Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

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

Cue: "Paste one of these in "Sketches" & one in "Tom Sawyer" & snd them to Miss Kirkham"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified: 2017-11-27T09:33:38

Revision History: RHH 2014-01-28 | ldm 2014-01-08 See E. Kirkham to SLC, | vf 2014-01-28 | RHH 2017-11-27

Published on MTPO: 2022

Print Publication:

MTPDocEd
To Elisha Bliss, Jr.
4 June 1877 • Hartford, Conn. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 13597)

Paste one of these in “Sketches” & one in “Tom
Sawyer” & send them to

Miss Kirkham

Hamilton

Bermuda.1explanatory note

letter docketed on the back: Samuel Clemens | June 4th 77

Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

MS, CU-MARK.

Provenance:

Purchased on 12 December 2011 from Marion N. Fay, who acquired it from one of Conway’s granddaughters.

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

Explanatory Notes
1 

Emily (Emmie) Kirkham (b. 1853?) was the daughter of Clemens’s and Twichell’s Bermuda landlady (29 May 1877 to Howells, n. 1). On 8 August she acknowledged receiving a letter (unrecovered) that Clemens sent from Elmira, as well as copies of Sketches, New and Old and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, presumably with the enclosed but unrecovered inscriptions. She wrote, in part (CU-MARK):

I received your very welcome letter by last mail, and I do myself the pleasure of sending you a few lines by return of same. What a nice time you must be having, on the top of that big hill, I wish I could enjoy some of the nice pure air you have, it is awfully warm down here now, and this climate makes one feel very lazy. I am pleased you enjoyed your excursion to Bermuda so much, is it correct that you had visited Bermuda before Your nice books I have read with much pleasure, I am quite the envy of some of the Bermudians in having them, I prize them highly

She concluded, “I hope you will visit our little Island, again some day. I suppose you will not go to Europe, before the Spring of next year, I wish you were coming to Bermuda instead.” Thirty years later, when Emily was managing the boarding house (her mother having died in 1894), Clemens and Twichell again stayed there (Hoffmann 2006, 73–74; AutoMT2, 359–60, 611).

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