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November – Sam’s article about the Hornet wreck, “My Debut as a Literary Person,” ran in the Nov. issue of Century Magazine. It was collected in My Debut as a Literary Person, with Other Essays and Stories (1903) [Budd Collected 2: 1004]. Note: See Feb. 25 entry. See also AMT 1: 127-44 and 501-6.

In London, England Sam wrote an aphorism to an unidentified person: “‘It is never too late to mend.’ There is no hurry. / Truly Yours/ Mark Twain / London, November, /99” [MTP].

James B. Pond’s article, “As to Mark Twain,” ran in The Philistine for Nov. p.174-7. Tenney: “Describes MT’s warm heart, but resentment when his confidence was betrayed: ‘Once a lecture manager in New York, whom he trusted to arrange the details of a lecture in Steinway Hall, swindled him to the amount of some $1,500.00, & afterwards confesst it, offering restitution to that amount, it being Mark’s share of the plunder, but not until it had been discovered. They were on board ship at the time, and Mark threatened to throw the fellow overboard, and meant it, too, but he fled ashore. In “The Gilded Age” Mark immolated him. (Mr. Griller, Lecture Agent. Page 438. London Edition.) The fellow died soon afterwards, and James Redpath, who was a witness to the scene on the steamboat, and who knew the man well, insisted that “Mark’s” arrow killed him….’ Also, notes a parallel between U.S. Grant and MT in courage and integrity” [Tenney: “A Reference Guide Fourth Annual Supplement,” American Literary Realism, Autumn 1980 p. 174].

Andrew W. Tuer (1838-1900) inscribed a copy of Stories from Old Fashioned Children’s Books, etc. to Sam: “To Mark Twain / from And. W. Tuer / with admiration & apologies./ p. XVI Intro: / Nov. 1899” [MTP]. Note: See also Gribben p.718. In July 1900 Sam inscribed this same book to Percy Spalding of Chatto & Windus. See entry.

November, early – In London Sam wrote to Pamela Moffett [MTP: letter by Pamela to Samuel E. Moffett Nov. 18]. Note: letters from London to California would take around 10 to 14 days, so this letter was likely written in early November; MTP catalogs it as “before Nov. 18”].

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.   

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