Bless us, Frank, of all the devils in the world, you are the particular devil that I most wish would pack up his trunk & his wife (from the other place) & waltz along up here & give us a week’s glorification & general jollity in our house. We would certainly come down & see you twain, but that I have been away from home, in effect, the best part of a year & really feel entitled to linger by mine own hearthstone for a little while, now.
Write me, or telegraph me what day you will come & what train you will come by, & I will be at the station to receive you. Both of you will like my wife & adore our neighbors.1 I am entirely idle, & shall remain so for two weeks & possibly three. I did intend to lecture in New York & Boston, but my wife prefers that I should remain at a home all the winter, & I [honetstly ] think I have not even a faint desire to do anything that does not meet with her enthusiastic [approval. ] so—so I shall not lecture at all this winter.
The best train leaves the Grand Central Depot, in New York, & gets here at 10 AM & comes here in about 3 hours. Then I think there are 4-hour trains that leave at 12 8 AM., 12:15, & 3 P.M. Take your choice & let me know.2 You MUST come. Nobody in the house but my wife & me,—& we’ll have a royal good time telling lies & smoking.3
Yrs always
Mark.
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L6, 22–23.
Provenance:The MS, offered for sale in 1937 (AAA/Anderson
1937, lot 91), was donated in about 1960 by the
family of businessman and collector George N. Meissner
(1872–1960).
Emendations and textual notes:
1874. • [a superscript ‘?’ inserted in ink after ‘1874.’ has been deemed curatorial]
honetstly • [‘t’ partly formed; possibly ‘I’]
approval. • [deletion implied]