of age,
+will not please you. You seem to me to be beginning rather badly, as
+regards both your fortune and your peace of mind.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I saw * * * every day while in New York, and he does not know that I
+feel the slightest resentment toward you, nor do I know it myself. So
+far as he knows, or is likely to know (unless you will have it
+otherwise) you and I are the best of friends, or rather, I am the best
+of friends to you. And I guess that is so. I could no more hate you
+for your disposition and character than I could for your hump if you
+had one. You are as Nature has made you, and your defects, whether
+they are great or small, are your misfortunes. I would remove them if
+I could, but I know that I cannot, for one of them is inability to
+discern the others, even when they are pointed out.
+
+I must commend your candor in one thing. You confirm * * * words in
+saying that you commented on "my seeming lack of sympathy with certain
+modern masters," which you attribute to my not having read them. That
+is a conclusion to which a low order of mind in sympathy with the
+"modern masters" naturally jumps, but it is hardly worthy of a man of
+your brains. It is like your former lofty assumption that I had not
+read some ten or twelve philosophers, naming them, nearly all of whom
+I had read, and laughed at, before you were born. In fact, one of your
+most conspicuous characteristics is the assumption that what a man who
+does not care to "talk shop" does not speak of, and vaunt his
+knowledge of, he does not know. I once thought this a boyish fault,
+but you are no longer a boy. Your "modern masters" are Ibsen and Shaw,
+with both of whose works and ways I am thoroughly familiar, and both
+of whom I think very small men--pets of the drawing-room and gods of
+the hour. No, I am not an "up to date" critic, thank God. I am not a
+literary critic at all, and never, or very seldom, have gone into that
+field except in pursuance of a personal object--to help a good writer
+(who is commonly a friend)--maybe you can recall such instances--or
+laugh at a fool. Surely you do not consider my work in the
+Cosmopolitan (mere badinage and chaff, the only kind of stuff that the
+magazine wants from me, or will print) essays in literary criticism.
+It has never occurred to me to look upon myself as a literary critic;
+if you _must_ prick my bubble please to observe that it contains more
+of your breath than of mine. Yet you have sometimes seemed to value, I
+thought, some of my notions about even poetry. * * *
+
+Perhaps I am unfortunate in the matter of keeping friends; I know, and
+have abundant reason to know, that you are at least equally luckless
+in the matter of making them. I could put my finger on the very
+qualities in you that make you so, and the best service that I could
+do you would be to point them out and take the consequences. That is
+to say, it would serve you many years hence; at present you are like
+Carlyle's "Mankind"; you "refuse to be served." You only consent to be
+enraged.
+
+I bear you no ill will, shall watch your career in letters with
+friendly solicitude--have, in fact, just sent to the * * * a most
+appreciative paragraph about your book, which may or may not commend
+itself to the editor; most of what I write does not. I hope to do a
+little, now and then, to further your success in letters. I wish you
+were different (and that is the harshest criticism that I ever uttered
+of you except to yourself) and wish it for your sake more than for
+mine. I am older than you and probably more "acquainted with
+grief"--the grief of disappointment and disillusion. If in the future
+you are convinced that you have become different, and I am still
+living, my welcoming hand awaits you. And when I forgive I forgive all
+over, even the new offence.
+
+Miller undoubtedly is sincere in his praise of you, for with all his
+faults and follies he is always generous and usually over generous to
+other poets. There's nothing little and mean in him. Sing ho for
+Joaquin!
+
+
+If I "made you famous" please remember that you were guilty of
+contributory negligence by meriting the fame. "Eternal vigilance" is
+the price of its permanence. Don't loaf on your job.
+
+
+I have told her of a certain "enchanted forest" hereabout to which I
+feel myself sometimes strongly drawn as a fitting place to lay down
+"my weary body and my head." (Perhaps you remember your Swinburne:
+
+ "Ah yet, would God this flesh of mine might be
+ Where air might wash and long leaves cover me!
+ Ah yet, would God that roots and stems were bred
+ Out of my weary body and my head.")
+
+The element of enchantment in that forest is supplied by my wandering
+and dreaming in it forty-one years ago when I was a-soldiering and
+there were new things under a new sun. It is miles away, but from a
+near-by summit I can overlook the entire region--ridge beyond ridge,
+parted by purple valleys full of sleep. Unlike me, it has not visibly
+altered in all these years, except that I miss, here and there, a thin
+blue ghost of smoke from an enemy's camp. Can you guess my feelings
+when I view this Dream-land--my Realm of Adventure, inhabited by
+memories that beckon me from every valley? I shall go; I shall retrace
+my old routes and lines of march; stand in my old camps; inspect my
+battlefields to see that all is right and undisturbed. I shall go to
+the Enchanted Forest.
+
+
+
+
+ PRINTED BY
+ JOHN HENRY NASH AT SAN FRANCISCO
+ IN DECEMBER MDCCCCXXII
+ THE EDITION CONSISTS OF FOUR HUNDRED
+ AND FIFTEEN COPIES
+ FOUR HUNDRED ARE NUMBERED
+ AND FOR SALE
+ No. 208
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Letters of Ambrose Bierce, by Ambrose Bierce
+
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