Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: CU-MARK ([CU-MARK])

Cue: "Told him to serve an apprenticehip"

Source format: "MS, author's paraphrase"

Letter type: "author's paraphrase"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: HES

Published on MTPO: 2007

Print Publication: v6

MTPDocEd
To William J. Lampton
22? May 1875 • Hartford, Conn. (MS, author’s paraphrase: CU-MARK, UCCL 12078)

Told him to serve an apprenticeship for nothing & when worth wages he would get them.1explanatory note

Textual Commentary
22? May 1875 • To William J. LamptonHartford, Conn.UCCL 12078
Source text(s):

MS, author’s paraphrase, on back of William J. Lampton to SLC, 20 May 75 (UCLC 32172), Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (CU-MARK).

Previous Publication:

L6 , 484–85.

Provenance:

see Mark Twain Papers in Description of Provenance.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens’s paraphrase of his answer survives on the envelope of the following letter (CU-MARK):

office of garrett, mc. dowell & co. pig iron. n.e. cor. 4th and washington ave.

st. louis, May 20th 187 5

Sam’l. L. Clemens Esq

Hartford

Connemendation

Dear Sir

Honors like misfortunes never come singly, and I am another star (?) to add to your crown of glory—I am your cousin—at least, Jas Lampton Esq of this city says so, and I’m sure, Jas may be relied upon in matters genealogic. I am from Kentucky, and have lived west of the Mississippi about a year and a half & have known Cousin James since 3 weeks ago. I am book-keeper for the firm whose name stands at the head of this sheet, and the longer I keep books the more I feel that I have missed my calling and that “newspaper man” was inscribed upon the package of dust from which I was evolved. I’ve tried to get on some paper here, as reporter but have no influential acquaintances among the editors; when I heard that you were of like blood with myself I thought, “try again,” and your influence might be gained in my favor, with some of your publishing friends. I’m young & healthy, and not afraid of the disagreeable duties incidental to a first appearance as quill driver; besides my education & reading give me some confidence in the less unpleasant portions of the work. Don’t think because I ante this that I’m impecunious, dead broke short of money or friends, & seeking to curry favor or funds for it is not so, but from the fullness of the heart the mouth speaketh & I’d like to hear from you. East, West, North, South, any-where; daily, weekly, monthly, quarterly anything.

I am very &c Yours

—W. J. Lampton—

care Garrett McDowell & Co—St L—Mo

William James Lampton (1851?–1917) was the grandson of James Lampton (1787–1865), one of Jane Clemens’s seven paternal uncles. He was therefore Clemens’s second cousin (and a first cousin once removed of James J. Lampton, the model for Colonel Sellers). James Lampton became wealthy from iron ore discovered on his Kentucky land, and his business passed to William’s father, William Henry Lampton (1813–99). In 1873 William left Kentucky for St. Louis, where he took a position with Garrett, McDowell and Company, Commission Merchants and Dealers in Pig Iron. In 1876 he again wrote Clemens, proposing a visit, and was rebuffed: Clemens wrote on the envelope of his letter, “Declined to suffer the affliction of his visit” (Lampton to SLC, 26 June 76, CU-MARK). In 1877 Lampton succeeded in becoming a journalist by launching the Ashland (Kentucky) Weekly Review, with his father’s money. Around that time he may have managed to meet Clemens and his family, as suggested by his close to an exultant letter of 18 February 1882, on the letter-head of the Steubenville (Ohio) Herald (CU-MARK):

You will remember perhaps in 1876 when I was in St Louis keeping books I asked you to assist me in getting a place in a newspaper but you told me I’d better stick at what I was. But I didn’t do it, and five years ago this month I went to Ky and started down so low as to publish a Republican paper in that state (Possibly you dont know just what sort of a job that was. I do—now) Then I went to Cincinnati & then here in 1879 & here I have succeeded in getting my name in lots of papers and my picture in several more and this week just 5 years from my first work on a newspaper I have been offered & accepted the position of City Editor of the Courier-Journal of Louisville without any solicitation or knowledge of it until the proposition was made. That’s all. I feel like I am entitled to this crow for you were the first man I ever talked to in the newspaper business and I felt interested in you. No preventing Providence. I go to Louisville Mch 1st & if you ever come down that way, we will see if we cant find a fresh cork out of a bourbon bottle for you to smell at. . . . Remember me to Mrs Clemens and the little chicks.

Yours,

W. J. Lampton

Ed Herald

The editor of the Louisville Courier-Journal, Henry Watterson, of course recognized the name “Lampton,” and may have known of William’s family relationship to Clemens—and, more remotely, to himself. In later years Lampton wrote several books, as well as humorous poems he called “yawps,” which were printed in the New York Sun and collected in Yawps and Other Things (Philadelphia: Henry Altemus Company, ca. 1900) (Selby, 15, 30, 112; Lampton 1990, 161–73).

Emendations and Textual Notes
 Sam’l . . . Conn ● a vertical brace spans the right margin of these three lines
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