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<br/>
<h2> DINNER TO HAMILTON W. MABIE </h2>
<p>ADDRESS DELIVERED APRIL 29, 1901<br/>
<br/>
In introducing Mr. Clemens, Doctor Van Dyke said:<br/>
<br/>
“The longer the speaking goes on to-night the more I wonder how<br/>
I got this job, and the only explanation I can give for it is<br/>
that it is the same kind of compensation for the number of<br/>
articles I have sent to The Outlook, to be rejected by Hamilton<br/>
W. Mabie. There is one man here to-night that has a job cut<br/>
out for him that none of you would have had—a man whose humor<br/>
has put a girdle of light around the globe, and whose sense of<br/>
humor has been an example for all five continents. He is going<br/>
to speak to you. Gentlemen, you know him best as Mark Twain.”<br/></p>
<p>MR. CHAIRMAN AND GENTLEMEN,—This man knows now how it feels to be
the chief guest, and if he has enjoyed it he is the first man I have ever
seen in that position that did enjoy it. And I know, by side-remarks which
he made to me before his ordeal came upon him, that he was feeling as some
of the rest of us have felt under the same circumstances. He was afraid
that he would not do himself justice; but he did—to my surprise. It
is a most serious thing to be a chief guest on an occasion like this, and
it is admirable, it is fine. It is a great compliment to a man that he
shall come out of it so gloriously as Mr. Mabie came out of it tonight—to
my surprise. He did it well.</p>
<p>He appears to be editor of The Outlook, and notwithstanding that, I have
every admiration, because when everything is said concerning The Outlook,
after all one must admit that it is frank in its delinquencies, that it is
outspoken in its departures from fact, that it is vigorous in its mistaken
criticisms of men like me. I have lived in this world a long, long time,
and I know you must not judge a man by the editorials that he puts in his
paper. A man is always better than his printed opinions. A man always
reserves to himself on the inside a purity and an honesty and a justice
that are a credit to him, whereas the things that he prints are just the
reverse.</p>
<p>Oh yes, you must not judge a man by what he writes in his paper. Even in
an ordinary secular paper a man must observe some care about it; he must
be better than the principles which he puts in print. And that is the case
with Mr. Mabie. Why, to see what he writes about me and the missionaries
you would think he did not have any principles. But that is Mr. Mabie in
his public capacity. Mr. Mabie in his private capacity is just as clean a
man as I am.</p>
<p>In this very room, a month or two ago, some people admired that portrait;
some admired this, but the great majority fastened on that, and said,
“There is a portrait that is a beautiful piece of art.” When that portrait
is a hundred years old it will suggest what were the manners and customs
in our time. Just as they talk about Mr. Mabie to-night, in that
enthusiastic way, pointing out the various virtues of the man and the
grace of his spirit, and all that, so was that portrait talked about. They
were enthusiastic, just as we men have been over the character and the
work of Mr. Mabie. And when they were through they said that portrait,
fine as it is, that work, beautiful as it is, that piece of humanity on
that canvas, gracious and fine as it is, does not rise to those
perfections that exist in the man himself. Come up, Mr. Alexander. [The
reference was to James W. Alexander, who happened to be sitting—beneath
the portrait of himself on the wall.] Now, I should come up and show
myself. But he cannot do it, he cannot do it. He was born that way, he was
reared in that way. Let his modesty be an example, and I wish some of you
had it, too. But that is just what I have been saying—that portrait,
fine as it is, is not as fine as the man it represents, and all the things
that have been said about Mr. Mabie, and certainly they have been very
nobly worded and beautiful, still fall short of the real Mabie.</p>
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