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xlii

Page xlii

A publisher found

This advice Biddle in due time felt impelled to accept, and
February 23d, 1813, tells Clark that having found Bradford's
terms "not such as I thought advantageous I made
proposals to all the booksellers in town. The stagnation
in that branch of business was so great that
no one was willing to embark in it, and after a great deal of
fruitless negociation I was obliged to return and on the advice
of Mr. Conrad accept Mr. Bradford's proposals. . . I now
wait only for the engravers who will soon I hope finish their
work and then we can strike off the printing immediately & in
a little time the work will be published." Nevertheless a year
was spent in the mechanical execution of the two small volumes.
Meanwhile the publishing firm of Bradford & Inskeep, who
had undertaken the work, in their turn became insolvent and
at the actual time of publication (February 20, 1814)[38] were in
the bankruptcy court.

 
[38]

The date of the first sale of volumes. See Coues, Lewis and Clark, i, pp. xci,
xcii, for detailed statement of the financial outcome of the enterprise.