Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Collection of Todd M. Axelrod, Gallery of History ([Axelrod])

Cue: "I'll speak in"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v4

MTPDocEd
To James Redpath
19 July 1871 • Elmira, N.Y. (MS: Axelrod, UCCL 10497)
Dear Redpath—

I’ll speak in time. You have made no appointments for me west of Cleveland—very well, don’t.

When I think of those awful western roads & hotels I get sick—sick as death.

My season is so short that we can fill it up pretty well from Cleveland east.1explanatory note

Have just declined a month in Kansas &c at $150 a night.2explanatory note

Mind you charge Nasby prices—Rondout c $125 wasn’t, was it? YES. 3explanatory note

Ys
Mark

Say—am I aggravating you now, & disarranging your matters? I do hope not.

letter docketed: boston lyceum bureau. redpath & fall. aug 3 1871 and Twain Mark | Elmira N.Y. | July 19 ’71

Textual Commentary
19 July 1871 · To James Redpath · Elmira, N.Y. · UCCL 10497
Source text(s):

MS, collection of Todd M. Axelrod.

Previous Publication:

L4 , 436–437; Bangs, lot 81, brief excerpt.

Provenance:

The present location of the MS, sold to an unidentified purchaser in 1900 and owned by Axelrod in 1983, is not known.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Redpath’s Lyceum Magazine announced: “Mr. Clemens has consented to lecture this season for a brief series of engagements between the middle of October and the end of January only. This, he assures us, will be positively his last season on the platform” ( Lyceum 1871, 20). Clemens’s tour lasted from 16 October 1871 to 27 February 1872, about the same length of time as his 1868–69 tour (nineteen weeks), but much longer than his 1869–70 tour (eleven weeks), which he had cut short in order to get married on 2 February. The 1871–72 tour was the most solidly booked, comprising some seventy-seven lectures compared with forty-three and about fifty, respectively, in 1868–69 and 1869–70 (Lecture Schedule, 1871–1872click to open link; Lecture Schedule, 1868–1870 ).

2 

This offer may have come from the Associated Western Literary Societies, which had managed the midwestern portion of Clemens’s 1868–69 tour, or from O. Sackett, of Kansas City, on behalf of his Western Lyceum Bureau, which had recently represented Horace Greeley and was currently recruiting Kate Field and others for its roster. Clemens was apparently free to accept offers from regions that the Boston Lyceum Bureau did not routinely serve. But the bureau, which had opened in 1868 to handle bookings in the New England and mid-Atlantic states, was currently extending its reach. It tentatively scheduled some western, or midwestern, appearances for Clemens and by late 1871 it established a branch office in Chicago (8 Aug 71 to Redpathclick to open link; L3 , 481; Kate Field to Whitelaw Reid, 6 Nov 70, DLC; Eubank, 99, 114, 122–24).

3 

Added at the Boston Lyceum Bureau by an unknown hand. For Nasby’s prices, see 10 June 71 to Redpath and Fall n. 2click to open link.

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