Explanatory Notes        Apparatus Notes ()

Source: My Father, Mark Twain. New York: Harper and Brothers ([])

Cue: "The longer I know you, the more and more I esteem and"

Source format: "Transcript"

Letter type: "[standard letter]"

Notes:

Last modified: 2015-04-20T11:23:51

Revision History: RHH 2015-02-17 | RHH 2015-04-20

MTPDocEd
To Olivia L. Clemens
27? November 1883 • Hartford, Conn. (My Father, Mark Twain, p. 75: UCCL 13678)

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Theemendation longer I know you, the more &emendation more I esteem & admire & honor you for your rare wisdom, your peculiar good sense, your fortitude, endurance, pertinacity. Your justice, your charity, kindliness, generosity, magnanimity, your genuine righteousness & your unapproachable excellence in the sublime & gracious offices of motherhood. Many wives call out love—that is common—but very few such honor & admiration.emendation

unknown amount of text missing 1explanatory note

Iemendation offer you as a birthday present, the fact that only three profane expressions have issued from my lips or existed in my heart (which is the great thing) since the event of the 8th of last August. Of course I mean in waking hours: (curiously enough, or not curiously, I don’t know which) there is no change in my dreams: in my dreams I still do swear like the very army in Flanders.emendation

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Textual Commentary
Source text(s):

CC 1931, p. 75.

Provenance:

Clara Clemens Samossoud owned the letter until at least 1931. Its present location is unknown.

Explanatory Notes
1 Clara Clemens introduces the next excerpt of the letter by writing: “At the end of the letter, he adds a bit of humor:”
Emendations and Textual Notes
 The • “~
 & • and here and hereafter
 admiration. • ~.”
 I • “~
 Flanders. • ~.”
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