We received an extraordinary gift recently: a writer’s dime.
It came from our friend Bill who had given great thought into the gift.
As a coin collector, he had heard a story and went in quest of the writer’s dime.
When he found it, he brought it and the tale to us.
A terrific gift.
I wasn’t taking notes as he told us, but my memory of the story went like this.
The Story
In May 1864, American writer Mark Twain arrived in San Francisco with his pockets bulging with promise from the gold fields.
He and a friend lived a high life in the city by the bay and enjoyed themselves as only twenty-something unattached bachelors could at the time.
As a writer, Twain expected his words to keep the money flowing, or if nothing else the shares he owned in what surely was a profitable mine could help.
Reality eventually intervened, and he had to find a job at the local Daily Morning Call.
During his time in San Francisco, Twain made a close friend, writer Bret Harte.
Harte has found a sinecure at the San Francisco mint, an office job, and Twain often stopped in to chat.
It soon became clear that a reporter’s job on an editor’s terms didn’t really appeal to Twain and he was fired in October.
As Twain himself put it: “It was awful drudgery for a lazy man, and I was born lazy.”
Twain had some income from articles he wrote for the Californian magazine, but it wasn’t sufficient.
He and his roommate moved lodgings five times.
Emptying pockets
At the end of October, according to biographer Fred Kaplan in The Singular Mark Twain,
“A local reporter for the Morning Call published a paragraph about ‘a melancholy-looking Arab, known as Marque Twein,’ who by necessity, like an Arab folding his tent, moves often.”
The proud Twain was mortified by his situation and took to avoiding his friends.
He wandered the streets with only a dime in his pocket, “clinging to his dime in the fear that actual pennilessness ‘might suggest suicide,’ according to Kaplan.
Twain’s family was no help–he had bragged about his ability to make money, he couldn’t tell them the truth.
Bill handed me the dime. “Harte worked at the mint, Twain carried a dime in his pocket as a talisman. This may or may not be that writer’s dime.”
Fun to consider the possibilities, isn’t it?
Mark Twain, of course, picked himself up and went on to greater glory. Not having any money forced him back on his cleverness and to explore other opportunities. He went back up to the California foothills and while in a mining camp, wrote several stories that he sold to the Californian.
His writing career eventually felt secure enough he didn’t need to carry that dime anymore.
We’re not collectors, though we do own a possible Chagall painting (you can read that fun story here and here).
The writer’s dime, though, represents a thought gift from a friend, to a writer who lives not far from San Francisco.
It’s encouraging to think what having a dime like this in my pocket could mean, isn’t it?
Tweetables
The writer’s dime–owned by Mark Twain? Click to Tweet
A fun gift to a writer: the writer’s dime. Click to Tweet
Did Mark Twain own the writer’s dime or not? Who cares? Click to Tweet
Simone says
What a thoughtful gift?! I wish I was that intentional in my gift giving.
It’s also encouraging to know that even The Great Mark Twain struggled with self doubt:-).
Michelle Ule says
Excellent point about the seemingly always cocky Mark Twain. His later life was filled with sorrow–he loved his wife and daughters dearly.
Robi says
I LOVE this story, whether was actually his dime or not. Remember when: if you gave a purse as a gift, you were supposed to put a coin in? Remember when: shoes that had a spot for a dime to make a phone call? (Ya, you youngsters, we had “payphone booths”…like Superman).
May your stories always connect with people so that you never need “the dime”.
Michelle Ule says
Thanks, Robi! And yes, I will never forget needing a dime for a phone call (got stranded at the San Pedro library as a 13 year old one night! Ellen Eliason’s father gave me a ride home.)