The Langham, July 5.
My Dear Miller:
Indeed I would exceedingly like to make that call with you, but we shall not be in town on Tuesday—going into the country for a 24 or 48 hours’ visit. I’ll get that book.1 We think of running up to Lady Hardy’s for an hour this evening—my wife has just received her hearty & inspiriting note.2 Having Lady Hardy’s [ es ] express permission to come at the early hour, we shall doubtless get there very soon after 8, inasmuch as Mrs. Clemens was a cooped-up invalid yesterday & shan’t be allowed downstairs today until we start for North Bank this evening.
Simply reading your penmanship has distorted my own handwriting out of all shape; & so if you can’t read this, remember it is your own faus lt.3
Yrs as Ever—,
Saml. L. Clemens.
Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary
William Hepworth Dixon (1821–79) wrote on historical and political subjects, and was the former
editor of the Athenaeum (1853–69); for William Gorman Wills, see 6 July 73 to Fairbanks, n. 6. Clemens would be in Stratford on
Tuesday, 8 July. He had evidently written to Miller at the Hardy mansion in North Bank, where he was a houseguest, but Miller
had been “down town,” in his rooms at 11 Museum Street. Only one of the two letters is known to survive
(1 and 2 July 73 to Miller). Frederick Locker
(1821–95), later Locker-Lampson, published his first book of verse, London Lyrics, in 1857,
and an anthology of “vers de société and vers d’occasion” by several
authors, entitled Lyra Elegantiarum, in 1867. The work containing “selections”
from Locker, Tennyson, and Browning has not been identified; Clemens did, however, acquire a copy of an 1872 edition of London Lyrics (Gribben, 1:415). On 6 July Miller
wrote to Locker: “You see Clemens happens also to be engaged on Tuesday; so we will drop in for you some other day
and take our chances on finding you in. I enclose his letter which you may keep for your collection of letters if you
like” (CtY-BR). Clemens’s 5 July letter was
preserved until recently in the Locker-Lampson Papers at the East Sussex Record Office in Lewes. (Frederick Locker was Arthur
Locker’s older brother: see 17 Sept 72 to
Locker.)
Source text(s):
Previous publication:
L5, 398–402.
Provenance:The MS was preserved in the Locker-Lampson Papers—a collection of some two thousand letters, most of them addressed
to Frederick Locker—at the East Sussex Record Office, Lewes, England, until 1993, when CtY-BR acquired them.
Emendations and textual notes:
es express • esxpress