22 December 1880 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: TxU-Hu, UCCL 02124)
I certainly owe you an apology; & I must claim your indulgence for one of my ineradicable n bad habits—that of intending to answer letters, & stopping there. I always intend to answer my letters; but in seven cases out of ten it gets no further. Suppose you received more letters each day than you could conveniently answer? What would you do? I know what you would do; you would acquire my habit. Maybe you think you wouldn’t, but you wait, & you will see by & by. It is a very great pleasure to receive letters, provided they don’t have to be answered. I have one correspondent who always winds up with something like this: “Never mind answering this.” Now there’s true magnanimity; & you mark my words—that man will be an angel one of these days.
I was very glad you got the gold medal, but I knew you would know that, perfectly well, without my saying it; so I procrastinated—with the usual result. And I’m glad to hear about the music, drawing & German, & shall hope you will have the luck to succeed with all of them, & especially the latter fascinating but most formidable undert accomplishment.
Yes, I shall revise the new book & add some chapters during the spring, & publish it next fall, if my present purpose undergoes no modification.
But——here’s a pile of letters, & I must begin the work of intending to answer them; & right away, too, so I will say good bye to you for the present, & ask you to remember me kindly to your teacher.
Master Wattie Bowser | Dallas | Texas return address: return to s. l. clemens, hartford, conn., if not delivered within 10 days. postmarked: hartford conn. dec 23 1pm
MS, TxU-Hu.
Covici 1960, 112–114 (misdated 1881); MicroPUL, reel 1.
As of 1960, the letters to Bowser were “in the possession of Bowser’s niece, Mrs. E. C. Stradley” and destined “for eventual deposit in the manuscript archives” at TxU (Covici 1960, 105).
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.