Sept. 24, 1874.
The Hon
The Secretary of
t War:
Dear Sir:
It isn’t that I am thankless that I have not written before now to thank you for your most kind & very effectual efforts toward the appointment of my nephew to the Naval school; but the fact is I have been getting out a play, & that took all my time for a while; & now I am finishing & furnishing a house & fighting a detachment of carpenters for the privilege of occupying a spare corner in it; & the consequence is that at last my head is all gone & I am but a wreck of my former self. But still I want to thank you as heartily as I can—& as heartily, too as if I were in my right mind—though it really seems to be only a sort of lucid interval.
I shall have the boy put to school at once. I perfectly understand that the promise is not absolute, & that Mr. Robeson may not be able to compass the appointment; but we will at least hope for success, & prepare for it.
And so it is “Good for Keokuk!” It seems to be a good sort of gate to approach the government through, does the Gate [City. 1 My ] brother has gone out there again to live, but he hasn’t any official designs, & I must try & not breed any in his head by telling him in what high respect the authorities hold the name of that town.2
Thanking you again,
I am
Truly y
Yrs
Samℓ. L. Clemens
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L6, 243–244.
Provenance:The MS, owned in 1930 by Daniel P. Woolley, vice-president of Standard
Brands, was deposited at ViU by Clifton Waller Barrett on 15 May 1962.
Emendations and textual notes:
City. My • City.—|My