Accordion Essay by Mark
Twain
Touching Story of George
Washington's Boyhood
If it please your neighbor to
break the sacred calm of night with the snorting of an
unholy trombone, it is your duty to put up with his wretched
music and your privilege to pity him for the unhappy instinct
that moves him to delight in such discordant sounds. I did not
always think thus: this consideration for musical amateurs was
born of certain disagreeable personal experiences that once
followed the development of a like instinct in myself. Now this
infidel over the way, who is learning to play on the trombone,
and the slowness of whose progress is almost miraculous, goes on
with his harrowing work; every night, uncursed by me, but
tenderly pitied. Ten years ago, for the same offense, I would
have set fire to his house. At that time I was a prey to an
amateur violinist for two or three weeks, and the sufferings I
endured at his hands are inconceivable. He played "Old Dan
Tucker," and he never played any thing else; but he
performed it so badly that he could throw me into fits with it if
I were awake, or into a nightmare if I were asleep. As long as he
confined himself to "Dan Tucker," though, I bore with
him and abstained from violence; but when he projected a fresh
outrage, and tried to do "Sweet Home," I went over and
burnt him out. My next assailant was a wretch who felt a call to
play the clarionet. He only played the scale, however, with his
distressing instrument, and I let him run the length of his
tether, also; but finally, when he branched out into a ghastly
tune, I felt my reason deserting me under the exquisite torture,
and I sallied forth and burnt him out likewise. During the next
two years I burned out an amateur cornet player, a bugler, a
bassoon-sophomore, and a bar- barian whose talents ran in the
base-drum line.
I would certainly have scorched
this trombone man if he had moved into my neighborhood in
those days. But as I said before, I leave him to his own
destruction now, because I have had experience as an amateur
myselt, and I feel nothing but compassion for that kind of people
Besides, I have learned that there lies dormant in the soul~ of
all men a penchant for some particular musical instrument, and an
unsuspected yearning to learn to play on it, that are bound to
wake up and demand attention some day. Therefore, you who rail at
such as disturb your slumbers with unsuccessful and demoralizing
attempts to subjugate a fiddle, beware! for sooner or later your
own time will come. It is customary and popular to curse these
amateurs when they wrench you out of a pleasant dream at night
with a pe- culiarly diabolical note; but seeing that we are all
made alike, and must all develop a distorted talent for music in
the fullness of time, it is not right. I am charitable to my
trombone maniac; in a moment of inspiration he fetches a snort,
sometimes, that brings me to a sitting posture in bed, broad
awake and weltering in a cold perspiration. Perhaps my first
thought is, that there has been an earthquake; per- haps I hear
the trombone, and my next thought is, that suicide and the
silence of the grave would be a happy release from this nightly
agony; perhaps the old instinct comes strong upon me to go after
my matches; but my first cool, collected thought is, that the
trombone man's destiny is upon him, and he is working it out in
suffering and tribulation; and I banish from me the unworthy
instinct that would prompt me to bum him out.
After a long immunity from the
dreadful insanity that moves a man to become a musician in
defiance of the will of God that he should confine himself to
sawing wood, I finally fell a victim to the instrument they call
the accordeon. At this day I hate that contrivance as fervently
as any man can, but at the time I speak of I suddenly acquired a
disgusting and idolatrous affection for it. I got one of powerful
capac- ity, and learned to play "Auld Lang Syne" on it.
It seems to me, now, that I must have been gifted with a sort of
inspiration to be enabled, in the state of ignorance in which I
then was, to select out of the whole range of musical composition
the one solitary tune that sounds vilest and most distressing on
the accordeon. I do not suppose there is another tune in the
world with which I could have inflicted so much anguish upon my
race as I did with that one during my short musical career.
After I had been playing
"Lang Syne" about a week, I had the vanity to
think I could improve the original melody, and I set about adding
some little flourishes and variations to it, but with rather
indifferent success, I suppose, as it brought my landlady into my
presence with an expression about her of being opposed to such
desperate enterprises. Said she, "Do you know any other tune
but that, Mr. Twain?" I told her, meekly, that I did not.
"Well, then," said she, 'stick to it just as it is;
don't put any variations to it, because it's rough enough on the
boarders the way it is now."
The fact is, it was something
more than simply "rough enough" on them; it was
altogether too rough; half of them left, and the other half would
have followed, but Mrs. Jones saved them by discharging me from
the premises.
I only staid one night at my next
lodging house. Mrs. Smith was after me early in the
morning. She said, "You can go, sir; I don't want you here;
I have had one of your kind before anda poor lunatic, that
played the banjo and danced breakdowns, and jarred the glass all
out of the windows. You kept me awake all night, and if you was
to do it again, I'd take and mash that thing over your
head!" I could see that this woman took no delight in music,
and I moved to Mrs. Brown's.
For three nights in succession I
gave my new neighbors "Auld Lang Syne," plain
and unadulterated, save by a few discords that rather improved
the general effect than otherwise. But the very first time I
tried the variations the boarders mutinied. I never did find any
body that would stand those variations. I was very well satisfied
with my efforts in that house, however, and I left it without any
regrets; I drove one boarder as mad as a March hare, and another
one tried to scalp his mother. I reflected, though, that if I
could only have been allowed to give this latter just one more
touch of the variations, he would have finished the old woman.
I went to board at Mrs. Murphy's,
an Italian lady of many excellent qualities. The very first time
I struck up the variations, a haggard, care-worn, cadaverous old
man walked into my room and stood beaming upon me a smile of
ineffable happiness. Then he placed his hand upon my head, and
looking devoutly aloft, he said with feeling unction, and in a
voice trembling with emotion, "God bless you, young man! God
bless you! for you have done that for me which is beyond all
praise. For years I have suffered from an incurable disease, and
knowing my doom was sealed and that I must die, I have striven
with all my power to resign myself to my fate, but in
vain andthe love of life was too strong within me. But
Heaven bless you, my benefactor for since I heard you play that
tune and those variations, I do not want to live any
longer & I am entirely resigned andI am willing to
die and in fact, I am anxious to die. And then the old man
fell upon my neck and wept a flood of happy tears. I was
surprised at these things; but I could not help feeling a little
proud at what I had done, nor could I help giving the old
gentleman a parting blast in the way of some peculiarly
lacerating variations as he went out at the door. They doubled
him up like a jack-knife, and the next time he left his bed of
pain and suffering he was all right, in a metallic coffin.
My passion for the accordeon
finally spent itself and died out, and I was glad when I
found myself free from its unwholesome influence. While the fever
was upon me, I was a living, breathing calamity wherever I went,
and desolation and disaster followed in my wake. I bred discord
in families, I crushed the spirits of the light-hearted, I drove
the melancholy to despair, I hurried invalids to premature
dissolution, and I fear me I disturbed the very dead in their
graves. I did incalculable harm, and inflicted untold suffering
upon my race with my execrable music; and yet to atone for it
all, I did but one single blessed act, in making that weary old
man willing to go to his long home.
Still, I derived some little
benefit from that accordeon; for while I continued to
practice on it, I never had to pay any board and landlords
were always willing to compromise, on my leaving before the month
was up.
Now, I had two objects in view in
writing the foregoing, one of which was to try and
reconcile people to those poor unfortunates who feel that they
have a genius for music, and who drive their neighbors crazy
every night in trying to develop and cultivate it; and the other
was to introduce an admirable story about Little George
Washington, who could Not Lie, and the Cherry-Tree - or the
Apple- Tree & I have forgotten now which, although it was
told me only yesterday. And writing such a long and elaborate
introductory has caused me to forget the story itself; but it was
very touching.