Elmira, Apl. 18.
My Dear Bro:
Since Knox has printed a similar story (so (the same “situation” has been in print often—men have written it before Knox & I were born,)—let the Bull story alone until it appears in the book—or at least in the “specimen” chapters for canvassers. That is to say, Do not put it in the paper, at all. I cannot alter it—too much trouble.1
Joe Goodman is up here at the farm with me—will come up every day for 2 months & write a novel.
He is going to read my MSS critically.2
Livy just the same—no better, no worse.
Yrs
Sam.
P. S. No—I won’t print Jack & Moses. I may lecture next winter, & in that case shall want it.3
Mind you, I do ‸must‸ not appear in the paper oftener than bi-monthly, in any case.
Explanatory Notes
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L4, 378–379; MTMF, 153, brief excerpt; MTLP, 64–65.
Provenance:see Mark Twain Papers in Description of Provenance.