[begin page 914]
Description of Texts
Each of the fifteen texts described in “Authoritative Texts” below contains readings
pertinent to the
establishment of an accurate text for this edition of Roughing It. Many of these are texts written by Mark
Twain before he composed Roughing It—sketches, articles, and newspaper letters—which he revised
and incorporated into the book (BE, G, SU, TE63). Others are texts written by other
authors, from which he quoted in the book (BoM,
HoHI, MP, NYT, PCA, TE70, VoM), or which reprinted material subsequently included
in the book and which thus intervened in the chain
of textual transmission (PT). The second section, “Derivative Texts,” describes reprintings
of the complete text of Roughing It, or of excerpts from it, issued during Mark Twain’s lifetime. All of them, with one
exception
(HWb), were found to derive without authorial intervention from A, or from the “pre-Roughing It”
sources BE, G, or SU. (Variants in derivative editions are not recorded in Emendations
of the Copy-Text and Rejected Substantives.)
The last section, “Collations,” comprises a list of collations performed and the specific
copies used. Symbols and cues
are explained in Emendations.
Authoritative Texts
A
First American edition of Roughing It
AP
American Publisher
BE
Buffalo Express
BoM
Book of Mormon
G
Galaxy
HoHI
History of the Hawaiian Islands
MP
Mormon Prophet
NYT
New York Times
PCA
Honolulu Pacific Commercial Advertiser
Pr
Prospectus of A
PT
People’s Tribune
SU
Sacramento Union
TE63
Virginia City Territorial Enterprise
TE70
Virginia City Territorial Enterprise
VoM
Vigilantes of Montana
A
First American edition. Roughing It. Hartford: American Publishing Company, 1872–1903 (BAL 3337 and reimpressions). Twenty-five impressions are known, the
first four of which are dated 1872 and the last 1903. Collation revealed that several
pages in A exist in more [begin page 915] than one state. For convenience, the designations below refer to whole copies, rather
than to individual pages
within the copies. Seven states have been identified. The earliest copy located of
each state is as follows: Aa, Ab, Ac, and Ad,
1872; Ae, 1874; Af, 1877; Ag, 1892. The variants are cumulative in each state; that
is, Ab contains the first variant, Ac contains
that one plus one more, and so forth. The last known state, Ag, contains a total of
twelve variants; they are listed in chronological
order of appearance. Aa is copy-text for all of the book not specified as deriving
from one of the other sources listed below
(roughly 75 percent of the text).
309.18 |
eastern (Aa) • Eastern (Ab–g) |
542.7 |
hearties (Aa–b) • heartiest (Ac–g) |
102.28 |
breast-pin (Aa–c) • breast pin (Ad–g) |
103.13 |
death! (Aa–c) • death. (Ad–g) |
222.12–13 |
he was occupying his (Aa–c) • was occupying (Ad–g) |
136n.6 |
thirteenth (Aa–d) • sixteenth (Ae–g) |
273.2 |
toss2 (Aa–d) • toss, (Ae–g) |
273.31 |
fortune—(Aa–d) • fortune⁁ (Ae–g) |
91.10 |
[They (Aa–e) • ⁁They (Af–g) |
136n.6 |
Aha! (Aa–e) • Aha⁁ (Af–g) |
236.5 |
coarse (Aa–e) • course (Af–g) |
517.11 |
tidal wave (Aa–f) • tidal-wave (Ag) |
AP
American Publisher: “The Old-Time Pony Express of the Great Plains,” May 1871, 4. Eight
extracts from Roughing It were printed in the American Publisher, the house journal of
the American Publishing Company, between May 1871 and June 1872. Of the eight extracts,
seven derived from the A typesetting; they
are identified below in “Derivative Texts.” One extract, however, was typeset directly
from Mark Twain’s Roughing It manuscript, or possibly from an amanuensis copy of it, and therefore contains readings
that may have
equal authority with A. This passage, listed below, is thus a radiating text, and
all variants in it between A and AP are reported in
Emendations. For a full discussion see the textual note at 50.1–52.7.
50.1–52.7 |
‘In . . . maybe.’ |
No illustrations were included. |
BE
Buffalo Express. Out of the series of ten “Around the World” letters that Mark Twain
published in the Buffalo Express between October 1869 and March 1870, he drew upon five—plus an
additional Express sketch published in April 1870—for use in Roughing It. BE is
copy-text for the passages listed below.
“Around the World. Letter No. One,” 16 October 1869, 1. |
245.1–249.15 |
Mono . . . true. |
Around the World. Letter No. 3,” 13 November 1869, 1. |
387.18–392.24 |
The1 . . . over.” |
[begin page 916]
“Around the World. Letter Number 4,” 11 December 1869, 2. |
238.1–240.6 |
It . . . desires. |
BE, ¶17–18 |
392.25–395.11 |
But . . . head. |
BE, ¶1–16 |
“Around the World. Letter Number 5,” 18 December 1869, 2. |
413.6–419.28 |
In . . . me. |
“Around the World. Letter Number 6,” 8 January 1870, 2. |
299.7–301.31 |
Two . . . him. |
BE, ¶1–18 |
303.35–304.2 |
I . . . again. |
BE, ¶19 |
“The Facts in the Great Land Slide Case,” 2 April 1870, 2. |
221.1–227.5 |
The . . . understanding. |
BoM
The Book of Mormon: An Account Written by the Hand of Mormon, upon Plates Taken from
the Plates of Nephi.
Translated by Joseph Smith, Jun. Sixth European Edition. Liverpool: Published by Brigham
Young, Jun., 1866. The relevant passages in
the following editions or impressions of the Book of Mormon were collated to determine
Mark Twain’s most likely source for the
extracts in chapter 16: first through fifth American (1830, 1837, 1840, 1842, 1858);
first through sixth European (1841, 1849, 1852,
1854, 1854, 1866); and Independence (187–). Collation established that he could have
used either the fifth or sixth European
(English) “edition”—actually two printings of the same typesetting, with different
front matter but otherwise
apparently identical texts. The sixth edition has been designated copy-text for the
passages listed below, since it was probably the
one most readily available in 1870–71. Citations are to book, chapter, verse, and
(where necessary) line: “Jacob
2:6:14–25” refers to the Book of Jacob, chapter 2, verse 6, lines 14–25.
107.26–111.2 |
The . . . powers: |
BoM, title page (lines 1–23) and testimonial page |
111.3–25 |
And . . . Jacob: |
BoM, 1 Nephi 5:38, 5:39:1–2, 5:42 |
111.26–112.7 |
For . . . everybody: |
BoM, Jacob 2:6:14–25, 2:9:11–18 |
112.8–36 |
And . . . children. |
BoM, 3 Nephi 9:1:1–3, 9:2:1–8, 8:5:3–22 |
113.24–114.44 |
7. . . . written. |
BoM, Ether 6:7–8, 6:9:1–25 |
G
Galaxy: “About a Remarkable Stranger. Being a Sandwich Island Reminiscence,” 11 (April
1871): 616–18. Mark Twain apparently revised a copy of this Galaxy printing when preparing
printer’s copy for chapter 77. G is copy-text for the passage listed below.
526.1–531.22 |
I . . . sir.” |
HoHI
History of the Hawaiian Islands, by James Jackson Jarves. Third Edition. Honolulu: Charles Edwin
Hitchcock, 1847. The relevant passages in the following editions or impressions of
Jarves’s book [begin page 917] were collated to determine Mark Twain’s most likely source for the extracts in his
Sacramento Union
letter published on 1 August 1866, which was later incorporated into chapter 68 of
Roughing It: first (Boston
and London, 1843); second (Boston, 1844); and third (Honolulu, 1847). Collation established
that Mark Twain used the third edition.
HoHI is copy-text for the passage listed below; substantive variants between HoHI
and ¶20–30 of the Union letter are reported in Emendations.
469.30–472.43 |
On . . . abuse. |
HoHI, 105 ¶1–106 ¶4 |
MP
The Mormon Prophet and His Harem; or, An Authentic History of Brigham Young, His Numerous
Wives and
Children, by Mrs. Catharine V. Waite. Fifth Edition, revised and enlarged. Chicago: J. S.
Goodman and Co., 1868. Waite’s
book, which Mark Twain explicitly mentions as his source for the quotations in appendix
B (550.22–23), was first issued in 1866, reprinted several times, and published in
a “revised and
enlarged” edition in 1868. The passages quoted by Mark Twain are identical (apparently
printed from the same plates) in the
two editions; the 1868 edition has been designated copy-text for the passages listed
below because it was probably the one most
readily available in 1870–71.
550.24–551.6 |
A . . . God. |
MP, 76 ¶1 |
551.29–552.21 |
They . . . occasion: |
MP, 73 ¶4–74 ¶2 |
552.22–553.7 |
He . . . reliable: |
MP, 84 ¶5–85 ¶2 |
553.9–38 |
For . . . depredations. |
MP, 76 ¶3–77 ¶7 |
NYT
New York Times: “Across the Continent: From the Missouri to the Pacific Ocean by Rail,” by
William Swinton, 28 June 1869, 1–2. Although Mark Twain explicitly names the New York
Times as the
source of the extract in chapter 4 (26.29), collation suggested that his actual source
may have been a reprinting of the article in
an unidentified newspaper, incorporating several “corrections” (actually corruptions)
of the text. Nevertheless, in the
belief that Mark Twain intended to present an accurate text of the Times article, regardless of the actual
copy that he had access to, NYT has been chosen as copy-text for the passages listed
below.
26.32–34 |
ACROSS . . . jaunt. |
NYT, title, ¶3 |
26.34–37 |
A . . . car. |
NYT, ¶8 |
26.37–28.5 |
It . . . out. |
NYT, ¶12 |
PCA
Honolulu Pacific Commercial Advertiser: “Programme of the Funeral of Her Late Royal Highness the
Princess Victoria Kamamalu Kaahumanu,” 30 June 1866, 2. Mark Twain probably used a
clipping of this program when preparing his
Sacramento Union letter published on 1 August 1866. The Union letter was later
incorporated into Roughing It. PCA is copy-text for the passage listed below; substantive variants between PCA
and ¶8 of the Union letter are reported in Emendations. For a full discussion see the textual note at
466.19–468.3.
466.19–468.3 |
Undertaker . . . Force. |
[begin page 918]
Pr
Prospectus. Roughing It. Hartford: American Publishing Company, 1871 and 1872. The prospectus was issued
in two states, Pra (first copy bound on 22 November 1871) and Prb (first copy bound
on 23 January 1872). Both states include eighty
pages of selections from the book, plus two pages of advertising, a one-page “Publisher’s
Announcement,” a page
giving the prices of copies in the available bindings, and thirty-two blank ruled
pages for the salesman to record his orders.
Included in the advertising is an illustration from chapter 20 that does not appear
elsewhere in Pr; it is printed on page 131 of
this edition. Pr never serves as copy-text, although in one instance it is a source
of emendation (see the textual note at
350.15–353.10). Except for one instance (see the entry below at 113.39–115.1), the
make-up of the Pra
pages—exclusive of folios and running heads—is identical to that of the corresponding
A pages; all of the pages in Prb
are identical in make-up to those in A. Unlike the pages in prospectuses for other
works by Mark Twain, those in the Roughing It prospectus were not bound in the correct first-edition sequence. The first table
below lists the
contents in the order in which they appear in Pra and identifies the differences between
Pra and Prb. Some minor variation has been
noted among the copies of Pra examined in the number and placement of full-page illustrations,
but since these are inserted plates,
their placement does not affect the composition of type or imposition of pages; the
table describes Pra (collection of Dorothy
Goldberg). Only one copy of Prb has been examined (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872p). Prb
contains the same pages as Pra (with the exception noted above), bound in the order
shown in the second table. Both prospectuses
contain the first-edition title page, copyright page, dedication page, and “Prefatory”;
the title and copyright pages
in Pra read “1871,” and in Prb read “1872.” The symbol “A” signifies “identical to
A”; the symbol “Pra” signifies “identical to Pra.”
contents of pra and prb, in pra order
Page.line (C) |
Cue / Description |
Pra |
Prb |
Chapter: page (A) |
218 illus |
camping in the snow. |
A |
A |
frontispiece #1 |
xx illus |
the miner’s dream. |
not in |
A |
frontispiece #2 |
xxv title–b.6 |
List . . . 49 |
A |
A |
v |
xxvb.7– xxviiib.28 |
35. . . . 543 |
contains four blank pages with folios vii–x, headed ‘Illus-trations.’ |
A |
vi–x |
xxix title– xxxi.20 |
Contents . . . 122 |
A |
A |
xi–xii |
xxxi.21– xxxii.27 |
CHAPTER . . . 179 |
page numbers for chapters not yet supplied |
A |
xiii |
[begin page 919]
xxxii.28– xxxvi.22 |
CHAPTER . . . 396 |
contains three blank pages with folios xiv–xvi, headed ‘Contents.’ |
A |
xiv–xvi |
1.1–3.8 |
My . . . so. |
A |
A |
1:19–21 |
4.1–9.11 |
The . . . under |
A |
A |
2:22–27 |
10.1–22 |
About . . . curtain, |
A |
A |
3:29 |
11.25–14.12 |
legs . . . miniature |
A |
A |
3:31–33 last page ends ‘minia-|’ |
15.23–17.15 |
jackass . . . height. |
A |
A |
3:35–36 |
18.24–19.12 |
ourselves . . . every |
A |
A |
4:38 |
79 illus |
the south pass. |
not in |
A |
12: facing 100 |
521 illus |
a view in the iao valley. |
A |
A |
76: facing 547 |
347.9–353.18 |
I1 . . . ashore. |
pages lack folios and chapter identification |
pages have correct folios except for folios 373–74, which are
reversed, although the pages are in the correct order |
51:369–75 |
303.32–307.15 |
some . . . us.” |
325, 327, 328 numbered ‘1, 3, 4’ without chapter identification; 326 unnumbered |
A |
46:325–28 |
107.1–22 |
All . . . it |
page headed (incorrectly) ‘CHAPTER
XVII.’ |
A |
16:127 |
108.31–111.6 |
these . . . and2 |
pages numbered ‘17-3, 17-4’ to
indicate pages 3 and 4 of (incorrect) chapter 17 |
A |
16:129–130 |
42.25–44.6 |
worth . . . holding |
pages numbered with (incorrect) folios ‘77,
78’ |
A |
7:62–63 last page ends ‘hold-|’ |
296 illus |
the great “flour sack” procession. |
A |
A |
45: facing 317 |
50.1–54.1 |
In . . . with |
A |
A |
8:70–73 |
[begin page 920]
144.19–146.20 |
The . . . enemy. |
165 numbered ‘4’; 166–67 numbered ‘22-5, 22-6’ to indicate pages 5 and 6 of (incorrect) chapter 22 |
A |
21:165–67 |
532.1–536.29 |
After . . . well. |
558 headed (incorrectly) ‘CHAPTER LXXV.’; 559–63 numbered ‘2-75, 3-75, 4-75, 5-75, 6-75’ to
indicate pages 2 through 6 of (incorrect) chapter 75 |
Pra |
78:558–63 |
60.1–62.3 |
Really . . . which |
A |
A |
10:80–81 |
63.38–64.13 | 64n.1 |
and . . . practices. | *“The . . . Dimsdale. |
A |
A |
10:84 |
155 illus |
fire at lake tahoe. |
A |
A |
23: facing 176 |
518.1–520.26 |
We . . . such |
544 headed (incorrectly) ‘CHAPTER LXXIII.’ and numbered ‘1-73’; 545–46 numbered ‘2-73, 3-73’ to indicate pages 2 and 3 of (incorrect)
chapter 73 |
like Pra, except that 544 lacks the number
‘1-73’ |
76:544–46 |
152.25–157.13 |
conquering . . . history. |
pages numbered ‘24-2, 24-3, 24-4,
24-5’ to indicate pages 2, 3, 4, and 5 of (incorrect) chapter 24; illustration on 24-2 does not appear on 174 in A, but on 169 (117 in C), and type on 24-2 wraps around on left side rather than right; caption
matches A 174 |
A |
23:174–77 first page begins ‘quering’ |
48.16–49.24 |
cocoanut . . . boys.” |
A |
A |
7:68–69 first page begins ‘nut’ |
76.24–82.14 |
world . . . the2 |
A |
A |
12:98–102 |
32.18–33.3 |
is2 . . . pie.” |
A |
A |
5:51 |
[begin page 921]
113.39–115.1 |
camps . . . dreary |
page numbered ‘17-8’ to
indicate page 8 of (incorrect) chapter 17 |
not in; includes revised page described in next entry instead |
16:134.25– 135.28 |
114.18–115n.1 |
wine . . . *Milton. |
not in; includes page described in previous entry instead |
A |
16:135 |
244 illus |
mono lake. ‘lake mono.’ in Pr; emended |
A |
A |
38: facing 265 |
99.25–106.7 |
daughters . . . Mormons. |
pages numbered ‘16-2, 16-3, 16-4, 16-5,
16-6, 16-7, 16-8’ to indicate pages 2 through 8 of (incorrect) chapter 16 |
A |
15:120–26 |
158.1–164.16 |
I1 . . . I |
178 headed (incorrectly) ‘CHAPTER XXV.’; 180–81 numbered ‘25-3, 25-4’ to indicate pages 3 and 4 of (incorrect) chapter 25; 179 and 182–83 have no folios or chapter identification |
A |
24:178–83 |
520.26–522.23 |
an . . . to |
page numbered ‘4-73’ to
indicate page 4 of (incorrect) chapter 73 |
Pra |
76:547 |
523.20–525.7 |
only . . . always. |
pages numbered ‘6-73, 7-73’ to
indicate pages 6 and 7 of (incorrect) chapter 73 |
Pra |
76:549–50 |
479 illus |
going into the mountains. |
A |
A |
69: facing 502 |
order of contents in prb
Page.line (C) |
Cue/Description |
218 illus |
camping in the snow. |
xx illus |
the miner’s dream. |
xxv title–xxxvi.22 |
List . . . 396 |
155 illus |
fire at lake tahoe. |
1.1–3.8 |
My . . . so. |
4.1–9.11 |
The . . . under |
10.1–22 |
About . . . curtain, |
11.25–14.12 |
legs . . . miniature |
[begin page 922]
15.23–17.15 |
jackass . . . height. |
18.24–19.12 |
ourselves . . . every |
79 illus |
the south pass. |
50.1–54.1 |
In . . . with |
144.19–146.20 |
The . . . enemy. |
532.1–536.29 |
After . . . well. |
60.1–62.3 |
Really . . . which |
63.38–64.13 | 64n.1 |
and . . . practices. | *“The . . . Dimsdale. |
479 illus |
going into the mountains. |
518.1–520.26 |
We . . . such |
152.25–157.3 |
conquering . . . history. first page begins
‘quering’] |
48.16–49.24 |
cocoanut . . . boys.” first page begins
‘nut’] |
76.24–82.14 |
world . . . the2 |
32.18–33.3 |
is2 . . . pie.” |
114.18–115n.1 |
wine . . . *Milton. |
521 illus |
a view in the iao valley. |
99.25–106.7 |
daughters . . . Mormons. |
158.1–164.16 |
I1 . . . I |
520.26–522.23 |
an . . . to |
523.20–525.7 |
only . . . always. |
296 illus |
the great “flour sack” procession. |
304.31–307.15 |
“Say . . . us.” |
107.1–22 |
All . . . it |
108.31–111.6 |
these . . . and2 |
42.25–44.6 |
worth . . . holding last page ends ‘hold-|’ |
347.9–353.18 |
I1 . . . ashore. |
303.32–304.30 |
some . . . driver: |
244 illus |
mono lake. ‘lake mono.’ in Pr; emended |
PT
People’s Tribune: “A Seeming Plot for Assassination Miscarried,” by Conrad Wiegand,
1 (February 1870): 10–12, a reprinting of TE70 (see below). Although collation established
that PT was Mark Twain’s
actual source for the text of Wiegand’s letter in appendix C, TE70 is copy-text
for the passage in this edition. All substantive variants between PT and TE70 are
reported in Emendations. For a full discussion see
the textual note at 555.3–569.38.
555.3–569.38 |
From . . . M. T.] |
SU
Sacramento Union. Out of the series of twenty-five Sandwich Islands letters that Mark Twain published
in
the Union between April and November 1866, he drew upon thirteen—with significant revisions
and
deletions—for use in Roughing It. As indicated below, many of these letters survive as clippings in
scrapbooks that Orion Clemens compiled; since none of the scrapbook clippings shows
any sign of revision, Mark Twain must have used
other copies of the clippings to prepare the printer’s copy of Roughing It. In addition to emendations
of the texts he did use, all of the material in these thirteen letters which he decided
not [begin page 923] to
reuse—approximately 60 percent of the text—is reported in full in Emendations. SU
is copy-text for the passages listed
below.
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 4,” 19 April 1866, 2, clippings in Scrapbook 6:109–10 and
Scrapbook
7:41–43, CU-MARK. |
431.9–434.2 |
then . . . sail— |
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 5,” 20 April 1866, 2, clippings in Scrapbook 6:110–11 and
Scrapbook 7:43,
CU-MARK. |
454.15–456.6 |
Society . . . shoved.” |
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 6,” 21 April 1866, 3, clippings in Scrapbook 6:111–12 and
Scrapbook
7:43–47, CU-MARK. |
436.2–438.21 |
I . . . about. |
SU, ¶1–4 |
439.1–441.20 |
A . . . itself. |
SU, ¶15–22 |
444.16–448.18 |
This . . . expense. |
SU, ¶5–14 |
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 7,” 24 April 1866, 4, clipping in Scrapbook 6:112–13, CU-MARK. |
442 title–444.15 |
CHAPTER . . . business. |
SU, ¶1–23 |
448.19–450 title |
It . . . CHAPTER 66 |
SU, ¶24 |
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 8,” 21 May 1866, 3. |
450.1–453.37 |
Passing . . . art. |
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 12,” 20 June 1866, 1, clipping in Scrapbook 6:116–17, CU-MARK. |
457 title–458.18 |
CHAPTER . . . etc.2 |
“Scenes in Honolulu—No. 15,” 1 August 1866, 1, clipping in Scrapbook 6:122–23, CU-MARK. |
466.15–18 |
After . . . procured: |
SU, ¶1–8 |
468.4–469.29 |
I . . . came: |
SU, ¶9–19 |
472.44–475 title |
You . . . CHAPTER 69 |
SU, ¶31–34 |
“Letter from Honolulu,” 18 August 1866, 1. |
475.1–480.2 |
Bound . . . fruit. |
“From the Sandwich Islands,” 24 August 1866, 3. |
480.3–24 |
At . . . required. |
SU, ¶1–13 |
489.1–491.24 |
At . . . retaliation. |
SU, ¶14–33 |
“From the Sandwich Islands,” 30 August 1866, 3. |
491.25–492.20 |
Near . . . innocent. |
“From the Sandwich Islands,” 6 September 1866, 3. |
493 title–495.14 |
CHAPTER . . . point. |
“From the Sandwich Islands,” 22 September 1866, 1. |
495.15–506.4 |
I1 . . . charge. |
“Letter from Honolulu,” 16 November 1866, 1. |
508.1–10 |
By . . . like. |
SU, ¶1–6 |
508.11–23 |
A . . . revelation. |
SU, ¶15 |
508.24–512.8 |
Arrived . . . hotel. |
SU, ¶7–16 |
TE63
Virginia City Territorial Enterprise: “Ye Bulletin Cyphereth,” 27 August 1863, Scrapbook
2:70, CU-MARK. Mark Twain probably had two clippings of this article, which he had
written for the Enterprise [begin page 924] several years earlier. One still survives in a
scrapbook, and the other he apparently incorporated into the printer’s copy for Roughing It. TE63 is
copy-text for the passage listed below.
355n.1–356n.3 |
*Mr. . . . M. T.] |
TE70
Virginia City Territorial Enterprise: “Mr. Winters’ Assault on Conrad Wiegand,” by
Conrad Wiegand, 20 January 1870, 1. Although the heading “From the Territorial Enterprise,
Jan. 20, 1870” (555.3)
implies that the text of the letter by Conrad Wiegand reproduced in appendix C is
taken from the Enterprise, collation established that the actual source was a reprinting of the letter in the
Gold Hill (Nevada) People’s Tribune (see PT above). Nevertheless, TE70 has been designated copy-text
for the passage listed below. The rationale for this selection, as well as a full
explanation of the emendation policy for this
appendix, may be found in the textual note at 555.3–569.38.
555.3–569.38 |
From . . . M. T.] |
VoM
The Vigilantes of Montana, or Popular Justice in the Rocky Mountains. Being a Correct
and Impartial Narrative
of the Chase, Trial, Capture and Execution of Henry Plummer’s Road Agent Band, Together
with Accounts of the Lives and Crimes
of Many of the Robbers and Desperadoes, the Whole Being Interspersed with Sketches
of Life in the Mining Camps of the “Far
West;” Forming the Only Reliable Work on the Subject Ever Offered the Public, by Prof. Thomas J. Dimsdale. Virginia City,
Montana Territory: Montana Post Press, 1866. Mark Twain explicitly mentions Dimsdale’s
book as his source for the quotations
in the two chapters on the desperado Slade (64n.1, 69.5–8); it was issued in only
one edition, which is copy-text for the
passages listed below.
63.35–64.2 |
On . . . paragraph: |
VoM, 175 ¶2 |
64.3–9 |
While . . . execution. |
VoM, 175 ¶1 |
64.9–11 |
Stories . . . line. |
VoM, 175 ¶4 |
64.11–13 |
As . . . practices. |
VoM, 175 ¶3 |
69.5–13 |
“The . . . picturesque: |
VoM, title page |
69.13–17 |
“Those . . . incarnate.” |
VoM, 167 ¶2, lines 19–24 |
69.17–21 |
And . . . mine: |
VoM, 175 ¶3, lines 3–4 |
69.22–74.18 |
After . . . feelings. |
VoM, 167 ¶3–173 ¶3 |
Derivative Texts
AP
American Publisher. The following seven extracts published in the American
Publisher derived from A without authorial revision or intervention. The first four were evidently
typeset from page proofs of A
or from Pr. The last three were probably typeset from a bound copy of A.
“My First Lecture,” December 1871, 4. Includes three illustrations from A, with captions
(see pages
535–36). |
533.5–536.29 |
I . . . well. |
[begin page 925]
“A Nabob’s Visit to New York,” January 1872, 4. Includes three illustrations from
A, without captions (see
pages 305–6). |
304.3–307.15 |
In . . . us.” |
“Dollinger the Aged Pilot Man,” February 1872, 8. Includes five illustrations from
A, without captions (see pages
348–52). |
347.9–353.18 |
I1 . . . ashore. |
Untitled extract, February 1872, 8. No illustrations included. |
101.9–103.9 |
Mr. . . . mountains. |
“Roughing It,” March 1872, 8. Includes three illustrations from A, without captions
(see pages
393–95). |
391.27–395n.1 |
It1 . . . M.T. |
“Horace Greeley’s Ride,” April 1872, 8. Includes two illustrations from A, without
captions (see pages 131
and 134). |
131.7–136.5 |
On . . . Greeley.* |
“Mark Twain on the Mormons,” June 1872, 8. Includes four illustrations from A, with
captions (see pages 100, 101,
104, and 105). |
99.14–106.2 |
And . . . it.” |
Aus
Australian edition. 2 vols. The Innocents at Home, Part I—Roughing It and The
Innocents at Home, Part II—The Pacific Coast. Melbourne: George Robertson, 1872. Although this unillustrated edition
resembles E physically, it was typeset from Ad and includes the appendixes of A, which
E lacks. Unlike E, it does not contain
“A Burlesque Autobiography.” A “Notice” on an inserted slip reads: “This edition of
‘The
Innocents at Home’ is reissued by authority from Messrs. George Routledge & Sons,
of London, who are owners of the
British Copyright.” In 1873 Robertson reissued these two volumes, bound together in
one volume, as The
Innocents at Home, which includes separate title pages for the two parts.
E
First English edition, first issue. “Roughing It” (BAL 3335) and The Innocents at Home (BAL 3336). London: George Routledge and Sons, 1872. This unillustrated edition was typeset
from proof sheets
of Aa, but lacks the appendixes included in all states of A. The second volume, however,
concludes with “A Burlesque
Autobiography,” which was not included in A. Soon after the appearance of both volumes
as the “Copyright
Edition,” the first volume (but not the second) was reissued as the “Author’s English
Edition” (BAL 3599). This volume was then bound together with the
“Copyright Edition” of The Innocents at Home to create the single-volume edition of Roughing It and the Innocents at Home (George Routledge and Sons, 1872). The Innocents at
Home, printed from the Routledge plates, was also issued in Toronto by the Musson Book
Company sometime after 1901. No Musson
issue of Roughing It has been located.
PJks
Practical Jokes with Artemus Ward, Including the Story of the Man Who Fought Cats. By Mark Twain and
Other Humourists. [begin page 926] London: John Camden Hotten, [1872]. BAL 3342. For a full discussion of PJks, HWa, HWaMT, and HWb, see the Introduction, pages 893–95. The three sketches marked with an asterisk below derived
from E. The fourth sketch was typeset directly from G and therefore includes none
of the revisions that Mark Twain carried out on G
when preparing A.
*“Editorial Skits”: A → E → PJks |
339.13–26 |
Once . . . stranger!” |
“Mark Twain’s Remarkable Stranger”: G → PJks |
526.11–531.22 |
I . . . sir.” |
*“Sending Them Through”: A → E → PJks |
*“The Union—Right or Wrong?”: A → E → PJks |
278.11–281.3 |
We . . . had. |
HWa
The Choice Humorous Works of Mark Twain. Now First Collected. With Extra Passages to the
“Innocents Abroad,” Now First Reprinted, and a Life of the Author. London: John Camden
Hotten, [1873].
BAL 3351. Mark Twain revised and corrected a set of sheets of HWa
(HWaMT, now at NN); his changes were incorporated into HWb. The four sketches marked
with an asterisk below derived ultimately from A: three through E, and one apparently
through AP. The other four derived as noted.
The collation entries listed below record the textual history of words occurring in
passages deriving from A which Mark Twain revised
in HWaMT, but do not report other variants between A and HWa.
“Baker’s Cat”: BE → Scrs → HWa → HWaMT → HWb |
416.9–419.28 |
Whenever . . . me. |
The HWa text derived ultimately from BE (SLC 1869o), through an intervening
printing in Screamers: A Gathering of Scraps of Humour, Delicious Bits, & Short Stories (London: John
Camden Hotten, [1871]).
|
“Honoured as a Curiosity in Honolulu”: SU → Cal → JF1 → JF2 → JF3 → HWa
→ HWaMT no revision → HWb |
454.16–456.6 |
If . . . shoved.” |
The HWa text derived ultimately from a piece entitled “Etiquette” in SU (SLC 1866m), through intervening printings in the Californian and three successive editions of The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County (JF1, New York: C.H. Webb, 1867; JF2, London: George Routledge
and Sons, 1867 [unauthorized]; JF3, London: John Camden Hotten, [1870] [unauthorized]).
HWaMT contains no revisions.
|
*“Mark in Mormonland”: A → E → HWa → HWaMTdeleted |
100.1–106.7 |
According . . . Mormons. |
The HWa text derived from A, through E; Mark Twain deleted it without revision on
HWaMT. |
[begin page 927]
*“A Nabob’s Visit to New York”: A → AP → HWa → HWaMT
→ HWb |
304.3–307.15 |
In . . . us.” |
The HWa text derived from A; the collation entry at 305.10 suggests that it was typeset
from AP. |
305.3 |
Ride it (A–AP, HWaMT–HWb) • Ride (HWa) |
305.10 |
stared (A) • started for (HWa); stared for (AP, HWaMT–HWb) |
305.24 |
can’t (A–AP, HWaMT–HWb) • shan’t (HWa) |
305.36 |
reckon—(A–AP, HWaMT–HWb) • reckon⁁ (HWa) |
306.18 |
cleats (A–AP, HWaMT–HWb) • bleats (HWa) |
307.14 |
had (A–AP, HWaMT–HWb) • have (HWa) |
“A Remarkable Stranger”: G → PJks → HWa → HWaMT → HWb |
526.11–531.22 |
I . . . sir.” |
The HWa text derived ultimately from G, through PJks.
|
*“Sending Them Through”: A → E → PJks → HWa → HWaMT
→ HWb |
The HWa text derived from A, through E and PJks. |
39.6 |
who? (A–E, HWaMT–HWb) • what? (PJks–HWa) [SLC in HWaMT margin:
“God damn the hound who altered that.”] |
39.7 |
who? (A–E) • what? (PJks–HWa); who? (HWaMT–HWb) |
39.8 |
Moses, (A–E) • Moses was (PJks–HWa); Moses (HWaMT–HWb) |
“The Steed ‘Oahu’ ”: SU → Cal → JF1 → JF2 → JF3 → HWa
→ HWaMT → HWb |
437.5–438.7 |
The . . . storm. |
The publication history of the HWa text is identical to that of “Honoured as a Curiosity
in Honolulu” (see
above).
|
*“The Union—Right or Wrong?”: A → E → PJks → HWa → HWaMT → HWb |
278.11–281.3 |
We . . . had. |
The HWa text derived from A, through E and PJks. (The designation “A–HWa” means that
the reading is
identical in A, E, PJks, and HWa.) |
278.31–279.1 |
get . . . have1 (A–E) • get (PJks–HWb) this corruption necessitated SLC’s revision at 279.2 |
279.2 |
they will (A–HWa) • I can (HWaMT–HWb) |
279.6 |
rational (A–HWa) • human (HWaMT–HWb) |
280.11 |
But (A–HWa) • no ¶ But (HWaMT–HWb) [SLC in HWaMT
margin: “No ¶”] |
280.11 |
friendly. The (A–E) • friendly![¶] The (PJks–HWa); friendly.
[¶] The (HWaMT–HWb) |
HWb
The Choice Humorous Works of Mark Twain. Revised and Corrected by the Author. With Life and Portrait of
the Author, and [begin page 928] Numerous Illustrations. London: Chatto and Windus, 1874. BAL 3605. HWb incorporated the revisions inscribed by Mark Twain on HWaMT; all the texts
were therefore merely new impressions of HWa, with corrected plates. All but one of
the Roughing It sketches
in HWa were reprinted in HWb; Mark Twain canceled “Mark in Mormonland.” Later reprintings
of “Honoured as a
Curiosity in Honolulu”—in Mark Twain’s Sketches, New and Old (American Publishing
Company, 1875), Information Wanted (George Routledge and Sons, [1876]), and Sketches by Mark Twain (Bernhard Tauchnitz, 1883)—derived from HWb without authorial revision.
Can
Canadian edition. Roughing It. Toronto: Belford and Co., 1880. This unauthorized, abridged edition was
set from Af. It contains 71 instead of 79 chapters: chapters 22, 36, 45, 49, 52, 71,
72, and 77 were omitted, as were the appendixes.
Although “Fully Illustrated by Eminent Artists,” according to the title page, it contains
relatively few illustrations,
some possibly tracings of illustrations in A and others probably stock cuts chosen
for their fancied appropriateness. In July 1880,
Belford and Company issued an impression of this edition, in a two-column format resembling
a magazine or small newspaper, as
“The Belford Library,” no. 9 (July [n.y.]). Although this impression looks very different
from the book
issued by Belford, it was printed from the same type, reimposed line for line, some
75 lines per page. The year of the Belford
Library impression is implied by the presence, below the masthead and title, of a
quotation taken from a review of A Tramp Abroad which appeared in the London Athenaeum no. 2739 (24 Apr 80): 529–30. Undated
reprints of this edition were issued by Rose-Belford Publishing Company and Rose Publishing
Company; Rose-Belford was in operation
until 1883, and Rose from 1883 until 1894.
Tau
Continental edition. 2 vols. Roughing It and The Innocents at Home. Authorized
Edition. Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz, 1880–81. BAL 3627.
Collection of British Authors, volumes 1929 and 1948. This unillustrated edition was
typeset from E. Like E, volume 2 includes
“A Burlesque Autobiography” and omits the appendixes included in A.
E2
Second English edition. 1 vol. Roughing It and The Innocents at Home. Illustrated by F.A. Fraser. London:
George Routledge and Sons, 1882. BAL 3630. This edition was
typeset from E but contains many corrected readings from A, including one variant
(“sixteenth” at 136n.6) introduced in
Ae, as well as the appendixes of A that were omitted from E. Like E, however, it includes
“A Burlesque Autobiography.”
An 1883 impression of E2 is recorded as BAL 3635. In 1885 Chatto
and Windus acquired the plates of E2 from Routledge, together with 1536 copies of
the book in quires. Chatto issued these copies with
a cancel title page bearing its own imprint in 1885, and produced another printing
in 1889. The two Routledge impressions and the
1889 Chatto impression were sold at 7s. 6d. in decorated red cloth. In 1897 Chatto and
Windus issued the first of a [begin page 929] number of impressions printed from the same plates but priced at 3s. 6d. and bound in dark blue cloth stamped in gold on the front cover and spine.
LoH
Mark Twain’s Library of Humor. New York: Charles L. Webster and Co., 1888. BAL 3425. This edition was also issued in Montreal by the Dawson Brothers (1888), an
authorized printing from duplicate plates of LoH. The texts of all five Roughing It excerpts were typeset from
A.
30.5–34.12 |
Along . . . parents. |
416.1–419.25 |
One . . . mining.” |
158.1–165.12 |
I1 . . . perhaps. |
207.14–219.24 |
We . . . cards! |
“Nevada Nabobs in New York” |
304.3–307.15 |
In . . . us.” |
LoHE
Mark Twain’s Library of Humour. London: Chatto and Windus, 1888 and 1897. BAL 1982. This authorized edition contains all of the Roughing It
selections in LoH, from which it was typeset.
SAH
Selections from American Humour. Leipzig: Bernhard Tauchnitz, 1888. BAL 3646. The texts of both Roughing It excerpts were typeset from
LoH.
416.1–419.25 |
One . . . mining.” |
158.1–165.12 |
I1 . . . perhaps. |
A2
Second American edition. 2 vols. Roughing It. Hartford: American Publishing Company,
1899, 1901, and 1903; London: Chatto and Windus, 1899; New York: Harper and Brothers,
1903–?14. BAL 3456. This edition was typeset from Ag. The three earliest impressions, all issued
in
1899, were called the Autograph, Royal, and Popular “editions.” All later impressions
include corrections in the plates
suggested by Forrest Morgan, a proofreader for the American Publishing Company; Mark
Twain was evidently consulted in only one
instance: see the textual note at 416.4.1 These corrections first appeared in two other 1899 impressions [begin page 930] called the
Japan and DeLuxe editions. Later impressions include the Hillcrest edition, issued
by the American Publishing Company in 1903, and
also by Harper and Brothers from 1903 to 1906; the Author’s National edition; and
the Uniform Library edition issued by Harper
from about 1904 to 1914, both as two volumes and as two volumes in one. In 1915, Harper
issued a new, more compact, two-volume
edition as the Limp Leather edition. Whereas in A2 volume 1 ends on page 326 and volume
2 on page 366, in this later edition volume 1
ends on unnumbered page 287 and volume 2 on unnumbered page 330. The new plates were
used subsequently to produce the regular Harper
edition, which bore no “edition” name, both in two volumes and in two volumes bound
as one, and the two-volume
Definitive edition published in 1922 by Gabriel Wells. A copy of Roughing It now in the Mark Twain Papers,
issued by Harper and Row in 1969, was printed from the same setting of type.
Below is a list of additional books known to have reprinted excerpts from Roughing It during
the author’s lifetime (newspaper reprintings are not included). There is no evidence
to suggest that they incorporate Mark
Twain’s revisions or corrections, but the possibility of authorial intervention cannot
be ruled out entirely, since the
excerpted texts have not been collated.
That Convention; or, Five Days a Politician. By F. G. W. et als. By Fletcher G. Welch. New
York and Chicago: F. G. Welch and Co., 1872. BAL, 2:246.
“The Champion Chirography of the Modern Cincinnatus.”
Howard’s Recitations. Comic, Serious, and Pathetic. Edited by Clarence J. Howard. New
York: Dick and Fitzgerald, [1872]. BAL, 2:246.
“Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral.”
One Hundred Choice Selections No. 9. Compiled by Phineas Garrett. Philadelphia and Chicago:
P. Garrett and Co., 1874. BAL, 2:247. “Buck
Fanshaw’s Funeral.”
The Pacific Coast Fourth Reader. San Francisco: A. L. Bancroft and Co., 1874. “The
Pony Rider,” “A Nevada Quartz-Mill” (parts 1 and 2), and “The Coyote.”
The Elocutionist’s Annual Number 2. Edited by J. W. Shoemaker. Philadelphia: J. W.
Shoemaker and Co., 1875. BAL, 2:247. “Buck Fanshaw’s
Funeral.”
Speechiana. New York: Happy Hours Co., [1875?]. “Buck Fanshaw’s
Funeral.”
Record of the Year, 1:4 (April 1876). Reissued in Parlor Table
Companion. New York: G. W. Carleton and Co., 1877. BAL 3376.
“Mark Twain Buys a Horse.”
The Reading Club and Handy Speaker. Number 6. Edited by George M. Baker. Boston: Lee and
Shepard; New York: Charles T. Dillingham, 1879. BAL, 2:249.
“Greeley’s Ride.”
[begin page 931] Wit and Humor of the Age . . . by Mark Twain, Robt. J.
Burdette, Josh Billings, Alex. Sweet, Eli Perkins. With the Philosophy of Wit and
Humor, by Melville D. Landon. Chicago: Western
Publishing House, 1883. BAL 3633 and 11220; reprinted by various
publishers, sometimes entitled Library of Wit and Humor by Mark Twain and Others. “Mark Twain on the
First Woman in Nevada,” “Mark Twain’s Nevada Funeral—Scotty Briggs and the Clergyman,”
and
“Mark Twain on the First San Francisco Baby.”
Selections of American Humor in Prose and Verse. Leipzig: Gressner and Schramm,
[1883]. “The Aged Pilot Man.”
Choice Bits from Mark Twain. London: Diprose and Bateman, [1885]. BAL 3639. “Baker’s Cat” and “Sending Them
Through.”
Chambers’s New Reciter: Comprising Selections from the Works of I. Zangwill
. . . [et al.] Edited by R. C. H. Morison. London: W. and R. Chambers, 1900. “Buck
Fanshaw’s Funeral.”
Masterpieces of Wit and Humor with Stories and an Introduction by Robert J. Burdette.
Copyright, 1902, by E. J. Long. BAL 2013 and 3473. “The
Funeral of Buck Fanshaw.”
Mark Twain’s Library of Humor: The Primrose Way. New York: Harper and Brothers, 1906.
BAL 3668. “Buck Fanshaw’s Funeral.”
The American Press Humorists’ Book. Edited and published by Frank Thompson Searight.
Los Angeles: Frank Thompson Searight, 1907. BAL 3501. “Mark
Twain Recalls an Incident of Carson Days” [Nevada nabobs in New York].
Collations
Like most books printed in the latter half of the nineteenth century, all copies of
the first American edition of
Roughing It were manufactured with acidic paper that has deteriorated over time, rendering the
volumes
extremely fragile. To reduce unnecessary damage to copies in CU-MARK, the text was
initially transcribed and many collations were performed using copies of a modern
facsimile of Ac (N.Y.: Hippocrene Books,
[1987]). Variant readings, however, were always checked in actual first-edition copies.
Printer’s copy for this edition was initially prepared by two typists, each of whom
keyed the entire
text of the first edition from a copy of the Ac facsimile on a microcomputer using
WordPerfect software, version 5.0. DocuComp
software, version 1.2, was used to compare the two transcriptions electronically and
to generate a list of the differences between
them. The typographical errors thus revealed were purged from the text. Passages based
on sources other than A were then altered to
bring them into conformity with their several copy-texts, by incorporation of accepted
copy-text readings (previously identified
through collation), and the entire text was emended as necessary. The resulting edited
text was submitted on floppy disk to Wilsted
& Taylor Publishing Services of Oakland, [begin page 923] California, who converted it electronically using Penta
software to enable a Linotron 202 typesetter to produce printed pages. The page proofs
were proofread by a two-person team against a
copy of Ab and the other copy-texts. It was thus possible to detect at this stage
any errors that had previously been overlooked. In
some half dozen instances the two typists made identical errors, which had not been
identified by the DocuComp comparison. In
addition, a handful of errors had been introduced by typesetter intervention. To ensure
that the integrity of the corrected
electronic text was preserved through successive stages of production, a final collation
was performed—by superimposition on a
light box—between the earliest correct version of each page and its last page proof,
generated immediately before the book was
printed.
The first-edition illustrations were reproduced from a copy of Ac (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872 copy 1). In addition, the points distinguishing the seven states of
A from one another were checked in
the following copies: Aa (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872 copy 4); Ab (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872); Ac (CU-MARK facsimile); Ac (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872c copy 1); Ac (CU-MARK
PS1318.A1 1872a copy 2); Ad (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872a copy 4); Ae (Hirst); Af (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1888); Ag (CU-MARK PS1318.A1
1900); Ag (Vi PS1318.A1 1903).
The sight collations listed below were carried out by two-person teams. The machine
collations were performed
on a Hinman collator. An asterisk (*) on an entry indicates that the complete collation
performed for RI 1972 was not repeated; instead, sight collation was performed on selected passages
only, as needed to support the conclusion that the text was wholly derivative.
sight collations
Ac (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872c copy 1, PH) vs.
AP (DLC, PH)
BE (NBu, PH)
BoM (CoDR BX8623 1866)
G (CU-MARK AP2.G2 set 2)
HoHI (CU-BANC DU625.J385)
MP (CU-BANC xF835.W18 1868)
NYT (CU-NEWS, PH)
PCA (CU-BANC, PH)
PT (CU-BANC, PH)
SU, April 1866 (CU-MARK, clippings in Scrapbook
6:109–13)
SU, May–November 1866 (CU-MARK, bound newsprint)
TE63 (CU-MARK, clipping in Scrapbook 2:70)
TE70 (CU-BANC, PH)
VoM (CU-BANC xF731.D57)
Ac (CU-MARK facsimile) vs.
Aus (NRU PS1318.Alr, PH)*
Aus (CU-MARK PS1322.1537 1873)*
[begin page 933] E(CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1880b)
PJks (IU 817.C859p, PH)*
Can (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1880a)*
Tau vol. 1 (MB PS1318.A1 1880, PH)*
Tau vol. 2 (CU-MARK PS1322.1537 1881 copy 1)*
E2 (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1882)*
LoH (CU-MARK PN6157.C5 1888 copy 5)*
LoHE (CU-MARK PN6157.C5 1888a)*
SAH (CU-MARK PRS.C55S41 1888)*
A2 (CU-MARK PS1300.E99d, vols. 7, 8)*
A2 (CU-MARK PS1300.E99c, vols. 7, 8)*
Ac (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872a copy 2) vs.
HWa (TxU Clemens B33)
HWb (TxU Clemens B34)
machine collations
Prb (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872p) vs.
Pra (collection of Dorothy Goldberg)
Ac (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872c copy 1)
Ac (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872a copy 2) vs.
Aa (CU-MARK PS1318.A1 1872 copy 4)
Ag (Vi PS1318.A1 1903)
Editorial Notes
1 The copy of A2 marked with
corrections by Forrest Morgan (Royal edition, vols. 7–8) is at
CtY-BR. In
addition, some—but not all—of these corrections are listed on a sheet of paper now
at
ViU (Box 13, 6314-q). At the top of this sheet is written “Corrections for Roughing It—old
edition” in Morgan’s hand; the list itself is in Frank Bliss’s hand. Morgan compared
the text of A with the text
of A2, restoring readings from A in some cases, and offering additional corrections
as well. His suggestions were reviewed by Bliss,
who evidently selected which ones to carry out (see
HF,
522–23 n. 5).