Explanatory Notes
Apparatus Notes
MTPDocEd
[begin page 349]
[mark twain improves “fitz smythe”]
§ 134. Take the Stand, Fitz Smythe
6–7 February 1866

This highly personal attack on Albert Evans is part of Clemens' “San Francisco Letter” written on 3 February 1866 and probably published in the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise on February 6 or 7 (February 5 was a Monday). A clipping of the entire letter is preserved in the Yale Scrapbook.1

Evans' local reports in the Alta California and his letters to the Gold Hill News provide ample evidence that he was biased in favor of the San Francisco police. Clemens, on the other hand, had been carrying out a series of attacks, through his letters in the Enterprise, on corruption in the city government and especially in the police department.2 This difference in point of view was exaggerated by Clemens' superior powers as a humorist, which unfailingly dwarfed the “prairie wisdom” of his opponent. In short, Clemens' charges in this sketch may be overstated somewhat, but they capture the spirit if not the letter of the truth, and his genuine outrage lends bite and depth to his ad hominem attack.

Editorial Notes
1 Another selection from the same letter, “More Cemeterial Ghastliness” (no. 172), appears in its chronological position in this collection.
2 Clemens' attacks on the police are scheduled to appear in the collection of social and political writings in The Works of Mark Twain.
Textual Commentary

The first printing appeared in the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise, probably on 6 or 7 February 1866 (TEnt). The only known copy of this printing, in a clipping in the Yale Scrapbook, pp. 47–48, is copy-text for all but the passage that Mark Twain quotes from the San Francisco Morning Call, 3 February 1866, p. 1 (MC), which is copy-text from 352.9 through 352.25. Mark Twain presumably dropped the signature from the passage quoted, and this change is adopted as a needed emendation of MC from TEnt, while two further changes in spacing and paragraphing are rejected as compositorial. Copy: PH from Bancroft (MC). Mark Twain struck through the scrapbook clipping early in 1867, presumably because he did not intend to reprint it in JF1. There are no textual notes.

[begin page 350]
Take the Stand, Fitz Smythe

Fitz Smythe (“Amigo,” of the Gold Hill News explanatory note) is the champion of the police, and is always in a sweat because I find fault with them. Now I don't find fault with them often, and when I do I sometimes do it honestly; even Fitz Smythe will not have cheek to say he expresses his honest opinions when he invariably and eternally slobbers them over with his slimy praise and can never find them otherwise than pure and sinless in every case. No man is always blameless—Fitz Smythe ought to recollect that and bestow his praise with more judgment. Fitz knows he would abuse them like pirates if they were all to die suddenly. I know it, because he always abuses dead people. He was a firm, unswerving friend of poor Barney Olwellexplanatory note until the man was hanged and buried, and then look what hard names he called him in the last News. Fitz can ruin the reputation of any man with a paragraph or two of his praise. I don't say it in a spirit of anger, but I am telling it for a plain truth. I have only stirred the police up and irritated them a little with my cheerful abuse, but Fitz Smythe has utterly ruined their character with his disastrous praise. I don't ask any man to take my evidence alone in this matter—I refer doubters to the police themselves. But for Fitz Smythe's kindly meant but calamitous compliments, the police of San Francisco would stand as high to-day as any similar body of men in the world. But you know yourself that you soon cease to attach weight to the compliments of a man whose mouth is an eternally-flowing fountain [begin page 351] of flattery.emendation Fitz Smythe praises all alike—makes no distinction. There is that man Ansbroexplanatory note—I don't know him—never saw himemendation, that I know of—but I know, and so does Fitz Smythe, that he does twice as much work as any other detective on the force—but does Fitz Smythe praise him any more than he praises those pets who never do anything at all? Not he—he makes no discrimination. And Chappellemendation explanatory note? but why argue the case? When those officers do anything Fitz impartially rings in all the balance of the force to share the credit, sometimes. Fitz, you won't do. I have told you so fifty times, and I tell you again, that you won't do. I can warm you up with ten sentences, and make you dance like a hen on a hot griddle, any time, Fitz Smythe. I know your weak spot. I can touch you on the raw whenever I please, make you lose your temper and write the most spiteful, undignified things. You see you will always be a little awkward with a pen, Fitz, because your head isn't sound—isn't well balanced; you have good points, you know, but they are kept down and crowded out by bad ones. You don't know that when a man is in a controversy he is at a great disadvantage when he loses his temper. It leaves him too open to ridicule, you know. And you can't stand ridicule, Fitz; it cuts you to the quick; it just makes you howl; I know that as well as you do, Fitz, and I am saying these things for your own good; you are young, and you are apt to let the fire of youth drive you into exceedingly unhappy performances. I do not mean that you are so young in years, you know, but young in experience of the world. You ought to be modest; the same wisdom which was so potent in Illinois and the wilds of Texas does not overpower the people of a great city like it used to do there, you know. Ah, no—they read you, attentively—because you write with a certain attractiveness Fitz Smythe—but they say “Oh, this prairie wisdom is too wide—too flat; and this swamp wisdom's too deep altogether.”emendation

And they don't attach any weight to your praise of the police. They say, “Oh, this fellow don't know—he ain't used to police—they don't have 'em in the wilds of Texas where this Ranger come from.”

But you are certainly the most interesting subject to write about, Fitzy—I never get hold of you but I want to stay with you and hang on to you just as if you were a jug. I didn't intend to [begin page 352] write two lines this time, Fitz; I only wanted to getemendation you, as Excuser and Explainer-in-Chief to the Police, to go on the witness stand and inform me when it is possible for a man to lug a prisoner about a mile through the thickest settled portion of this city—clear to the station-house—and never come across a policeman. Read this communication from the Morning Call, Fitz—and it is a true version—and then go on and explain it, Fitz—try it, you long-legged rip!

where historical collation are the police?explanatory note

Editors historical collation Morning Call:—On Thursday night a terrible onslaught was made on the house of a peaceable citizen on Larkin street by a band of soldiers. The man, awakened by this attempt to enter his dwelling, called on his neighbors for help. One came to his aid, the soldiers threatened to fire on the families, but, after a severe fight and long chase, the citizen and his neighbor captured two of the rascals near the Spring Valley School House. They have been held over to appear before the County Court. The citizen, with his prisoner, came from the Presidio Road, along Larkin, down Union, along Stockton, down Broadway to Kearny street, before he met an officer. The neighbor, with his prisoner, came from the same place, down Union to Powell, along that street to Washington, and down to the lower side of the Plaza, before he met an officer. This was between three and four, a.m. What I wish to know is, where were the Police, and cannot we, in the remote parts, be protected by at least one officer?historical collation emendation

Historical Collation Take the Stand, Fitz Smythe
  where  (I-C)  ●  Where  (MC)  [¶] Where  (TEnt) 
  [¶] Editors  (M-C)  ●  no Editors  (TEnt) 
  officer? (TEnt)  ●  officer? | W. W. (MC) 
Editorial Emendations Take the Stand, Fitz Smythe
  flattery. (I-C)  ●  flattery?
  saw him (I-C)  ●  saw kim
  Chappell (I-C)  ●  Chappelle
  altogether.” (I-C)  ●  altogether.‸
  get (I-C)  ●  yet
  officer? (TEnt)  ●  officer? | W. W.
Explanatory Notes Take the Stand, Fitz Smythe
 “Amigo,” of the Gold Hill News] Evans' weekly column in the Gold Hill News began on 2 July 1864 and was signed “Amigo.”
 Barney Olwell] On 13 January 1865 Barney Olwell killed James Irwin. He was later convicted of murder in the first degree and hanged on 22 January 1866. Evans' report of the execution called Olwell “a brute of the lowest type, hardly entitled to be considered a man; he committed a brutal murder in cold blood and with malice aforethought” (“Our San Francisco Correspondence,” Gold Hill News, 29 January 1866, p. 2). Evans' items on Olwell were, despite Clemens' gibe to the contrary, consistently critical of him.
 Ansbro] Thomas Ansbro of the San Francisco police force (Langley, Directory for 1865, p. 61).
 Chappell] Jacob G. Chappell, also of the police force (Langley, Directory for 1865, p. 116).
  where are the police?] Signed “W. W.,” this letter appeared in the San Francisco Morning Call on 3 February 1866 (p. 1). Clemens made no changes.