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Date: | Fri, 22 Feb 2019 10:25:38 -0600 |
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There are several elements in "Texan Steer" that do give me pause and think
that the sketch has a Twain whiff about it.
1) Twain did write a number of reports when he was living in and
contributing to California newspapers about animals (dogs) running in the
street and a being a menace to the public.
2) The final reference to improving the undertaking business if the steer
was not captured -- Twain had a particular aversion to that business
enterprise. (See "Mark Twain's Quarrel with Undertakers" online at
twainquotes.com).
3) One curious angle that I found when I looked at _Mark Twain's Lexicon_
for the word "corned" in quotation marks -- The documented usage according
to the _Lexicon_ was in the 1910 edition of _Mark Twain's Speeches_ in a
speech titled "The Union Right or Wrong? Reminiscences of Nevada." That
1910 version of the speech contains a passage: "We found him standing on a
table in a saloon with an old tin lantern in one had and the school report
in the other, haranguing a gang of "corned" miners ..." (_Speeches_, 1910,
p. 272 -- available in the Oxford Edition, 1996). Searching for that
identical phrase turns up an edited version that was used in _Roughing It_,
Chapter 43. However, the passage had been edited to read: "haranguing a
gang of intoxicated Cornish miners..." (_Roughing It_ University of
California Works edition, 1993, p. 280). There is no textual commentary
regarding this change or how it appeared in the original manuscript, if it
exists.
I think a good argument can be made that Twain did use the phrase "corned"
at least once in his notes and that it was later edited and/or refined in
such a way to implicate Cornish miners -- who may not have even been
Cornish.
Barb
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