Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()
This text has been superseded by a newly published text
MTPDocEd
To Lewis Jacob Cist
1 August 1876 • Elmira, N.Y. (MS: CtY-BR, UCCL 01353)
(SUPERSEDED)
L. J. Cist, Esq1explanatory note
Dr Sir:

No, I do not remember ever writing anything for the St Louis Republican;2explanatory note & I used the nom de plume first in Nevada Territory.3explanatory note

I am sorry, but there is not a letter-sheet on the place—this note size is the best I can do—but you will observe it is the size most affected by Henry VIII, Richard III, & other people of consequence.

Ys Truly
Sam. L. Clemens
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Textual Commentary
Previous Publication:

MicroPUL, reel 1.

Provenance:

The Morse Collection was donated to CtY in 1942 by Walter F. Frear.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Lewis Jacob Cist (1818–85), a poet and a banker and government official in St. Louis and Cincinnati, amassed a collection of more than eleven thousand autographs and portraits before his death ( VAB 2005). The letter from him that Clemens answered does not survive.

2 

In fact the St. Louis Missouri Republican had published at least five contributions by Clemens between 1858 and 1867: on 22 October 1858 a piece of chatty river correspondence (signed “C.”), written while he was serving as steersman on the packet John H. Dickey; on 27 May 1860 a brief, matter-of-fact river report signed by him and Wesley Jacobs, his City of Memphis copilot; on 30 August 1860 a subtly humorous “Pilot’s Memoranda,” signed by him and J. W. Hood, his Arago copilot; on 17 March 1867 “Cruelty to Strangers,” a letter to the editor, signed with his pen name, making a punning complaint about a local prohibition of “lying on the grass”; and on 24 March 1867 “Explanatory,” also a letter to the editor signed with his pen name, humorously announcing a 25 March St. Louis performance of his Sandwich Islands lecture (SLC 1858; SLC 1860; SLC 1860; SLC 1867; SLC 1867; Branch 1982, 199–201; > ET&S1 ,> 142–45). Clemens is not now believed to have written “Special River Correspondence,” which appeared in the paper on 8 September 1860 and was formerly attributed to him (Ganzel 1967, 396–400).

3 

Clemens first used his pen name on a letter from Carson City, Nevada Territory, published by the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise on 3 February 1863 (SLC 1863; L1 , 245–46 n. 1).