Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Madison Memorial Union Library, University of Wisconsin, Madison | University of California, Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, Berkeley ([WU-MU CU-MARK])

Cue: "We shall doubtless"

Source format: "Transcript | Transcript"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: Tehrani, Michelle

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v5

MTPDocEd
To Elisha Bliss, Jr.
3 May 1873 • Hartford, Conn. (Transcript: WU, UCCL 00912)
Friend Bliss—

We shall doubtless be ready to talk business by about Tuesday, Wednesday, or, at latest, Thursday—&emendation we shall be in a hurry too—emendationshan’t have long to talk. So, think it all over—Sheldon & Co think we will make a serious & damaging mistake if we try to sell a novel by subscription.emendation 1explanatory note Try & be ready, also to recommend to me another Hartford subscription publisher to get out a telling book on Japan, for I suppose you have got your hands about full. I want you to recommend a man who will appreciate a good thing & know how to push it.2explanatory note

Yrs
Clemens
Textual Commentary
3 May 1873 • To Elisha Bliss, Jr.Hartford, Conn.UCCL 00912
Source text(s):

Transcript facsimile. The editors have not seen the original hand-written transcript, made by Dana S. Ayer during the late 1890s or later, which is in the Rare Book Department, Memorial Library, University of Wisconsin, Madison (WU).

Previous Publication:

L5 , 361–362; MTLP 75–76.

Provenance:

The MS evidently remained among the American Publishing Company’s files until it was sold (and may have been copied at that time by Ayer; see Brownell Collection in Description of Provenance). The Ayer transcription was in turn copied by a typist, and this typed transcription is also at WU.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens wrote on Saturday. His “hurry” seems to have been prompted, at least in part, by his plan to leave for Elmira (by way of New York City), which he did on Thursday, 8 May—the same day he and Warner finally met with Bliss to sign the contract for The Gilded Age. Bliss agreed to a 10 percent royalty (5 percent to each author) on the retail price of every book sold (see Contract for the American Publishing Company Gilded Age click to open link and 16 July 73 to Bliss, n. 2click to open link). London publisher George Routledge was also in Hartford that day and may have joined them to discuss arrangements for the English edition. The manuscript itself was probably not delivered to Bliss until late May, after Warner had revised it (“Brief Mention,” Hartford Courant, 8 May 73, 2; 12 May 73 to Redpath, n. 1click to open link; 16 July 73 to Blissclick to open link). Isaac E. Sheldon’s prediction of failure in publishing “a novel by subscription” was merely the received wisdom at this time, both among trade and subscription publishers. When Bliss issued The Gilded Age in December 1873, it became the first novel published by subscription. In April 1871 Clemens had proposed writing “quite a respectable novel” for publication by Sheldon, who had been encouraging: “I like the idea & it would sell well if it were a good story & had a quiet vein of humor as well as the tragic interest of a story. I do not see why you could not write such a story” ( L4 , 375, 376 n. 1). The “story” in question was probably a version of The Gilded Age, which Clemens then thought of writing with Joseph T. Goodman. The present letter shows that he must have talked with Sheldon again, this time about the novel he and Warner had actually written. Bliss was predisposed to regard Sheldon as a rival, having objected to his publication, in March 1871, of Mark Twain’s (Burlesque) Autobiography and First Romance (SLC 1871) as a violation of his own exclusive contract with Clemens (see L4 , 320–21 n. 1). That rivalry may have influenced his decision to agree to the 10 percent royalty. In general, subscription publishers paid authors far more than did trade publishers, as Warner implicitly acknowledged on 19 April when he informed James R. Osgood of his own, presumably temporary, defection from the retail trade: “Mark Twain and I have been writing a novel the last two months, but it will have to go into the subscription trade here, and we hope that our high art will be rewarded with several dollars” (CtHMTH; see also Hill 1964, 6–13, 71).

2 

On 3 May 1871 Clemens had urged Bliss to consider publishing a book that Edward H. House was writing about Japan. Bliss was interested, but the project was not pursued until House evidently revived it during his recent visit to Clemens, in late April. Despite Clemens’s suggestion here, by late 1873 Bliss had reached an agreement with House, who wrote him from Japan on 25 November that the “MSS. progresses with reasonable rapidity, and as there seems to be ample time, I am seeing through a new series of observations, in order to make it additionally accurate and complete” (ViU). Ultimately, however, the American Publishing Company did not publish House’s book (see L4 , 388, 389 n. 1; 25 and 26 Apr 73 to OLC, n. 8click to open link).

Emendations and Textual Notes
  & ●  and here and hereafter, except at 361.7, where copy-text reads ‘Sheldon & Co’
  too— ●  too.—
  subscription. ●  subscription‸ written off edge
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