Submitted by scott on

October 2 Sunday – Sam wrote from Hartford to Webster, mentioning his hope of interesting William W. Ellsworth of Scribner’s in the Kaolatype engraving process. Ellsworth was “the nephew of the business manager & chief owner of Scribner’s” and would become head manager of the Century magazine in 1882 [MTNJ 2: 358n5; MTP].

Sam also wrote to James R. Osgoodwho wrote on Sept. 29 of a plan to gain legal control over Canadian publication of P&P, so as to avoid the kind of piracy that he’d experienced with The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Sam asked if all he needed was a bill of sale to transfer the rights to Chatto. He might “run up to Boston Thursday of this or early next week” [MTLTP 142].

Joe Twichell wrote Sam from Keene Valley, NY, enclosing a “discourse of George Eliot’s, which I would like you to read at your leisure…” [MTP].

October 2? Sunday – Sam wrote from Hartford to W.H. Lentz of the Volcano House in Hawaii, answering that he was not the writer of a piece called “Dream,” although it had been supposed so there for many years. (See Nov. 22, 1881 entry.) Sam’s letter concluded:

“Therefore observe you this, and keep it in mind; none genuine without the signature on the bottle. Yours truly, Mark Twain” [MTP]. Note: Phila. patent medicine king, Thomas W. Dyott likely the first to use this slogan, later used by Jim Beam bourbon.

Links to Twain's Geography Entries

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.