‸ Personal ‸
My Dr. Reid—
Warner was by when I got this news, & so no doubt he will have it in the form of a small item in [tomorrow’s] Courant.1
I meant to make three stickfuls of it for you, but I got fond of it & so it has strung out to a couple of columns.2 I am so awfully busy getting ready to lecture in New York that I ought not to have “got fond of it.” But it’s all right; everybody likes the Cunarders, though nobody knows anything about them.
Let the boys follow my copy—there’s only 2 italicised words.
Yrs
Mark.
[enclosure:]
[letter docketed:]
Mr Reid: This is a very entertaining letter—on the reward to the sailors who effected a rescue described by Mark Twain—on British benevolence generally, and winding up with a strong puff of the Cunard line.
There is some part of it cut out on the 17th p. which I think it was rather a pity to leave out. Perhaps Mr. C. thought it might be considered irreverent.3
WCW4
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Mark Twain was on board the Cunard steamer
Batavia when the gallant crew of that vessel picked up at sea,
hazarding their lives, the survivors of the foundered bark Charles
Ward. Readers of The Tribune will recollect his blood-stirring account of the
rescue, at which he so nobly
“assisted”—as the French have it.
They will be glad to hear the sequel of the whole matter, which is
related by Mark Twain in a characteristic letter, herewith
published. The award of the gold medal and other things therewith
connected give our correspondent occasion to reel off a pleasant
skein of gossip about worthier topics than will be found in what he
calls “the daily feast of Congress corruption and
judicial rottenness.” (27 Jan 73, 4)
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L5, 282–283.
Provenance:The Whitelaw Reid Papers (part of the Papers of the Reid Family) were donated
to DLC between 1953 and 1957 by Helen Rogers Reid (Mrs. Ogden Mills
Reid).
Emendations and textual notes:
24 25th • 245th.
tomorrow’s • to- |morrow’s