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May – Sam’s option on the sale of Jan Szczepanik’s Raster machine in America was allowed to expire. Rogers had not been enthusiastic and now America was at war with Spain. Letters from Sam to Rogers for the period reveal Sam’s “increasingly crestfallen responses” to Rogers’ letters on the subject, none of which are extant [Dolmetsch 204]. Note: See photos of both of Szczepanik’s machines p. 202-3. Sam remained friends with the young inventor and also admired his capitalist backer, Ludwig Kleinberg. During the summer in Kaltenleutgeben, Sam made several bicycle trips with the two men [ibid].

Sometime during the month Sam inscribed a cabinet photo to Amelia S. Levetus: To Miss Levetus/ with

compliments of / Mark Twain / May 1898 [MTP: Hamilton catalogs Nov. 3, 1966, No. 15, Item 278]. (Editorial emphasis.)

Sam also inscribed his photograph to Eva Nansen: He had his desire—he has seen the pole; I have had mine, for I have seen him / Mark Twain / To Mrs. Frithjof [sic] Nansen, / With best salutations of / SL Clemens/ May, 1898 [MTP: Christie’s catalogs, May 29, 1998, Item 59; also eBay Nov. 6, 2008, Item 230268702043]. Note: Fridtjof Nansen (1861-1930) was famous for his expedition to the North Pole 1893-1896. See May 9 entry.

Sometime before the 26th of the month, Sam wrote to Joe Twichell [MTP].

The May issue of The Windsor Magazine (London) ran, “American Authors of Today,” by James Ramsay, which included a segment, p.722, on Twain [eBay Oct. 25, 2009, Item 270351039042]. Not in Tenney.

Ch. Scolik’s article and photograph, “Mark Twain Sitting for His Portrait, March 1898” ran in McClure’s, p.2 The photograph was of Sam sitting for a bust by Miss Theresa Feodorowna Ries [Tenney 29].

Catholic World, p.266-7 reviewed FE. Tenney: “‘One of the best of his books. It is lively and interesting almost all the way through,’ although India is a dull topic. ‘His theory of the pledge is one of his best things; a most valuable idea, and well known to Catholic theology, though not always duly insisted on in this particular manner’” [Tenney: “A Reference Guide Second Annual Supplement,” American Literary Realism, Autumn 1978 p. 170].

 

 

Day By Day Acknowledgment

Mark Twain Day By Day was originally a print reference, meticulously created by David Fears, who has generously made this work available, via the Center for Mark Twain Studies, as a digital edition.