“Yours Ever, Sam’l Clemens” (September/October 1990 | Volume: 41, Issue: 6)

“Yours Ever, Sam’l Clemens”

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Authors: Geoffrey C. Ward

Historic Era: Era 10: Contemporary United States (1968 to the present)

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September/October 1990 | Volume 41, Issue 6

You had better shove this in the stove,” 29-year-old Sam Clemens wrote his older brother, Orion, in 1865, “for … I don’t want any absurd ‘literary remains’ & ‘unpublished letters of Mark Twain’ published after I am planted.”

The young Clemens might not have appreciated the first two volumes of Mark Twain’s Letters that have now been published by the University of California Press, but the rest of us should be grateful that neither Orion nor a good many of his brother’s other correspondents did as they were told. Both books are models of scrupulous scholarship, containing everything the reader could conceivably want to know: the gross profit of a Manhattan market in the year in which young Sam Clemens bought some fruit there; the dates of arrival and departure for every steamboat on which he served; the title and full publishing history of a book he may have sent his sweetheart.

The first volume begins with an 1853 letter, written home to Hannibal by a distinctly provincial 17-year-old in New York City for the first time. “I reckon I had better black my face,” he told his mother, “for, in these Eastern States, niggers are considerably better than white people.” And it ends in 1866, as the 31-year-old writer and lecturer says good-bye to San Francisco and sets out for the East in search of a publisher.

The second volume covers just two years—1867 and 1868—during which he published his first book, The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, and Other Sketches, and toured the Holy Land with the determinedly prayerful assemblage he would soon satirize in Innocents Abroad.

Sensibly enough he seems to have saved most of his best stuff for his journals and notebooks and for the articles and books he drew from them. But because he also seems to have been constitutionally unable to give in for long to the admonitions of those, like his mother, who urged him to “tell everything just as it is—no better and no worse—and do let nonsense alone,” his patented comic style shows through his letters often enough to keep you reading:

 

“I saw Lily Hitchcock in Paris & she was chief among the ten thousand American roses there & altogether lovely. I did so yearn to kiss her for her mother but it was just my luck—her mother was there herself.”

“Train stops every fifteen minutes and stays three quarters of an hour, figure out when it will arrive and meet me.”

“I am not married yet, and I never will marry until I can afford to have servants enough to leave my wife in the position for which I designed her, viz—as a companion . I don’t want to sleep with a three-fold Being who is cook, chambermaid and washerwoman all in one. I don’t mind sleeping with female servants as long as I