Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

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

Cue: "It lacks something"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter] | envelope included"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v3

MTPDocEd
To Olivia L. Langdon
13 March 1869 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 00277)

It lacks something of midnight emendation, yet—& so there is time at least to say—I love you, Livy, bless your dear old heart.

“And all my life shall lift its hands In earnest longing toward thy face”1explanatory note

The sweetest face that ever turned the cares of life to trifles & its ills to blessings—& the dearest girl, withal, that ever made man look back upon his life & say “Of what use was this blank?— emendation what was the object of it?— emendation was this that emendation person that lived s that life, & this that lives this new, ampler, grander, happier life, the same person?” It looks so preposterous. How did I ever live without you, Livy? You darling!

I have just answered Mother Fairbanks’ letter, and tried to comfort her in her new misfortune. It seems too bad that after all her trouble & bother & labor in reinstating her household gods & restoring her pleasant home, this new calamity should come, & lay waste the work of her hands.

Why didn’t you put in just a word in Charlie’s letter, you precious Livy? But you would have done it if you had known I was not to hear from you for four whole days—I know you would. If I had only had sense enough to write tell you to write me at the Everett Astor House in New York, I could have got it on Monday emendation Tuesday.2explanatory note Never mind, though—you have been a dear, faithful, generous little correspondent, & are entitled to a rest. But emendation what a vexatious darling it is!—to send me a Beecher sermon, with never a pencil mark in it.3explanatory note That isn’t any way to do, honey. I tore off the envelop & looked all the way through it, hunting for some sign or footprint of Livy—but not a mark was there, & I was so disappointed. But I forgive you—I could forgive you anything. Just so you love me, that is sufficient. If it had been marked, I would have dropped my work & read it at once—couldn’t have finished my work in time, then—couldn’t have gone to Boston. Did you have a premonition of that, I wonder? It is all the better, though, as it is. To-morrow will be Sunday, & then I can read it. It is a good girl.

I have examined proofs of some eighty engravings, so far, & like all of them but one. I sent you half a dozen or so this morning—would have sent them all if they would let me. Several of the little views are handsome. Some proof sheets will doubtless reach Elmira before I do. Open the package if you choose, little Curiosity, for you have just as much authority to do it as I have, & I want you to feel that way, & know it—but don’t show them to anybody else, till I come, because to acknowledge the plain truth, I am fully as sensitive about having an article of mine seen in proof, as I could be to have my ordinary m friendly letters in Manuscript read by strangers. But with you it is different—I haven’t the slightest possible sensitiveness on that score with you—you are part of me—you are myself—& I would no more be troubled by your looking over my shoulder than it would embarrass me to look over my own shoulder. So, just read whatever you please, Livy darling, & make yourself entirely at home—plunge your dainty fingers into my affarirs just as much as you want to—& the more you do it the more you’ll delightt me (with two t’s, you mutineer). They m emendation wanted to make a portrait of me—steel engraving—for a frontispiece; but I naturally objected—refused, rather; that is a sort of impertinent intrusion upon the public that suits should be left to the patent-medicine gentry.

Charlie writes that he has bought a horse that I can’t drive. Well! I’d like to see the horse that I can’t drive. I But if I can’t really drive that horse, what are we going to do, Livy? I don’t like to ask Charlie to do such a thing, but then I don’t see any other way—so when we ride out he will have to walk, & lead the horse. I know it is hard, but it is his own fault, for buying such a beast.4explanatory note

Had a really pleasant time at Mrs. Hooker’s last night, Twichell & I. I do like Mr. Jno. Hooker—he is splendid.—& I think a good deal of Mrs & Miss Hooker, too. I showed them the little picture., & the first thing Miss Alice said, was: “Why she has a ribbon on her hair—I thought she never wore them.” I said “it was a fancy you had acquired lately, & I thought it a very comely one.” And indeed it is. My darling hardly seems in full dress, now, without her ribbon.5explanatory note

Mrs. Hooker advanced some theology which startled emendation me—but it did more than that with Twichell—it troubled him, exceedingly. It was a reference to some vague expression in Peter which Mrs. H. construed to mean that Christ preached, & still preaches to the souls in purgatory6explanatory note—& in it she found authority for believing that those that die suddenly, & all of us, in fact, have another opportunity, hereafter, of compassing salvation. She quoted also the remark to the thief on the cross, about supping with him in “Paradise” (one of whose meanings is equivalent to our term “purgatory.”)7explanatory note

Twichells was so distressed about it that he was at my bedside soon this morning, & remained a long time urging me to search the Scriptures for myself, & not let one or two vague speeches of the Apostles lift themselves up & overshadow the vol emendation vast array of evidence which the Testament offers plainly, forcibly & directly in opposition to the doctrines which they seem to promulgate.

I satisfied him that I was not given to taking firm & final hold of things without due deliberation, & that what Mrs. H. had said was not likely to leave a permanent & damaging impression. Good fellow, Twichell is, & faithful & true.whole-hearted emendation—magnificent. I love him. I gave him all your loving messages to himself & his household idols, & received fervent ones to you in return. He wants us to spend the summer vacation with him & Mrs. T. in the Adirondacks. Said we would, if Mr. & Mrs. Langdon would go, & you were willing. He has been there—last summer—& is perfectly infatuated with the place.

And here I talk, talk, talk—because I can’t let my Livy go when emendation—want to talk to her all the time—& the first thing I know, that train8explanatory note will emendation waltz along & leave me.

Time’s nearly up—take my kiss & my blessing, you worshipped darling, whom I so love & honor.

Always Yours
Sam.

P.S. I love you Livy. I love you will all my might. And next Wednesday9explanatory note I shall see you—hasten the day!

Miss Olivia L. Langdon | Elmira | New York. postmarked: hartford conn. mar 14 docketed by OLL:

10explanatory note 56th

Textual Commentary
13 March 1869 • To Olivia L. LangdonHartford, Conn.UCCL 00277
Source text(s):

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

Previous Publication:

L3 , 171–175; LLMT , 83, 358, brief paraphrases; MTMF , 82, brief excerpt.

Provenance:

see Samossoud Collection, p. 586.

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

Explanatory Notes
2 

Clemens was to be in New York City on Tuesday, 16 March, bound for New-town, on Long Island, where he lectured that evening. The letter he had received from Charles J. Langdon has not been found.

3 

An unidentified issue of the Plymouth Pulpit.

5 

The porcelaintype that Clemens received on 22 January. See 22 Jan 69 to OLL, n. 1click to open link, and 26 and 27 Jan 69 to OLLclick to open link.

6 

Possibly “By which also he went and preached unto the spirits in prison” (1 Peter 3:19).

7 

“And Jesus said unto him, Verily I say unto thee, To day shalt thou be with me in paradise” (Luke 23:43).

8 

To Boston.

9 

17 March.

Emendations and Textual Notes
  midnight ●  mid- | night
  blank?— ●  blank?— | —
  it?— ●  it?— | —
  this that ●  thisat
  Monday  ●  ‘y’ partly formed
  rest. But ●  rest. | But
  m  ●  possibly ‘w’ or ‘n’
  startled ●  possibly ‘starteled’
  vol  ●  possibly ‘wh’ with ‘h’ partly formed
  whole-hearted ●  whole- | hearted
  when  ●  possibly ‘where’
  will ●  sic
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