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Auction archive: Lot number 202

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE ("Mark Twain"). Autograph manuscript of Chapter 4 from The Gilded Age ("The Steamboat Explosion") with a number of revisions, deletions and additions by Twain, n.p., n.d. [c.l873]. 39 pages, 8vo, paginated 62 through 100, wr...

Auction 05.12.1991
5 Dec 1991
Estimate
US$25,000 - US$35,000
Price realised:
US$26,400
Auction archive: Lot number 202

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE ("Mark Twain"). Autograph manuscript of Chapter 4 from The Gilded Age ("The Steamboat Explosion") with a number of revisions, deletions and additions by Twain, n.p., n.d. [c.l873]. 39 pages, 8vo, paginated 62 through 100, wr...

Auction 05.12.1991
5 Dec 1991
Estimate
US$25,000 - US$35,000
Price realised:
US$26,400
Beschreibung:

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE ("Mark Twain"). Autograph manuscript of Chapter 4 from The Gilded Age ("The Steamboat Explosion") with a number of revisions, deletions and additions by Twain, n.p., n.d. [c.l873]. 39 pages, 8vo, paginated 62 through 100, written in dark ink on rectos only of 39 sheets lined notepaper, first page a bit soiled and with a strip of old newprint or printer's proof adhering to it (obscuring a few words), some inky printer's fingerprints in margins, the last page bearing pencilled note on verso: "Please read this and return it at 2 p.m. if you possibly can. We wish very much to cast it [stereotype it?] this afternoon E.Blair Jr." [of The American Publishing Co.]; enclosed in a silk-lined red morocco protective box, covers elaborately gilt-tooled with floral and foliate designs, the box fitting into a dark blue morocco solander case with broad borders gilt-tooled and onlaid with scrolling foliage, leaves and red roses,spine similarly gilt-tooled in 4 compartments and gilt-lettered in 2, by Adams of New York. A VIVID ACCOUNT OF STEAMBOATING ON THE MISSISSIPPI, REVEALING THE SOURCE OF THE PSEUDONYM "MARK TWAIN" A remarkably fine early Chapter from this essentially rather flawed book. The Chapter is a detailed account of a steamboat trip down the Mississippi by Squire Hawkins, one of the book's principal characters. The chapter ends in tragedy when the steamboat Hawkins is riding on races another steamboat. The chapter begins: "Early in the morning Squire Hawkins took passage in a small steamboat, with his family & his two [originally Twain wrote 'three' salves, & presently the bell rang. The stage-plank was hauled in & the vessel proceeded up the river." After some initial fright, when "the gauge-cocks sent out an angry hiss," and at the "shivering of the boat under the beating of the wheels," the passengers relaxed. "...Then the voyage at once became a glorious adventure, a royal progress through the very heart & home of romance....They sat by the hour in the shade of the pilot house on the hurricane deck & looked out over the curving expanses of the ["mighty" is deleted] river sparkling in the sunlight. Sometimes the boat fought the mid-stream current with a verdant world on either hand; & remote from both; sometimes she closed in under a point, where the dead water & the helping eddies were, & shaved the bank so closely that the decks were swept by the jungle of over-hanging willows & littered with a spoil of leaves; departing from these 'points' she regularly crossed the river every five miles, avoiding the 'bight' of the great bends & thus escaping the strong current; sometimes she went out & skirted a high 'bluff' sandbar in the middle of the stream & occasionally followed it a little too far & trenched upon the shoal waters of its head -- & then the intelligent craft refused to run herself aground, but 'smelt' the bar, & straightaway the foamy streak that streamed away from her bows vanished, a great foamless wave rolled forward & passed her under way, & in this instant she leaned far over on her side, shied from the bar, & fled square away from the danger like a frightened thing -- & the pilot was lucky if he managed to 'straighten her up' before she drove her nose into the opposite bank....Now & then small log cabins appeared in little clearings, with the never-failing frowsy women & girls in soiled & faded linsey-woolsey leaning in the doors or against wood-piles & rail-fences, gazing sleepily at the passing show....Sometimes she stopped a moment at a landing & took on some freight or a passenger while a crowd of slouchy white men & negroes stood on the bank & looked sleepily on with their hand in their pantaloons pockets -- of course, for they never took them out except to stretch, & when they did this they squirmed about & reached their fists into the air & lifted themselves on tip-toe in an ecstasy of enjoyment....." Later, the boat races another steamboat, and chances a short-cut through a nar

Auction archive: Lot number 202
Auction:
Datum:
5 Dec 1991
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Park Avenue
Beschreibung:

CLEMENS, SAMUEL LANGHORNE ("Mark Twain"). Autograph manuscript of Chapter 4 from The Gilded Age ("The Steamboat Explosion") with a number of revisions, deletions and additions by Twain, n.p., n.d. [c.l873]. 39 pages, 8vo, paginated 62 through 100, written in dark ink on rectos only of 39 sheets lined notepaper, first page a bit soiled and with a strip of old newprint or printer's proof adhering to it (obscuring a few words), some inky printer's fingerprints in margins, the last page bearing pencilled note on verso: "Please read this and return it at 2 p.m. if you possibly can. We wish very much to cast it [stereotype it?] this afternoon E.Blair Jr." [of The American Publishing Co.]; enclosed in a silk-lined red morocco protective box, covers elaborately gilt-tooled with floral and foliate designs, the box fitting into a dark blue morocco solander case with broad borders gilt-tooled and onlaid with scrolling foliage, leaves and red roses,spine similarly gilt-tooled in 4 compartments and gilt-lettered in 2, by Adams of New York. A VIVID ACCOUNT OF STEAMBOATING ON THE MISSISSIPPI, REVEALING THE SOURCE OF THE PSEUDONYM "MARK TWAIN" A remarkably fine early Chapter from this essentially rather flawed book. The Chapter is a detailed account of a steamboat trip down the Mississippi by Squire Hawkins, one of the book's principal characters. The chapter ends in tragedy when the steamboat Hawkins is riding on races another steamboat. The chapter begins: "Early in the morning Squire Hawkins took passage in a small steamboat, with his family & his two [originally Twain wrote 'three' salves, & presently the bell rang. The stage-plank was hauled in & the vessel proceeded up the river." After some initial fright, when "the gauge-cocks sent out an angry hiss," and at the "shivering of the boat under the beating of the wheels," the passengers relaxed. "...Then the voyage at once became a glorious adventure, a royal progress through the very heart & home of romance....They sat by the hour in the shade of the pilot house on the hurricane deck & looked out over the curving expanses of the ["mighty" is deleted] river sparkling in the sunlight. Sometimes the boat fought the mid-stream current with a verdant world on either hand; & remote from both; sometimes she closed in under a point, where the dead water & the helping eddies were, & shaved the bank so closely that the decks were swept by the jungle of over-hanging willows & littered with a spoil of leaves; departing from these 'points' she regularly crossed the river every five miles, avoiding the 'bight' of the great bends & thus escaping the strong current; sometimes she went out & skirted a high 'bluff' sandbar in the middle of the stream & occasionally followed it a little too far & trenched upon the shoal waters of its head -- & then the intelligent craft refused to run herself aground, but 'smelt' the bar, & straightaway the foamy streak that streamed away from her bows vanished, a great foamless wave rolled forward & passed her under way, & in this instant she leaned far over on her side, shied from the bar, & fled square away from the danger like a frightened thing -- & the pilot was lucky if he managed to 'straighten her up' before she drove her nose into the opposite bank....Now & then small log cabins appeared in little clearings, with the never-failing frowsy women & girls in soiled & faded linsey-woolsey leaning in the doors or against wood-piles & rail-fences, gazing sleepily at the passing show....Sometimes she stopped a moment at a landing & took on some freight or a passenger while a crowd of slouchy white men & negroes stood on the bank & looked sleepily on with their hand in their pantaloons pockets -- of course, for they never took them out except to stretch, & when they did this they squirmed about & reached their fists into the air & lifted themselves on tip-toe in an ecstasy of enjoyment....." Later, the boat races another steamboat, and chances a short-cut through a nar

Auction archive: Lot number 202
Auction:
Datum:
5 Dec 1991
Auction house:
Christie's
New York, Park Avenue
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