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Add to My Citations To Thomas D. Lockwood
30 December 1882 • Hartford, Conn.
(MS, typewritten facsimile, from dictation: CU-MARK, UCCL 02316)
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hartford, dec. 30th. 1882.

thomas d. lockwood, [esq.],

dear sir,

none but pirated editions of that book have been published, thus far, but i shall issue it, greatly expanded, two or three months hence, through j. r. osgood, & co., boston. title, “life on the mississippi.”

i have read your book with great interest, particularly the first part, which details the history of electricity. i read the rest of the book just as i read a german work—for the sake of the solid enjoyment which one gets out of almost understanding what he is reading, but falls just enough short of it to leave his mind in a state of enthusiastic confusion. you are so familiar with the technicalities that they seem simple and easy; but to an outsider they convey a darkness as impenetrable as our easy alphabet conveys to a coma[n]che. i read the whole book with pleasure, as i have already intimated, but i could not set up a telephone circuit now, nevertheless, which would pass inspection. i know i should get some of the ohms in the wrong place.

very truly yours,

s. l. clemens.

Textual Commentary



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MS, typewritten facsimile, from dictation, CU-MARK.

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MicroPUL, reel 2.

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The TS facsimile was sent to Rosamond Chapman, care of Bernard DeVoto, on 14 November 1941, by R. T. Barrett of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company of New York, which owned the original.

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esq.[period badly inked]