Home, Dec. 3.
Dear Mother:
We have not heard of your arrival, but we judge that you must have reached home, s before this, else some of the people there would be inquiring into it by telegraph, maybe. I was uneasy & uncomfortable a good while, the day you left, for I dreaded some more railroad obstructions—& I was not over the discomfort till we got your dispatch next morning—& then it occurred to me that as you went down in a [ daylight ] train no obstructor would be muggins enough to try to throw it off the track.1
You left your muff here & we are going to send it to you by mail—would do it today, but are out of [prepaid] envelops. We have been pretty homesick for you, & even my potent presence was not sufficient to keep Livy from missing you day & night & talking about it.
Send Sue & The. along—we want them ever so much. The little Susie needs them, too.2 She has a marvelous cold—as bad a one as I ever had myself, I think. It pulls her down at a wonderful rate. She is nothing now but skin & bones & flesh.
I h went to work on my English book yesterday & turned out 36 pages of [ on ] satisfactory manuscript, but the baby kept me awake so much last night that today I find the inspiration is vanished & gone, right in the middle of my subject.
Clara may as well get ready, for she has to go with us to England in May.3
How stands Elmira on the Beecher Scandal?4 Miss Catherine Beecher5 tells us that Mr. Moulton6 did go after a MS., to Mr. Beecher, & su ‸ex‸spe expecting that he “would be mad,” took a pistol with him. The poor old soul was in considerable trouble, evidently, & fully appreciated the damaging effect of one statement in the Woodhull arraignment being a fact. She was sorry a sweeping assertion of the untruth of the said arraignment would not do—because of that unlucky pistol business. However, she said Beecher didn’t give up the paper.7 The Twichells now tell us that [ th ] a full year ago the Tiltons (both the he one & the she one)8 gave to Mr. Beecher an absolute denial of all these slanders, & that that paper is still in Mr. B.’s possession.9
Very well, then. The Twichells say, with us, that that paper ought at once to be printed. Whoever feels uncertain about the truth or falsehood of those slanders (& I would extremely like to know who feels certain) is suffering shame & defilement, & is continuing to carry a filthy subject in his mind, to his further defilement, when possibly the Beecher party are all the while able to sweep away his doubts & purify his mind with a breath. I think the silence of the Beechers is a hundred fold more of an obscene publication than [ the that] of the Woodhulls. 10—for & the said silence is a thousand-fold more potent in convincing people of the truth of that scandal than the evidence of fifty Woodhulls could be. Silence has given assent in all ages of the world—it is a law of nature, not ethics—& [Henry] Ward Beecher is as amenable to it as the humblest of us. You will find presently that the general verdict ‸thought‸ of the nation will gradually form itself into the verdict that there is some fire somewhere in all this smoke of scandal.
Mrs. Hooker has gone down to see Mr. Beecher—moved thereto by a talk with Miss Catharine, its is said.11
Mother dear, the autumn leaves are exquisite, & so is the frame that encloses them—& more prized than all is the mother-love of which they are the expression. The gift occupies the middle of my study mantel, & is flanked by your & father’s12 portraits in the lovely blue velvet mounting—Livy’s birthday gift to me. These things give the study a dainty air that marvelously assists composition.
Nasby has just gone—been here an hour on a flying visit.13
Love to you & to all the household.
Yr son
Samℓ
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
Miss Clara Spaulding had long desired to go
abroad. Mrs. Clemens desired her company, for there had never been
any break in the friendship beginning in early
girlhood—Mr. Spaulding, with large means was happy to
send the daughter to whom he was devoted. It proved to be one of the experiences where
friends can travel many months together, with increasing devotion.
(Susan L. Crane to Albert Bigelow Paine, 2 June 1911, Davis 1956, 3)
signed a paper which he
[Beecher]
wrote, to clear him in case of trial. . . . I
found on reflection that this paper was so drawn as to place me most
unjustly against my husband, and on the side of Mr. Beecher. . . .
Mr. Moulton procured from Mr. B. the statement which I gave to him
in my agitation and excitement, and now holds it. (Beecher Trial, 6–7) Mrs. Tilton changed her mind again during Beecher’s trial and
wrote another statement denying his guilt.
I, Theodore Tilton, do, of my own free will and friendly spirit
toward Henry Ward Beecher, hereby covenant and agree that I will
never again repeat, by word of mouth or otherwise, any of the
allegations, or imputations, or in[n]uendoes contained in
my letters hereunto annexed. (Oliver, 251–52) This document was not made public until the spring of 1873, when someone
furnished a copy of it to the press (Oliver, 230–54; Clark, 208).
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L5, 235–238.
Provenance:donated to CtHMTH in 1962 or 1963 by Ida Langdon.
Emendations and textual notes:
daylight • day- | light
prepaid • pre-|paid
on • [possibly ‘ori’]
th • [‘h’ partly formed]
the that • theat
Henry • Henn ry