My Dear Mr. Gill:
I see you announce your humble servant among your Treasure Trove series.1 Don’t do it anymore. I’ve got burnt once ce (Lotos Leaves)—that is enough. I shall be a very very old fool before I repeat the courtesy (i.e. folly) of giving my permission to print a sketch of mine in any book but mine.2
Therefore, since I have endeavored to do you kinidnesses before now, please do one for me, inasmuch as your opportunity has come—to wit: Give notice in print, as quickly as you can, that in consequence of my publishers’ unwillingness, nothing of mine will appear in your Treasure Trove. That will be sufficient without mentioning other reasons.
S L Clemens
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Messrs. William F. Gill & Co., who are
tasteful in their selections of literature, announce some
excellent summer reading in press, among which is a
“Satchel series” and a
“Treasure Trove series,” the latter
including graceful and humorous selections from Dickens,
Thackeray, Lamb, Swift, Addison, and Irving, among the classics,
interspersed with popular pieces by Mark Twain and Max Adeler,
and some extracts from Geo. Wm. Curtis’s agreeable
essays.
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L6, 488–489; MTLP, 87–88.
Provenance:The MS, which was owned at one time by Thomas Porro, was deposited at ViU by Clifton Waller Barrett on 17
December 1963.
Emendations and textual notes:
Hdfd • [sic]
S L • [‘L’ partly formed]