Feb. 13.
Dear Redpath:
I’m going to reach the St. James Hotel, Boston, about 4 or 5 Monday afternoon, to be at the Wilkie Collins dinner, & I hope you’ll be there.1 I want to show you the MS. of a queer play I have written.2
Ys
Mark.
[letter docketed:] [boston lyceum bureau. james redpath. feb 15 1874] [and] Mark Twain| Febr’y 15, 1874.
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Ladies and Gentlemen—I am here to introduce Mr. Charles
Kingsley, the lecturer of the evening, and will observe that when I
wrote the book called “The Innocents Abroad”
[applause], I thought it was a volume which
would bring me at once into intimate relation with the clergy. But I
could bring evidence to show that from that day to this, this is the
first time that I have ever been called upon to perform this
pleasant office of vouching for a clergyman
[laughter] and give him a good unbiased start
before an audience. [Laughter.] Now that my
opportunity has come at last, I am appointed to introduce a
clergyman who needs no introduction in America.
[Applause.] And although I have n’t
been requested by the committee to indorse him, I volunteer that
[laughter] because I think it is a graceful
thing to do; and it is all the more graceful, from being so
unnecessary. . . . And I am glad to say that this kindly feeling
toward Mr. Kingsley is not wasted, for his heart is with America,
and when he is in his own home the latch string hangs on the outside
of the door for us. I know this from personal experience; perhaps
that is why it has not been considered unfitting that I should
perform this office in which I am now engaged.
[Laughter.] Now, for a year, for more than a
year, I have been enjoying the hearty hospitality of English friends
in England, and this is a hospitality which is growing wider and
freer every day toward our countrymen. I was treated so well there,
so undeservedly well, that I should always be glad of an opportunity
to extend to Englishmen the good offices of our people; and I do
hope that the good feeling, the growing good feeling, between the
old mother country and her strong, aspiring child will continue to
extend until it shall exist over the whole great area of both
nations. I have the honor to introduce to you Rev. Charles Kingsley.
[Applause.] (“Rev. Charles Kingsley
at Tremont Temple,” Boston Evening
Transcript, 18 Feb 74, 1) Clemens probably returned to Hartford on Wednesday
morning, 18 February (SLC 1874 [MT02462],
1874 [MT02463]; Seaver 1874, in William Seaver’s Squibs
about Clemens; “Brief Jottings,” Boston
Evening Transcript, 18 Feb 74, 4;
“Charles Kingsley’s Lecture,” Boston
Advertiser, 18 Feb 74, 1).
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L6, 34–36; Henkels 1903, lot 632; Anderson Auction Company 1908, lot 235.
Provenance:When offered for sale in 1903 the MS was part of the collection of Harold
Pierce; when offered again in 1908 it was part of the collection of Edwin N.
Lapham (b. 1850). In 1911 Owen F. Aldis (1852–1925) donated it to
CtY in his American Literature collection. At that time the MS was laid in a
copy of Old Times on the Mississippi (Toronto:
Belford Brothers, 1876).
Emendations and textual notes:
boston lyceum bureau. james redpath. feb 15 1874 • [ ] feb 15 [18] [erased; text adopted from 28 Feb 74 to Redpath]