Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()
This text has been superseded by a newly published text
MTPDocEd
To Joseph H. Twichell
29 January 1876 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 12941)
(SUPERSEDED)

written on envelope of enclosed letter:

You may return this, Joe.1explanatory note


editorial office of the atlantic monthly.
the riverside press, cambridge, mass.
My dear Clemens:

I shall not be able to come down to Hartford this Saturday, but I am getting the better of my literary misery,2explanatory note and you may depend upon seeing me very soon.

In the meantime I must tell you what an immense success the Literary Nightmare is, though you know already. It took here instantly. The day the number came out, I dined at Ernest Longfellow’s, and before I got into the parlor, I heard him and Tom Appleton urging each other to punch with care. They said the Longfellow ladies all had it by heart, and last night at the Fieldses they told me that Boston was simply devastated by it. And everybody appreciates and enjoys the way you have set the thing. In my own family it is simply a nuisance. John clacks it off at mealtimes till boxed into silence, and then Pilla starts up with, “Punch, brullers, punch with care!” I heard of its raging similarly in families all along this street, and of course Harvard is full of it.3explanatory note

When are you going to send me that paper you read before your Club? Let me see it even if you don’t want to publish it.4explanatory note

Yours ever
W. D. Howells.

S. L. Clemens, | Hartford | Conn. | return address: the atlantic monthly. the riverside press, cambridge, mass. postmarked: | cambridge sta. mass. jan 28

Textual Commentary
Previous Publication:

MTHL , 1:124–25, partial publication.

Provenance:

See Mark Twain Papers in Description of Provenance.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

The enclosed letter was a reply to the unrecovered invitation Clemens had sent to Howells around 24 January (see 18 Jan 76 to Howellsclick to open link, n. 5). Clemens passed it on to Twichell, who was quite friendly with Howells and had been allowed to share a Howells letter at least once before (see L6 , passim, especially 301 n. 1). Twichell responded in the course of a letter of 3 February 1876 (CU-MARK):

Dear Mark,

I have just refused to ask you to lecture or read in a case in which I would have hardly refused anything I could do but that. Mrs. G. F. Davis of Washington St, representing the Orphan Asylum now caught in a pecuniary crisis, is the party I turned away, not without regret and, I confess, considerable compunction. But I have sworn not to let my personal relations to you be utilized in that way. I had to do it in self defense, and in decency.

BUT, if this most excellent lady gets at you through any other channel, I advise you to grant her at least an audience. I almost wish I had excepted orphans when I made my vow.

There is no trick in this note i.e I did not tell Mrs Davis I would write it.

I shall be vastly grieved to miss dear Howells’ visit if he is here over Monday. I am going out of town.

To Father Hawley’s funeral, now, with a sorrowful heart. How glad you must be, how very glad to think of the comfort you gave him. To-day it is worth to you ten thousand times more than all the trouble it cost.

Yours aff
Joe

Mrs. Davis, wife of G. F. Davis, president of the City National Bank of Hartford, was corresponding secretary of the Hartford Orphan Asylum. David Hawley, Hartford’s lay city missionary, had died on 31 January 1876, just short of his sixty-seventh birthday. Clemens’s last known public assistance to Hawley had come on 5 March 1875, when he delivered his “Roughing It” lecture and raised over $1,200 for Hawley’s charitable work (Geer 1875, 58, 292, 299; L5 , 289–90 n. 1; L6 , 392–94, 402–3, 409; “A Good Man Gone,” Hartford Courant, 1 Feb 76, 2).

2 

“Private Theatricals” (Howells 1875-76).

3 

In addition to his children John (1868–1959) and Mildred (known as Pilla, 1872–1966), Howells mentioned or alluded to: “A Literary Nightmare” (SLC 1876f); Ernest Longfellow (1845–1921), the painter son of Henry Wadsworth Longfellow; Thomas Gold Appleton (1812–84), an essayist, poet, artist, and Boston wit, who was married to the sister of the eldest Longfellow; the latter's daughters, Alice Mary (1850–1928), Edith (1853–1915), and Annie Allegra (1855–1934) (Longfellow’s wife, Frances, had died in 1861); Harriet Longfellow, wife of Ernest; and James T. Fields (1817–81) and his wife, Annie (1834–1915).

4 

”The Facts Concerning the Recent Carnival of Crime in Connecticut.” See 11 Jan 76 to Howells, n. 5; SLC 1876.