Buffalo 22d.
Dear Redpath=
The Young Men’s Association here want me to lecture, & they are a pretty decent lot. In fact the Sec’y has almost made me feel like talking in Buffalo.1 However, I have made such a caterwaul at you the other day on the subject that I am ashamed to discuss Buffalo with you. So I merely told him to write you & if it all fell right I would talk. I did not tell him my price is $200—you can do that yourself if you choose to open negotiations. But that GAR are not [ no nice] people.
We are packing our furniture & shipping it to Hartford & we are in a mess—house upside down—my wife sick—can’t leave her bed for perhaps a week yet—& yet we must take possession of our house in Hartford Oct. 1.2
Did I offend with my last letter? I didn’t mean to, but I am such an ass that I do most things ass foremost.
Ys
Mark.
Do you ask if I know [my] mind? No, I don’t. Never have had an experience of the kind.
[letter docketed:] boston lyceum bureau. redpath & fall. sep 26 1871 [and] Twain Mark. | Buffalo N. Y. | Sept. 22nd ”71.
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Mark Twain’s Residence.—For the benefit of those who are
making inquiry as to the price of Mark Twain’s residence,
on Delaware street, just above Virginia street, we would state that
the house is a new brick, of modern pattern, three stories high,
Mansard roof, with bath-room, warm and cold water and gas in all the
rooms—13 in number, beside the kitchen and laundry;
heating furnace, dry and roomy cellar, and all the modern
improvements. The wainscoting is black walnut and maple, the doors
heavy black walnut, and the interior finish generally is artistic
and complete. Attached to the house is a two-story brick barn,
complete in all its appointments, with gas and water. The lot is 65
feet front, 130 feet deep, and is one of the most desirable
locations in the city. The furniture is not for sale, and the price
asked for house and barn is $20,000. This is in answer to
several questions inquiring “what Mark Twain asks for his
house.” Hume & Sanford are the agents. (20
Sept 71, 2)
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L4, 459–460; Bangs, lot 81, brief excerpt.
Provenance:The present location of the MS, sold to an unidentified purchaser in 1900 and
owned by Axelrod in 1983, is not known. •
Emendations and textual notes:
no nice • noice