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Auction archive: Lot number 27

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE. Autograph letter signed ("Saml.") to his wife Livy in Paris, New York, "The Players" (club), "Xmas," [25 December] 1893. TWENTY-SIX PAGES, 8vo, in ink on both sides of 13 sheets, with a few revisions, with original envelope...

Auction 09.06.1993
9 Jun 1993
Estimate
US$10,000 - US$15,000
Price realised:
US$17,250
Auction archive: Lot number 27

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE. Autograph letter signed ("Saml.") to his wife Livy in Paris, New York, "The Players" (club), "Xmas," [25 December] 1893. TWENTY-SIX PAGES, 8vo, in ink on both sides of 13 sheets, with a few revisions, with original envelope...

Auction 09.06.1993
9 Jun 1993
Estimate
US$10,000 - US$15,000
Price realised:
US$17,250
Beschreibung:

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE. Autograph letter signed ("Saml.") to his wife Livy in Paris, New York, "The Players" (club), "Xmas," [25 December] 1893. TWENTY-SIX PAGES, 8vo, in ink on both sides of 13 sheets, with a few revisions, with original envelope (defective) addressed by Clemens. THE ART OF THE DEAL An extraordinary letter, written on Christmas Day upon Clemens'return from Chicago; he had travelled there with his new friend and financial benefactor, Henry Huttleston Rogers, to negotiate a new contract with James W. Paige, inventor of the typesetting machine for which Clemens had formed a company to manufacture and market. Rogers, a chief architect of the Standard Oil trust and one of the most rapacious businessmen of his day, had taken over the supervision of Clemens' troubled business affairs. Clemens would later say of him: "He is not only the best friend I ever had, but is the best man I have ever known" (quoted in Justin Kaplan, Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain, p. 321. To make up for "the 3 letterless days" during his Chicago trip during which he had not written to Livy, Clemens divides this 26-page letter into four "Letters" (sections really). In "Letter No. 1" (pages 1-4) Clemens is mainly concerned with Christmas and family news; in "Letters No. 2 and 3" (pages 5-23) he gives a detailed narration -- with extensive dialogue -- of the business meetings in Chicago; in "Letter No. 4" (pages 24-26) he mostly writes of the train journeys (on a private car with lavish accomodations) to and from Chicago. "Merry Xmas, my darling, & all my darlings! I arrived from Chicago close upon midnight last night, & wrote & sent down my Xmas cablegram before undressing: 'Merry Xmas! Promising progress made in Chicago!'...I was vaguely hoping, all the past week that my Xmas cablegram would be definite , & make you all jump with jubiliation; but the thought always intruded itself, 'You are not going out there to negoiate with a man, but with a louse. This makes results uncertain' [it would be more than a month before Paige would agree to the new terms and sign the final contract]...it is time to dress for Mrs. [William] Laffan's Xmas dinner this evening [she was the wife of the publisher of the New York Sun ] -- where I shall meet Bram Stoker & must make sure about that photo with [Sir Henry] Irving's autograph. I will get the picture & he will attend to the rest. In order to remember, & not forget -- well, I will go there with my dress coat wrong-side out; it will cause remarks & then I shall remember..." "I tell you it was interesting! [Clemens begins "Letter No. 2"] The Chicago campaign, I mean. On the way out Mr. Rogers would plan-out the campaign while I walked the floor & smoked and assented. Then he would close it up with a snap & drop it & we would totally change the subject & take up the scenery, etc. Then a couple of hours before entering Chicago, he said: 'Now we will review, & see if we exactly understand what we will do & will not do -- that is to say, we will clarify our minds, & make them up finally . Because in important negociations a body has got to change his mind : & how can he do that if he hasn't got it made up, & doesn't know what it is.' A good idea, & sound. Result -- two or three details were selected & labeled (as one might say), 'These are not to be yielded or modified, under any any stress of argument, barter, or persuasion.' There were a lot of other requirements -- all perfectly fair ones, but not absolute requisites. 'These we will reluctantly abandon & trade off, one by one, concession by concession, in the interest of & for the preservation of those others -- those essentials.' That was clear & nice & easy to remember. One could dally with minor matters in safety -- one would always know where to draw the line..." Clemens and Rogers met with Paige's lawyer on the night they reached Chicago and convinced him of the fairness of their terms (Clemens narrates this, reporting key dialogue). The next day Rogers

Auction archive: Lot number 27
Auction:
Datum:
9 Jun 1993
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Park Avenue
Beschreibung:

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE. Autograph letter signed ("Saml.") to his wife Livy in Paris, New York, "The Players" (club), "Xmas," [25 December] 1893. TWENTY-SIX PAGES, 8vo, in ink on both sides of 13 sheets, with a few revisions, with original envelope (defective) addressed by Clemens. THE ART OF THE DEAL An extraordinary letter, written on Christmas Day upon Clemens'return from Chicago; he had travelled there with his new friend and financial benefactor, Henry Huttleston Rogers, to negotiate a new contract with James W. Paige, inventor of the typesetting machine for which Clemens had formed a company to manufacture and market. Rogers, a chief architect of the Standard Oil trust and one of the most rapacious businessmen of his day, had taken over the supervision of Clemens' troubled business affairs. Clemens would later say of him: "He is not only the best friend I ever had, but is the best man I have ever known" (quoted in Justin Kaplan, Mr. Clemens and Mark Twain, p. 321. To make up for "the 3 letterless days" during his Chicago trip during which he had not written to Livy, Clemens divides this 26-page letter into four "Letters" (sections really). In "Letter No. 1" (pages 1-4) Clemens is mainly concerned with Christmas and family news; in "Letters No. 2 and 3" (pages 5-23) he gives a detailed narration -- with extensive dialogue -- of the business meetings in Chicago; in "Letter No. 4" (pages 24-26) he mostly writes of the train journeys (on a private car with lavish accomodations) to and from Chicago. "Merry Xmas, my darling, & all my darlings! I arrived from Chicago close upon midnight last night, & wrote & sent down my Xmas cablegram before undressing: 'Merry Xmas! Promising progress made in Chicago!'...I was vaguely hoping, all the past week that my Xmas cablegram would be definite , & make you all jump with jubiliation; but the thought always intruded itself, 'You are not going out there to negoiate with a man, but with a louse. This makes results uncertain' [it would be more than a month before Paige would agree to the new terms and sign the final contract]...it is time to dress for Mrs. [William] Laffan's Xmas dinner this evening [she was the wife of the publisher of the New York Sun ] -- where I shall meet Bram Stoker & must make sure about that photo with [Sir Henry] Irving's autograph. I will get the picture & he will attend to the rest. In order to remember, & not forget -- well, I will go there with my dress coat wrong-side out; it will cause remarks & then I shall remember..." "I tell you it was interesting! [Clemens begins "Letter No. 2"] The Chicago campaign, I mean. On the way out Mr. Rogers would plan-out the campaign while I walked the floor & smoked and assented. Then he would close it up with a snap & drop it & we would totally change the subject & take up the scenery, etc. Then a couple of hours before entering Chicago, he said: 'Now we will review, & see if we exactly understand what we will do & will not do -- that is to say, we will clarify our minds, & make them up finally . Because in important negociations a body has got to change his mind : & how can he do that if he hasn't got it made up, & doesn't know what it is.' A good idea, & sound. Result -- two or three details were selected & labeled (as one might say), 'These are not to be yielded or modified, under any any stress of argument, barter, or persuasion.' There were a lot of other requirements -- all perfectly fair ones, but not absolute requisites. 'These we will reluctantly abandon & trade off, one by one, concession by concession, in the interest of & for the preservation of those others -- those essentials.' That was clear & nice & easy to remember. One could dally with minor matters in safety -- one would always know where to draw the line..." Clemens and Rogers met with Paige's lawyer on the night they reached Chicago and convinced him of the fairness of their terms (Clemens narrates this, reporting key dialogue). The next day Rogers

Auction archive: Lot number 27
Auction:
Datum:
9 Jun 1993
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Park Avenue
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