Day By Day: 1892

A More Respectable Address – Dinner With the Kaiser – Resorts and more Resorts - Flying Trip to Chicago – A World of Night-&-Day Railroading - Letters for McClure’s Syndicate – Hobnobbing in Europe - American Claimant – Viva Villa Viviani!

Books published by Charles L. Webster & Co. in 1892

Bacheller, Irving, The Master of Silence: A Romance

Beard, Daniel C., Moonlight and Six Feet of Romance

Benton, Joel, The Truth About “Protection” 

Day By Day: 1890

Yankee Inspires Praise and Invective – Legal Tangles and Slippers for Elsie Leslie - House Wins Lawsuit – Livy’s Eyes are Bad – Goodman Stumps for Typesetter - Summer in Onteora – Susy Enters Bryn Mawr – Jane Clemens Dies­ - Jean’s Mystery Illness – Olivia Lewis Langdon Dies – Frauds & Liars!

The End of Volume I

Editor’s note: The close of 1885 is a propitious division for this work, both in number of pages and in the life of Samuel Clemens, who was at the highest point of his success, with several best selling books behind him, immense success with the release of Grant’s Memoirs, and the future pregnant with possibilities as a publisher and writer. In February of 1886 Julia Grant received the largest royalty payment ever made in U.S publishing history. All told, some $450,000 would eventually be hers. Sam’s reputation was never stronger.

January 1881

January – “Contributors’ Club” items in the Atlantic Monthly were usually unsigned. Sam’s untitled piece on Tauchnitz ran in this month’s issue [Camfield, bibliog.].

November 2, 1866 Friday ca.

November 2 Friday ca.– On or about this day Sam wrote from Virginia City to Catherine C. (Kate) Lampton and Annie E. and Samuel E. Moffett. Kate was Sam’s first cousin; Annie and Sammy were Pamela Moffett’s children, Sam’s niece and nephew. Teasing Annie again about the “bullrushers” story, Sam asked,

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