There is no character, howsoever good
and fine, but it can be destroyed by ridicule, howsoever
poor and witless. Observe the ass, for instance:
his character is about perfect, he is the choicest
spirit among all the humbler animals, yet see what
ridicule has brought him to. Instead of feeling
complimented when we are called an ass, we are left
in doubt.
—Pudd’nhead Wilson’s Calendar
A person who is ignorant of legal
matters is always liable to make mistakes when he
tries to photograph a court scene with his pen; and
so I was not willing to let the law chapters in this
book go to press without first subjecting them to
rigid and exhausting revision and correction by a
trained barrister—if that is what they are
called. These chapters are right, now, in every
detail, for they were rewritten under the immediate
eye of William Hicks, who studied law part of a while
in southwest Missouri thirty-five years ago and then
came over here to Florence for his health and is still
helping for exercise and board in Macaroni Vermicelli’s
horse-feed shed, which is up the back alley as you
turn around the corner out of the Piazza del Duomo
just beyond the house where that stone that Dante
used to sit on six hundred years ago is let into the
wall when he let on to be watching them build Giotto’s
campanile and yet always got tired looking as Beatrice
passed along on her way to get a chunk of chestnut
cake to defend herself with in case of a Ghibelline
outbreak before she got to school, at the same old
stand where they sell the same old cake to this day
and it is just as light and good as it was then, too,
and this is not flattery, far from it. He was
a little rusty on his law, but he rubbed up for this
book, and those two or three legal chapters are right
and straight, now. He told me so himself.
Given under my hand this second day
of January, 1893, at the Villa Viviani, village of
Settignano, three miles back of Florence, on the hills—the
same certainly affording the most charming view to
be found on this planet, and with it the most dreamlike
and enchanting sunsets to be found in any planet or
even in any solar system—and given, too,
in the swell room of the house, with the busts of
Cerretani senators and other grandees of this line
looking approvingly down upon me, as they used to
look down upon Dante, and mutely asking me to adopt
them into my family, which I do with pleasure, for
my remotest ancestors are but spring chickens compared
with these robed and stately antiques, and it will
be a great and satisfying lift for me, that six hundred
years will.
Mark Twain.