Submitted by scott on

January 14 Wednesday – Delayed by a snowstorm, and “Long past midnight,” Sam wrote from Keokuk, Iowa to Livy. He’d had “no time to turn around, for 2 or 3 days” and so was behind in his letters. He wrote poignantly of his mother and of Hannibal, and an old friend since childhood, Tom Nash. Nash had been deaf and dumb for 40 years and handed Sam a letter which he read and sent to Livy to keep.

A beautiful evening with ma—& she is her old beautiful self; a nature of pure gold—one of the purest & finest & highest this land has produced. The unconsciously pathetic is her talent—& how richly she is endowed with it—& how naturally eloquent she is when it is to the fore! What books she could have written!—& now the world has lost them.

The visit to Hannibal—you can never imagine the infinite great deeps of pathos that have rolled their tides over me. I shall never see another such day. I have carried my heart in my mouth for twenty-four hours [MTP].

In the evening, Sam and Cable gave a reading at the Opera House in Keokuk, Iowa.

A check from James B. Pond to Sam for $1,540.46 with this date is signed “for deposit, Chas Webster” [MTP].

In Boston, U.S. Circuit Court, Judge Colt heard arguments by attorneys for Samuel L. Clemens, plaintiff, (George L. Huntress and S. Lincoln) seeking to prevent Estes & Lauriat from issuing a catalogue offering HF at prices less than the subscription rate [N.Y. Times, “Mark Twain a Plaintiff,” Jan. 15, 1885 p1].

Day By Day Acknowledgment

Mark Twain Day By Day was originally a print reference, meticulously created by David Fears, who has generously made this work available, via the Center for Mark Twain Studies, as a digital edition.