• November 9, 1871 Thursday

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    November 9 Thursday  Sam won a positive review from the Hartford CourantSam lectured in Mechanics Hall, Worcester, Mass.  “Artemus Ward.” Sam wrote from Worcester after the lecture, upset that the lecture chairman sat behind him on the stage—“a thing I detest.” Sam had talked to:

  • November 11, 1871 Saturday 

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    November 11 Saturday  Sam woke at 6 AM and traveled to Boston, where he had breakfast and then wrote Livy at 11 AM. Feeling “rusty & stupid,” Sam wrote:

    “You see those country hotels always ring a gong at 6 & another at half-past, & between the two they would snake out Lazarus himself, let alone me, who am a light sleeper when nervous” [MTL 4: 488].

  • November 12, 1871 Sunday

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    November 12 Sunday  Sam wrote from Boston to Elisha Bliss. He’d enjoyed a good many dinners with Howells, Aldrich and Keeler. Sam directed copies of Innocents be sent to the three men, in care of J.R. Osgood & Co., Boston [MTL 4: 489].

  • November 16, 1871 Thursday

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    November 16 Thursday  Sam lectured in City Hall, Portland, Maine  “Artemus Ward.” Sam wrote from Portland to Moses S. Beach, declining an invitation Beach had sent to Livy for the family to stay with the Beaches [MTL 4: 493-4]. Note: It was Mrs. Beach who had disapproved of Sam as a suitor for their daughter Emeline in 1868.

  • November 17, 1871 Friday

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    November 17 Friday  At 1 AM in Portland, Maine, Sam wrote a short note to Livy. Sam thought the Portland lecture enjoyable, and the Portland Eastern Argus agreed [MTP].

    In the evening Sam lectured in Huntington Hall, Lowell, Mass.  “Artemus Ward.” [MTPO].

  • November 20, 1871 Monday

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    November 20 Monday – Sam took the morning train from Hartford to New York, and made connections to Philadelphia [MTL 4: 493n8]. Sam lectured in the Academy of Music, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania  “Artemus Ward.”

    In Hartford, Livy wrote for Sam to Robert M. Howland at the St. Nicholas Hotel in NYC:

    Dear Sir

  • November 21, 1871 Tuesday 

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    November 21 Tuesday  Sam lectured in Plymouth Church, Brooklyn, New York  “Artemus Ward.” Plymouth was Henry Ward Beecher’s church. Sam evoked “continuous fits of laughter” [MTL 4: 497]. Advertisements like the one that ran on Nov.

  • November 24, 1871 Friday

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    November 24 Friday  Sam lectured in Reading, Penn.  “Artemus Ward.” The theater of Keystone Opera House, as reported by the Berks and Schuylkill Journal of Nov. 25:

    Mark Twain, author of “Innocents Abroad,” delivered a lecture on the “Uncommon-place Characters he has met with” at the Keystone Opera House last evening to a full house.”

  • November 25, 1871 Saturday

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    November 25 Saturday – The London Leisure Hour ran reprints from the St. Louis Republican and a story of how Sam took the name Mark Twain—this one relates him writing a sketch about Captain Isaiah Sellers, then asking “John Morris, now steward of the Belle Memphis,” what name he should sign to it. When the leadsman called out “Mark Twain,” it supposedly decided the issue [Tenney 4].

  • November 29, 1871 Wednesday

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    November 29 Wednesday  Sam lectured in Opera House, Newark, New Jersey  “Artemus Ward.”

    On this day or the next, Sam wrote from Newark, N.J. to Redpath & Fall. “Well, Troy had telegraphed for Feb. 8. We telegraphed you. You answered with a ‘word with a bark to it—No’ ” [MTL 4: 503; paraphrased]. Note: see source n1 for a full explanation.

  • December 1871

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    December – Sam’s article “My First Lecture” ran in American Publishing Co.’s in-house promotional monthly, American Publisher [Camfield, bibliog.]. Similar to Roughing It, Ch. 78.

  • December 2, 1871 Saturday 

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    December 2 Saturday  Sam gave the “Artemus Ward” lecture in Barber Hall, Homer, New York to a “large assemblage.”

    Clemens gave a humorous autograph to an unidentified person. Cue: “It isn’t egotism that makes me choose a leaf so…” Not found at MTP but in catalog [MTP].

  • December 3, 1871 Sunday

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    December 3 Sunday  Sam spent the day in HomerNew York.  He wrote a laundry list of concerns to Livy, including loans to his Express partner, Josephus Larned; money to his mother; bills for shirts; directing that Margaret (the maid) should be given “the nightly care of the cubbie”; and another lecturer from Virginia City days, C.B.