Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

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

Cue: "Of course I"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: 2022

Print Publication:

This edited text supersedes the previously published text
MTPDocEd
To Elisha Bliss, Jr.
22 July 1876 • Elmira, N.Y. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 01349)

PRIVATE.

Friend Bliss:1explanatory note

Of course I can neither confess nor deny your underlings’ New York gossip without knowing what it is. But come—we are all a good deal alike, I judge. I listen to a director of the company & others, & under irritated impulse, talk & act unwisely, & get sorry at leisure. You tell hard things about me to entertain a group (the worst of it being that they are mainly true, although not pleasant things to remember,) & for a day I am angry & ready to do or say anything that comes handy; by that time I begin to imagine that I am fooling away time & tongue on a matter that is not very prodigious—& I am so there an end for the time being. As regards Williams, we will dismiss that with the single & simple remark that what I said to him occupied but short space & will bear repeating in any presence, since it was to no one’s prejudice. But come—if I have said as injurious things about y a truce to this—if it is good matter to talk about together, but not to write about.

You write as if you supposed I was mightily concerned about the company & its management emendation expenses. I was am concerned just this far, exactly: The business seems to be a great big unpaying thing, whereas the reverse would be the case if it were shrunk up, perhaps. I don’t know it, I simply suggest it. And with the suggestion I stop. I have My duty as a director & stockholderemendation ends there. I shall not lose any sleep about it one way or the other.

But there is a matter in which I am strongly interested. You told me, several times that a subscription house could not run two books at once & do justice to either of them. I saw no reason to disbelieve that, & I never have disbelieved it. Therefore I am solicitous about Tom Sawyer .—more so than I would be about another book, because this is an experiment. I want it run by itself, if possible, & pushed like everything. Can this be done?—& when? Give me your ideas about it. What do you think of canvassing in September & October & iss[u]ing 1st Nov.? Shall you be canvassing any new book then?

You must not think that I never wanted to attend a director’s meeting. It is a mistake. My notices always arrived too late. Thisemendation is why I wrote twice requesting that my notice be mailed a day earlier.2explanatory note

I wouldn’t have aggravated you if I had known you were going to be sick—I don’t pick out such times purposely, but only by accident.

I think that if you offer a prize of $1000 (I to pay the money myself but not be known in it) for the canvasser who shall sell the largest number of Tom Sawyers in six months (putting it in the circulars but not in the newspapers,) it might have a good effect. Or make two $500-prizes of it—one for east of the east line of Ohio & the other for west of that line. What do you think of it?3explanatory note

I shall start the proofs back with this mail.

If Confidentially, I shall have a business proposition to make to you individually in the fall when I return. , if Tom Sawyer sells as well as I think it is going to. I foresee advantage in it, & I think you will, also. I came near making it once before, but was restrained by a feeling which has well nigh ceased to exist, now, & seems likely to cease altogether & speedily. Iemendation think I was a fool that unwise that I did not make it when I first thought of it. If I chance to have occasion to run to Hartford in the meantime, I can get my data together & make the proposition then. I have figured upon it for hours, to-day, & if I had had any wit I would have done the same thing long ago. I shall be ready to talk with you about it at any time that we can get together.

Meantime I hope you will say nothing about the matter to anybody—& I shall not. I mark my letter “Private” for this reason.4explanatory note

Ys Truly
Sam. L. Clemens

Those chapters are a nice clean proof—please do it again.

Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

MS, CU-MARK.

Previous Publication:

MTLP , 100–102; MicroML, reel 4.

Provenance:

See Mendoza Collection in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens answered the following letter (CU-MARK), which replied to his of 24 Juneclick to open link:


agents wanted for standard works.
office american publishing company,
no. 284 asylum street, hartford, conn.
Friend Clemens—

Two weeks sickness this hot weather has nearly used me up, but I am out again; I should have replied to you before had I been able to do it! Your proofs have also been delayed on a/c of my indisposition—

I send you by mail to night 2 chapters proofs, & original copy, which please return as soon as convenient, be sure & return copy with proofs.— Shall send 2 chapters more tomorrow, & so on & put it through rapidly— You may look for proofs rapidly—

Your duplicate cuts went to England next day after you was in the office.

And now as respects the company business you mention— I would say, I shall certainly offer no personal objection or use any personal influence to prevent the adoption of any plan deemed proper by the other directors— I do not know as you knew are aware of the condition of the Co or not, you have never been present at any of the meetings & have never asked for information of me—

I am not ashamed to show my business up, for the past 10, or the past single year— It will compare well with anyone else’ business, be it who it may. Still I think it might be even better & I thought so last spring & I therefore preferred to give up my seat to some one more capable & also less costly— I urged this plan upon the Co. By this means the expenses can be cut down no doubt.

I will be pleased to lay any proposition you have to make before the directors   I am sorry you found it necessary to talk against many my management outside of our board as I have several times heard you have— Even the poor drunken Williams—comes & boastingly taunts me with what you tell him—while another of my help gets letters from N.Y. stating what he says you told there— For myself I care nothing, but it seems poor policy to injure the stock this way, & our stock is too valuable to be made to suffer this way. As long as I stay in the Co. I will do my best for it & its authors as I have done—but when dissatisfaction arises, my usefulness here is over! Other Avenues are open to me & I rather desire to tread them, as this business has its vexations & annoyances, & I hardly care to endure them much longer. The business can be cut down, & with a cheaper man at the helm, expenses can be made low, & possibly larger profits made. The experiment can be tried & I will most cheerfully assist with all my might—

The 2 chapters sent of proofs, I think you will find tolerably correct.

My orders are as I received them from you to follow copy, exactly, & I hope it has been done—

What time do you wish Tom Sawyer to appear. We will bring him out when you say. Let us know.

Hope you are not in as warm a place as it is here— Thermometer 97.

Clemens had last been at the American Publishing Company on 6 July. He and Bliss both were wary of True Williams’s alcoholism (see 18 Jan 1876 to Howellsclick to open link and 6 July 1876 to Bentleyclick to open link, n. 1). For “the other directors” of the firm, see 24 June 1876 to the Board of Directorsclick to open link, n. 1.

2 

These letters are not known to survive.

3 See 8 Aug 1877 to Bliss.
4 Clemens’s “business proposition” has not been identified.
Emendations and Textual Notes
  management  ●  false ascenders/descenders
  stockholder ●  stock- | holder
  late. This ●  ~. || ~ probably intended to be run-in; ‘late’ alone on a short line at bottom of page; ‘This’ flush left at top of the next page
  speedily. I ●  ~.— | ~
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