ition of her twenty-five years of valued service as my literary adviser and editor. For it is higher & nobler to be kind to even a shad like him than just . Clemens was always having his fortune told, in one way or another, beingsuperstitious, as he readily confessed, though at times professing littlefaith in these prognostics. With the possible exception of General Grant's long trip in '78 and '79there has hardly been a more royal progress than Mark Twain's trip aroundthe world.
ilable one; a very angry one, a less angry one, and an argumentative one with hot embers in it here and there. Then he is the man for you to approach. Mark Twain would naturally sympathize with the Boer--the weaker side, theman defending his home. It is betterhistory and more informing.
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