The death of a child is never an easy thing for any parent
to go through, including Samuel Clemens.
On the heels of the death of Susie Clemens, Samuel Clemens attempted to
make sense of life and of death through his work as Mark Twain. Throughout his life, as evidence through his
work and his interaction with his wife Livy and various others, Twain has
struggled with religion and the God of the Bible. His story, The Mysterious Stranger, is one of many works that attempt to grapple
with these ideas. One scene at the
beginning of The Mysterious Stranger
sets up this struggle to understand religion, life, and death. Satan, an angel builds a clay people then
sets them in motion to live life as if they were human. Satan even allows the children that he meets
to help him build clay people – crippled and poorly made people. As soon as the
people were made the “went diligently to work and cleared and leveled off a
space a couple of yards square in the grass and begun to build a cunning little
castle in it”(61). In other words, they
went about their little lives “as natural as life” (61). Twain uses Satan and these clay people as a
metaphor for how he views our relationship with the God of the Bible, if there
was one.
The narrator says of Satan’s behavior and thoughts of humans
that we are “of paltry poor consequence; often you would think he was talking
about flies, if you didn’t know” (63).
In this he sets Satan, and God, up as a character that is above the
everyday existence of humanity. Our
actions, our feelings, and our lives are of no consequence to the characters Twain
has created in his story and by extension of the metaphor, to God. The narrator later says the Satan spoke of
humanity in a “matter-of-course way and without bitterness, just as a person
might talk about brick or manure or any other thing that was of no consequence
and hadn’t feelings” (61). The children
even get wrapped up in his enchantments; they forgot everything while they
reveled in the stories Satan told them. At
one point the children even laugh of when Satan had brought to life two of the
worst clay people and they moved about as if they were drunk. Their humanity was still intact,
however. They are upset when Satan
crushes the poorly made clay people and he said that it didn’t matter because
more can be made. At the end of the
small clay lives, Satan causes a storm and an earth quake the swallows up all
the clay people. Satan ends the lives he
created with no second thought and no remorse.
Twain’s life had been marked by several senseless and
difficult to handle deaths, including the death of two of his children by this
point. Twain sees God as a figure above
humanity, willing to play with lives, uncaring, and remorseless when human
tragedies happen. This worldview is no surprise
coming from a deeply conflicted and cynical man with a keen eye for
observation.