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This text has been superseded by a newly published text
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To William Wright (Dan De Quille)
28 January 1876 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: CLjC, UCCL 01304)
(SUPERSEDED)
Dear Dan:

I have been through that mill (of “When is your book going to be out?”) so often that it long ago ceased to have any power to annoy me—though when the “Innocents” was in press I confess I wished a million times that I had never written a book. It is the same mill that every man who projects an enterprise of any kind has got to suffer anguish in once. It isn’t confined to book scribblers, by a long shot. How many hundred times a week do you suppose Mackey is asked when the new machinery will be up, & when the new mills will be finished, & all that sort of thing? Keep your shirt on, man, & remember what I long ago told you—viz., that Bliss never yet came within 4 months of getting a book out at the time he said he would. On the Innocents he fell short overstepped his word & his contract 13 13 months—& I suffered questioning all that time.1explanatory note

Williams has finished the pictures for my book & tells me he is on at work on yours, now.

You needn’t speak to Mackey any more about those letters.2explanatory note I can It doesn’t matter. But you may send me a peck of your best pine nuts per express, at your earliest convenience, with bill for the same. I want to spread them before company for a novelty. Your book is going to interfere a good deal with my Sketches, but I don’t mind that., if it don’t interfere too much.3explanatory note

Yrs.
Mark.
4explanatory note
Textual Commentary
Previous Publication:

Berkove 1988, 9.

Provenance:

The MS was one of nine letters from Clemens to Wright which after Wright’s death “were left with his daughter, Mell Evans. She, in turn, passed them on to her daughter, Irma Evans Morris. Effie Mona Mack learned of them while doing research for Mark Twain in Nevada [(Mack 1947)], and purchased photographic negatives of them” (Berkove 1988, 4, 18 n. 1). Mrs. Morris bequeathed the letters to her three children. After Evans Morris’s death in 1990, the letters were sold, and most were purchased from Admirable Books in March 1993 by CLjC. Owned in 1989 by Evans Morris, Rosemary Morris, and Marjory Anderson, descendants of William Wright, the manuscript was subsequently bought by CLjC.

More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens persistently overstated the delay in publication of The Innocents Abroad . He had submitted the manuscript to Elisha Bliss in August 1868, expecting publication that fall. The book was published at the end of July 1869 ( L3 , xxvi-xxvii, 284–87, 291–93). Wright’s letter to Clemens, complaining of delay in publication of The Big Bonanza , does not survive. On 27 January Wright had written Bliss that he was “beseiged” about the book (CtY-BR, UCLC 35603):

People here are becoming very impatient, as I told them some time ago that it would be out about the 1st of January; Mark Twain having written me to that effect. . . . I wish you to get out the book as soon as possible, without cutting down the illustrations. Please let me know about how soon you can get it out, as I am asked dozens of times every day and no longer know what answer to make. I am also getting many subscribers of which I make mental note; if I knew when the book would be out I might be taking down the names of these, but as it is now I can give the would-be subscribers no satisfaction in regard to the time when the book will make its appearance. Please let me know this and send me the proper authority for receiving subscriptions.

In a letter of 5 November 1875click to open link, Clemens had urged Bliss to “rush Dan’s book into print, by New Year’s, if possible” ( L6 , 585). The letter to Wright in which Clemens projected a January 1876 publication date for The Big Bonanza is not known to survive, however.

3 

The Big Bonanza was not published until July 1876 and thus did not interfere with sales of Mark Twain’s Sketches, New and Old , published in late September 1875.

4 

Wright replied (CtY-BR):

Dear Mark,—Yours telling me that Williams has gone to work is at hand. I am glad to know that a move has at last been made. I hear nothing from Bliss. What are his initials? I have forgotten and have been writing to him as “Mr Bliss of the American Pub. Co.” I don’t know that he is receiving the things I am sending. I shall send you Dr. Linderman’s report. It has some maps of the lower levels in it. There is one that is the same as that left by me with Mr Bliss, except that it is much smaller, therefore a reduced copy may be made from it more easily than from the large one I gave him. I shall try the Indians here for those pine-nuts. If I can’t get them here I shall write to some of my friends in Eastern Nevada to get them for me. I think “Capt. Bob,” “Johnson,” “One-eyed George” or some of the braves here will be able to produce the peck of Piute grub.

I had a letter from A. L. Bancroft & Co. a day or two since. They are well pleased with what I told them of the plan of my book. I hope Bliss has copy-righted the title we talked of. I don’t think I shall hurt your book. Your agents here captured a few of my subscribers. The advertisement of your book was headed:

“The Big Bonanza”

of

Wit and Humor,” etc.;

and several of my friends went for it as soon as they read the top line.

Our fellows have got your horse-car business on the brain. Even the old “bums” and “stiffs” now say: “A two-bit nip for a one-bit chip; punch his head with a sassinjare.”

Make Bliss understand that the sooner that book is out the better for us all. I get more confounded letters about it than a few and lots from fellows that want to “work the thing,” you know. Regards to Mrs. Clemens and the Blisses. I hear from Joe almost every week. I am posting Mrs. G. a little on stocks. There is not likely to be any big rise before April. If it goes much beyond that there will be no big market till late next fall; you see the big grain crop will soon be calling for the money.

As ever yours
Dan.

Wright alluded to: Henry R. Linderman (1825–79), physician and first director of the Bureau of the Mint, who had recently conducted an official examination that confirmed the richness of Nevada’s big bonanza silver discovery of 1874, but whose map of “the lower levels” was not reproduced in De Quille’s book; the Paiute Indians, for whom pine nuts were a dietary staple; A. L. Bancroft and Company, the San Francisco publishers who acted as West Coast agent for the American Publishing Company; Clemens’s “A Literary Nightmare”; Frank, as well as Elisha, Bliss ; and Joseph T. and Ellen Goodman (APC 1866–79,134; Angel 1881, 150, 169, 619; L6 , 425 n. 2).