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

Cue: "I have just"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

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Published on MTPO: 2022

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To Olivia L. Clemens
26 April 1877 • Baltimore, Md. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 01416)
guy’s hotel, on the european plan,
monument square, samuel c. little, proprietor.
baltimore, Apl. 26 1877 1explanatory note

Livy Darling—I have just come in (4 PM.) & found your letter, which was a great delight to me. Poor little Susie—tell her to be sure & give you my kiss every night; but that she must remember it is mine, not yours. I send her & Bay a lot in return, in this letter. Bay must not vomit—not that vomiting must necessarily hurts her, but because it alarms you.2explanatory note

At noon to-day, after rehearsal, I walked out to the Winans place, & found a massive brick wall ten or 12 feet high, in the thick of the city—a wall with apparently no openings in it. I followed it a block, turned a corner, followed it another block, turned a third second corner & followed it nearly another block, when I found a great iron gateway & a porter’s lodge of stone.3explanatory note The porter & his wife said Mr. Winans was out, & that all the young gentlemen were absent from the city. So I started away, but met a coupè 30 yards from there, & Mr. Winans hailed me from it. He had been here to the hotel, having seen my name in the paper. So I entered his ample grounds with him—grass, shrubbery & trees everywhere, a summer-house, an ornamental rock-work fish-pond with running water, & lots of discolored statues glimpsed here & there through the foliage.

The house was in the midst, & was huge, of course; from the centre of the pile of buildings rose a plain factory chimney as tall as a church steeple. We entered a hall with light airy rooms on either side; passed into a smaller one & washed my hands—automatic machinery for turning on the water.

Passed through a suite to the dining room, where Miss Celeste, two Whistler girls, Miss Ames & a Mr & Mrs. Hicks & Miss Hicks had just seated themselves at the familiar round dinner-table that turns on a pivot.4explanatory note The dinner was just such as they used to have at Newport.5explanatory note The family were just removing for a week or two to their country place, 4 miles from town;6explanatory note so when dinner was over all departed, leaving Mr. Winans & me to smoke & drink it out. He excused himself to all comers, & we had a quiet, pleasant time.

I wish to say, just here, that the Newport house is a reflection of this one, only on a small scale. That is to say, everythingemendation is for use, nothing for ornament. Everything is sound & substantial, but nothing for show. Nothing, gaudy, or elegant, or even fine—everything plain, & mighty comfortable.

From the dining room we stepped on to a hemendation an enclosed semi-circularemendation, broad porch, with plo ground glass sides & roof. (Southern exposure.) All around the bend of this glass house were plain, green-painted wooden tables, with 4 chairs to match, to each. To Two hundred people can seat themselves in roomy comfort at these tables —s & nibble their ice cream & sip their wine—so they never invite but 200. This place is for winter parties, day or night. You can imagine how light & cheery it is. The wooden floor is pierced with holes, like a strainer, & through these comes the furnace heat. An automatic arrangement keeps this heat at the same figure all the time. Over head, around the great circle, extends in a curve, about a hundred gas lamps, whose chimneys are passed into holes in a great she curved sheet-iron cylinder which conveys all the heat away.

Then we went off somewhere (still on the first floor) & entered a huge oblong saloon, with ceiling about 25 feet high—r a room capable of seating 250 people. In one end of it was a fire place that would accommodate our bedstead.

That cross X represents an iron back. On The space on eEach side of that back is occupied by mirrors. The insides of the jambs are also faced with mirrors—& so perfect is the draft that these never none of these mirrors ever get smoked. At the bottom of that iron back I have tried to represent a mighty log, as nearly as big & as long as myself, that lay on the andirons. There was a lot of other wood in front of it. Theemendation andirons do not run straight back horizontally, but slope downward from the front to the log, thus

So the wood never tumbles down in front when you have piled it high—the slope will not allow it. An invention of Mr. Winans’s.

Within the fire-place, on each side of the andirons, is a little settee, without a back. A giant Twichell could stand upright in the fire-place. In front, a few feet, is framed a sheet of plate glass as large as the rug that lies before our library fire. This keeps off the heat without hiding the fire. On each side stood a nest of 3-legged tables that occupied no more room than a wash-tub wouldemendation—yet there were eighteen tables in each bunch. They were gold colored. Each table is big enough for coffee & sandwiches—or you could combine several of them so as to accommode two or more people:


Here you have 6 of them. This amounts to a card table. (An invention of Mr. W.’s.) This room is lighted by 8 great chandeliers, with 18 gas burners to each—total, 144. But this is not all. All around the cornice overhead are gas burners—so that there are between 400 & 500 300 & 400 burners in the room. Of course the cornice burners are pretty high up to get at.emendation for lighting. So Mr. W. invented an arrangement. In once corner of the room you turn a knob & a tin trough at the ceiling comes out of its concealment & inverts itself over the rows of gas burners. You turn another knob & send in the corner & a stream of gas rushes up a tube—it strikes the inverted trough & flies along, from one burner to the next. You stand in the corner, touch a match to that little stream of ascending gas, & flash! go the 200 gas burners in the twinkling of an eye. It is like lighting a train of powerder. You turn the original knob & the inverted tin trough over the burners retires into concealment again.

In one place is a large rug. All the rest of the plain wood floor is pierced uncarpeted. The entire floor is pierced with holes for warm-water heat to come up. Well, the established temperature of the entire house is 70 saloon is 70 degrees, & is kept at that, always. Suppose you put 250 people in this room & light the big fire & 400 gas burners. You don’t have to bother about whether it is going to get too hot or vi not.—An automatic invention of Mr. W.’s stands there to take care of that. Close to the wall is a long, broad ribbon of brass, fastened in an upright position. frame. Alongside of it is just such a ribbon made of paper. When the room warms up to above 70, the brass ribbon begins to expand, & automatically turns a cock & lets a thread of water begin to flow out of a fa[u]scet & into a pipe which carries it to an iron bucket suspended in the cellar. The bucket is so nicely hung, that the moment the water begins to trickle into it, it answers to the weight & begins to descend slowly; this acts upon a wire which begins to retard & reduce the circulation of heat in the hot air pipes. As soon as the temperature has got down to 70 agemendation in the saloon again, the water ceases to flow, the iron bucket automatically empties itself & all is well.

If The humidity of the atmosphere is required to stand at a certain point. The moment it becomes too humid, the dampness affects the paper ribbon & it sets a stream to trickling into another iron bucket, & this operates upon some machinery in the cellear which restores the humidity to the right figure.

If you wish to go down cellar to see the wilderness of water tanks & various sorts of pipes (used only for that saloon—the rest of the house has its own apparatus) you turn a knob, & a straightway a table & a couple of chairs make you shudder by proceeding to turn slowly & solemnly down on their sides to the floor. They are fastened to a trapdooremendation which opens & closes noiselessly by automatic arrangement of weights & spring.

Around about the saloon are two or three pianos & such things. In one side of the saloon is a great recess or alcove, ten feet above the floor, with a balustrade in front. Upemendation there is for a band. It was full of drums & all sorts of instruments. On the opposite side of the room is a a very large church orgamn. You press a knob, which turns on the water-power, & you are ready to play—you don’t need anybody to blow a bellows. The organ has two benches—the usual one at the organ, & another one three or 4 feet behind that one. Therefore two persons can play on the organ at once—so you have the might & majesty of two distinct great organs going at once.

Then we passed into a great square, lumber-like room which was a good deal like a chimney, or an elevator. It was 60 feet high or more, & had a rough scaffolding in it as high as a house. This is to be the great orgamn, & there’s a world of odds & ends & queer complications in that rubbishy room. Mr. W. (who doesn’t know music), (he built the present organ also), has designed this organ as an architect would design a house; “has it all in his head,” he says; hires men (not organ builders) & makes them work strictly after his plans. The key-board is like this—(I may say, exactly like this), barring a few inaccuracies):

That centre pile is 3 banks of keys. The two sides are each 3 banks of keys, too, but they work the stops. See? You don’t have to pull out pegs, you only strike keys. You can instantly take off a row of twenty-five stops with a sweep of your finger-nail along a bank of stop-keys. There’s an enormous number of stops, but all are as convenient to the hand as you can imagine.

The biggest pipe is finished, now, & a lot more are progressing. Mr. W. has contrived a bewildering apparatus, with weights, springs, electrical wires & what not, to determine & ◇◇◇◇◇ the sizes the openings in the pipe should be. It is a most perplexing looking nes mess of traps.

The big pipe looks like our cold-air box set on one end, with another one like it added to it to lengthen it. It is square & seems to be wood, though the other pipes look like zince. Mr. W. touched a spring & turned on the water-power; touched another spring which gave voice to the big pipe, & you should have heard the rich thunders roll & tumb roll forth & felt the building quake!7explanatory note

We went up a winding stairway of so slight a slant that water molasses wouldn’t have flowed down it, & entered a room which was like a workshopemendation that had been struck by lightning. It had all manner of tools & traps & contrivances in it, & among other things a large, long-necked inverted glass funnel filled with infant brook-trout the size of Susie’s little finger.

The stream of water comes in at the bottom in a strong current & escapes at the spout which I have marked. Mr. W. raised these fishes from the eggs. He had been raising them fishes in the common way before (in one of his outhousesemendation,) but was satisfied that they did not grow as fast as in their natural state. He watched, & decided that they never touched their food unless they could catch it before it touched bottom. So he contrived this thing for an experiment. The upward-flowing current of water keeps the food always suspended, like motes in the air, & the fishes are content. They grow more in a week, now, than they did before in a month by the old plan. He feeds them on dried lv liver, powdered.

Everywhere you go in this house you find mysterious knobs, springs, cranks & other sorts of automatic deviltries; & the thermometers, barometers, temperature & humidity regulators, & similar creatures fairly swarm in every nook & upon every coign of vantage.

We entered Mr. W.’s bedroomemendation. Under Chaos is no name for it! Yet it was orderly to him. He could knew where to put his hand on each of the million things in it. The bedstead stood in the centre of the room. Under it (same size as the s bed) was a water tank six inches deep, let into the floor.—cold water.emendation Immersed in the water was a raft of hot-water pipes. The usual automatic process keeps the temperature & humidity at the Winans-bedroom-regulation figure—65 degreses of temperature, & I’ve forgotten the humidity figure.

The floor of the room is double—two floors a foot apart. He can pull a cord, by his pillow & throw a draft of street-air between those floors. The cords hang thick about his nose when he is abed. He can pull one & open a ventilator; pull another & close it; pull another & fetch a draft of air from within the house that has had its wintriness toned down by being sucked through a long gallery by an arrangement connected with the huge chimney I have spoken of. He can pull another cord & a board outside his door will fold down & expose the words— “I “Asleep.”

This bedroom is the size of our library, but imagine the things there are in it! You couldn’t get a tenth of them into our library. Because you wouldn’t know how. There’s a row of work benches, loaded with things in process of construction. Under this row are embrasures crammed with all imaginable tools. There is a charming little steam-engine which doesn’t run by steam but by water-power, & it buzzes away like a good fellow, whirling a turning-lathe which was all littered up with ringlets of iron shavings. There was a tall cupboard of drawers, & every drawer packed full of brass & iron joints, tubes, cocks, & every conceivable sort of thing.emendation that is made of those metals. Near by was a thing which you could step on,& instantly your weight was registered on a dial. I think likely I stepped on considerable many thermometers, barometers, automatic health-registers & so-on, but I didn’t notice. They were all around. There was a thing on a gas burner to make tea in. Mr. W. goes to bed at 8 or 8.30, & is called at 4 A.M by his watchman, who builds a cup of tea & butters some bread while Mr. W. dresses. Then Mr. W. takes his tea & bread & immediately gets at work with that lathe, &c.

Near his room we passed by a large room whose door was open & within I saw a regular carpenter shop—a world clutter of pine lumber & shavings, & a man planing away on a work-bench.emendation of the ordinary sort.

Miss Celeste’s sitting room was crowded with books, musical instruments, & all manner of things.

Presently we went out into the cellar & saw the great boiler & furnace that heat the water, for the house, & the steam engine which drives the machinery in a building fifty yards from the house in the grounds. We started thither, & in the roadway Mr. W. lifted an iron slab & showed me a tunnel with 4 or 5 great iron pipes in it, for water, gas, steam, &c. The tunnel is big enough to walk in, & you can get in it & go all over that great place, under ground. When a pipe needs mending, this is convenient.

He has turned a long glass-built grapery into a workshop; & in it we found 8 men hard at work in iron, brass & wood, & assisting themselves with steam machinery.

We walked through a system of hot houses & graperies & came to a building wherein Mr. W. takes his horseback exercise under a glass roof when it is too wintry outside.

Then to his skating rink, a great wooden circle elevated a few feet above ground. He floods this shallow basin to a foot’s depth with water & lets it freeze, in the skating season.

Then to a building which was put up for the late artist Ames to work in.8explanatory note It is still full up of pictures & artist traps.

And finally to the stables where where were about 8 or 10 carriages & 10 horses.

Mr. W.’s own coupè has a plate-glass top—an invention of his for getting sunshine without snow, in winter. You pull a string & slide a blue silk curtain along if you want to temper the sunshine.

The rims of the wheel-tires project slightly, & are notched at each spoke, thus:

See the idea? This wheel never goes sliding aggravatingly along a street-railway rail; the notch catches, & over she goes. Thatemendation is another invention of Mr. W.’s.

I am so given to forgetting everything that I resolved I would tell you something about this wonderful establishment before I had a chance to forget it.

Mr. Winan’s eye is as kind as ever. He & the others asked all about you & the children. I told them all I knew. Mr. W. was sorry you didn’t come with me—& so was & am I, for that matter.

I don’t doubt it costs money to run that place & pay those 20 or 30 30 or 40 workmen & servants; but then I noticed a chap counting 24 cripsp new one-thousand dollar bonds before Mr. W., who said: “Put them in the safe, & bring me the numbers.” Perhaps these things help.9explanatory note

Well I love you, my darling, I do indeed; & likewise I love sSusie & I love the Bay him put’n in shum an’ pulled out a plum ’n’ said

Ever Yours in Earnest
Saml.

32 pages MS.

Mrs. Sam. L. Clemens | Hartford | Conn | flourish return address: if not delivered within 10 days, to be returned to postmarked: baltimore md. apr 27 9am

Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

MS, CU-MARK.

Previous Publication:

MicroML, reel 4.

Provenance:

See Samossoud Collection in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.

Explanatory Notes
1 Clemens arrived in Baltimore on 24 April to supervise rehearsals of Ah Sin for its 7 May opening in Washington. His presence was reported by Baltimore newspapers, one of which facetiously noted, “MARK TWAIN is at Guy’s hotel. He signed a pledge in Connecticut the other day, and has come on here to take a hand in the temperance movement” (Baltimore Bee, 25 Apr 1877, 3).
2 Olivia Clemens’s letter is not known to survive.
3 

Clemens visited the residence of Thomas De Kay Winans (1820–78), a wealthy engineer and inventor, who named his six-acre estate “Alexandroffsky” in memory of the seven years he had spent in Russia building locomotives and other rolling stock for Russian railroads. The house itself, built in 1852, was a “four-story villa featuring towers, projected bows, semi-circular arcaded porches.” It was torn down in 1929 (Hager 2018; McGrain 2011, 10). Alexandroffsky incorporated many of Winans’s inventions, as Clemens went on to note in this letter. The grounds surrounding the villa

were ornamented with the choicest flowers, and groups of statuary added to the artistic character of the scene. Some objections were, however, made to the statue of the “Dying Gladiator,” and other studies from the antique, and the City Council passed a resolution requesting their removal. Mr. Winans retaliated by building a brick wall about 12 feet high around his property, and though often petitioned to pull it down, steadily refused, and it still remains standing. (“A Millionaire Inventor. Death of Thomas Winans,” New York Times, 11 June 1878, 5)

4 “Miss Celeste” (b. 1855) was Winans’s daughter by his late wife, who had died in 1861. The “two Whistler girls” were Julia and Neva, the daughters of his sister, Julia De Kay Winans Whistler (1825–75), and George W. Whistler (1822–69), a civil engineer. Miss Ames was either Josephine or Sophia Ames, whose father was the artist Joseph Ames, mentioned later in this letter. The Hicks family has not been identified (“The Will of Mr. Thomas Winans,” New York Herald, 15 June 1878, 6; “The Winans Family,” New York Times, 20 July 1878, 5).
5 The Winans family had a residence near Brenton’s Point in Newport, Rhode Island. The Clemenses had visited them while staying in Newport in the summer of 1875 (see the link note following 29? July 1875 to Redpath, L6, 521–23; “Obituary. Thomas Winans,” New York Herald, 11 June 1878, 3).
6 “Crimea,” Winans’s nine-hundred-acre estate in West Baltimore, also named for his memories of Russia. In addition to Orianda House, “a three story cube built of native fieldstone with hipped roof and a large gazebo at its apex” in “an idiosyncratic style, somewhat resembling an Asian pagoda,” Crimea included farmhouses, stables, a barn, and a chapel (Hager 2018).
7 

Winans planned to spend $100,000 in developing this organ:

He had a building erected in which he began the construction of the monster musical instrument, but after experimenting for several years he abandoned the work. He also began the erection of a somewhat similar organ at Newport, R. I., two years ago. A building was erected about forty yards from his summer villa, in which the organ was placed. It was operated by steam, the key board being in the dwelling house. It could be heard under favorable circumstances for one and a half miles. (“Obituary. Thomas Winans,” New York Herald, 11 June 1878, 3)

8 Joseph A. Ames (1816–72), a noted portrait painter. One of his last portraits was of Ross Winans (1796–1877), Thomas’s father, also a famous inventor and railroad developer.
9 Upon his death on 10 June 1878, Winans left an estate estimated at between nine and twenty million dollars (“A Millionaire Inventor,” New York Times, 11 June 1878, 5; “Obituary. Thomas Winans,” New York Herald, 11 June 1878, 3).
Emendations and Textual Notes
  everything ●  ever[y◊] | thing written off edge of page
  a h  ●  ‘h’ partly formed
  semi-circular ●  semi- | circular
  it. The ●  ~.— | ~
  would ●  wo◊o would corrected miswriting
  at. ●  deletion implied
  ag  ●  ‘g’ partly formed
  trapdoor ●  trap- | door
  Up ●  Up | Up corrected miswriting
  workshop ●  work- | shop
  outhouses ●  out- | houses
  bedroom ●  bed- | room
 —cold water. ● deletion of dash implied
  thing. ●  deletion implied
  work-bench. ●  deletion implied
 goes. That ● ~.— | ~
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