Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa (D Latham/M Jaffe) From: Helen Date: 25 Apr 22 - 06:22 PM Thread #119 Message #4140151 Posted By: Helen 25-Apr-22 - 04:11 AM Thread Name: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa (D Latham/M Jaffe) Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa (D Latham/M Jaffe)
I'll go back and read this whole thread but I just watched an Australian Sci-fi movie called Predestination. A couple of times in the movie someone was playing I'm My Own Grandpa on a juke box and it turns out that it is a core theme of the movie.
Hi Piers Plowman, I've created a new thread, specific to our discussion on our favourite Sci-Fi and/or fantasy fiction authors: BS: Sci-Fi and/or fantasy authors I didn't want to sully a DTStudy thread with unrelated content.
-Joe Offer- |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa (D Latham/M Jaffe) From: Jim Dixon Date: 18 Aug 17 - 12:29 PM I was intrigued by the quote that Jim Rolfs posted awhile back, so I traced it via Google books, and it is exactly as he described it (except for the book title—but then maybe Jim had a later edition than this one, and the book was retitled). I found it in Wit and Humor of the Age: Comprising Wit, Humor, Pathos, Ridicule, Satires, Dialects, Puns, Conundrums, Riddles, Charades, Jokes and Magic by Mark Twain, Robt. J. Burdette, Josh Billings, Alex. Sweet, Eli Perkins (etc.), (Lexington, Ky.: Huffman & Johnson, 1884), page 87. Since Twain is the first author listed on the title page, it's easy to see how a bit of sloppy scholarship (or a poor memory) resulted in the quote being misattributed to him. I agree with Jim Rolfs that Eli Perkins was the more likely author of this piece that is unattributed in the original. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Busy Lizzie Date: 11 Apr 10 - 04:01 AM Try Anthony John Clarke website! |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Jim Dixon Date: 11 Apr 10 - 03:05 AM From Alden's Illustrated Family Miscellany, Oxford, England, Vol. XII, No. 133, September 1865. DOMESTIC PERPLEXITIES.—A correspondent of the Drawer is involved in domestic perplexities. He writes, "I got acquainted with a young widow, who lived with her step-daughter in the same house. I married. My father fell, shortly after it, in love with the step-daughter of my wife, and married her. My wife became the mother-in-law, and also the daughter-in-law, of my own father; my wife's step-daughter is my step-mother, and I am the step-father of my mother-in-law. My stepmother, who is the step-daughter of my wife, has a boy; he is naturally my step-brother because he is the son of my father and of my step-mother; but because he is son of my wife's step-daughter, so is my wife the grandmother of the little boy, and I am the grandfather of my step-brother. My wife has also a boy; my stepmother is consequently the step-sister of my boy, and is also his grandmother, because he is the child of her step-son; and my father is the brother-in-law of my son, because he has got his step-sister for a wife. I am the brother of my own son, who is the son of my step-mother; I am the brother-in-law of my mother, my wife is the aunt of her son, my son is the grandson of my father, and I am my own grandfather." |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Jim Dixon Date: 11 Apr 10 - 02:41 AM From Wit and Humor: A Choice Collection by Marshall Brown, John Wesley Beatty (Chicago: S. C. Griggs and Company, 1882), page 213: SOMEWHAT MIXED. "What's the matter?" "Sam, who am I?" "Why, you are yourself—Bob Harrison, ain't you?" "No, far from it." "Why, what's the matter?" "Well, sir, I am so mixed up I don't know who I am." "Don't take it so hard to heart." "I can't help it." "Well, sir, what's the matter?" "Why, I am married." "Married! Why, sir, you should be happy." "Yes, but I ain't." "Why, all married men are supposed to be happy." "Yes, but how many are so?" "Well, sir, as I said before, don't take it so hard; tell us all about it." "Well, Sam, I'll tell you how it is. You see I married a widow, and this widow had a daughter." "Oh, yes, I see how it is; you have been making love to the daughter." "No; worse than that! You see my father was a widower, and married that daughter; so that makes my father my son-in-law, don't it?" "Well, is that all?" "No; I only wish it was. Don't you see, my stepdaughter is my step-mother, ain't she? Well, then, her mother is my grandmother, ain't she? I am married to her, ain't I? So that makes me my own grandfather doesn't it?" |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,guest, C. Payne Date: 10 Apr 10 - 03:18 PM I have been trying for 2 years to get a copy of the Muppet's tape (or CD preferably) called Silly Songs. It's an older one containg I'm My Own Grandpa, Lydia the Tatooed Lady, among others. Can you help? |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,Jim Rolfs (pen name--Douglas Marshall Date: 01 Aug 09 - 12:29 AM I have a book, copyright 1883 and 1901, entitlie "Library of Wit and Humor" by Eli Perkins and Others. The cover of the book has a photo of Samuel Clemens who, of course, wrote under the pen name of Mark Twain. On the inside is a sketch of Melville D. Landon who wrote under the pen name of Eli Perkins. The "Many Others" includes Josh Billings (who was initially promoted by Eli Perkins), Bret Harte, and Eugene Field. Josh Billings, who's real name was Henry Wheeler Shaw, was probably the second most popular humorist, lecturer, and writer in the US in the latter 1800s. On page 87 of the book is found a short piece entitled, "Very Closely Related" that goes like this: "Well, Sam, I'll tell you how it is. You see, I married a widow, and this widow had a daughter. Then my father, being a widower, married our daughter so you see my father is my own son-in-law." "Yes, I see." "Then again my step-daughter is my step-mother, ain't she? Well, then, her mother is my grandmother, ain't she? I am married to her, ain't I? So that makes me my own grandfather, doesn't it?" Many of the writings in this book are credited specifically to one or another of the contributors, but quite a few are not. The "Very Closely Related" piece is one of the ones that is not. If this book is the one the song idea came from, it's as likely that Eli Perkins wrote the own-Grandpa thing a Mark Twain. It does sound very much like Mark Twain's style, but I think it sounds more like Eli Perkins. Also, the last writer credited before this piece was Eli Perkins. It's impossible to tell for sure from this volume who actually authored the piece. Of course the source could have been a different book altogether. This gives me an idea for a funny song about 19th humorists with pen names that wrote alike--maybe a guy named Arthur who's his own author. No, that's lame--hafta work on that. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,anonymous Date: 11 Feb 09 - 02:46 AM about the step-step thing above, i believe that two steps cancel out and become an in-law, and also, i have 2 stepuncles, so they do exist, (but saying "stepuncle larry" is too long, so i just call them uncles) |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Nigel Parsons Date: 06 Oct 07 - 11:57 AM This song could now be made even shorter following a news item in the Daily Telegraph Pensioner sperm donor for his 'grandchild' CHEERS Nigel |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Seamus Kennedy Date: 23 Sep 07 - 11:15 AM I sang this song at a kids's show earlier this year ( a lot of kids and grandparents there). The audience loved it, but the organizers got one complaint from a disgruntled patron who asked, "Why is Seamus Kennedy singing that filthy Irish song 'I'm my Own Grandpa?'" You can't win 'em all. Seamus |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,Lucia Song Date: 23 Sep 07 - 03:32 AM Hello Louie Roy! This is my email address: luciasong8@hotmail.com Could you send that MP3 song to me? I'm be very glad to receive it. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Barry Finn Date: 07 Apr 07 - 02:46 PM "I can't say that this is Twain's text - but if Bill Foster says he saw a handwritten copy from 1829, I believe him. Bill is a very credible source." Mark Twain was born in 1835. So not only was Mark Twain's death great exaggerated but so was his birth. Barry |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: oldhippie Date: 26 Nov 06 - 08:47 AM In addition to those mentioned, there are also recordings by Guy Lombardo and Steve Goodman. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Susanne (skw) Date: 25 Nov 06 - 10:45 PM On the radio the other day I heard a song by the Viennese songwriter Hugo Wiener, sung by Wiener died in 1993, and this song seems to be from the Seventies. I suspect it is an adaptation of our song above, though so far I haven't found proof one way or the other. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,janette Date: 14 Nov 06 - 02:13 AM funny! hehe! this is our assignment about relations anf functions! its really a great song! |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Peace Date: 18 Jun 06 - 08:10 PM Only melody for it I have heard is here. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Peace Date: 18 Jun 06 - 07:38 PM "I can't say that this is Twain's text - but if Bill Foster says he saw a handwritten copy from 1829, I believe him. Bill is a very credible source." Mark Twain was born in 1835. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,GUEST: RHR Date: 18 Jun 06 - 06:16 PM hi- I got here by googling for "I'm My Own Grandma" and Canova because I remembered that the 78 my dad used to play was by Judy Canova. Never heard of Esmerelda. Sounds like many, many people have covered it, which I did not realize until I came here. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,Jim Date: 24 Apr 06 - 11:14 AM I first heard this song sung by Jimmy Dean, not the rebel without a cause, but the guy who used to flog sausages on TV. Another great version was Michael Cooney's (I'm not sure if it's available on record). I used to teach music in public school and about 2 years ago I ran into one of my former students at a gig. She was all grown up with kids of her own, but she requested "that song about incest that you used to sing us in greade 4." I got her to listen carefully and she admitted that there was no incest in the song. I think only a public school secretary can fully understand it on first listening. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Kaleea Date: 23 Apr 06 - 03:15 PM I was at the Walnut Valley Music Festival in Winfield, Kansas when 9-11 happened. It was quite an unusual festival year, as you may imagine. There was not a lot of laughter going on. I was sitting with some old & new friends for the performance of the Prairie Rose Wranglers who had come to perform in the place of some who could not make it. (it was amazing how many folks loaded up the vans & trucks, as many could not fly, & headed to Winfield that year to help out) The Wranglers sang some & told some of the usual Cowboy type humor which reaped little laughter. Then they went into "I'm My Own Grandpa." It was an old song which many had heard, but the Wranglers were mugging such faces & hamming it up that we started to laugh and just couldn't stop. Those gentlemen brought some sorely needed guffahs to all of us-for which we were tremendously grateful in a difficult time. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,Bob Coltman Date: 23 Apr 06 - 07:04 AM One of the best and earliest recordings of this (a 78 rpm c. 1947 or 48? which makes it shortly after this song was composed in '47) was by Grandpa (what else) Jones. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,Dave Hemsworth Date: 23 Apr 06 - 01:41 AM Hey Louie Roy Could you send me the mp3 to I'm My Own Grandpa. My address is gretawog@hotmail.com cheers |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Seamus Kennedy Date: 21 Nov 05 - 01:41 AM Guest AJP, would you please become a member here at Mudcat, and PM me. I'm one of the people who mistakenly recorded the song as Public Domain, on the word of other musicians who told me it was Traditional. This was over 23 years ago, before the Internet, when songs and authors were not as easily tracked down as they are today. I'd like to rectify the situation. Thanks. Seamus Kennedy |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,AJP Date: 21 Nov 05 - 01:31 AM Moe Jaffe was my father. And, yes indeed, he and Dwight Latham did write "Grandpa." The Website cited (no pun intended) contains material written by my brother Howard in honor of the centennial of my father's birth. It was put on the Net by our niece, Debbie J. Lonzo and Oscar were only the first of a long line of charlatans who have erroneously claimed that they wrote the song. For some peculiar reason, several people have assumed it was public domain and attempted (with some initial success) to publish it under their own names through BMI. BMI should have checked and seen that it was an ASCAP song. After being threatened with several lawsuits, they now acknowledge that it is not their song. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Dave'sWife Date: 19 Nov 05 - 06:05 AM Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Hawker - PM Date: 03 Sep 01 - 06:45 PM I remember the muppets doing a superb rendition of this song! Lucy Hawker..if you are still here (your post was in '01)... That album was MUPPET SILLY SONGS a terrific album indeed that included kermit singing Lydia the Tattoed Lady. I used to babysit for a little boy named Quinn when I was in Grad School. I had him all day 2 days a week and the only way i could get him to sit still and eat lunch was to put on MUPPT SILLY SONGS. There was a catch however. if 'I'm my own Grandpa' came on whilst he was eating his soup, he would wait for the chorus and the start banging the spoon, full or empty, on the highchair tray, singing along with the chorus at the top of his lungs! Alphabet soup all over the kitchen! Those were fun days. I highly recommend that album which I'm sure can be obtained on CD by now, to anyone with a small boy. The songs are just perfect for them. There's even one called 'The Worm song' |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Louie Roy Date: 18 Nov 05 - 04:09 PM I can email an MP3 of I'm my own grandpa by Lonzo and Oscar to anyone who wants it.PM me your email address and I will be very happy to send the MP3 to you.Louie Roy |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Jim Dixon Date: 04 Nov 05 - 08:02 PM Joe: Yes, I believe the song is accurate IF you allow that a stepson can be called a son, a stepfather can be called father, and so on. If you insist on strict accuracy, that would require you to insert a lot of "steps." Just for fun, I decided to do that: This made my dad my stepson-in-law and changed my very life. My stepdaughter was my stepmother, 'cause she was my father's wife. To complicate the matter even though it brought me joy, I soon became the father of a bouncing baby boy. My little baby then became a stepbrother-in-law to Dad, And so became my stepuncle though it was very sad. For if he was my stepuncle then that also made him stepbrother Of the widow's grown-up daughter who of course was my stepmother. Father's wife then had a son who kept him on the run, And he became my stepgrandchild for he was my stepdaughter's son. My wife is now my stepmother's stepmother and it makes me blue, Because although she is my wife she's my stepgrandmother, too. Now if my wife is my stepgrandmother then I'm her stepgrandchild, And every time I think of it it nearly drives me wild, For now I have become the strangest case I ever saw. As husband of my stepgrandmother, I am my own stepstepgrandpa. Oh, I'm my own stepstepgrandpa I'm my own stepstepgrandpa It sounds funny I know But it really is so Oh, I'm my own stepstepgrandpa. * * * OK, I never heard of a stepuncle, or a stepstep-anything, but I believe my construction is logical. It might even get a few laughs to perform it that way, but only if the audience is already familiar with the song. I know what you mean by being a literalist (although I think I grew out of my literalist phase by the time I reached 16). I do remember being bothered by the song TENNESSEE WALTZ when I was young. Assuming the song told a story that was literally true, how could she sing, "I was dancin' with my darlin' to the Tennessee Waltz" when this song WAS the Tennessee waltz? In other words, if it's true that someone really danced and then later wrote a song about it, and the song was called TENNESSEE WALTZ, then what song was she dancing to? OK, if you allow that the story was fictional, then it was a badly written one, because it was illogical and impossible. Of course you can eliminate the paradox if you assume she only danced to the tune of the Tennessee Waltz, and the lyrics were written later, but I probably didn't know then that new lyrics were sometimes written to pre-existing tunes. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,from Hull, England Date: 04 Nov 05 - 06:41 PM |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: MartinRyan Date: 04 Nov 05 - 03:08 PM I almost heard this song for the first time last night! The guy who started off on it was far too drunk to remember where his feet went - never mind the words of the song! Ah well.... Regards |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Tannywheeler Date: 04 Nov 05 - 12:14 PM This is a silly, fun song. I remember when my cousin had her first child. My Uncle John was so tickled he would sing the first line of the chorus a few times going around the house. I wondered how someone could be so idiotic about a baby. They were OK and could be pleasant to be around, but he was goofy. Then I married, had kids, survived it, and had grandkids. I understand the goofiness at last. The only right reaction....Tw |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Louie Roy Date: 03 Nov 05 - 12:04 PM Anyone who would like to order a CD fo this song by LOnzo and Oscar can do so at his site Thomas Frank The Music Barn Ltd Box 1083 Niagara Falls New York 14304 USA I have no idea what the cost is but you can contact with email to tom@themusicbarn.com or visit their web page at www.themusicbarn.com or their Fax is 905 513 6918 |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Susanne (skw) Date: 29 Oct 05 - 05:22 PM As Iain MacKintosh used to say in his intro: "It's not legal - but it's possible." Joe, no doubt your stepson is correct about the stepgrandpa bit, but it's a lot less singable! |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Joe Offer Date: 29 Oct 05 - 02:35 PM My 16-yr-old stepson wonders whether anybody has ever charted this out to see if it all works logically. I said it's all mixed in with stepmothers and stepfathers and step-this and step-that. As far as I can see, all the singer might be able to claim is that he is his own stepgrandpa - but it's best to just enjou the song and not worry about that. In my experience, 16-yr-old boys are literalists, so they are unable to make the logical jumps needed to enjoy a song like Grandpa. If things aren't exactly right, then they have no value at all to a 16-yr-old boy. They have no room at all for imagination, unless the object of imagination is female. Some 16-yr-old boys never grow up - we call them "fundamentalists." But back to Grandpa, has anybody got this all figured out? -Joe Offer- |
Subject: Lyr Add: I'M MY OWN GRANDMAW (Esmereldy) From: GUEST,pindell@artelco.com Date: 13 Aug 05 - 11:43 AM The group Sidesaddle did a female version of I’M MY OWN GRANDPA titled I’M MY OWN GRANDMA. I really need the lyrics of the female version. Can anyone find them and send ASAP. Thanks This was posted in one of the other threads on this song. Dale Rose thinks it may have been sung originally by Jo Stafford, and I did find a listing for "I'm My Own Grandmaw" on a CD called Jo Stafford on Capitol. I think it's the version Sidesaddle sings on their Saratoga Gap CD, but I don't have that CD. -Joe Offer (e-mail sent)-
Posted By: Ferrara 08-Jul-04 - 05:32 PM Thread Name: Lyr Req: I'm My Own Grandpa Subject: Lyr Add: I'M MY OWN GRANDMA
Funny. I sang this on July 1 at an Open Sing. We had a 78rpm of a woman singing it. The singer could have been Judy Canova, but I think it was Esmereldy, and the flip side was probably "Hooo-eee, Ain't Nature Grand!".... Here's how she sung it, more or less.... |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 06 Mar 05 - 08:24 PM I once saw a performance on TV where the singer had a chart - might have been on the 2 Ronnies.... |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,from Gina Boyanowski Date: 06 Mar 05 - 12:01 PM For those thinking that I'm my own grandpa is illegal or wrong for some reason. It is perfectly legal and could happen. The man was 23 and probably married a widow some years older than himself. Then his widowed father fell in love with the widow's daughter (his stepdaughter). There was probably, again an age difference, but it was true love. And being widowed and not at all related through blood to his true love they married. Nothing wrong, nothing gross, nothing illegal at least where I live. True love in both cases. The song is a mind bender, but to really figure it out you've got to put it down on paper. |
Subject: Re: Tom Arnold Movie From: George Seto - af221@chebucto.ns.ca Date: 09 Jul 04 - 02:54 PM In the message left earlier, I think it said the movie was "The Stupids". That's the way I read it. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,wattsnteens@aol.com Date: 09 Jul 04 - 11:23 AM What is the name of that movie, with Tom Arnold? |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Little Robyn Date: 22 Mar 04 - 06:19 AM Our local newspaper today had this Reuters story from India: 'A 25 year-old Indian man has married his 80-year-old grandmother because he wants to take care of her. "I felt she needed extra care as she is old. I can look after her better as a husband than as a grandson," Narayan Biswas said. The couple married in a Hindu ceremony near Panchpara, 150 kilometres west of Calcutta.' I wonder if he knows the song??? Robyn |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Stewie Date: 06 Mar 04 - 06:49 PM The final stanza of Fiddlin' John Carson's 'Papa's Billy Goat'[OK 45077 ca March 1924] is a lyric of similar ilk: Then I acted an old fool, married me a widow And the widow had a daughter and her name was Maude Father being a widower married her daughter And now my daddy is my own son-in-law --Stewie. |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Susanne (skw) Date: 06 Mar 04 - 04:56 PM Thanks, guest! |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST Date: 06 Mar 04 - 02:48 AM Suzanne: Here is information about Moe Jaffe: http://home.earthlink.net/~jaffed/moejaffe/index.html |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST Date: 27 Feb 04 - 12:18 PM You can also hear a version of this in the movie "The Stupids" starring Tom Arnold. The movie IS stupid but the song is GREAT!!!!! |
Subject: RE: DTStudy: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,someone Date: 31 Jan 04 - 03:05 PM it's a good song |
Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,bob Date: 23 Jan 04 - 06:22 AM hu the hell r the singers in the muppet show song of im my own grandpa |
Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Jacqk Date: 23 Nov 03 - 07:51 PM Supporting the Moe Jaffe and Dwight Latham authorship is a record at the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers. You can look at their record here; you have to enter the name in the search field because I couldn't link directly to the page. Past the following into the search field: I m my own grandpa That should bring up the record. As far as reliablity of this info, I can't say. But it looks fairly professional. Jack |
Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Tiger Date: 21 Nov 03 - 09:44 AM I know that one well, but also have another that's completely different in a collection by "Blue Grass Roy" Freeman. It starts with "I am the most related man that walks the earth today." The tune is similar to "When the Work's All Done This Fall" I'll see if I can get it transcribed over the weekend. |
Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,neilania Date: 20 Nov 03 - 08:37 PM and all the time i thought it was australia's Chad Morgan that wrote it. if you wantto hear some funny stuff, search him on the p2p music programs. |
Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: GUEST,Andrew O'Reilly Date: 05 Jun 03 - 09:58 PM I just found this thread searching on Google for the same information...then I remembered where I'd found it before. If I may offer more fuel to the grandpaternal fire... http://php.indiana.edu/~jbmorris/LYRICS/grandpa According to this, Lonzo and Oscar wrote it, Jaffe and Latham composed it, and Lombardo, Harris, Jo Stafford, Homer & Jethro, and Ray Stevens all recorded versions of it (Stafford, of course, being her own grandma). Hope this helps. |
Subject: RE: I'm My Own Grandpa From: Jim Dixon Date: 29 May 03 - 10:15 PM I strongly doubt that the quote that Joe posted (in the box above) is authentic. It doesn't sound like Mark Twain's style to me. It isn't particularly funny. Even when he wasn't writing for publication, Mark Twain was funnier than that. For example, while searching Twain's works for the word "grandfather" I found this (at Mark Twain's Letters, Complete, Arranged with Comment by Albert Bigelow Paine):
November 14, 1905. DEAR MR. ROW,--That alleged portrait has a private history. Sarony was as much of an enthusiast about wild animals as he was about photography; and when Du Chaillu brought the first Gorilla to this country in 1819 he came to me in a fever of excitement and asked me if my father was of record and authentic. I said he was; then Sarony, without any abatement of his excitement asked if my grandfather also was of record and authentic. I said he was. Then Sarony, with still rising excitement and with joy added to it, said he had found my great grandfather in the person of the gorilla, and had recognized him at once by his resemblance to me. I was deeply hurt but did not reveal this, because I knew Sarony meant no offense for the gorilla had not done him any harm, and he was not a man who would say an unkind thing about a gorilla wantonly. I went with him to inspect the ancestor, and examined him from several points of view, without being able to detect anything more than a passing resemblance. "Wait," said Sarony with confidence, "let me show you." He borrowed my overcoat--and put it on the gorilla. The result was surprising. I saw that the gorilla while not looking distinctly like me was exactly what my great grand father would have looked like if I had had one. Sarony photographed the creature in that overcoat, and spread the picture about the world. It has remained spread about the world ever since. It turns up every week in some newspaper somewhere or other. It is not my favorite, but to my exasperation it is everybody else's. Do you think you could get it suppressed for me? I will pay the limit. Sincerely yours, S. L. CLEMENS. |
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