To
Mary E. (Mollie) Clemens and Jane Lampton
Clemens 30 August 1877 • Elmira, N.Y.(MS: CU-MARK,
UCCL01476)
Elmira, Aug. 30.
My Dear Mollie:
I write for Livy, who has her hands full getting ready to leave for Hartford on the
4th.
Livy thinks your health & strength are a bar to your attempting the new house.
She says your energy & capacity are amply sufficient to enable you to succeed,
& succeed handsomely; but, considering the bar above mentioned, she would advise rather
against the new
enterprise than in favor of it.
She says, If you got such an establishment on your hands & then fell sick—what
then?
unknown amount of text torn away
out. I believe you could take the new house &
make run it ably & make money out of it if you have a fair degree of strength—but
when I reflect that with $42 a month from me, & $50 from Orion earned in a
but like Livy I doubt if you have these.1explanatory note
in top left margin: P. S. I wrote 5 pages, Mollie, but tore up 3⅓. S L C
With love from us,
Samℓ.
Dear Ma—If you don’t quit tearing around with the
other young people, you will make yourself sick, sure. However, we are glad you are
having such a good time,
& hope it will continue.3explanatory noteWhy don’t you want to go to George
Hawes’s?4explanatory note Livy & I & the children send love.
1 By 24 August 1877 Orion and Mollie had at least two boarders at their home in
Keokuk, and were expecting two more. The “new enterprise” was apparently a plan
to rent a larger house to expand the business (JLC to Samuel Moffett and Annie
Webster, 23 and 24 Aug 1877, CU-MARK). The concerns about Mollie’s health were
justified: Orion reported on 9 December that “Mollie is sick in bed, with a physician
in attendance—dyspe[p]sia, neuralgia, rheumatism, heart disease—sick stomach and
racking pains, head to foot, bad cold and cold and hot by turns,” but the next day
(in
the same letter) he provided a reassuring postscript: “Mollie is better, and is up”
(OC
to SLC, 9 and 10 Dec 1877, CU-MARK). Orion and Mollie still had boarders in October, but evidently had not relocated.
2 Clemens tore away the top third of both the second and third pages, creating
gaps in the text at two separate points.
3 Jane Clemens was still visiting Keokuk. She remained there until 29 October
1877, when she started back to her home in Fredonia, New York (OC to SLC, 29
Oct 1877, CU-MARK).
4 George A. Hawes (1811–91), the nephew of Jane Clemens’s brother-in-law, John
Quarles, lived in Hannibal, Missouri, where he was president of the Farmers’ and
Merchants’ Bank (Holcombe 1884, 953; Bacon 1990, 345, 347; MTBus, 72).
MS, CU-MARK.
MicroPUL, reel 1.
See Moffett Collection in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.