The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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drawn from a million outside sources, and daily used by the garnerer  
with a pride and satisfaction born of the superstition that he  
originated them; whereas there is not a rag of originality about them  
anywhere except the little discoloration they get from his mental  
and moral calibre and his temperament, and which is revealed in  
characteristics of phrasing. When a great orator makes a great speech  
you are listening to ten centuries and ten thousand men--but we call it  
his speech, and really some exceedingly small portion of it is his.  
But not enough to signify. It is merely a Waterloo. It is Wellington's  
battle, in some degree, and we call it his; but there are others that  
contributed. It takes a thousand men to invent a telegraph, or a steam  
engine, or a phonograph, or a photograph, or a telephone or any other  
important thing--and the last man gets the credit and we forget the  
others. He added his little mite--that is all he did. These object  
lessons should teach us that ninety-nine parts of all things that  
proceed from the intellect are plagiarisms, pure and simple; and the  
lesson ought to make us modest. But nothing can do that.  
Then why don't we unwittingly reproduce the phrasing of a story, as well  
as the story itself? It can hardly happen--to the extent of fifty words  
except in the case of a child: its memory-tablet is not lumbered with  
impressions, and the actual language can have graving-room there, and  
preserve the language a year or two, but a grown person's memory-tablet  
is a palimpsest, with hardly a bare space upon which to engrave a  
phrase. It must be a very rare thing that a whole page gets so sharply  
printed upon a man's mind, by a single reading, that it will stay long  
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