Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, Austin ([TxU-Hu])

Cue: "Bier bot. 3"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v2

MTPDocEd
To Daniel Slote
7 August 1867 • Naples, Italy (MS, not sent: TxU, UCCL 00143)

the bill has been canceled with a diagonal line

Bier bot. 3,     1.20.
Au . . . . .     20.
Chandel . . . .     1.
Deiuné 1explanatory note . . . .     1.20.
                3.60
                2.60
                fr 6.20

Paid

7th Morning—I have paid this breakfast bill, Dan. Tell the Doctor, I am gone to The Island of Ischia—will return to Naples to-morrow—leave Herculaneum & Vesuvius alone till Thursday2explanatory notewe don’t want to go with those inf3explanatory note

Textual Commentary
7 August 1867 • To Daniel SloteNaples, ItalyUCCL 00143
Source text(s):

MS, not sent, Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center, University of Texas, Austin (TxU). Albert Bigelow Paine had this MS in his possession at the time of his death, presumably having received it from Clemens; this fact suggests that Clemens never gave—and perhaps never even showed—his unfinished note to Slote. Paine wrote on the MS: “1867 ǀ (Quaker City trip) ǀ Mem. for ‘Dan’.”

Previous Publication:

L2 , 77–78; AAA / Anderson Galleries 1937, lot 68.

Provenance:

Paine owned the letter when he died in 1937; it is not known when TxU acquired it.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 The bill lists the following items: three bottles of beer (correctly, bière, bouteilles 3); water (eau); candle (chandelle); and breakfast (déjeuné).
2 

Since Clemens wrote this note on a Wednesday, he must have meant “Friday” here, instead of “Thursday”: Friday was in fact the day he returned from Ischia and visited Vesuvius (see the next letter).

3 

Clemens described the party that went to Ischia in an Alta dispatch as “two or three of us,” but its other members have not been identified (SLC 1867). Clemens stopped writing in the middle of a line and probably never gave or sent this note to Slote, perhaps because he found he could tell him what he had written, or intended to write. The note itself apparently remained in Clemens’s possession until his death: see the textual commentary for this letter.

Top