Dec. 9,
Dear Fitz Gibbon:
We had such a jolly nice audience, this foggy night, & I never enjoyed talking in all my life as I did on this occasion. It is a most excellent notice in the Post, & I am grateful for it.1 Won’t you & Mrs. Fitz Gibbon try to run down some night & hear this lecture? I wish you would. The people like it better than the other one.
Yes, I’m going to be at the Morayshire dinner 2—but I haven’t any highland costume but an undershirt & a striped cravat.
Ys Ever
L. Clemens.
Explanatory Notes
Of course Mr. Twain’s forte is humour, often of the broadest kind, yet never
going beyond the line; but he must also be credited with possessing
an extraordinary power of describing the wonders of those Western
regions in picturesque language. He narrates with facility the
splendours of mountain, valley, and lake scenery, conjuring up
panorama after panorama matchless for its wealth of beauty.
Evidently a very close observer of nature, Mr. Twain is also a
nature-worshipper, for he dilates with what, for him, is enthusiasm
upon the scenic charms which abound in California. This merit the
audience are too apt to overlook in their eagerness to hear
“something funny,” of which there is indeed a
sufficiency. Few men can tell a story as well as Mr. Twain, who has
an inexhaustible stock of “yarns,” and is
never tired of spinning them. . . . There is nothing so broadly
comic to be heard in London as “Roughing it on the Silver
Frontier,” and Mr. Twain ought to have crowded houses
every night, as no doubt he will. His reception last night was
exceedingly flattering, and the large concert-room was full.
(“Mr. Mark Twain’s New Lecture,” 9
Dec 73, 2, clipping in Scrapbook 12:37, CU-MARK)
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L5, 500.
Provenance:donated to MoSW in about 1960 by the family of
businessman and collector George N. Meissner (1872–1960).