Complete Letters of Mark Twain eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,140 pages of information about Complete Letters of Mark Twain.

Complete Letters of Mark Twain eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 1,140 pages of information about Complete Letters of Mark Twain.

Well, your butcher is magnificent.  He won’t stay out of my mind.—­I keep trying to think of some way of getting your account of him into my book without his being offended—­and yet confound him there isn’t anything you have said which he would see any offense in,—­I’m only thinking of his friends—­they are the parties who busy themselves with seeing things for people.  But I’m bound to have him in.  I’m putting in the yarn about the Limburger cheese and the box of guns, too—­mighty glad Howells declined it.  It seems to gather richness and flavor with age.  I have very nearly killed several companies with that narrative,—­the American Artists Club, here, for instance, and Smith and wife and Miss Griffith (they were here in this house a week or two.) I’ve got other chapters that pretty nearly destroyed the same parties, too.

O, Switzerland! the further it recedes into the enriching haze of time, the more intolerably delicious the charm of it and the cheer of it and the glory and majesty and solemnity and pathos of it grow.  Those mountains had a soul; they thought; they spoke,—­one couldn’t hear it with the ears of the body, but what a voice it was!—­and how real.  Deep down in my memory it is sounding yet.  Alp calleth unto Alp!—­that stately old Scriptural wording is the right one for God’s Alps and God’s ocean.  How puny we were in that awful presence—­and how painless it was to be so; how fitting and right it seemed, and how stingless was the sense of our unspeakable insignificance.  And Lord how pervading were the repose and peace and blessedness that poured out of the heart of the invisible Great Spirit of the Mountains.

Now what is it?  There are mountains and mountains and mountains in this world—­but only these take you by the heart-strings.  I wonder what the secret of it is.  Well, time and time again it has seemed to me that I must drop everything and flee to Switzerland once more.  It is a longing —­a deep, strong, tugging longing—­that is the word.  We must go again, Joe.—­October days, let us get up at dawn and breakfast at the tower.  I should like that first rate.

Livy and all of us send deluges of love to you and Harmony and all the children.  I dreamed last night that I woke up in the library at home and your children were frolicing around me and Julia was sitting in my lap; you and Harmony and both families of Warners had finished their welcomes and were filing out through the conservatory door, wrecking Patrick’s flower pots with their dress skirts as they went.  Peace and plenty abide with you all! 
          
                              Mark.

I want the Blisses to know their part of this letter, if possible.  They will see that my delay was not from choice.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Complete Letters of Mark Twain from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.