Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()
This text has been superseded by a newly published text
MTPDocEd
To William Dean Howells
per Telegraph Operator
8 November 1876 • Hartford, Conn. (MS, copy received: MH-H, UCCL 01387)
(SUPERSEDED)

blank no. 1.

the western union telegraph company.

the rules of this company require that all messages received for transmission, shall be written on the message blanks of the company, under and subject to the conditions printed thereon, which conditions have been agreed to by the sender of the following message.

william orton, pres’t,

a. r. brewer, sec’y.  new york.

13  dated     Hartford Ct                       187 6

received at    Camb.                              Nov. 8th

to       W. D. Howells


37 Concord Ave

———————————————————

I love to steal a while away from every cumbering care and while returns come in today lift up my voice & swear
                Plymouth Collection 1explanatory note
23 paid

Textual Commentary
Previous Publication:

MTHL , 1:162.

Provenance:

See Howells Letters in Description of Provenanceclick to open letter.

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens parodied the first stanza of a popular hymn by Phoebe Hinsdale Brown (1783–1861): “I love to steal, awhile, away/From every cumbering care,/And spend the hours of setting day/In humble, grateful prayer.” It was included in Henry Ward Beecher’s Plymouth Collection of Hymns, which Clemens knew well. He was following early returns from the 7 November presidential election. As a supporter of Hayes, the Republican, he was disturbed that Hartford and Connecticut had already gone for Tilden, the Democrat, with the Hartford Courant projecting: “The decided probabilities are that Mr. Tilden is elected” (“The Result,” “The Result in Connecticut,” 8 Nov 76, 2; Beecher 1855, 799–800; L2 , 276 n. 12, 402, 411; L3 , 183–84 n. 9, 250, 384 n. 11).