Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: The James S. Copley Library, La Jolla, California. The collection of the Copley Library was sold in a series of auctions at Sotheby’s, New York, in 2010 and 2011 ([CLjC])

Cue: "Your six-line letter"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: #N/A

Print Publication: v2

MTPDocEd
To Frank Fuller
24 September 1868 • St. Louis, Mo. (MS: CLjC, UCCL 02753)
Noble Chief:

I Your six-line letter is just to hand, but no cundrum. However, never mind the cundrums. I can get along without them, I suppose. My aunt never uses them. emendationSome people can do things as well as others.1explanatory note

Mr. Torbert appears to be getting along well enough in with the lecture tour. I have made several other appointments to preach.2explanatory note

I hope you are well, Judge, & I hope your Company is well, also. I like Odorless Rubber Companies. I like them because they don’t stink.3explanatory note

Yrs always,
Mark.
Textual Commentary
24 September 1868 • To Frank FullerSt. Louis, Mo.UCCL 02753
Source text(s):

MS, The James S. Copley Library, La Jolla, Calif. (CLjC, call no. 2421).

Previous Publication:

L2 , 254–255.

Provenance:

Many years after receiving this one-page letter, Fuller wrote in pencil on the back: “The ‘Odorless Rubber Company’ was started by me in Bridgeport to make certain India Rubber goods with little or no Sulpher in the rubber mixture. The products were beautiful but cost too much for the trade. I sold it to a Mr Post FF.” CLjC acquired the letter in July 1966 as part of a Fuller collection. At that time, it was paired with the envelope for Clemens’s 6 Sept 74 letter to Fullerclick to open link (UCCL 01124), whose only surviving text is an Ayer transcript (WU).

More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.

Explanatory Notes
1 

“Some things can be done as well as others” was one of the mottoes rendered proverbial by Sam Patch (1807?–29), a daredevil who became a folk hero in 1827 when he jumped from a seventy-foot cliff at Passaic Falls. Two years later he was killed in a jump from the top of Genesee Falls, near Rochester (Dorson, 133–38).

2 

See 15 Aug 68 to Fuller, n. 3click to open link. Clemens’s winter tour began in Cleveland on 17 November 1868 and ended in mid-March 1869. Torbert was responsible for midwestern engagements only: according to Clemens, by late November he had booked twenty-one dates between 23 December (later moved up to 22 December) and 18 January. Clemens himself arranged ten appearances in November and December, mainly in eastern towns, in part through the agency of the American Literary Bureau in New York, which as early as 3 October was listing “Saml. L. Clemens (Mark Twain)” as an available lecturer on “Americans in the Old World.” Later in the tour, Torbert continued to add new engagements until Clemens told him to stop (29? Nov 68 to PAMclick to open link; “The Price of Lectures,” New York Evening Post, 28 Nov 68, 2; “The Lecture Season,” Round Table 8 3 Oct 68: 234; SLC to OLL, 29 Jan 69click to open link, CU-MARK; see Clemens’s lecture schedule for November 1868–January 1869click to open link).

Emendations and Textual Notes
  cundrum . . . cundrums . . . My aunt never uses them. ●  Someone other than Clemens heavily canceled these seven words sometime after the letter was received.
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