<h2> <SPAN name="venture" id="venture"></SPAN>MY FIRST LITERARY VENTURE </h2>
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<h3> [written about 1865] </h3>
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<p>I was a very smart child at the age of thirteen—an unusually smart
child, I thought at the time. It was then that I did my first newspaper
scribbling, and most unexpectedly to me it stirred up a fine sensation in
the community. It did, indeed, and I was very proud of it, too. I was a
printer's "devil," and a progressive and aspiring one. My uncle had me on
his paper (the Weekly Hannibal Journal, two dollars a year in advance—five
hundred subscribers, and they paid in cordwood, cabbages, and unmarketable
turnips), and on a lucky summer's day he left town to be gone a week, and
asked me if I thought I could edit one issue of the paper judiciously. Ah!
didn't I want to try! Higgins was the editor on the rival paper. He had
lately been jilted, and one night a friend found an open note on the poor
fellow's bed, in which he stated that he could not longer endure life and
had drowned himself in Bear Creek. The friend ran down there and
discovered Higgins wading back to shore. He had concluded he wouldn't.</p>
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<p>The village was full of it for several days, but Higgins did not suspect
it. I thought this was a fine opportunity. I wrote an elaborately wretched
account of the whole matter, and then illustrated it with villainous cuts
engraved on the bottoms of wooden type with a jackknife—one of them
a picture of Higgins wading out into the creek in his shirt, with a
lantern, sounding the depth of the water with a walking-stick. I thought
it was desperately funny, and was densely unconscious that there was any
moral obliquity about such a publication. Being satisfied with this effort
I looked around for other worlds to conquer, and it struck me that it
would make good, interesting matter to charge the editor of a neighboring
country paper with a piece of gratuitous rascality and "see him squirm."</p>
<p>I did it, putting the article into the form of a parody on the "Burial of
Sir John Moore"—and a pretty crude parody it was, too.</p>
<p>Then I lampooned two prominent citizens outrageously—not because
they had done anything to deserve, but merely because I thought it was my
duty to make the paper lively.</p>
<p>Next I gently touched up the newest stranger—the lion of the day,
the gorgeous journeyman tailor from Quincy. He was a simpering coxcomb of
the first water, and the "loudest" dressed man in the state. He was an
inveterate woman-killer. Every week he wrote lushy "poetry" for the
journal, about his newest conquest. His rhymes for my week were headed,
"To MARY IN H—l," meaning to Mary in Hannibal, of course. But while
setting up the piece I was suddenly riven from head to heel by what I
regarded as a perfect thunderbolt of humor, and I compressed it into a
snappy footnote at the bottom—thus: "We will let this thing pass,
just this once; but we wish Mr. J. Gordon Runnels to understand distinctly
that we have a character to sustain, and from this time forth when he
wants to commune with his friends in h—l, he must select some other
medium than the columns of this journal!"</p>
<p>The paper came out, and I never knew any little thing attract so much
attention as those playful trifles of mine.</p>
<p>For once the Hannibal Journal was in demand—a novelty it had not
experienced before. The whole town was stirred. Higgins dropped in with a
double-barreled shotgun early in the forenoon. When he found that it was
an infant (as he called me) that had done him the damage, he simply pulled
my ears and went away; but he threw up his situation that night and left
town for good. The tailor came with his goose and a pair of shears; but he
despised me, too, and departed for the South that night. The two lampooned
citizens came with threats of libel, and went away incensed at my
insignificance. The country editor pranced in with a war-whoop next day,
suffering for blood to drink; but he ended by forgiving me cordially and
inviting me down to the drug store to wash away all animosity in a
friendly bumper of "Fahnestock's Vermifuge." It was his little joke. My
uncle was very angry when he got back—unreasonably so, I thought,
considering what an impetus I had given the paper, and considering also
that gratitude for his preservation ought to have been uppermost in his
mind, inasmuch as by his delay he had so wonderfully escaped dissection,
tomahawking, libel, and getting his head shot off.</p>
<p>But he softened when he looked at the accounts and saw that I had actually
booked the unparalleled number of thirty-three new subscribers, and had
the vegetables to show for it, cordwood, cabbage, beans, and unsalable
turnips enough to run the family for two years!</p>
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