Pudd’nhead Wins His Name
Tell the truth or trump—but get the trick.
—Pudd’nhead Wilson’s Calendar
The scene of this chronicle is the
town of Dawson’s Landing, on the Missouri side
of the Mississippi, half a day’s journey, per
steamboat, below St. Louis.
In 1830 it was a snug collection of
modest one- and two- story frame dwellings, whose
whitewashed exteriors were almost concealed from sight
by climbing tangles of rose vines, honeysuckles, and
morning glories. Each of these pretty homes had
a garden in front fenced with white palings and opulently
stocked with hollyhocks, marigolds, touch-me-nots,
prince’s-feathers, and other old-fashioned flowers;
while on the windowsills of the houses stood wooden
boxes containing moss rose plants and terra-cotta
pots in which grew a breed of geranium whose spread
of intensely red blossoms accented the prevailing
pink tint of the rose-clad house-front like an explosion
of flame. When there was room on the ledge outside
of the pots and boxes for a cat, the cat was there—in
sunny weather—stretched at full length,
asleep and blissful, with her furry belly to the sun
and a paw curved over her nose. Then that house
was complete, and its contentment and peace were made
manifest to the world by this symbol, whose testimony
is infallible. A home without a cat—and
a well-fed, well-petted, and properly revered cat—may
be a perfect home, perhaps, but how can it prove title?
All along the streets, on both sides,
at the outer edge of the brick sidewalks, stood locust
trees with trunks protected by wooden boxing, and
these furnished shade for summer and a sweet fragrancer
in spring, when the clusters of buds came forth.
The main street, one block back from the river, and
running parallel with it, was the sole business street.
It was six blocks long, and in each block two or three
brick stores, three stories high, towered above interjected
bunches of little frame shops. Swinging signs
creaked in the wind the street’s whole length.
The candy-striped pole, which indicates nobility proud
and ancient along the palace-bordered canals of Venice,
indicated merely the humble barbershop along the main
street of Dawson’s Landing. On a chief corner
stood a lofty unpainted pole wreathed from top to bottom
with tin pots and pans and cups, the chief tinmonger’s
noisy notice to the world (when the wind blew) that
his shop was on hand for business at that corner.
The hamlet’s front was washed
by the clear waters of the great river; its body stretched
itself rearward up a gentle incline; its most rearward
border fringed itself out and scattered its houses
about its base line of the hills; the hills rose high,
enclosing the town in a half-moon curve, clothed with
forests from foot to summit.
Steamboats passed up and down every
hour or so. Those belonging to the little Cairo
line and the little Memphis line always stopped; the
big Orleans liners stopped for hails only, or to land
passengers or freight; and this was the case also
with the great flotilla of “transients.”
These latter came out of a dozen rivers—the
Illinois, the Missouri, the Upper Mississippi, the
Ohio, the Monongahela, the Tennessee, the Red River,
the White River, and so on—and were bound
every whither and stocked with every imaginable comfort
or necessity, which the Mississippi’s communities
could want, from the frosty Falls of St. Anthony down
through nine climates to torrid New Orleans.
Dawson’s Landing was a slaveholding
town, with a rich, slave-worked grain and pork country
back of it. The town was sleepy and comfortable
and contented. It was fifty years old, and was
growing slowly—very slowly, in fact, but
still it was growing.
The chief citizen was York Leicester
Driscoll, about forty years old, judge of the county
court. He was very proud of his old Virginian
ancestry, and in his hospitalities and his rather formal
and stately manners, he kept up its traditions.
He was fine and just and generous. To be a gentleman—a
gentleman without stain or blemish—was his
only religion, and to it he was always faithful.
He was respected, esteemed, and beloved by all of
the community. He was well off, and was gradually
adding to his store. He and his wife were very
nearly happy, but not quite, for they had no children.
The longing for the treasure of a child had grown
stronger and stronger as the years slipped away, but
the blessing never came—and was never to
come.
With this pair lived the judge’s
widowed sister, Mrs. Rachel Pratt, and she also was
childless—childless, and sorrowful for that
reason, and not to be comforted. The women were
good and commonplace people, and did their duty, and
had their reward in clear consciences and the community’s
approbation. They were Presbyterians, the judge
was a freethinker.
Pembroke Howard, lawyer and bachelor,
aged almost forty, was another old Virginian grandee
with proved descent from the First Families. He
was a fine, majestic creature, a gentleman according
to the nicest requirements of the Virginia rule, a
devoted Presbyterian, an authority on the “code”,
and a man always courteously ready to stand up before
you in the field if any act or word of his had seemed
doubtful or suspicious to you, and explain it with
any weapon you might prefer from bradawls to artillery.
He was very popular with the people, and was the judge’s
dearest friend.
Then there was Colonel Cecil Burleigh
Essex, another F.F.V. of formidable caliber—however,
with him we have no concern.
Percy Northumberland Driscoll, brother
to the judge, and younger than he by five years, was
a married man, and had had children around his hearthstone;
but they were attacked in detail by measles, croup,
and scarlet fever, and this had given the doctor a
chance with his effective antediluvian methods; so
the cradles were empty. He was a prosperous
man, with a good head for speculations, and his fortune
was growing. On the first of February, 1830,
two boy babes were born in his house; one to him,
one to one of his slave girls, Roxana by name.
Roxana was twenty years old. She was up and
around the same day, with her hands full, for she
was tending both babes.
Mrs. Percy Driscoll died within the
week. Roxy remained in charge of the children.
She had her own way, for Mr. Driscoll soon absorbed
himself in his speculations and left her to her own
devices.
In that same month of February, Dawson’s
Landing gained a new citizen. This was Mr. David
Wilson, a young fellow of Scotch parentage. He
had wandered to this remote region from his birthplace
in the interior of the State of New York, to seek
his fortune. He was twenty-five years old, college
bred, and had finished a post-college course in an
Eastern law school a couple of years before.
He was a homely, freckled, sandy-haired
young fellow, with an intelligent blue eye that had
frankness and comradeship in it and a covert twinkle
of a pleasant sort. But for an unfortunate remark
of his, he would no doubt have entered at once upon
a successful career at Dawson’s Landing.
But he made his fatal remark the first day he spent
in the village, and it “gaged” him.
He had just made the acquaintance of a group of citizens
when an invisible dog began to yelp and snarl and howl
and make himself very comprehensively disagreeable,
whereupon young Wilson said, much as one who is thinking
aloud:
“I wish I owned half of that dog.”
“Why?” somebody asked.
“Because I would kill my half.”
The group searched his face with curiosity,
with anxiety even, but found no light there, no expression
that they could read. They fell away from him
as from something uncanny, and went into privacy to
discuss him. One said:
“’Pears to be a fool.”
“’Pears?” said another. “Is,
I reckon you better say.”
“Said he wished he owned half of the
dog, the idiot,” said a third.
“What did he reckon would become of the other
half if he killed his half?
Do you reckon he thought it would live?”
“Why, he must have thought it,
unless he is the downrightest fool in the world;
because if he hadn’t thought it, he would have
wanted to own the whole dog, knowing that if he killed
his half and the other half died, he would be responsible
for that half just the same as if he had killed that
half instead of his own. Don’t it look
that way to you, gents?”
“Yes, it does. If he owned
one half of the general dog, it would be so; if he
owned one end of the dog and another person owned the
other end, it would be so, just the same; particularly
in the first case, because if you kill one half of
a general dog, there ain’t any man that can tell
whose half it was; but if he owned one end of the dog,
maybe he could kill his end of it and—”
“No, he couldn’t either;
he couldn’t and not be responsible if the other
end died, which it would. In my opinion that
man ain’t in his right mind.”
“In my opinion he hain’t got any
mind.”
No. 3 said: “Well, he’s a lummox,
anyway.”
“That’s what he is;”
said No. 4. “He’s a labrick—just
a Simon-pure labrick, if there was one.”
“Yes, sir, he’s a dam
fool. That’s the way I put him up,”
said No. 5. “Anybody can think different
that wants to, but those are my sentiments.”
“I’m with you, gentlemen,”
said No. 6. “Perfect jackass—yes,
and it ain’t going too far to say he is a pudd’nhead.
If he ain’t a pudd’nhead, I ain’t
no judge, that’s all.”
Mr. Wilson stood elected. The
incident was told all over the town, and gravely discussed
by everybody. Within a week he had lost his first
name; Pudd’nhead took its place. In time
he came to be liked, and well liked too; but by that
time the nickname had got well stuck on, and it stayed.
That first day’s verdict made him a fool, and
he was not able to get it set aside, or even modified.
The nickname soon ceased to carry any harsh or unfriendly
feeling with it, but it held its place, and was to
continue to hold its place for twenty long years.