Fellow Twainians will be grieved to hear of the passing of the universally
beloved and infuential Twain scholar Hamlin Hill. Ham was felled by a
pulmonary embolism on Tuesday morning.
It is beyond my skills to provide an obituary that would fully present his
scholarly contributions to Twain studies, or convey to those who did not
know him the generosity, gentle humor, modesty, and humanity that defined
him. A brief summary follows, and I hope that those who knew Ham for more
than the twenty years I can claim, will share their own memories and
impressions with this list.
Ham got his BA from the University of Houston (1953), his MA from the
University of Texas (1954), and his PhD from the University of Chicago
(1959), and taught at several universities, most notably the University of
New Mexico and Texas A & M. His publications are too numerous to fully
list here, but I can mention a few: With Walter Blair, he co-wrote THE ART
OF
HUCKLEBERRY FINN (1962) and AMERICA'S HUMOR (1978). His MARK TWAIN AND
ELISHA BLISS (1964) became a model for such studies. He edited the first
volume in the Berkeley edition of Mark Twain, MARK TWAIN'S LETTERS TO HIS
PUBLISHERS (1967), and he was one of the prime-movers in establishing that
monumental edition of Twain's works. His MARK TWAIN, GOD'S FOOL (1973)
inspires vigorous debate to this day and changed the direction of modern
Twain studies. The most obvious tribute to his influence is that hardly
any worthwhile study of Twain published in the last twenty years does not
contain a direct reference to Hamlin Hill's work.
Writing in his preface to Tom Tenney's MARK TWAIN, A REFERENCE GUIDE
(1977), Ham wrote "Highbrowed critics and harmless scholars have produced
every
conceivable `reading' of his works, from imaginative interpretations to
definitive texts. They have explicated a single word and they have used
Mark Twain to make grand syntheses of American thought and character. They
have
created, blindly followed, and then vigorously attacked the trends in Mark
Twain scholarship --trends which themselves have been both provocative and
ultimately stultifying. The very quantity of academic research and
publication about Mark Twain does much to bring into question the notion
of an Establishment which, like eunuchs, protects its one-man harem from
unauthorized violation. If such an arrangement does exist, it is the
largest collection of eunuchs since Sollermun kept what Jim calls in
HUCKLEBERRY
FINN his `bo'd'n-house' .... What can be said without the need of prophecy
is that the flood will continue. However, the next generation defines Mark
Twain, it will find him as irresistible as earlier generations have;
perhaps... it can find not only more to say but also some important things
which have not been said before. Scholarship should build upon its earlier
insights, refining rather than merely repeating them."
When Ham sold me his library some years ago and "retired" he said he was
going to spend his time collecting kachina dolls and fishing for trout. Of
course, Ham's retirement turned out to be as busy as most of our active
careers. But now, let us all hope that the kachinas have brought rain in
the mountains, that the rivers are running, and the trout are biting.
Kevin Mac Donnell
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