9 March 1871 • Buffalo, N.Y. (MS: CtHMTH, UCCL 11006)
Thanks for Knott’s speech—it is first rate.1explanatory note
At last my wife is clear out of danger & mending tolerably fast. We send our love to you & yours.
Remember us to Geo. Alfred Townsend & Don Piatt. David Gray & I took a strong liking to Piatt. Ⓐemendation—& it was a great pity that he was suffering so with the neuralgia & I had such depressing news from home. We’d have had a royal time at this thatⒶemendation dinner of yours.2explanatory note
We are selling our dwelling & everything here & are going to spend the summer in Elmira while we build a house in Hartford. Eight months’ sickness & death in one place is enough for
P. S. If you’ll drop in any time at the Langdon homestead we’ll find bed & sustenance for you & Mrs. Cox, sure. 3explanatory note
James Proctor Knott (1830-1911) was a Democratic congressman from Kentucky. His satirical speech to the House on 27 January, in mock support of a Minnesota railroad project, was widely reprinted. Cox probably sent Clemens a clipping of “St. Croix and Bayfield Railroad,” from page one of the Washington Globe of 29 January ( BDUSC , 1323-24; Congressional Globe 1871, “Appendix,” 3:66-68).
For Cox’s dinner, see pp. 327-29. Piatt was described by a fellow correspondent for the Cincinnati Commercial as “one of the institutions of Washington”:
All men seem to know, or know of him. He has grown to be one of the celebrities of the land. Many fear or dislike him for what he has written, and many love and respect the man for his inherent good qualities and genuine kindness of nature. Knowing him only through his writings, we had formed the impression that all the milk of human kindness in the man, by some mysterious process, had been changed into wormwood and gall, and was oozing out at the end of his fingers in the form of the bitter D. P. letters to the Commercial. But we have learned here some new phases of the man’s character. Many who know him well—and among others George Alfred Townsend—have told us that Piatt was one of the most kind and genial men they had ever known—one of the most unselfish and generous—doing more individual favors to poor devils who had no claims upon him; securing by persevering personal effort more places for wounded and worthy soldiers than any man in Washington; that he is a man of the very largest human sympathy, and that his heart was as easily touched by a tale of real suffering or wrong as a child’s. . . . Piatt is no Bohemian in any sense of the word; is not dependent upon his pen for support; lives at the Arlington, we are informed, very elegantly upon his own means, and is in all senses an independent writer. One thing is certainly to be conceded: that wrongs and frauds, the jobs of Washington, so indescribably corrupt and infamous, receive no mercy at his hands. And for the battles which he has often fought in the interests of the people against politicians, tricksters and jobbers, and against their corrupt schemes, the country owes him a debt of gratitude. (Cincinnati)
Cox had been married to the former Julia Buckingham, of Zanesville, Ohio, since 1849. They had no children (“Congressman Cox Dead,” New York Times, 11 Sept 89, 5).
MS, Cyril Clemens Collection, Mark Twain House, Hartford (CtHMTH).
L4 , 346–347.
donated to CtHMTH in 1984 by Cyril Clemens.
More information on provenance may be found in Description of Provenanceclick to open link.