Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: First Annual Meeting and Banquet of the Associated Pioneers of the Territorial Days of California. New York: P. Barnes ([])

Cue: "Your courteous"

Source format: "Transcript"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified:

Revision History: AB

This edited text supersedes the previously published text
MTPDocEd
To Francis D. Clark
per Unidentified Stenographer

5 January 1876 • Hartford, Conn. ( Pioneers 1876, p. 30, UCCL 01294)
Francis D. Clarkemendation, Esq.,
Secretary, &c.
Dear Siremendation:

Your courteous invitation of Dec. 21st has been in my hands some little time now, but I have not been well enough to write letters, and am not yet well enough to do it without assistance. This must be my excuse for delaying to reply sooner.1explanatory note

I should be glad indeed, to meet with the Pioneers, and help them to celebrate the twenty-eighth Anniversary of the Gold discovery, and should be more than glad to take the veteran General Sutter by the hand again; but I am sorry to say that the loss of time consequent upon my illness has put my work back to such a degree, that I shall be obliged to remain at home for some time to come, in order to catch up.2explanatory note

Although I am debarred from being present on the pleasant occasion, I hope that the luckier ones will enjoy their happier opportunity to the full.

With many thanks, I am,

Yours, very truly,
Samuel L. Clemens.
(Mark Twain.)emendation
Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

Pioneers 1876, 30.

Explanatory Notes
1 

The letter from Clark, the secretary and treasurer of the newly organized Associated Pioneers of the Territorial Days of California, inviting Clemens to attend their meeting on 18 January, is not known to survive. Although available only in a printed transcription, the present letter was doubtless in the hand of the same unidentified stenographer who produced his dictated letters of 5 January to Morgan G. Bulkeley and William Wright, and his letter of 6 January to Pamela Moffett.

2 

On the evening of 18 January 1876, the Associated Pioneers held its first annual meeting and banquet, at the Sturtevant House in New York, celebrating the discovery, on 24 January 1848, of gold in California. John A. Sutter (1803–80), California colonist and self-styled “General” on whose property the discovery was made, was himself ill and unable to attend. In Sutter’s absence, the “honored guest” was another old friend of Clemens’s, Joaquin Miller. Clemens’s letter was one of several read aloud. The details of his acquaintance with Sutter are not known ( Pioneers 1876, title page, 4, 24–25, 27; Hart 1987, 306, 508).

Emendations and Textual Notes
  Hartford, Conn. •  Hartford, Conn.
  Francis D. Clark •  Francis D. Clark
  Dear Sir •  Dear Sir
  Samuel L. Clemens. | (Mark Twain.) •  SAMUEL L. CLEMENS | (MARK TWAIN.)
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