Submitted by scott on

August 13 Monday – At 3 PM, the Smyrniote and the Comet arrived at San Francisco together. The
trip had taken 25 days, due to long periods of calm weather [Sanborn 294]. From Walter Frear:
One of the most interesting features of the return voyage was the race between the clipper barks
Smyrniote (1426 tons, Capt. Lovett), on which Mark Twain sailed, and the Comet (1836 tons), in
command of the noted Commodore John Paty, who had sailed the course upwards of one hundred
and fifty times. Both left Honolulu the same afternoon, July 19, about two hours apart, the Comet first.
Both took twenty-five days. The Smyrniote was sighted first from the Farallones, about 30 miles off
San Francisco, but the Comet maneuvered so that both entered the Golden Gate almost side by side,
the Comet slightly in the lead, so near together that the passengers could call across. The Comet
dropped anchor fifteen minutes ahead, but was one and three-fourths hours longer in actual sailing
time. ….All this was thrilling, and especially to Twain, as he knew many of those on the other vessel,
including Mr. [Edward, “Ned”] Howard, with whom he had ridden around the island of Hawaii, and
the wife and daughters of Captain Thomas Spencer, with whom he had stayed when at Hilo [Frear
15]. Note: editorial emphasis.
From Sam’s notebook:
“Aug 13—San Francisco—Home again. No—not home again—in prison again—and all the wild
sense of freedom gone. The city seems so cramped, & so dreary with toil & care & business anxiety.
God help me, I wish I were at sea again!” [MTL 1: 355 n5; MTNJ 1: 163].
Sam telegraphed the publishers of the Sacramento Union, noting his arrival and that he would “go up
to Sacramento tomorrow” [MTL 1: 356; Sanborn 295].

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.