Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park, N.Y ([NHyF])

Cue: "We are very glad to hear"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v6

MTPDocEd
To David Gray
18 April 1874 • Elmira, N.Y. (MS: NHyF, UCCL 11400)
Dear David:1explanatory note

We are very glad to hear that Mrs. Gray is getting along so favorably. We reached here yesterday evening, & Susie & her mother show but slight traces of what was a very wearing & arduous journey.2explanatory note In the course of two weeks we shall be housed at the farm on top of the hill— can’t feel settled till then—& then we shall be a great deal more than glad to welcome you. Don’t forget, & don’t change your mind.3explanatory note

As soon as I got posted on that “Mark Twain dinner” item I saw that it wasn’t of a discomforting nature, & so I swallowed the joke without any difficulty.4explanatory note

With the very best wishes for all of you, not forgetting the little new party,

Ys Ever
Mark
Textual Commentary
18 April 1874 • To David GrayElmira, N.Y.UCCL 11400
Source text(s):

MS, David Gray Papers, General Services Administration National Archives and Record Service, Franklin D. Roosevelt Library, Hyde Park, New York (NHyF).

Previous Publication:

L6 , 108–10.

Provenance:

The David Gray Papers—donated to NHyF by David Gray, Jr.—include several dozen letters written to his father and mother. Among these are nine letters from Clemens, one from Clemens and Olivia, and one from Olivia alone.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

On 6 April Gray had written (CU-MARK):

April 6/74

My Dear Friend Mark:

I can’t remember anything of last winter’s happening that did me quite so much good as your splendid letter to me from London. It gave me a better measure than I had had of the bigness of your heart,—as to which I shall never doubt again but that it will be capacious enough to contain a corner for your old Buffalo friend, no matter how many better people may crowd in past him. I really cherished a vague idea that ere this I should have been able to run down to New York & see you either there or in Hartford. But there is no let up for me & I have to content myself tracking your shining footsteps in the newspapers.

But that you may not think me deserted by the beneficent gods let me tell you— & you will tell Mrs Clemens—that we have just had an arrival at our house. It is of the male persuasion—just about such another as his predecessor, & I am thankful to say that Mattie & he are doing magnificently. The little woman indeed has really surpassed herself this time. She charged me to send word promptly, with her love, to Hartford & so I have done. Next month you & yours will be on your way to Elmira, unless you have changed your plans. Would it not be possible—nay, natural & easy—to make Buffalo a stopping-place & let us see your faces again? In any event, while you are in this region, I must overhaul you, even if I have to go to Elmira for it. I would rejoice to hear of your doings in the present & your plans for the future—how the English success has affected you &c, &c. As to our coming to Hartford to occupy that Elysian gable, it is too paradisiacal to be thought of this year. So we must rely on your doing the travel this time.

Be sure & give Mrs Clemens the joint love of the Grays. We shall be eager to hear good news of her,—& the little girl with the wonderful eyes—how I should like to introduce my oldest son to her!

I have no news to tell of myself. Things jog on in their old toilsome way, but withal I have a good many fine compensations, & try to be decently thankful.

Dont let this coming summer pass without looking in on us. I am Always

Faithfully Yours
David Gray

Clemens may have replied to Gray’s letter in an earlier letter that has not been found (see note 4). Gray’s troubles, about which Clemens wrote his “splendid letter” from London (now lost), were evidently financial (28 Mar 75 to Gray, n. 1click to open link). The newborn son was given Martha Gray’s maiden name, Guthrie. The Grays’ first child, David—whom Gray wanted to “introduce” to Susy—was born on 8 August 1870 (“David Gray,” Buffalo Courier, 19 Mar 88,4; L4 , 102 n. 9; Larned, 1:135).

2 

The Clemenses left Hartford on 15 April, stopping in New York at the luxurious new Windsor Hotel on Fifth Avenue until 17 April, when they continued on to Elmira. At the Windsor they met Mrs. Fairbanks, who had just visited Hartford, and her son, Charles (see 25 Feb 74 to Fairbanks, n. 1click to open link; “Arrivals at the Hotels,” New York Times, 16 Apr 74, 5; L5 , 452 n. 1 bottom). In his “Here and There” column published in the Cleveland Herald on 3 June, Charles recalled:

One of the events of my New York visit, was a dinner—dinner is always an event with me and a happy one although a duty—with Mark Twain and the genial “Dan” of the Innocents, whom everyone likes. I almost forgot to eat, in my enjoyment of the conversation—what more could I say of its interest?

The magnificence of the Windsor Hotel, which we honored by our presence, was a feast for the eyes as much as the dinner for the inner man, and words to describe the elegance of the furnishings at all adequately are hard to command and would sound so extravagant as to repel faith in them. (Charles Mason Fairbanks 1874)

“Dan” was Daniel Slote, Clemens’s cabin mate on the Quaker City excursion to Europe and the Holy Land in 1867. John Hay and his wife were also to have been at the Windsor Hotel gathering. On 25 April Hay wrote (CU-MARK):

new york tribune.

My dear Clemens

That affair of the Windsor Hotel will be a grief to me forever. Mrs. Hay never received Mrs. Fairbanks’ letter and so we did not understand your note to mean anything positive. I learned by accident however that you were there and so posted up to find you, and you were not. Charlie F. came in to see me and said the letter had been directed to West 25th and we live at 111 East 25th St.

I shall simply never get over it. I was crazy to see something of the two ladies, and you know what is my private opinion of all the time I dont spend with you.

Yours faithfully
John Hay
3 

The Clemenses stayed with Mrs. Langdon at her home in Elmira proper until 5 May, when they moved to Quarry Farm (5 May 74 to Warnerclick to open link). It is not known if Gray paid them a visit there, but he did see them in Buffalo in August (22 Aug 74 to Howellsclick to open link; Gray to SLC, 18 Aug 75, CU-MARK).

4 

This remark suggests that Clemens had previously written to Gray about the item on or shortly after 9 April, when he first learned of it. It is possible, however, that Clemens assumed Gray had read it in the newspaper exchanges at the Buffalo Courier office. Clemens’s conclusion that it was a misdirected joke (see 13 Apr 74 to the editor of the Hartford Courant click to open link and 13 Apr 74 to Stillsonclick to open link) was reflected in the Elmira Advertiser on 20 April: “It was only an April fool joke, after all. Mark Twain was no invited guest at a dinner party. Nor did he conscientiously pay the bill when presented to him afterwards. Mark’s jokes are beginning to equal Sothern’s” (“Topics Uppermost,” 2). English comedian Edward Sothern was on an extended tour of the United States (4 Mar 74 to Howells, n. 2click to open link).

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