westminster hotel, cor. of irving place and
16th st. new york roberts
& palmer proprs
April 22./67.
Malcolmb Townsend EsqDear Sir—
I don’t know what use you can make of my autograph, but as far as it will go you are welcome to it, cheerfully.—[ & if you are anythin and a sentiment also:]
Thirty days after date I promise to pay—
It was a slip of the pen—but you will excuse it—it comes of long habit—I so often put my autograph to [ lit ]that sort of sentiment.
We will change it to my favorite, which is homely but good:
“Here’s Luck!”
Yrs Respectfully
Mark Twain
P.S. Excuse all blots & blemishes, as the [school-girls ]say.1
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L2, 28–29; AAA 1924, lot 92, without the salutation and complimentary
closing.
Provenance:On 24 or 25 November 1924, the MS, accompanied by a souvenir menu from the
1900 Lotos Club banquet in Clemens’s honor, was sold as part of
the collection of “the late William F. Gable of Altoona,
Pennsylvania.” It is not known when it became part of the Berg
Collection, given by Dr. Albert A. Berg to NN in 1940 but continuously
enlarged by gift and purchase since then. The MS came to the Berg Collection
tipped into a copy of the first American edition of The
Adventures of Tom Sawyer (1876).
Emendations and textual notes:
& if you are anythin and a sentiment also: • [‘and a sentiment also:’ over wiped-out ‘& if you are anythin’]
lit • [doubtful]
school-girls • school-|girls