“CLOTHES MAKE THE MAN, BUT THEY SELDOM IMPROVE THE WOMAN”: FIRST EDITION OF EVE’S DIARY, WITH DOUBLE INSCRIPTION BY MARK TWAIN
TWAIN, Mark. Eve's Diary. Translated from the Original MS. London and New York: Harper & Brothers, 1906. Octavo, original red pictorial cloth. Housed in a custom cloth chemise and half morocco slipcase.
First separate book edition of the work Twain wrote as a love letter to the memory of his wife, with delightful line illustrations on each facing page by Lester Ralph, this presentation copy inscribed on the front pastedown: "To Mrs. Sarah Leigh, with the kindest regards of The Author. Clothes make the man, but they seldom improve the woman. Truly yours, Mark Twain. Jan 31/09. Stormfield."
"Eve's Diary, a sequel to Extracts from Adam's Diary [first published in 1893 and as a separate volume in 1904] and in some sense a tribute to Olivia Clemens, was written in July 1905, a year after Olivia's death… Like Olivia, Eve is described as having died before her husband; Adam's tribute at Eve's grave may be understood as Clemens's tribute to his wife: 'Wheresoever she was, there was Eden'" (Mark Twain Encyclopedia, 265). Twain's caustic twist on the ages-old saying "clothes make the man" in the present inscription is unrecorded. He is popularly known for the related quote, "Clothes make the man. Naked people have little or no influence on society." "The story appeared originally in Harper's Magazine, December 1905. It was then printed in [the Harper anthology] Their Husband's Wives… which was published March 15, 1906" (Johnson, 85). This first separate edition was published in June 1906. The book "occurs both with, and without, a period after MS on the title page" (BAL 3489); this copy is with the period. Without very rare original dust jacket. BAL 3489. Johnson, 84-85. Small morocco bookplate on front pastedown above Twain's inscription.
Just a few minor smudges to cloth along spine, very nearly fine. A wonderful inscribed copy.