The San Francisco earthquake—MadameⒶtextual note Sembrich’s experience—The strange absence of fear shown by all who were shaken up by the earthquake—Mr. Clemens speaks of the great San Franciscan earthquake which occurred when he was living there—He learns through Mr. Richard Williams of the safety of Steve and Jim Gillis.
DuringⒶtextual note fifty-six years, the whole great globe has been continuously contributing to the population of San Francisco, therefore its destruction was a matter of personal concern to families scattered everywhere upon the globe’s surface. Its population, of four hundred thousand,Ⓐtextual note represented all the races of men, pretty nearly. There is not another city of justⒶtextual note its size in the world whose destruction could send dread and terror to anything like so many and so widely scattered hearthstonesⒶtextual note. New York seemed nowⒶtextual note to be suddenly swarming with ex-Californians, and with relatives and intimate friends of existing Californians. Everybody I met seemed to have personal grounds for his interest in the disaster. Some had a pecuniary interest in it. One friend of mineⒺexplanatory note who had been living long in New York on a liberal income furnished by San Franciscan property, had lost the most of his possessions and been obligedⒶtextual note to remove from expensive quarters to cheap ones in a humble flat. A week before the calamity a young coupleⒺexplanatory note, of independent means, dined at my table, and they were full of pleasant anticipations ofⒶtextual note an excursion around the world which they were preparing to make. Their fortune was in San Francisco. Ten days after the calamity they were aware that they were paupers; theyⒶtextual note were nowⒶtextual note seeking employment, for wages. They quickly found it—the wife in New York, the husband in Montana.Ⓐtextual note
It is thirty-eight years since I last saw San Francisco and was engaged in advancing its prosperity, at thirty or forty dollars a week on the Morning Call, as chief and only reporterⒺexplanatory note. In my day I knew everybody in San Francisco—including the most of the dogs and cats—because of my newspaper connection; but now I could not seem to call to mind any of my friends of that early day who would be likely to have been spared thirty-eight years to enjoy the earthquake. After much thinking and recalling,Ⓐtextual note I did dig up out of my memory three or four old friends whom I had reason to believe were still alive; also I established a personal connection in another way. About a week before the disaster the husband of Madame SembrichⒶtextual note visited me at 21 Fifth Avenue—the rented house which we call our home—and brought MadameⒶtextual note Sembrich’s autograph album,Ⓐtextual note which I was under contract to her to sign. As he was going away he said:
[begin page 112]“It will interest you to know that my wife, with the rest of the Grand Opera Company, is arriving in San Francisco to-day.”
As it turned out, she was not only arriving, but had arrived. And not only had she arrived, but at the time of our conversation the earthquake had shaken her out of the eighth story of her hotel, in night costume, and now she was camping in a public park. The earthquake shook her out of her bed and upset all the furniture in her room. She fled down the rocking stairs nearly to the street, then climbed up to her quarters again to get her jewels, made the descent a second time, this time to the street level, where she found the hotel entrance clogged with fallen building material. Then, being unhappy in her scant apparel, she made the ascent once more to get something, I don’t know what—a hair-pin,Ⓐtextual note I suppose. What I am arriving at is this: that with the globe apparently going to pieces, everything jostling and cracking and crumbling and making a muffled and thunderous clamor of unaccustomed noises, that charming and dainty and delicate and refined little creature was not frightenedⒺexplanatory note.
According to innumerable personal accounts of reputable witnesses, the passion of fear was strangely absent at the time of that cataclysm—yet we have the impression that the fright communicated by an earthquake is the most terrible of all frights, and spares nobody. I do not know how to account for this radical change. I was in what was called the “Great Earthquake”Ⓐtextual note in San Francisco a long time ago, and I remember that everybody who came under my notice during the sharp half-minute joggle that it lasted was frightened—except myself. I was not frightened because I didn’t know it was an earthquake. It shook me up violently, and I fell against a house on the street corner;Ⓐtextual note but I supposed,Ⓐtextual note for the moment,Ⓐtextual note that it was a riot inside the house. That interested me instantly and intensely, because I was a newspaper reporter, and was thankfulⒺexplanatory note. A moment or two later I recognized that it was an earthquake, and was arranging to get frightened, when I realized that the time for it had gone by, and that it was not now worth while. That earthquake produced two deaths—a lady died from sheer fright, and a young man was so demented with fright that he jumped out of a window and was killed.
My attention is called to this matter of the absence of fright as exhibited in this recent earthquake, by a published letter of ProfessorⒶtextual note William James, the philosopher, who was visiting at Stanford University, and who noted the wide prevalence of that astonishing absence of panickyⒶtextual note fear. To him it was an extraordinary thing, and unaccountable. It is not discoverable in the history of any preceding earthquake, in America or elsewhere. Professor James was shaken out of his quarters, but had no feeling of fright or fearⒺexplanatory note. He was merely strongly and absorbingly interested in the event as being a remarkable one, a memorable one, and one worth going far to experience. He speaks of an undergraduate who was sleeping in the fourth story of a massive stone dormitory of the University, and who was plunged from his bed down through the four floors and into the basement, where he lay imprisoned in wreckage, but not frightened,—Ⓐtextual noteand not hurt, so far as he knew—only surprised, with a surprise tinged with regret, for it was hardly five o’clock in the morning and he hadn’t finished his sleep. He worked his way up through the crazy ruins, reached what was left of his room in the fourth story, accumulated remnants of [begin page 113] his clothes from here, there, andⒶtextual note yonder, covered his nakedness with them, and went off to see what had been happening to other people. He was still unaware that he was hurt, yet before noon he was in the hospital, and it took him a week or two there to get mended up so that he could get out and on his feet again.
As I say, I dug out of my memory several friends of the days of thirty-eight years ago,Ⓐtextual note to get anxious about. One was JoeⒶtextual note Goodman. He is safe—nothing happened to him. Another was “little Ward,”Ⓐtextual note who was a compositor on the Morning Call in my time—and he used to go with little Steve Gillis and me to the beer saloons in Montgomery streetⒶtextual note when work was over, at two o’clock in the morning, and where I used to sit around till dawn and have a restful, pleasant time, while little Ward and Steve—weighing ninety-five pounds each—good-naturedlyⒶtextual note picked quarrels with any strangers over their size who seemed to need entertainment, and they always thrashed those strangers with their fists. I never knew them to suffer a defeat. They never assisted each otherⒶtextual note. If one had offered to assist the other against some overgrown person,Ⓐtextual note it would have been an affront, and a battle would have followed between that pair of little friends—a battle which would have continued for years and could never have been decided, because those boys were absolutely equally matched in scientific fisticuffs. We three were about of an age—I twenty-nine, and they twenty-seven.
Thinking over these hallowed memories I presently remembered that little Ward sent a bullet through his head several years ago, when he had reached the age of sixty-fiveⒺexplanatory note. My solicitude was now diminished to little Steve Gillis and his brother Jim. As I have before remarked, I had been a boarder in their parents’ house for a year or two, in those days, and was very intimate with the young sons and daughtersⒶtextual note of the familyⒺexplanatory note. I was presently to learn that the Gillis boys were safe. One day a card was brought up to my room,Ⓐtextual note the address upon which was “RichardⒶtextual note Williams, San Francisco.”Ⓐtextual note I had the proprietor of it brought up to my den at once, for I wanted to make inquiries. He was tall, broad shouldered, muscular; with a strong jaw and a determined face, gentlemanly in his dress and manners, and apparentlyⒶtextual note about forty years old. He wore no beard, and his face was a fearful spectacle to look upon. It was a riot and confusion of broad and slick scars, which overlapped each otherⒶtextual note like the scales of a fish—the sort of scars that fire makes. I said to myself,Ⓐtextual note “He doesn’t need to put San Francisco on his card. Anybody will know that he is back, recently,Ⓐtextual note from there,Ⓐtextual note or from Perdition; for heⒶtextual note never could have got that work of art from any but one or the other of those places; theyⒶtextual note don’t turn out that complete and perfect kind, elsewhere—Ⓐtextual notein this world or anywhere else.”Ⓐtextual note It was a brutal rudeness to stare at him, but I couldn’t help it. There was a fascination—a grislyⒶtextual note fascination—about his aspect which made it impossible for me to keep my eyes off his face;Ⓐtextual note and I think that wherever he goes he must find that the rest of the world are like me—they can’t resist.Ⓐtextual note
He said,Ⓐtextual note “Mr. Clemens,Ⓐtextual note you don’t know me. You’ve never seen me. But I am the eldest son of the eldest of the Gillis sisters.”
“Oh impossible,” I said, “whyⒶtextual note they were nothing but young girls.”
“Yes,” he said, “so they were, but they didn’t stay so.”
“Well,” I said, “I see how it is. Those young girls have remained young girls in my [begin page 114] memory all this time, but they could have grown up in the meantime; itⒶtextual note has happened before. Well,Ⓐtextual note it does seem very strange that you, a great stalwart man, should actually be the offspring of one of those young creatures. How old are you?”
He said he was thirty-sevenⒺexplanatory note, but was often taken to be older.
HeⒶtextual note told me that his uncles, little Steve Gillis and Jim, were both in the hospital at the time of the earthquake and the fire, and that although the hospitals had turned out to be particularly fatal places at the time of the catastrophe because the inmates were not able to aid in their own rescue, Jim and Steve had escaped. That was natural. They are the bravest of the brave. You might break their legs and their backs, too, and they would fight their way out of a danger that would be fatal to ordinary men with all their bones about them in good repair.
I am going to confess that I don’t know to this day how he got those scars. I had a delicacy about asking him how he got them. I knew there were only just the two places, hell or San Francisco, and so—Ⓐtextual note Moreover, I knew that if he had any sensitiveness about it he would throw me out of the window. He looked like just that determined kind of a man. I wish I knew whether he was in that San Francisco fire and got burned up and escaped—but I never shall know.Ⓐtextual note
One friend of mine] Unidentified.
a young couple] Unidentified.
thirty-eight years since I last saw San Francisco . . . chief and only reporter] Clemens describes his 1864 job at the Morning Call in the Autobiographical Dictation of 13 June 1906. He left San Francisco in December 1866, returning only once, for several months, in 1868 ( AutoMT1 , 509 n. 150.1–2).
husband of Madame Sembrich . . . little creature was not frightened] Marcella Sembrich (1858–1935), born in Austrian Poland, was a child prodigy on the piano and violin who ultimately became an operatic soprano. She performed at many European venues before making her New York debut in 1883, and sang with the Metropolitan Opera Company from 1898 to 1909. Her husband, Guillaume Stengel-Sembrich (1846–1917), was a pianist and one of Sembrich’s teachers. The Metropolitan company arrived in San Francisco the day before their opening performance on 16 April, and were scheduled to present thirteen different operas in as many days (“Guillaume Stengel Dies at the Gotham,” New York Times, 16 May 1917, 13; San Francisco Chronicle: “Amusements,” 18 Mar 1906, 42; “Grand Opera Stars Arrive,” 16 Apr 1906, 7). Clemens may have taken the details of his dictation from a story in the New York Times of 25 April, which reported Sembrich’s account of her ordeal. She explained that during her first attempt to return to her room in the St. Francis Hotel she met a “second shock, which sent me hurrying to the street”:
But I could not stay out without some sort of wear other than my night clothes, and I went back a second time. It was a climb of six flights of stairs, and on the third floor the third shock came. I kept on and got this suit I have on and my jewels. . . . We bundled blankets, some crackers, and a little whisky into a wagon and went to the beach near the Presidio. Thousands of people had gathered there, and there were many animals. Among Chinese, Japanese, negroes, and all races we slept that night on the beach, nothing between us and the sky save our blankets. (“Conried’s Singers Hug and Kiss Him,” New York Times, 25 Apr 1906, 6)
Sembrich and Clemens were acquainted: the previous November she had written to congratulate him on his seventieth birthday. He thanked her, and wrote her again on 30 April, “Welcome back to life again, dear Madame Sembrich, after that stupendous adventure!” (1 Dec 1905 and 30 Apr 1906 to Sembrich, NBolS).
I was in what was called the “Great Earthquake” . . . because I was a newspaper reporter, and was thankful] On 8 October 1865 an earthquake caused significant damage to buildings not only in San Francisco but as far away as San Jose and Santa Cruz. At that time Clemens was corresponding for the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise and had just agreed to write dramatic criticism for the San Francisco Dramatic Chronicle ( ET&S2, 289, 294, 297). He wrote several humorous sketches about the event: two letters to the Enterprise (“The Cruel Earthquake,” SLC 1865b, and “Popper Defieth Ye Earthquake,” SLC 1865c); a brief article in the Dramatic Chronicle (“Earthquake Almanac,” SLC 1865d); and a longer account in the New York Weekly Review (“The Great Earthquake in San Francisco,” SLC 1865f).
Professor William James . . . had no feeling of fright or fear] Psychologist and philosopher William James (1842–1910) taught at Harvard University from 1873 to 1907, and was a visiting lecturer at Stanford when the earthquake occurred. Clemens was familiar with at least two of his works: The Principles of Psychology (1890) and The Varieties of Religious Experience (1902) (Gribben 1980, 1:351). The two men had also corresponded in 1900 about the efficacy of Jonas Kellgren’s treatments for heart disease, and they shared an interest in “mind cure” (17 Apr 1900 and 23 Apr 1900 to James, MH-H; AD, 21 Dec 1906, note at 330.34). The “published letter” Clemens alludes to here was an article entitled “On Some Mental Effects of the Earthquake,” published in the Youth’s Companion for 7 June 1906 (80:283–84). In it James described his reaction when the temblor was “shaking the room exactly as a terrier shakes a rat”:
The emotion consisted wholly of glee and admiration; glee at the vividness which such an abstract idea or verbal term as “earthquake” could put on when translated into sensible reality and verified concretely; and admiration at the way in which the frail little wooden house could hold itself together in spite of such a shaking. I felt no trace whatever of fear; it was pure delight and welcome. . . .
I ran into my wife’s room, and found that she, although awakened from sound sleep, had felt no fear, either. Of all the persons whom I later interrogated, very few had felt any fear while the shaking lasted. (William James 1983, 331–32)
“little Ward,” . . . had reached the age of sixty-five] Lewis P. Ward (1837–1903) was a compositor on the San Francisco Alta California when Clemens shared a room with him in San Francisco in 1865. A Civil War veteran, he also taught gymnastics and performed in fencing exhibitions. When the two old friends corresponded briefly in 1888–89, Ward found Clemens to be the “same whole-souled, good fellow that you were when I last saw you, 24 years ago” ( San Francisco Census 1900, 107:3A; Goodman to SLC, 2 Oct 1903, CU-MARK; National Park Service 2012; CofC, 223; Ward to SLC, 23 Feb 1889, CU-MARK; for Steve Gillis see AutoMT1 , 569 n. 295.5–15).
Steve Gillis and his brother Jim . . . young sons and daughters of the family] Clemens mentions boarding with the Gillis family in San Francisco—in 1864 and again in 1865—in the Autobiographical Dictation of 19 January 1906. He became friends with Steve Gillis when working on the Enterprise in Virginia City, and stayed with Jim and Billy Gillis in their cabin at Jackass Hill in the winter of 1864–65 (see AutoMT1 , 295, 569 n. 295.5–15).
I am the eldest son of the eldest of the Gillis sisters . . . he was thirty-seven] The eldest Gillis sister, Theresa Ann (1843–1929), married Henry Williams, a stockbroker born in England. In 1906, her eldest (and only surviving) son was Henry Alston Williams (1864–1941). The other Gillis sisters were Mary Elizabeth (Mollie, 1846–1916) and Francina California (1849–1916) (Evans, Gillis, and Williams 1970).
Source documents.
TS1 Typescript, leaves numbered 873–82 (altered in pencil to 897–906), made from Hobby’s notes and revised.TS2 Typescript, leaves numbered 1026–35, made from the revised TS1 and further revised.
Hobby incorporated Clemens’s TS1 revisions into TS2, which Paine reviewed for possible publication in NAR, querying two passages to suggest omission. Clemens then revised TS2, deleting the summary paragraph and both passages (113.28–37, 114.12–17). He evidently changed his mind, however, and the dictation remained unpublished.