Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 3 (1876-1885) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 3 (1876-1885).

Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 3 (1876-1885) eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 262 pages of information about Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 3 (1876-1885).

I arrived home in time to make a most noble blunder—­invited Charley Warner here (in Livy’s name) to dinner with the Gerhardts, and told him Livy had invited his wife by letter and by word of mouth also.  I don’t know where I got these impressions, but I came home feeling as one does who realizes that he has done a neat thing for once and left no flaws or loop-holes.  Well, Livy said she had never told me to invite Charley and she hadn’t dreamed of inviting Susy, and moreover there wasn’t any dinner, but just one lean duck.  But Susy Warner’s intuitions were correct—­so she choked off Charley, and staid home herself—­we waited dinner an hour and you ought to have seen that duck when he was done drying in the oven. 
                              Mark.

Clemens and his wife were always privately assisting worthy and ambitious young people along the way of achievement.  Young actors were helped through dramatic schools; young men and women were assisted through college and to travel abroad.  Among others Clemens paid the way of two colored students, one through a Southern institution and another through the Yale law school.
The mention of the name of Gerhardt in the preceding letter introduces the most important, or at least the most extensive, of these benefactions.  The following letter gives the beginning of the story: 

To W. D. Howells, in Boston: 

Private and Confidential. 
                                        Hartford, Feb. 21, 1881. 
My dear Howells,—­Well, here is our romance.

It happened in this way.  One morning, a month ago—­no, three weeks —­Livy, and Clara Spaulding and I were at breakfast, at 10 A.M., and I was in an irritable mood, for the barber was up stairs waiting and his hot water getting cold, when the colored George returned from answering the bell and said:  “There’s a lady in the drawing-room wants to see you.”  “A book agent!” says I, with heat.  “I won’t see her; I will die in my tracks, first.”

Then I got up with a soul full of rage, and went in there and bent scowling over that person, and began a succession of rude and raspy questions—­and without even offering to sit down.

Not even the defendant’s youth and beauty and (seeming) timidity were able to modify my savagery, for a time—­and meantime question and answer were going on.  She had risen to her feet with the first question; and there she stood, with her pretty face bent floorward whilst I inquired, but always with her honest eyes looking me in the face when it came her turn to answer.

And this was her tale, and her plea-diffidently stated, but straight-forwardly; and bravely, and most winningly simply and earnestly:  I put it in my own fashion, for I do not remember her words: 

Mr. Karl Gerhardt, who works in Pratt & Whitney’s machine shops, has made a statue in clay, and would I be so kind as to come and look at it, and tell him if there is any promise in it?  He has none to go to, and he would be so glad.

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Mark Twain's Letters — Volume 3 (1876-1885) from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.