Hartford, Jan 12
Dear Hay—
Bliss is going to send “Roughing It” to the Tribune today, so he says. If you ever do any book reviews for the paper, I wish you’d & Reid would arrive at an amicable arrangement whereby you can have an hour or two to write a review of that book in, for you understand it & a week’s holiday afterward to rest up in—for you know the people in it & the spirit of it better than an eastern man would.1 I shall hope so, at any rate. ‸That is I mean I hope you’ll write it—that is what I am trying to mean.‸
Don’t answer this letter—for I know how a man hates a man that’s made him write a letter.
I have half a notion of preaching a Sandwich Island lecture in N. Y., (being invited thereto by several parties at rather seductive [figures)]. ‸Tribune letters, you know.‸ ‸I published 2 letters on the Islands in the Tribune last week.‸ 2 I But I am pretty busy & may not do it. Still, what I am trying to say, is, that if I do do it, I will then call upon you & get the answer to this letter——so don’t write.
Ys Truly
Samℓ. L. Clemens
Col. John Hay | Tribune [Editorial] staff | New York. | [flourish] [return address:] if not delivered within 10 days, to be returned to [postmarked:] [ hartford ]
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Dear Sir: I received the copy of Mark Twain’s
book of which you speak, and have asked our Mr Ripley to give it
early attention. ... he may be able to make such a notice as will be
gratifying to you. In that case it will be none the less so to
myself, since Clemens has few warmer friends or heartier admirers
than Very truly yours
Whitelaw Reid
E. Bliss, Jr. Esq. George Ripley (1802–80) received a degree from Harvard
Divinity School in 1826 and served as an ordained minister for fifteen
years. In 1841, together with his wife, sister, and several others, he
founded the Brook Farm Institute, a short-lived experimental community
near Boston. He had been the literary critic for the Tribune since 1849. Clemens was not at all pleased with his
review: see 2
Feb 73 to OLC.
116 Asylum St.
Hartford
Conn.
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L5, 268–269.
Provenance:donated to OClWHi in 1969 by Dr. and Mrs. Jonathan Bishop. Dr. Bishop is the
grandson of Samuel Mather and Flora Stone, whose sister, Clara Stone, was
married to John Hay.
Emendations and textual notes:
figures) • figures)). [closing parenthesis written accidentally over the ‘s’ and then rewritten]
Editorial • Editoriall
hartford • hart [] [torn; remainder of postmark torn away]