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1Author:  Pond, Major J. B.Add
 Title:  Mark Twain and George W. Cable [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: MARK TWAIN and GEORGE W. CABLE travelled together one season. Twain and Cable, a colossal attraction, a happy combination! Mark owned the show, and paid Mr. Cable $600 a week and his travelling and hotel expenses. The manager took a percentage of the gross receipts for his services, and was to be sole manager. If he consulted the proprietor at all during the term of the agreement, said agreement became null and void.
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2Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, Hartford, CT, to Fred J. Hall, 1890 Dec 27 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: I don't believe Whitford. Webster was too big a coward to bring a suit when advised against it. The real mistake was in trusting law business to an ignorant, blethering gas-pipe like Whitford. I am not saying this in hatred, for I do not dislike Whitford. He is simply a damned fool — in Court — & will infallibly lose every suit you put into his hands. If you are going to have any [illeg.]lawsuits with Gill, I beg that you will either compromise or have some other law conduct the thing.
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3Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  The Regular Toast. Woman—God Bless Her [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: The toast includes the sex, universally: it is to Woman, comprehensively, wheresoever she may be found. Let us con- sider her ways. First, comes the matter of dress. This is a most important consideration, in a subject of this nature, & must be disposed of before we can intelligently proceed to examine the profounder depths of the theme. For text, let us take the dress of two antipodal types — the savage woman of Central Africa, & the cultivated daughter of our high modern civilization. Among the Fans, a great negro tribe, a woman, when dressed for breakfast, or home, or to go to market, or go out a pick-up dinner, or to sit at home, or to go out calling, or to a simple or to take a simple tea with friends & neighbors, or to go out calling, does not wear anything at all but just her complexion. That is all; that is her entire outfit. It is the lightest cos- tume in the world, but is made of the darkest material. It has often been mistaken for mourning. It is the trimmest, & neatest, & grace- fulest costume that is now in fashion; it wears well, is fast colors, doesn't show dirt; you don't have to send it down town to wash, & have some of it come back scorched with the flat-iron, & some of it with the buttons ironed off, & some of it petrified with starch, & some of it chewed by the calf, & some of it rotted with acids, & some of it exchanged for other customers' things that haven't any virtue but holiness, & don't fit you anyhow, & ten-twelfths of the pieces over- charged for, & the rest of the dozen stolen"mislaid." And it always fits; it is the perfection of a fit. And it is the handiest dress in the whole realm of fashion. It is always ready, always "done up." When you call on a Fan lady & send up your card, the hired girl never says, "Please take a seat, madam is dressing — she will be down in three-quarters of an hour." No, madam is always dressed, always ready to receive; & before you can get the door-mat before your eyes, she is in your midst. And the hired girl never has to say to a lady visitor, "Please excuse madam, she is undressing;" & even if she ever had to bring such an excuse at all, she wouldn't say it in that way: she would say, "Please excuse madam, she's skins, not herself!" Then again, the Fan ladies don't go to church to see what each other has got on; & they don't go back home & describe it & slander it. The farthest they ever go is to say some little biting thing about the ultra fashionables
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4Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain to (Elisha) Bliss, 1871 May 15 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: Yrs rec'd enclosing check for $703.35. The old "Innocents" holds out handsomely.
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5Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain to Captain (John E.) Mouland, (1872) Dec 3 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: You must [illeg.]run down next voyage & see us, if you can. Telegraph me what hour you will arrive & I'll go to the station & fetch you home. Mr. Wood stayed all night with us & then joined the Gen- eral in New York & they went West together. I wanted the General to stop with us, too, but his business made it im- possible.
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6Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, Hartford, CT., to Horace Russell, 1882 Dec 12 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: Woodford [illeg.] wrote me, & I answered; result, this arrangement:
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7Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, Langham Hotel, London, to (Elisha) Bliss, (1873) Jul 7 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: Finally concluded not to go to Paris. So you can take the Herald letters & put them in a pam- phlet along with the Enclosed article about the Jumping Frog in French, (which is entirely new) & then add enough [Written in margin: I enclose Prefatory remarks, "To the Reader." You can mention, if you choose, that the Frog article has not been printed before. of my old sketches to make a good fat 25 cent pamphlet & let it slide — but don't charge more than 25c nor less. If you haven't a Routledge edition of my sketches to select from you will find one at my house or Warner's.
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8Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain to Augustin Daly, 1884 Feb 17 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: I have been dra- matizing a book of mine ("The Adventures of Tom Sawyer") & I wonder if you would like to take a look at the result, with an eye to business? If so, I will bring the play down when I return to New York Wednesday Thursday.
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9Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, Hartford, CT, to "Miss Harriet," 1876 Jun 14 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: I am a long time answering your letter, my dear Miss Harriet, but then you must remember that it is an equally long time since I received it — so that makes us even, & nobody to blame on either side.
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10Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain to Edward Howard House, 1886 Jul 26 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: I have come up to the study to answer you. Mrs. C. & I had just read your (no, Koto's) letter. As I left, I said "What shall I say for you?"
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11Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, New York, to "Dear Folks" (Jane Clemens et al), 1867 Apr 15 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: I need not have hurried here so fast, but I didn't know that. All passages had to be se- cured & the Twelve hundred & fifty dollars fare paid in to-day the 15th, for the Holy Land Excursion, & so I had to be here I thought — but the first man I met this morning was the chief of the Alta bureau with a check for $1,250 in his hand & a tele- graphic dispatch from the proprietors of the Alta say- ing "Ship Mark Twain in the Holy Land Pleasure Excursion & pay his passage." So we just went down & attended to the matter. We had to wait awhile, because the chief manager was not in & we did not make our- selves known. A newspaper man came in to get & asked how many names were booked & what notabilities were going, & a fellow (I don't know who he was, but he seemed to be connected with the concern,) said "Lt. Gen. Sher- man, Henry Ward Beecher & Mark Twain are going, & probably Gen. Banks!" I thought that was very good — an exceedingly good joke for a poor ignorant clerk.
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12Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, Hartford, CT, to (George) Bentley, 1877 Sep 15 [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: I sent you No. 1 of a series of 4 articles which I have been writing for the Atlantic Monthly, & with this I enclose No. 2. I saw Mr. Chatto in New York lately, & told him he could have these ad- vance sheets for one of his magazines in case you did not wish to use them. I have just writ- ten Mr. Chatto that I have not heard from you & therefore cannot inform him whether you want the advance sheets or not. I have suggested that he inquire of you.
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13Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain to Unknown; on verso Mark Twain to Charles Erskine Scott Wood with AN by Charles Erskine Scott Wood, 1882 Aug [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: In reply I am obliged to say that I have quitted the platform permanently. With thanks for the complement of your invitation I am
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14Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  Letter, Mark Twain, Riverdale, NY, to Unknown, (1901-1903) [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: The bearer is my daughter's maid, & I beg as a favor that you will allow her to have access to my daughter's room, so that she can unpack the trunk.
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15Author:  Twain, Mark, 1835-1910Add
 Title:  A True Story, Repeated Word for Word as I Heard It [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: 
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16Author:  United StatesAdd
 Title:  Declaration of Independence [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Description: When in the Course of human Events, it becomes necessary for one People to dissolve the Political Bands which have connected them with another, and to assume among the Powers of the Earth, the separate and equal Station to which the Laws of Nature and of Nature's God entitle them, a decent Respect to the Opinions of Mankind requires that they should declare the causes which impel them to the Separation.
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17Author:  Booker, James, 1840-1923, and Booker, John, 1840-1864Add
 Title:  Blair Family Records [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | UVA-LIB-Bookerletters 
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18Author:  Booker, James, 1840-1923Add
 Title:  Letter to Chloe Unity Blair, fragment, n.d. [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | UVA-LIB-Bookerletters 
 Description: James Reynolds sends his best respects to you, I was verry sorry to hear that my sweetheart was about to leave me, to hunt for another one in such a time as this, tho if she sees eny body that she likes better than she does me she can have my concent to take him, and I will go another way,
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19Author:  Booker, James, 1840-1923, and Blair, A.Add
 Title:  Letter to Chloe Unity Blair with inclusion from A. Blair [a machine-readable transcription]  
 Published:  1997 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | UVA-LIB-Bookerletters 
 Description: I have no doubt But what you think by my long silence that I have forgoten you tho Ill have you to know thatsuchis not thecase I have bin waiting to find out whare we had to be stationed we are at winchester, now I dont know how long weel have to stay here, I am in hopes that we will stay here for some time, we have elegant water and a plenty of it, and a plenty of good pervision so far, and a fine chance of beutyful young Ladies, and the kind est that I ever saw in my life, and the most beautiful Country that I ever saw thay have fine Crops over here, and not mutch likely hood of a fight the yankeys has gone back to martainsburg and it is thought if we get them we will have to go after them, a young man that belong to our Regement got shot yesterday eavening accedently, and died this eavening the young man that shot him is a bout to greve him self to deth about it Thay are both from martinburg I dont know neither of them,
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20Author:  Booker, James, 1840-1923Add
 Title:  Letter to Chloe Unity Blair  
 Published:  1997 
 Subjects:  University of Virginia Library, Text collection | UVA-LIB-Text | UVA-LIB-Bookerletters 
 Description: I received your kind letter last eavning which gave me great releaf I had not hird from home in nearly a month I had concluded that you all had forgoten us intirely I told the boys if my relation wanted to hear from me thay would have to write to me for I had writen three letters to thare one, and if thay would not write to me, I w I would not write to them, tho I will excuse you for this time if you will not do so eny more,
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