29 August 1872 • SS Scotia en route from New York, N. Y., to Liverpool, England (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 00800)
Aug. 29/72.
Livy darling, I have little or nothing to write, except that I love you & think of you night & day, & wonder where you are, & what you are doing, & how the Muggins1explanatory note comes on, & whether she ever speaks of me—& whether mother2explanatory note is cheerful & happy. I hope & trust & pray that you are all well & enjoying yourselves—but I can’t say that I have been enjoying myself, greatly, lost in a vast ship where our 40 or 50 passengers flit about in the great dim distances like vagrant spirits. But latterly our small clique have had a somewhat better time of it, though if one is absent there can be no whist.
I have given the purser a ten-dollar telegram of 3 words to send to you from Queenstown,3explanatory note & also my journal in 2 envelops4explanatory note
in ink: Mrs. Samℓ. L. Clemens | Cor. Forest & Hawthorne sts. | Hartford, | Conn. in upper left corner, boxed: U. S. of America. on flap: slc postmarked: queenstown a au30 72 and new york sep 10 paid all docketed by OLC: Ist
Susy Clemens. In games such as cribbage or dominoes, if a player fails to record a score, his opponent may call him a “muggins” and claim the score for himself.
Mrs. Langdon was staying with Olivia in New Saybrook (11 Aug 72 to Fairbanksclick to open link).
At 8 a.m. on 30 August the Scotia arrived at Queenstown, where Clemens’s telegram (now lost) was sent, and this letter mailed. The ship reached Liverpool the next day (“European Marine News,” New York Times, 31 Aug 72, 8; “Home Arrivals,” London Times, 2 Sept 72, 9).
In preparation for writing a book about England, Clemens kept a journal in “Francis” Highly Improved Manifold Writer,” which used “Carbonic Paper” to create duplicates of each page. The material in the journal is discursive, unlike the sketchy and elliptical notes he usually recorded in his notebooks—none of which are extant for this period. All of the journal text that has survived is transcribed in Mark Twain's 1872 English Journalsclick to open link.
—& now I’ll rush & give him this—consider, my dear, that I am standing high on the stern of the ship, w looking westward, with my hands to my mouth, trumpet fashion, yelling across the tossing waste of waves, “I LOVE YOU, LIVY DARLING!”
MS, Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (CU-MARK).
L5 , 151–152; LLMT , 176; Davis 1977, 1, brief excerpt.
see Samossoud Collection in Description of Provenance.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.