Elmira, Aug. 8.
Friend Bliss:1
Everything O. K. So that’s all right. I will remark, though, in passing, that no proposition has ever been made to Dustin of any kind—& none received from Dustin—so that report falls to the ground.2 I have made propositions to no publisher.
Yes, I like the idea of issuing Nov. 1st—or Dec. 1st or 15th,—whichever date seems best. What I am after is the best date. of the three. Choose it yourself. If you think it best to ‸issue Dec. 15, &‸ begin [MS page 2] canvassing Nov. 1st 4 or 5 weeks before that date, all right. That would make it essentially a holiday book & give it its very best chance, perhaps.
But if you prefer another date, let it be Nov. 1st, so as to get the month or 5 weeks’ canvassing done before the election.
I think the advantage lies with Dec. 15—don’t you?
But whichever date is chosen, let us make sure to be out promptly on that very day, & with an edition that will amply supply every order, so that there shall be no complaint on that head.3
I remember, now, you [MS page 3] explained the inexpediency of offering prizes, once before. So that may as well be dropped.4
I want the “Atlantic” notice of “Sawyer” to be put into the prospectus & in the slips that go to editors, for I think & a line or two of it in your advertisements, for I think it will have a good effect.5 I wish I had some of the English notices, but I suppose they have been thrown aside & lost at my house in Hartford, as I did not order any newspapers to be forwarded here.6
I have just returned Chap. 10, or 11, I forget [MS page 4] which—of Sawyer. They are admirably clean, nice proofs. One does not curse & swear over them.
[H] I have received Warner’s book, & it is a very handsome piece of typograpl hy &c. Haven’t read but 1st Chap—only got it last night.7
Let me know which of the two dates of publication you decide to use,.
The enclosed notice, from the Spectator has just come. I have bracketed good sentences in it, but it is all good, & possibly you can find use for it.
Chatto and Windus think
Company here to dinner—so I will quit.
Yrs
Clemens
[enclosure simulated, line by line:] 8
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. By Mark Twain (Chatto and Windus.)—This tale of boy-life on the other side of the Atlantic will amuse many readers, old as well as young. There is a certain fresh- ness and novelty about it, a practically romantic character, so to speak, which will make it very attractive. Desert islands and the like are all very well to read about, but boys know that they are not likely to come in their way; but an island in the Mississippi where they can really play Robinson Crusoe, catch fish to eat, and in a way, actually live like real runaways, looks true. Altogether, Tom Sawyer’s lot was cast in a region not so tamed down by conventionalities, as is that in which English boys are doomed to live. Hence he had rare opportunities, and saw rare sights, actual tragedies, which our tamer life is content to read about in books. Of course, what Mark Twain writes is sure to be amusing. There are passages in this volume which no gravity could resist. Notably there is that in which is detailed Tom’s experience with the “pain-killer,” which his too-careful aunt administered to him in the hope of benefiting his health. For a while, Tom was content to hand it over to a crack in the floor. But one day the cat came along and begged for a share, and the temptation was irresistible. The animal, of course, performed the most amazing antics before the old lady’s eyes. Tom, asked for an explanation, demurely answers “’Deed, I don’t know, Aunt Polly; cats always act so when they’re having a good time.” Pressed with the truth, and asked why he had treated “that poor dumb beast so,” he continues, “I done it out of pity for him,—because he hadn’t any aunt.” Tom Sawyer is certainly a book to be read. |
[letter docketed by Bliss:] Private [and by his staff:] Saml L. Clemens | Elmira | Aug 8 ″76 N.Y.