Dec. 6.
Livy darling, I shall rest all day tomorrow (Sunday) except that I shall be studying my new lecture, & on Monday evening I shall take a fresh start. There was a mighty fine house there this afternoon, & I went through all right, but I am unspeakably sick of the Sandwich Islands as a topic to lecture on.1 I shall get tired of the new one in a week I expect.
I am tired, but I do love you & I do long to see you.
Saml.
Mrs. Samℓ. L. Clemens | Hartford | [ Com Conn] | [flourish] [in upper left corner:] America | [flourish] [postmarked:] london-w. e 12 de 8 73 [and] new york dec 20 paid all
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
The quaint American humourist, “Mark
Twain,” whose facetious lecture on “Our Fellow
Savages of the Sandwich Islands” was received with such
distinguished favour on its first recital in October, has resumed
his pleasant discourses, and a numerous audience last night welcomed
him back from a rapid trip across the Atlantic, which has had
apparently no other effect than that of freshening the vivacity of
the lecturer. To the odd fancies, amusing anecdotes, sly satirical
comments, and graphic descriptions of the entertainer, the
assemblage listened with the same interest and sustained enjoyment
which were so strongly manifested by the auditory on the previous
occasions, and at the end “Mark Twain” was the
recipient of one of those spontaneous tributes of hearty applause
only given to those who have really honestly earned the thanks of an
audience for an hour’s genuine gratification.
(“Hanover-square Rooms,” 2 Dec 73, clipping in
Scrapbook 12:33, CU-MARK) On that same day the London Morning
Post pointed out that Clemens’s talents were greater
than some critics gave him credit for: It is a merit of the lecturer’s that while
... he is able to make his hearers very merry, he is competent to
hold them well-nigh spell-bound as he describes in picturesque
phraseology the thousand and one scenic beauties of the Sandwich
Islands. Perhaps, as a rule, the audience are too apt to expect the
lecturer to be “funny” the whole of the
evening, instead of crediting him with a desire to be instructive as
well as amusing. Of his ability to do both there is no question, as
was abundantly proved last night. (“Mr. ‘Mark
Twain,’” 2 Dec 73, 6, clipping in Scrapbook
12:33, CU-MARK) Stoddard preserved both of these notices in one of the
scrapbooks he was keeping for Clemens.
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L5, 494–495; LLMT, 364, brief paraphrase.
Provenance:see Samossoud Collection in Description of Provenance.
Emendations and textual notes:
Com Conn • Comnn