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<br/>
<h2> THE OLD-FASHIONED PRINTER </h2>
<p>ADDRESS AT THE TYPOTHETAE DINNER GIVEN AT DELMONICO’S,<br/>
JANUARY 18, 1886, COMMEMORATING THE BIRTHDAY OF<br/>
BENJAMIN FRANKLIN<br/>
<br/>
Mr. Clemens responded to the toast “The Compositor.”<br/></p>
<p>The chairman’s historical reminiscences of Gutenberg have caused me to
fall into reminiscences, for I myself am something of an antiquity. All
things change in the procession of years, and it may be that I am among
strangers. It may be that the printer of to-day is not the printer of
thirty-five years ago. I was no stranger to him. I knew him well. I built
his fire for him in the winter mornings; I brought his water from the
village pump; I swept out his office; I picked up his type from under his
stand; and, if he were there to see, I put the good type in his case and
the broken ones among the “hell matter”; and if he wasn’t there to see, I
dumped it all with the “pi” on the imposing-stone—for that was the
furtive fashion of the cub, and I was a cub. I wetted down the paper
Saturdays, I turned it Sundays—for this was a country weekly; I
rolled, I washed the rollers, I washed the forms, I folded the papers, I
carried them around at dawn Thursday mornings. The carrier was then an
object of interest to all the dogs in town. If I had saved up all the
bites I ever received, I could keep M. Pasteur busy for a year. I
enveloped the papers that were for the mail—we had a hundred town
subscribers and three hundred and fifty country ones; the town subscribers
paid in groceries and the country ones in cabbages and cord-wood—when
they paid at all, which was merely sometimes, and then we always stated
the fact in the paper, and gave them a puff; and if we forgot it they
stopped the paper. Every man on the town list helped edit the thing—that
is, he gave orders as to how it was to be edited; dictated its opinions,
marked out its course for it, and every time the boss failed to connect he
stopped his paper. We were just infested with critics, and we tried to
satisfy them all over. We had one subscriber who paid cash, and he was
more trouble than all the rest. He bought us once a year, body and soul,
for two dollars. He used to modify our politics every which way, and he
made us change our religion four times in five years. If we ever tried to
reason with him, he would threaten to stop his paper, and, of course, that
meant bankruptcy and destruction. That man used to write articles a column
and a half long, leaded long primer, and sign them “Junius,” or “Veritas,”
or “Vox Populi,” or some other high-sounding rot; and then, after it was
set up, he would come in and say he had changed his mind-which was a
gilded figure of speech, because he hadn’t any—and order it to be
left out. We couldn’t afford “bogus” in that office, so we always took the
leads out, altered the signature, credited the article to the rival paper
in the next village, and put it in. Well, we did have one or two kinds of
“bogus.” Whenever there was a barbecue, or a circus, or a baptizing, we
knocked off for half a day, and then to make up for short matter we would
“turn over ads”—turn over the whole page and duplicate it. The other
“bogus” was deep philosophical stuff, which we judged nobody ever read; so
we kept a galley of it standing, and kept on slapping the same old batches
of it in, every now and then, till it got dangerous. Also, in the early
days of the telegraph we used to economize on the news. We picked out the
items that were pointless and barren of information and stood them on a
galley, and changed the dates and localities, and used them over and over
again till the public interest in them was worn to the bone. We marked the
ads, but we seldom paid any attention to the marks afterward; so the life
of a “td” ad and a “tf” ad was equally eternal. I have seen a “td” notice
of a sheriff’s sale still booming serenely along two years after the sale
was over, the sheriff dead, and the whole circumstance become ancient
history. Most of the yearly ads were patent-medicine stereotypes, and we
used to fence with them.</p>
<p>I can see that printing-office of prehistoric times yet, with its horse
bills on the walls, its “d” boxes clogged with tallow, because we always
stood the candle in the “k” box nights, its towel, which was not
considered soiled until it could stand alone, and other signs and symbols
that marked the establishment of that kind in the Mississippi Valley; and
I can see, also, the tramping “jour,” who flitted by in the summer and
tarried a day, with his wallet stuffed with one shirt and a hatful of
handbills; for if he couldn’t get any type to set he would do a temperance
lecture. His way of life was simple, his needs not complex; all he wanted
was plate and bed and money enough to get drunk on, and he was satisfied.
But it may be, as I have said, that I am among strangers, and sing the
glories of a forgotten age to unfamiliar ears, so I will “make even” and
stop.</p>
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