Va, Nov. 1.
All the Folks, Affectionate Greeting:
You know the flush times are past, & it has long been impossible to more than half fill the Theatre here, with any sort of attraction—but they filled it for me, night before [last.—]full—dollar all over the house.
I was mighty dubious about Carson, but the enclosed call & some telegrams set that all right—I lecture there tomorrow night.1
They offer me a full house & no expenses, in Dayton—go there next.2
Sandy Baldwin says I have made the most sweeping success of any man he knows of.
I have lectured in San Francisco, Sacramento, Marysville, Grass Valley, Nevada, You Bet, Red Dog & Virginia. I am going to talk in Carson, Gold Hill, Silver [in bottom margin: (over] City, Dayton, & Washoe,3 San Francisco again, & again here if I have time to re-hash the lecture.4
Then I am bound for New York—lecture on the Steamer, maybe. I’ll leave toward 1st December—but I’ll telegraph you.
Love to all.
Yrs
Mark
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
The entire dress circle and the greater portion
of the parquette were filled with ladies, while all the
available space for extra seats and standing room was occupied.
It was a magnificent tribute to the lecturer from his old
friends. Of the lecture itself we can only speak in general
terms, as its points are too numerous and varied to admit of
special mention. Combining the most valuable statistical and
general information, with passages of drollest
humor—all delivered in the peculiar and inimitable
style of the author—and rising occasionally to lofty
flights of descriptive eloquence—the lecture
constitutes an entertainment of rare excellence and interest.
(Doten 1866, 3; see also
Doten 1973, 2:901)
Thomas Fitch secured the courthouse of
Washoe City. Here Mark Twain gave his lecture on the Sandwich
Islands. Fitch introduced his friend, who had arrived at the
point where he needed no introduction to the Western side of
America, at least. . . . On their way back to Fitch’s home
after the lecture Twain was depressed. He had not liked his
lecture. “Well, Sam, it was a great
success,” said Thomas Fitch, who had acted as
doorkeeper, cheerily. “I have taken in over
$200.” “Yes, and I have taken in over
200 people,” returned Twain gloomily. “Now, Sam, don’t
belittle yourself. You know you rank as one of the foremost
humorists of the day,” returned his friend. “I know. But as a lecturer I am a fraud,
ain’t I?” insisted Twain. “You have a tendency that way,” said Fitch,
laughingly. Mark Twain bubbled over with sudden humor. “I know, Tom,” he
said, “but there are over two hundred towns in the
United States and all have over five thousand inhabitants, and
maybe I can play all of them at once.” (Wells, 13) Fitch, whom Clemens had once characterized as an
unscrupulously ambitious “two-faced” dog, was now
district attorney of Washoe County, Nevada (see 11 Nov 64 to OC). The
lecture in Washoe City must have occurred between 4 and 7 November,
Clemens’s only free dates before his departure from Nevada on
12 November.
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L1, 365–367; MTL, 1:121, with omissions.
Provenance:see McKinney Family Papers, pp. 459–61.
Emendations and textual notes:
last.— • [dash over period]