November 11 Friday –At the Hotel Krantz in Vienna, Austria, Sam answered H.H. Rogers’ Nov. 10 cable with one of his own: “Sign thanks splendid Clemens” [NB 40 TS 50].
Sam then wrote to H.H. Rogers.
Your welcome cable came just as I was getting out of bed at 9 this morning, & at 10 my answer “Sign thanks splendid” left here. If I had only been thoughtful enough to address it to your home it could have fetched you & Mrs. Rogers out of bed at 4 this morning & you could have had a good long day & got in a lot of work. I think I was born careless. Forgive me [MTHHR 375].
Note: the source gives this letter and Sam’s cable as Nov. 12, but Sam’s notebook records Sam’s cable answer as Nov. 11, the day the contract supplement was signed in N.Y.C. It’s not clear if Rogers sent two cables, one on Nov. 10 (as per NB 40 TS 50) and another on Nov. 11 (referred to in this letter) but the request to sign would not have been sent after signing.
Sam was having a tussle with writing the Introduction which Frank Bliss wanted for the Uniform Edition. Also, he had resumed his Autobiography and expected to be done with Volume I by spring
J. Henry Harper, Walter Bliss, and H.H. Rogers’ attorney signed a supplemental to the contracts of Dec. 31, 1896 between Harpers, American Publishing Co., and Livy [MTHHR Appendix D 688-90].
Gribben gives this date for a draft of The Mysterious Stranger, a work which Sam would not finish in his lifetime, but one which was cobbled together and over -edited (to the point of introducing a new character, the Astrologer) by Paine and Dunka, and published in 1916 [402]. Note: Tuckey writes “This novella has, moreover, come to be regarded as an important key to an understanding of Mark Twain’s later life and work” [Mark Twain’s The Mysterious Stranger and the Critics, v.].