Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Sotheby’s, New York, N.Y ([])

Cue: "Yrs rec'd last"

Source format: "Sales catalog"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified: 2002-07-18T00:00:00

Revision History: HES 2002-07-18 was ODaU

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v6

MTPDocEd
To Charles Warren Stoddard
17 March 1875 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: Jacobs, UCCL 01210)
My Dear Stoddard:1explanatory note

Yrs rec’d last night. What a horrible time you have had of it! I cannot begin to appreciate it, though, because I never was bodily hurt in my life. But I had 8 cousins in one family every devil of whom had enjoyed from one to two broken arms before reaching puberty. Think of it!2explanatory note

Just been writing Finlay, who is in Rome, & goes presently to Venice.3explanatory note

I never hear of Webb’s book, & I don’t believe it sells at all. 4explanatory note

I feel persuaded that your book would sell, by subscription. When you’ve got it ready, call here on one of your journeys, & I think we’ll find a Hartford publisher. I think it we emendation very well worth your while to act upon this suggestion.

About Mulford you surprise me. I wonder what has become of him.5explanatory note

Wishing you better luck than you’ve been having, & a good time generally—

Yrs Ever
Mark

Shall send this through

Sir Thos. Hardy.

Textual Commentary
17 March 1875 • To Charles Warren StoddardHartford, Conn.UCCL 01210
Source text(s):

MS, collection of Victor and Irene Murr Jacobs, seen at Sotheby’s, New York City, while awaiting sale (Sotheby 1996).

Previous Publication:

L6 , 416–18; Sotheby 1996, lot 202, excerpts.

Provenance:

The Jacobses purchased the MS in 1964 from Paul C. Richards; it was offered for sale again on 29 October 1996 through Sotheby’s.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens answered the following letter (CU-MARK), which replied to his of 1 February:

Dear Mark

Your letter makes me feel more comfortable and I’m ever so much obliged for it. Here goes for an answer to each of your questions as they appear in order.

I I was riding a blind horse across the Campagna at midnight last May. My friends were jogging on ahead of me; suddenly my horse went off the edge of a low bridge and I went with him. We struck together among ugly stones and rubbish, righted immediately, but my left arm was fractured just below the elbow and the joint suffered a double dislocation.

For three months I believe I was in Hell! As it is I haven’t got further than purgatory; I shall probably never regain the use of the arm; it is as stiff as a pump handle and even now is sometimes painful. I thought of the Langham-days while I was lying on my back in Rome with my arm buried alive in plaster of paris.

II Did I never tell you of a pretty little English girl who was a friend of Joaquin Miller and who lived down in Museum St at our old lodgings? She was very pretty and seemed to be a milliner, though she was most of the time at home. We were good friends and often dined together and had long talks about Joaquin and Mulford and Olive Harper; by the way Harper wrote her up in some paper and called her “Josie”—that is her name. She wasn’t very proud but she was poor enough to make up for it; well, Mulford has married her and they are living somewhere in New England, I think, Sag Harbor perhaps.

III I’ve sent your message to Father Kroeger and he thinks you are such a bully fellow; you’d like him immensely; if you were to drop in on him at the Papal Palace in Loretto, he would give you some very good community wine (purer than is to be had out of the church, you know) and a bad cigar: Isn’t the Italian tobacco market seedy, though?

IV I hope you had a tearing time with the Jesuit Father. As a class they are the most genial fellows in the world. They are men of the world—with a reserve!

V I’m so glad you liked my letter on San Marco: Do you know Mark I would like to make a selection from my letters when this course is run, and get the same into a big subscription book with the hope of clearing a little out of them.

Would their chance be any poorer than that of our friends, whose book of Humor which is supposed to be found on every table at this moment?—I mean Webbs of course! Can you advise me on this matter? I want to work my way home by India, China etc—this will take money and the money has not yet made its appearance but perhaps it will. With best love for you, dear Mark, and for Mrs Clemens and the Modox

Ever your friend
C. W. Stoddard.

P. S.

I forgot to say in the right place that mene while I must return to England and see more of it: I dont want to go home yet, would you advise me to?

I havent heard a word from Dolby since I left London. Hope he is alive and well. I have seen but the first of your articles in the Atlantic and I thought of the old times when we used to sit up over the fire in the corner room and you drew such graphic off hand pictures of the Mississip’—by Jove! I wish they could be written just as you told them, voice and all. How is your book on England growing? I congratulate you heartily on your great dramatic success! Do it again. Love to Raymond when you see him!

again as always yours,

C.W.S.

In a 1906 account of his accident, Stoddard explained that his irresponsible Italian guide had provided a horse that later proved to be blind, with “eyes like a couple of hard-boiled eggs” (Charles Warren Stoddard 1906, 493). George Dolby was Clemens’s English lecture agent. The book on England had stopped “growing” in early 1874, when Clemens used portions of the unfinished manuscript in Mark Twain’s Sketches. Number One (see 25 Feb 74 to Fairbanks, n. 6click to open link). For additional glosses of Stoddard’s allusions, see notes 4 and 5.

2 

Clemens’s maternal aunt, Martha Ann Lampton (1807–50), married John Adams Quarles (1802–76), and they had eight children who survived infancy, born between 1826 and 1844. Clemens spent his boyhood summers on the Quarles farm in Florida, Missouri, with these cousins, who delighted in playing pranks (Lampton 1990, 57; MTB , 1:10–12, 30–34).

3 

Francis Dalzell Finlay, proprietor of the Belfast Northern Whig, had met Stoddard while staying in London as Clemens’s guest in December 1873 ( L5 , 529).

4 

John Paul’s Book. The sense of triumph in Clemens’s remark is attributable to an old conflict with Webb that still rankled (see 8 Apr 75 to Webb, n. 1click to open link).

5 

Prentice Mulford and Joaquin Miller both lived for a time in a lodging house at 11 Museum Street in London, where Stoddard also stayed while Miller was in Rome. On 3 November 1873 Miller wrote Stoddard about Josie Allen, another Museum Street lodger: “I am glad you like Miss Allen. . . . She is a little thing that I am trying to bring up to the light of the sun and I hope not altogether for selfish purposes. I need not tell you she has been unfortunate; hence, as a Christian knight you will treat her the more gently” (CSmH, in Walker 1969, 342). Olive Harper (1842–1915), a California journalist, novelist, and poet, described Allen in one of her 1873 European travel letters for the San Francisco Alta California:

My Josie is a treasure, a pretty little London girl, and one thoroughly well versed in everything about this great city. There is nothing she does not know, and as she is always at hand, I have only to ask her and she will tell me the entire history of everything of renown, and things that nobody else knows. She can tell you the date of every historical event, and in the next breath inform you where the best bargains in second-hand rag-shops are to be obtained. She is well educated, a perfect little lady, and as perfect a little Bohemian. (Harper)

Mulford and Allen married in the spring of 1874, and in July of that year returned to America, evidently settling in Sag Harbor, New York, his native town. The marriage did not last: reportedly they separated when Mulford refused “to let his pretty wife continue posing in the nude for commercial artists, a practice which he discovered when he received a picture of her naked figure in a package of cheap cigarettes” (Walker 1969, 341–42, 346–48, 355; Charles Warren Stoddard 1905, 97–99; Marberry, 120–22; Mulford 1874 [bib13758], 1874 [bib13759]). See also Stoddard’s amusing sketch about his stay at 11 Museum Street and his own relationship with Allen: Charles Warren Stoddard 1903, 277–320.

Emendations and Textual Notes
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