Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: CU-MARK ([CU-MARK])

Cue: "Capt Blaisdell says"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v1

MTPDocEd
To Orion Clemens
18 October 1864 • San Francisco, Calif. (MS: CU-MARK, 00090)
My Dear Bro

Capt Blaisdell1explanatory note says they talk some of running you for U S Senate. Do you think you stand any show? If so, maybe you had better make friends with your Carson enemies—that is, if you approve of the Scriptural doctrine which makes it a man’s duty to love his enemies.2explanatory note

I am getting along satisfactorily.3explanatory note Send the stock—send the stock. If I don’t sell it I will send it back, & I shan’t sell without advice from Sam Martin, at Va, who is watching the mine.4explanatory note

My Love to Mollie. I wrote to Ma yesterday.

Yr Bro
Sam.
Textual Commentary
18 October 1864 • To Orion ClemensSan Francisco, Calif.UCCL 00090
Source text(s):

MS, Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (CU-MARK).

Previous Publication:

L1 , 316–318.

Provenance:

probably Moffett Collection; see p. 462.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Henry Goode Blasdel (1825–1900), originally from Indiana, had come to Virginia City in 1860, after eight years as a miner, farmer, and merchant in California. His Nevada mining interests extended as far as Aurora and included, in the Virginia district, the construction of the Empire and Hoosier State mills and the superintendency of the Potosi and the Hale and Norcross mines. On 8 November 1864, eight days after Nevada was admitted to the Union, Blasdel was elected its first state governor. He was reelected in 1866, serving through 1870. Clemens’s designation of him here as “Capt” has not been explained; the title may have been a relic of Blasdel’s former connection with the steamboat business in Aurora, Indiana (DAB , 2:358).

2 

Orion Clemens never became a candidate for senatorial office. It was generally assumed that he would be chosen secretary of state in the election of 8 November 1864, particularly since he had won that office in the voided election of 19 January 1864 (see 2? Jan 64 to JLC, n. 4click to open link). Unfortunately, as Samuel Clemens later recalled, Orion

was hit with one of his spasms of virtue on the very day that the Republican party was to make its nominations in the Convention. Orion refused to go near the Convention. He was urged, but all persuasions failed. He said his presence there would be an unfair and improper influence, and that if he was to be nominated the compliment must come to him as a free and unspotted gift. This attitude would have settled his case for him without further effort, but he had another spasm of virtue on the same day, and that made it absolutely sure. . . . On nomination day he suddenly changed from a friendly attitude toward whiskey—which was the popular attitude—to uncompromising teetotalism, and went absolutely dry. His friends besought and implored, but all in vain. He could not be persuaded to cross the threshold of a saloon. The paper next morning contained the list of chosen nominees. His name was not in it. He had not received a vote. (AD, 5 Apr 1906, CU-MARK, in MTA , 2:318)

The Republican candidate for secretary of state, elected in November 1864, was Chauncey N. Noteware. Orion was elected to the state assembly in November 1865 and served from 1 January to 1 March 1866 (Andrew J. Marsh, 694 n. 296; Angel, 87, 529; Journal of the Assembly, passim).

3 

Clemens had lost the security of his weekly salary from the San Francisco Morning Call, having left that paper’s employ on or about 10 October (see CofC , 23). He later explained: “I neglected my duties and became about worthless, as a reporter for a brisk newspaper. And at last one of the proprietors took me aside, with a charity I still remember with considerable respect, and gave me an opportunity to resign my berth and so save myself the disgrace of a dismissal” (Roughing It, chapter 58). George E. Barnes, an editor as well as one of the proprietors of the Call, remembered that Clemens, “although at the time a good general writer and correspondent, . . . made but an indifferent reporter. He only played at itemizing.” He “parted from THE CALL people on the most friendly terms, when it was found necessary to make the local department more efficient, admitting his reportorial shortcomings and expressing surprise they were not sooner discovered” (Barnes, 1). Clemens’s only source of income now was the Californian, which, according to the previous two letters, paid him either $12.00 or $12.50 per article.

4 

Samuel G. Martin was the foreman at the printing office of the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise and the first president of the Washoe Typographical Union, organized in May 1863 (Kelly 1863, 256; Doten 1973, 3:2251). The mine he was watching for Clemens was the Hale and Norcross.

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