Mark Twain had known many of the great men of the Civil War and the
Gilded Age, and esteemed none more highly than Ulysses S. Grant, who
was modest, sensitive, generous, honest, and superlatively
intelligent. Grant's courage, both moral and physical, was a matter of
record. His genius as a general assured his immortality. In 1881,
Twain urged Grant to write his memoirs. No one is interested in me,
Grant replied. Out of the army, out of office, and out of favor--that
was his life now. He reminded Twain that the Military History of
Ulysses S. Grant, written by his wartime assistant, Adam Badeau, had
sold poorly. And John Russell Young's book, Around the World with
General Grant, published in 1879, had been a complete flop. Broke and
sick--he began suffering agonizingly painful throat cancer in 1884--
Grant agreed to write four articles for the Century Magazine on some
of his Civil War battles, and Century offered to publish his memoirs
if only he'd write them. Twain was on a lecture tour when he heard
that Grant might be willing to write a book and hurried back to New
York to tell Grant that he could arrange for publication of the book
by a small firm that he controlled. Grant accepted his offer because
Twain had been the first person to suggest he write his memoirs.
The inflexible will and powerful mind that helped make Grant a great
general were stronger than the torturing pain, the sleepless nights,
the terrors of death. Yet there was no sense of this heroic struggle
in the narrative he produced with stubby pencils or by dictating to a
secretary. The book was like the man himself--often humorous,
frequently charming, always lucid, sometimes poignant, generous to his
enemies, loyal to his friends. Twain was astonished when he discovered
that Grant had produced a considerably longer book than he had
contracted to write, but Grant had always tried to give more than was
expected of him. He did so even now. Grant finished his book in July
1885. The Memoirs were a triumph. The narrative has the directness and
limpidity of the purest English prose as it was first crafted by
William Tyndell and then spread throughout the English-speaking world
in the King James version of the Bible. Grant had reached deep into
himself and into the world history of the Anglo-American people to
grasp the core of its culture, the English language. He trusted in
that narrative style that achieves its effects by never straining for
effect, assembled it into vivid pictures sufficiently understated to
allow an intelligent reader's imagination room to expand, and shaped a
literary architecture with a born artist's eye. His recollections were
inevitably partial and selective. As with all memoirs, Grant's was at
its best as a revelation of the way he remembered the events of his
tumultuous life and the feelings they evoked in him as death drew
near. Its truth was less in the details of what he recalled as in the
story he had to tell, of justice triumphant over a great evil. On July
23, 1885, several days after correcting the galley proofs of his book,
Grant died in a summer cottage on the slopes of Mount McGregor, New
York, surrounded by friends and family. The memoirs, published a few
months later, have never been out of print.
Les mer
(A Modern Library E-Book)
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9780679641490
Publisert
2017
Utgiver
Random House Digital Inc.
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter