Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: New York Public Library, Albert A. and Henry W. Berg Collection, New York ([NN-BGC])

Cue: "You'll see per"

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 William Dean Howells
22 April 1876 • Hartford, Conn. (MS, in pencil: NN-BGC, UCCL 02500)

slc

My Dear Howells:

You’ll see per enclosed slip that I appear for the first time on the stage next Wednesday. You & Mrs. H. come down & you’l shall skip in free.1explanatory note

I wrote my skeleton novelette yesterday & todayemendation. It will make a little under 12 pages.2explanatory note

Please tell Aldrich I’ve got a photographer engaged, & tri-weekly issue is about to begin. Show him the canvassing specimens & beseech him to subscribe.3explanatory note

Ever Yrs
S L C
Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

MS, in pencil, NN-BGC.

Previous Publication:

MTL , 1:276; MTHL , 1:129–130.

Provenance:

See Howells Letters in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.

Explanatory Notes
1 

On 18 April (2), the Hartford Courant announced:

Amateur Theatricals.

The “Loan of a Lover,” one of the plays to be performed by amateurs at Dramatic Hall on the 25th inst., has been in part rewritten by Mr. Clemens, who takes the character of Peter. The quaint simplicity of the honest Dutch farmer is well preserved, and at the same time the character is enlarged and enriched by unconscious witticisms; a great deal of humor is introduced in Mr. Clemens’s own style. The actors are all musical, and the songs which intersperse the play, are a strikingly interesting feature.

The Courant was mistaken in announcing the performance for 25 April. It actually was scheduled for Wednesday, 26 April, as the paper made clear on 21 April (2) in the notice that Clemens presumably enclosed for Howells:

“Private Theatricals.”

Mr. Clemens desires it to be said that the impression that he has in any considerable degree rewritten the “Loan of a Lover” is an error. He has made no marked changes in the text. The piece remains substantially as its author originally framed it.

The following is the cast in full for the plays next Wednesday evening at the Dramatic Hall:

loan of a lover.

Musical Director...............Mr. Henry Wilson.

Stage Manager,............Dr. W. A. M. Wainwright.

Peter Spuyk,...........................Mr. Samuel L. Clemens.

Captain Amersfort,..........................Mr. J. O. Breed.

Swyzell,............................George H. Day.

Delve,......................................Mr. B. E. Warner.

Ernestine,..........................Miss Kitty Beach.

Gertrude,.........................Miss Helen Smith.

After which, the farce of

turn him out.”

Nichodemus Nopps,....................Mr. Alfred B. Bull.

Mr. Mackintosh Moke,..................Mr. B. E. Warner.

Mr. Eglantine Roseley,.....................Mr. J. O. Breed.

Julia (Moke’s wife),.....................Miss Helen Smith.

Susan (a maid of all work),..............Mrs. C. A. Taft.

Two porters.

The price of tickets will be $1, and there will be no extra charge for reserved seats. The sale of tickets will begin on Monday a. m., at 9 o’clock, at the store of Hamersley & Co.

Turn Him Out (1863) was a one-act farce by Thomas J. Williams (1824–74). The Loan of a Lover (1847) was a one-act play by James Robinson Planché (1796–1880). In addition to Clemens the participants were: Wilson, an organist and music teacher; physician William A. M. Wainwright; James O. Breed, a bank teller; Day (1851-1907), an insurance clerk and later a prominent business executive and the future husband of Katherine (Kitty) Beach (1853-1942). daughter of dye manufacturer Joseph Watson Beach; Warner, a student and competitive rower at Trinity College; Helen Yale Smith, daughter of merchant Morris W. Smith; Bull, a bookkeeper; and Ellen Clark (Mrs. Cincinnatus A.) Taft, wife of the Clemens family’s physician. Hamersley and Company was the book and stationery store owned by William J. Hamersley. For reaction to Clemens’s performance, see 28 Apr 1876 to Franklinclick to open link, n. 1 (Geer 1875, 38, 41, 58, 79, 146, 153, 235; Geer 1876, 59, 32, 170; Day 2017; Beach 2017; “College Boating,” Boston Post, 5 Jan 1876. 2; Trumbull, 1:148; “The Death of Dr. Taft,” Hartford Courant, 27 June 1884, 1).

2 Clemens’s contribution to the proposed “Blindfold Novelettes” (see 13 Mar 1876 to Howells) survives at the University of Texas at Austin (TxU-Hu). Entitled “A Murder, a Mystery, and a Marriage,” it was privately printed in an edition of sixteen copies in 1945, which was suppressed by Clemens’s lawyers, but otherwise remained unpublished until 2001 (SLC 1876g, 1945, 2001a, 2001b).
3 

The enclosed photographs of Clemens and, probably, his children were among those recently taken by Isaac White. Clemens was threatening a repetition of the photograph prank he played on Thomas Bailey Aldrich in late 1874 ( L6 : 18 Dec 1874 to Aldrich, 321-24; 31 Dec 1874 to Aldrich, 336-38). Clemens was photographed wearing a sealskin coat he had owned since September 1871 (see 26 Apr 1876 to Howellsclick to open link, n. 8; 3 or 4 May 1876 to Kingsbury).

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