Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: CU-MARK ([CU-MARK])

Cue: "I guess Mr"

Source format: "MS"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

MTPDocEd
To Elisha Bliss, Jr.
7 September 1869 • (2nd of 2) • Buffalo, N.Y. (MS: CU-MARK, UCCL 00348)
Friend Bliss—

J emendation I guess Mr. Wilder ought to have a book—I think he ought.—don’t you? Will you send him one—& drop him a line, or do something?1explanatory note

Our books have come, & they are splendid. We’ll come out in the papers with notices at the times specified, & will mention the Rochester agent.2explanatory note

A most excellent old friend of mine, Mrs. Wm H. Barstow, of has written me from Fredericksburg, Va., asking for the a Virginia agency for the book, & I have written her a letter to be sent to you, seconding her request. She is out of luck & among strangers, with 3 small children to look after, & as I sl emendation knew her in her better days, before she acquired a worthless husband, I want her to have an agency. She is an educated, cultivated lady, & has a deal of vim & enterprise in her, if trouble hasn’t broken her spirit. I know her well enough to be personal emendation be willing to let you send books to her without any cash in advance & be personally & responsible financiallyemendation responsible for those books myself. You will hear from her shortly, no doubt.3explanatory note

Yrs
Clemens

letter docketed:and Mark Twain | Sep 9/69

Textual Commentary
7 September 1869 • To Elisha Bliss, Jr. • (2nd of 2) • Buffalo, N.Y.UCCL 00348
Source text(s):

MS, Mark Twain Papers, The Bancroft Library, University of California, Berkeley (CU-MARK).

Previous Publication:

L3 , 340–341; LLMT , 131, brief quotation.

Provenance:

see Mendoza Collection, p. 587.

Explanatory Notes
1 

Clemens evidently enclosed a request, now missing, from the unidentified Mr. Wilder.

2 

Two of the Buffalo newspapers reviewed The Innocents Abroad on 16 October, evidently around the “time specified” by Bliss. Neither mentioned his Rochester agent, who was identified in advertisements for the book (see 27 Sept 69 to Blissclick to open letter, nn. 3, 4).

3 

Clemens ultimately had to make good on his guarantee to Bliss when Kate D. Barstow was unable to pay for all of the copies of Innocents sent to her. Barstow had been trained as a school teacher before going to Nevada Territory. She married William H. Barstow there, possibly in 1863 when he was one of the school trustees for Storey County (their eldest child was born early in 1864). Clemens knew both of the Barstows before their marriage. He first met William in the fall of 1861, when Barstow was assistant secretary of the Council of the first Nevada Territorial Legislature. In 1862 Barstow was partly responsible for offering him a regular position on the Virginia City Territorial Enterprise. During much of the 1870s, Barstow was without work, as he apparently was at the time Clemens wrote this letter ( L1 , 201 n. 8, 231; in CU-MARK: Elisha Bliss, Jr., to SLC, 15 Feb 70; SLC to Elisha Bliss, Jr., 23 Feb 70, in MTLP , 32–33; Kate Barstow to SLC, 16 Oct 81).

Emendations and Textual Notes
  J  •  possibly miswritten ‘I’
  sl  •  ‘l’ partly formed; possibly ‘h’
  personal  •  ‘l’ partly formed
  personally & responsible financially •  personally & | responsible & financially
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