Jump to Content

Add to My Citations To William Dean Howells
12 January 1875 • Hartford, Conn.
(MS: MH-H, UCCL 01178)
Click to add citation to My Citations.

Hartford Jan. 12.

My Dear Howells:1

We mustn’t give up the New Orleans trip. Mrs. Clemens would gladly go if her strength would permit, but can’t Mrs. Howells go anyway? I think she would find it very pleasant. I know she would. We can put off New Orleans until March 1st, & then that would do in place of Bethlehem. You just persuade her.

We are expecting the furniture for one of the guest rooms in a few days. When it comes can’t you & Mrs. Howells run down here for 3 or 4 days & have a talk about this matter? [ Woul ] We would go to Boston but for the fact that we are not foot-free now; at least she ain’t, on account of having to see to little odds & ends of settling every day or so—nothing of much consequence, but just enough to make her presence in a manner necessary; so she begs & I beg that the Howellses will come to us in place of our attempting to get to Boston. Now do try to come.

Ys Ever

Mark.

I know how we can make our expenses going to N. O., but you’d just lose money going to Beth.

Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary

Add to My Citations

Click to add citation to My Citations.
1 Clemens answered the following letter (CU-MARK):
Click to add citation to My Citations.

Howells’s “colossal work of the imagination” was the book version of A Foregone Conclusion. The “Toronto letter” might have been an offer from an unidentified Canadian publisher (see 27 Aug 75 to Bliss). It and “the accompanying taunt” were part of an unrecovered letter, possibly dated 9 January, in which Clemens proposed simultaneous English publication of “Old Times on the Mississippi” in Temple Bar magazine, and reported on his earnings from the Gilded Age play (see 15 Jan 75 to Howells, n. 4). That letter also might have included his response to a compliment Howells had passed along: in a 5 January business letter, novelist John W. De Forest had advised Howells: “By the way, tell Mark Twain to try pathos now & then. His ‘True Story,’—the story of the old negress,—was a really great thing, amazingly natural & humorous, & touching even to the drawing of tears” (CU-MARK). Howells underlined the passage before sending De Forest’s letter to Clemens on 8 January, evidently without a cover letter of his own. Howells’s suggestion of a New Orleans trip had fallen on Clemens’s receptive ears when they were in Boston for the 15 December Atlantic Monthly dinner.



glyphglyphSource text(s):glyph
MS, Houghton Library, Harvard University (MH-H, shelf mark bMS Am 1784 [98]).

glyphglyphPrevious publication:glyph L6, 348–49; MTHL, 1:58–59.

glyphglyphProvenance:glyphsee Howells Letters in Description of Provenance.

glyphglyphEmendations and textual notes:glyph


Woul[‘l’ partly formed]