16 April 1876 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: NNC, UCCL 01323)
(SUPERSEDED)
Just as I feared, Tom Sawyer is not yet ready to issue. Would not be ready for 2 weeks or longer, yet. Therefore the spring trade is lost beyond redemption. Consequently I have told Bliss to issue in the autumn & make a Boy’s Holiday Book of it. Another thing that has moved me to this course is the fact that whereas the Sketch Book sold 20,000 copies the first 3 months, it has only sold 3,700 the second 3 (ending March 30.) This distinctly means that this is no time to adventure a new book. I am determined that Tom shall outsellⒶemendation any previous book of mine, & so I mean that he shall have every possible advantage.1explanatory note
First publication in England cannot impair my American copyright (have telegraphed Spofford & made sure on that point;) therefore I have just wired cabled you: “Hickson, Smithfield, London: We delay publication till fall, but you may publish as soon as you choose.”2explanatory note
Now as to electros: Bliss will furnish full set of plates, (pictures, letter press & all,) at $2 per page. Ⓐemendation—say total of about $600. Or, he will furnish the pictures alone, at 25 cents per inch square. inch. Total, for picture-electros alone, $150 to $200. Write or telegraph me which you want & I will send them. It is possible that Chatto may see his best market in waiting till fall & issuing as a holiday book. But he may do as he prefers.3explanatory note
Get the May Atlantic when it reaches London. You may be able to utilize Howells’s notice of Tom.4explanatory note
Ys Ever
The delay suited Conway. He had requested a postponement in a letter that had not yet reached Clemens (CU-MARK):
For Conway’s telegram, see 25 Mar 76 to Conwayclick to open link and 9 Apr 76 to Conwayclick to open link, n. 1.
Clemens’s cables as received by Conway and by Ainsworth R. Spofford, the librarian of Congress, have not been recovered. He did not receive Spofford’s definitive answer until 17 April (CU-MARK):
Since American copyright on Tom Sawyer had been entered on 21 July 1875, it was secure even though English publication (on 9 June 1876) preceded American publication (on 8 December). American copyright was not perfected until 2 January 1877, when the required two copies of Tom Sawyer were received in Spofford’s office (Johnson 1935, 29; TS 1980, 25; Lehr 1982, 1).
The edition of Tom Sawyer that Chatto and Windus published on 9 June was unillustrated, the result of delay in transmission of the picture plates. For information on their later illustrated edition, see 4 July 76 to Conwayclick to open link, n. 2.
MTLP , 98.
The Conway Papers were acquired by NNC sometime after Conway’s death in 1907.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.