Mark Twain, A Biography

By Albert Bigelow Paine

Table Of Contents

AN ACKNOWLEDGMENT

Dear William Dean Howells, Joseph Hopkins Twichell, Joseph T. Goodman, and other old friends of Mark Twain:

I cannot let these volumes go to press without some grateful word to you who have helped me during the six years and more that have gone to their making.

First, I want to confess how I have envied you your association with Mark Twain in those days when you and he "went gipsying, a long time ago." Next, I want to express my wonder at your willingness to give me so unstintedly from your precious letters and memories, when it is in the nature of man to hoard such treasures, for himself and for those who follow him. And, lastly, I want to tell you that I do not envy you so much, any more, for in these chapters, one after another, through your grace, I have gone gipsying with you all. Neither do I wonder now, for I have come to know that out of your love for him grew that greater unselfishness (or divine selfishness, as he himself might have termed it), and that nothing short of the fullest you could do for his memory would have contented your hearts.

My gratitude is measureless; and it is world-wide, for there is no land so distant that it does not contain some one who has eagerly contributed to the story. Only, I seem so poorly able to put my thanks into words.

Albert Bigelow Paine.


Part I - Prefatory Note

    Ancestors

    The Fortunes Of John And Jane Clemens

    A Humble Birthplace

    Beginning A Long Journey

    The Way Of Fortune

    A New Home

    The Little Town Of Hannibal

    The Farm

    School-Days

    Early Vicissitude And Sorrow

    Days Of Education

    Tom Sawyer`s Band

    The Gentler Side

    The Passing Of John Clemens

    A Young Ben Franklin

    The Turning-Point

    The Hannibal "Journal"

    The Beginning Of A Literary Life

    In The Footsteps Of Franklin

    Keokuk Days

    Scotchman Named Macfarlane

    The Old Call Of The River

    The Supreme Science

    The River Curriculum

    Love-Making And Adventure

    The Tragedy Of The "Pennsylvania"

    The Pilot

    Piloting And Prophecy

    The End Of Piloting

    The Soldier

    Over The Hills And Far Away

    The Pioneer

    The Prospector

    Territorial Characteristics

    The Miner

    Last Mining Days

    The New Estate

    One Of The "Staff"

    Philosophy And Poetry

    Mark Twain

    The Cream Of Comstock Humor

    Reportorial Days

    Artemus Ward

    Governor Of The "Third House"

    A Comstock Duel

    Getting Settled In San Francisco

    Bohemian Days

    The Refuge Of The Hills

    The Jumping Frog

    Back To The Tumult

    The Corner-Stone

    A Commission To The Sandwich Islands

    Anson Burlingame And The "Hornet" Disaster

Part II - The Lecturer

    Highway Robbery

    Back To The States

    Old Friends And New Plans

    A New Book And A Lecture

    The First Book

    The Innocents At Sea

    The Innocents Abroad

    The Return Of The Pilgrims

    In Washington--A Publishing Proposition

    Olivia Langdon

    A Contract With Elisha Bliss, Jr.

    Back To San Francisco

    A Visit To Elmira

    The Rev. "Joe" Twichell

    A Lecture Tour

    Innocents At Home--And "The Innocents Abroad"

    The Great Book Of Travel

    The Purchase Of A Paper

    The First Meeting With Howells

    The Wedding-Day

    As To Destiny

    On The Buffalo "Express"

    The "Galaxy"

    The Primrose Path

    The Old Human Story

    Literary Projects

    Some Further Literary Matters

    The Writing Of "Roughing It"

    Lecturing Days

    Roughing It

    A Birth, A Death, And A Voyage

    England

    The Book That Was Never Written

    The Gilded Age"

    Planning A New Home

    A Long English Holiday

    A London Lecture

    Further London Lecture Triumphs

    The Real Colonel Sellers-Golden Days

    Beginning "Tom Sawyer"

    An "Atlantic" Story And A Play

    The New Home

    The Walk To Boston

    Old Times On The Mississippi

    A Typewriter, And A Joke On Aldrich

    Raymond, Mental Telegraphy, Etc.

    Concluding "Tom Sawyer"--Mark Twain`s "Editors"

    Sketches New And Old"

    Atlantic Days

    Mark Twain And His Wife

 

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