SATIRISTS regard anything and everything as grist for their mill, so when a celestial object comes along creating a mild panic no self-respecting humorist could let that pass. A good example would be . . .
"A Curious Pleasure Excursion."
By Mark Twain (Samuel Langhorne Clemens, 1835-1910; Wikipedia HERE; the ISFDb HERE; the SFE HERE; and the IMDb HERE).
First appearance: The New York Herald Tribune, July 6, 1874.
Reprinted in Fantasy and Science Fiction, June 1961 (today's text).
Reprints page (ISFDb HERE).
Short short short story (4 pages).
Online at The Luminist Archives (HERE; go to text page 60).
"And, at all events, if we cannot inspire love we shall, at least, compel respect for our country wherever we go."
OUR author gets in a few digs at some of his bêtes noire, including religion, foreign policy, and politicians that he found distasteful.
References:
- "Louis Armstrong" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "Weather Bird" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "the 'Comet Scare' in the summer of 1874"; "Mr. Coggia":
"The public scare regarding the comet [C/1874 H1 (Coggia)] was satirized by Mark Twain in his short story 'A Curious Pleasure Excursion'." (Wikipedia HERE.) Comets have always been of interest to the public, and fictioneers like Twain have not been slack in exploiting that interest. (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "Mr. Barnum" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "the tenth or twentieth magnitude" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- Astronomical references (Wikipedia links):
"Jupiter" (HERE); "Saturn" (HERE); "Venus" (HERE); "Uranus" (HERE); "Mars" (HERE); "Mercury" (HERE); "THE DOG STAR" (HERE); "the Great Bear" (HERE); "Moon" (HERE); "the Milky Way" (HERE); and "constellations" (HERE).
- "General Butler" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "Mr. Hale, of Maine" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "Mr. Shepherd" (Wikipedia HERE.)
- "Mr. Richardson": Without a given name or a title we have no idea who this person was, so take your pick from these (Wikipedia links): (HERE), (HERE), (HERE), or (HERE).
Resources:
- About eighty-two years after he died, Mark Twain made an unexpected appearance in a two-part episode of a sci-fi TV show (WARNING! SPOILERS! Wikipedia HERE).
- Off and on during his prodigious writing career Mark Twain dabbled in what would later be termed "science fiction," today's story being an example. Twain's SFF was definitively (we think) collected in 2003 in Tales of Wonder, from which we extract its table of contents (ISFDb):
Introduction (The Science Fiction of Mark Twain) • (1984) • essay by David Ketterer
ix • Texts and Acknowledgments (The Science Fiction of Mark Twain) • (1984) • essay by David Ketterer
xiii • Introduction (Tales of Wonder) • (2003) • essay by David Ketterer
3 • Petrified Man • (1862) • short story by Mark Twain
4 • Earthquake Almanac • (1865) • short story by Mark Twain
6 • A Curious Pleasure Excursion • (1874) • short story by Mark Twain
10 • The Curious Republic of Gondour • (1870) • short story by Mark Twain
14 • Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven • (1907) • novelette by Mark Twain (variant of Extract from Captain Stormfield's Visit to Heaven)
61 • The Loves of Alonzo Fitz Clarence and Rosannah Ethelton • (1878) • short story by Mark Twain
77 • Time Travel Contexts from A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court • (1984) • short fiction by Mark Twain
96 • Mental Telegraphy • (1891) • short story by Mark Twain
112 • Mental Telegraphy Again • (1895) • short story by Mark Twain
117 • My Platonic Sweetheart • (1912) • short story by Mark Twain
127 • From the "London Times" of 1904 • (1898) • short story by Mark Twain
139 • The Great Dark • (1942) • novelette by Mark Twain
176 • The Secret History of Eddypus, the World-Empire • (1972) • novella by Mark Twain
226 • Sold to Satan • (1923) • short story by Mark Twain
233 • 3,000 Years Among the Microbes • (1966) • novella by Mark Twain (variant of Three Thousand Years Among the Microbes)
327 • "The Mysterious Balloonist" • (1975) • short fiction by Mark Twain
331 • Synopsis of "A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage" • (1945) • short fiction by Mark Twain
334 • "The Generation Iceberg" • (1935) • short fiction by Mark Twain
335 • Shackleford's Ghost • (1984) • short story by Mark Twain
338 • "History 1,000 Years from Now" • (1972) • short story by Mark Twain
341 • Explanatory Notes (The Science Fiction of Mark Twain) • (1984) • essay by David Ketterer
381 • Selected Bibliography (The Science Fiction of Mark Twain) • (1984) • essay by David Ketterer.
- It was very recently that we encountered Twain's take on the awful demise of a Roman bigwig (HERE).
The bottom line:
Unless otherwise noted, all bibliographical data are derived from The FictionMags Index created by William G. Contento.
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