7 March 1881 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: MH-H, UCCL 01924)
First & foremost—yes, send me a collection of etiquette books; Mrs. Fairchild’s idea is a mighty good one, I think.
Now here’s my American “rightful Earl of Durham,” a sort of second or third cousin of mine. If you approve my suggestion, send him $10 on account, & charge said $10 to me, of course—but after that, you & him for it. If he writes you anything worth printing you’ll probably take it & pay something for it—otherwise you’ll drop him. I Ⓐemendation think he’ll write you a gassy, extravagant, idiotic book that will be delicious reading, for I’ve read some of his rot; & it is just the sort of windy stuff which a Kentucky tramp who has been choused out of an English earldom would write. By George I believe this ass will write a serious book which would make a cast-iron dog laugh. You take him in hand, now; but mind you make him understand that if he attempts to visit me or write me, you will cut cease from business intercourse with him at once. Dern him, I can’t be bothered with him.
If you approve all this, mail to him the enclosed letter.
I expect settlement-cheque from Bliss about Wednesday or Thursday; & as soon as it comes, I shall forward to you that Cyclopedia-item for the papers—for I haven’t heard anything from Gebbie yet.
I have written Bliss to give me bulk- statements of cost of paper, printing, binding—& shipping-expenses. The statement which he did give me, went but little into particulars—simply: 62,000 sold; $106,000 received; profit, above $64,000; Clemens’s half, $32,000. Cost of cloth copies, (& packing,) 67 cents each. Bliss says you can’t make ’em for 47 cents—nor 50 cents—nor a penny less than 65.
Please send me a lot of prepaid envelops with your address printed on them, & charge to
MS, Rogers Memorial Room, MH-H (shelf mark bMS Thr 470, 12).
MTLP, 133–34.
The Henry M. Rogers and Kathleen Rogers Collection was donated to MH in 1930.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.