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                <title level="m" type="main">Charles W. Chesnutt to George Washington Cable, 4 March 1889</title>
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                    <title>Charles W. Chesnutt to George Washington Cable, 4 March 1889</title>   
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                <dateline>Cleveland, O., <date when="1889-03-04">March 4th, 1889.</date></dateline>      
                <salute>My dear Mr. Cable:-</salute>
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              <p>Permit me to trouble you long enough to read this letter, in regard to a personal matter.</p>
               <p>I have been chiefly employed, during the past two years, as a stenographic reporter in the courts of this county, intending to use this business as a means of support while awaiting the growth of a law practice, there being reasons why this process might be a little slower in my case than in some others. But by a very natural process, the thing I have given most time to has hindered instead of helping that which it was intended to assist. As a consequence I have built up a business, almost entirely as a stenographer, which brought me in last year an income of two thousand dollars.</p>
               <p>But there is a bill pending in the legislature of this State (it has already passed one house) for the appointment of two official stenographers for this county.<ref target="n.his00015"/> There are five or six men now engaged in doing this court work, and probably all of these will be applicants for these positions. I have perhaps more than a fighting chance&#8212;certainly that&#8212;for one of them. If I should secure it, it would pay a salary of $1500 a year, with fees to the probable amount of $1000 or $1500 more; and it would in all probability occupy fully all my time.</p>
               <p>In the event of a failure on my part to apply for or to secure one of these appointments, I shall be compelled to turn my attention to other fields of labor. And my object in writing to you is to inquire your opinion as to the wisdom or rashness of my adopting literature as a means of support.</p>
               <p>I am aware that I am perhaps asking you a question, an answer to which you have very meager data to base upon; and I realize that I am perhaps presuming on a very slight acquaintance with a busy man. But I will risk the latter, and say as to the former, that I can turn my hand to several kinds of literary work&#8212;can write a story, a funny skid, can turn a verse, or write a serious essay, and I have heretofore been able to dispose of most that I have written, at prices which fairly compensated me for the time spent in writing them, as compared with what I could have earned in the same time at something else. I have even written a novel,<ref target="n.lit00041"/> though I have never had time to revise it for publication, nor temerity enough to submit it to a publisher. I have a student's knowledge of German and French, can speak the former, and could translate either into grammatical English, and I trust into better English than many of the translations which are dumped upon the market.</p>
               <p>I am also impelled to this step by a deep and growing interest in the discussion and settlement of the Southern question, and 

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all other questions which affect the happiness of the millions of colored people in this country. But life is short, and any active part that one would take in this matter ought to be begun, it seems to me, while something of the vigor and hopefulness of youth remains. I am only 31, but time flies rapidly. It seems to me that there is a growing demand for literature dealing with the Negro, and for information concerning subjects with which he is in any manner connected; his progress in the United States, in Brazil, in the West Indies, in South America, and in other lands<add hand="#h02" place="inline">,</add> the opening up of Africa&#8212;it seems to me that in these subjects there is a vast field for literary work, and that the time is propitious for it; and it seems to me a field in which a writer who was connected with these people by ties of blood and still stronger ties of sympathy, could be <hi rend="underline">facile princeps</hi>, other things being equal; <del rend="overstrike" hand="#h02">or in which,</del> or in which such a writer of very ordinary powers could at least earn a livelihood.</p>
               <p>If I could earn twelve or fifteen hundred dollars a year at literature, or in some collateral pursuit which would allow me some time to devote to letters, I think I should be willing to undertake it in any event, and certainly in the event of my failure to apply for or to secure one of the appointments above referred to. If from your own experience and knowledge of the literary life you think it likely that I could make a success in it, or if you know or hear of any such employment as I have suggested, and will take the trouble to write to me upon the subject, I will be under greater obligations to you than I am already.</p>
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                <salute>Yours very truly,</salute>
                <signed hand="#h03">Chas. W. Chesnutt.</signed>

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                           <addrLine>Mr. G. W. Cable,</addrLine>
                           <addrLine>Northampton, Mass.</addrLine>
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