The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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I have come near writing you about this matter several times, but it  
wasn't ripe, and I waited. It is ripe, now. It is a type-setting machine  
which I undertook to build for the inventor (for a consideration). I  
have been at it three years and seven months without losing a day, at a  
cost of $3,000 a month, and in so private a way that Hartford has known  
nothing about it. Indeed only a dozen men have known of the matter. I  
have reported progress from time to time to the proprietors of the N. Y.  
Sun, Herald, Times, World, Harper Brothers and John F. Trow; also to the  
proprietors of the Boston Herald and the Boston Globe. Three years ago I  
asked all these people to squelch their frantic desire to load up their  
offices with the Mergenthaler (N. Y. Tribune) machine, and wait for mine  
and then choose between the two. They have waited--with no very gaudy  
patience--but still they have waited; and I could prove to them to-day  
that they have not lost anything by it. But I reserve the proof for the  
present--except in the case of the N. Y. Herald; I sent an invitation  
there the other day--a courtesy due a paper which ordered $240,000 worth  
of our machines long ago when it was still in a crude condition. The  
Herald has ordered its foreman to come up here next Thursday; but that  
is the only invitation which will go out for some time yet.  
The machine was finished several weeks ago, and has been running ever  
since in the machine shop. It is a magnificent creature of steel, all of  
Pratt & Whitney's super-best workmanship, and as nicely adjusted and as  
accurate as a watch. In construction it is as elaborate and complex  
as that machine which it ranks next to, by every right--Man--and in  
performance it is as simple and sure.  
751  


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