Day By Day Dates

Day by Day entries are from Mark Twain, Day By Day, four volumes of books compiled by David Fears and made available on-line by the Center for Mark Twain Studies.  The entries presented here are from conversions of the PDFs provided by the Center for Mark Twain Studies and are subject to the vagaries of that process.    The PDFs, themselves, have problems with formatting and some difficulties with indexing for searching.  These are the inevitable problems resulting from converting a printed book into PDFs.  Consequently, what is provided here are copies of copies.  

I have made attempts at providing a time-line for Twain's Geography and have been dissatisfied with the results.  Fears' work provides a comprehensive solution to that problem.  Each entry from the books is titled with the full date of the entry, solving a major problem I have with the On-line site - what year is the entry for.  The entries are certainly not perfect reproductions from Fears' books, however.  Converting PDFs to text frequently results in characters, and sometimes entire sections of text,  relocating.  In the later case I have tried to amend the problem where it occurs but more often than not the relocated characters are simply omitted.  Also, I cannot vouch for the paragraph structure.  Correcting these problems would require access to the printed copies of Fears' books.  Alas, but this is beyond my reach.

This page allows the reader to search for entries based on a range of dates.  The entries are also accessible from each of the primary sections (Epochs, Episodes and Chapters) of Twain's Geography.  

Entry Date (field_entry_date)

February 3, 1909 Wednesday

February 3 Wednesday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to Mai H. Coe and William Robertson Coe.

Dear Coes:

It has arrived, & Miss Lyon, who is ill in bed & under contract with the doctor to keep perfectly quiet for ten days, has gone into raptures & frenzies & convulsions of admiration & delight over it. But a happy earthquake doesn’t hurt a patient, it sets the drowsy circulation going at lightning-express gait, & does good. And that is what has resulted in this instance.

February 4, 1909 Thursday

February 4 Thursday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote a postcard (with a picture of Stormfield) to Ruth Woods in Philippi, W. Va.: “Thank you ever so much, dear Ruth, for suggesting it, but the truth is I am much too old & indolent to take up writing again. / Sincerely your friend / SL. Clemens” [MTP].

February 7, 1909 Sunday

February 7 Sunday — Clara Clemens and Ossip Gabrilowitsch arrived at Stormfield; at least this date was given in the guestbook. However, on Feb. 8 in a letter to Frances Nunnally, Sam misdated it Feb. 9, which may present confusion. Victor Fischer of the MTP confirms that the Feb. 8 letter was misdated.

February 9, 1909 Tuesday

February 9 Tuesday — In Redding, Conn. Sam sent the “Posing for Admiration” postcard to Margery Hamilton Clinton. “Ashcroft has must arrived with the news—& your date—Tuesday the 23*, You are a very dear plumber, & will be most welcome. Bring several changes of soldering irons—for you must stay as long as you can. / Affectionately” [MTP].

E. Mayban Denbeigh wrote from NY asking for “<a little message” to read to her literary club [MTP].

February 10, 1909 Wednesday

February 10 Wednesday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote a note of introduction “To any friend or acquaintance of mine” for Albert Bigelow Paine, “my biographer & particular friend, who is seeking information concerning me for use in his book.” [MTP]. Note: Sam may have written several of these as two survive, UCCL # 07666 and 08345,

February 11, 1909 Thursday

February 11 Thursday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to Beatrice M. Benjamin, granddaughter of H.H. Roger

O, come, dear heart, all this enthusiasm over a comparative stranger! But you have studied it over, & know whether it is warranted or not; so it isn’t for me to criticise.

February 12, 1909 Friday

February 12 Friday Isabel Lyon’s journal noted that Sam was in bed reading “Quakenbores [sic] book on Natural Philosophy” in bed with “a cigar between his teeth”. Note: A Natural Philosophy, etc. (1899) by George Payn Quackenbos (1826-1881) [Gribben 565].

George Brunton for the Boone Iowa News-Republican wrote to ask Sam for a letter of encouragement for their YMCA [MTP].

February 15, 1909 Monday

February 15 MondayCharles E. Hinckley for W.A. Hunter & Co., Nashville, Tenn. wrote to Sam.

I have the honor to say that you are directed, for naval purposes, to read the accompanying article [not in file] and report to the secretary of the navy at Washington, D.C. the proper way of putting our naval vessels through the Suez Canal without so much flub-dub about the pilots. Talk about a little old eighty-seven miles on the Mississip? Huhl...

late Captain Steamer “Copperopolis” San Francisco to Sacramento.

February 16, 1909 Tuesday

February 16 Tuesday — In Redding, Conn., Ralph W. Ashcroft wrote for Sam to Archibald Henderson, professor at UNC, Chapel Hill.

Dear Dr Henderson:

Mr. Clemens’ comment was: “Mightily interesting and very ingenious.” And he was deep/y touched with your reference to Mrs Clemens.

February 19, 1909 Friday

February 19 Friday John N. Ryan for Equitable Life Assurance, NYC wrote to ask Sam for “something from you” for the Year Book for the Pleiades Club, NYC [MTP].

A.H. Tomlinson wrote from Swathmore, Penn. to Sam. He’d sent a copy of “The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg” and asked that Sam sign it with a few words and place the date on it [MTP].

February 20, 1909 Saturday

February 20 Saturday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to Margaret Blackmer.

Attention, you dear little tyke!

You will have a long vacation at Easter; can’t you & your mother spend it with us? I do hope so. When Ashcroft-Benares goes to New York Tuesday, I want him to catch your mother on the telephone & discuss the matter with her. / With lots of love [MTP; MTAg 251].

February 21, 1909 Sunday

February 21 Sunday — In Redding, Conn., Ralph W. Ashcroft wrote for Sam to prof. Archibald Henderson, University of N. Carolina, Chapel Hill. “Dear Dr Henderson: / We spell it: ‘UMPAWAUG’—not ‘Umpawag, as you had it” [MTP]. Note: Umpawaug, named after Indians who deeded land in 1686; a district, and road in Redding, Conn. Also a cemetery, across the road from the original Mark Twain Library, which began in a chapel.

February 24, 1909 Wednesday

February 24 Wednesday — Elizabeth P. Brown wrote from NYC to Sam.

I shall put yesterday down as one of the days in which something really happened for it was last evening that your letter came.

Irene was a dear to suggest your writing—and you—what shall 1 say about you for doing as she suggested?

Anyway, I thank you very much indeed. [She regretted not being able to speak to him the day he called at her school. She thought Irene Gerken] “a most bewitching little miss” MTP]. Note IVL: “From Irene's teacher, Miss Brown”

February 25, 1909 Thursday

February 25 Thursday - In Redding. Conn. Sam wrote to John Albert Macy.

Dear Mr. Macy: / Thank you for Greenwood’s book. I have read it most carefully, and have stolen meat enough from it to stuff yards and yards of sausage-gut in my vast Autobiography and make it look like my own. And really the gut is mine. My, but I have enjoyed that book!

With love to you all,

Clemens,

February 26, 1909 Friday

February 26 Friday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to daughter Jean now at the Unkeway Farm in Babylon, Long Island, N.Y.

You dear Jean, I was glad to hear from you. I have a photograph of your house, & I think it is most attractive. For your sake I hope it is as pleasant as it looks.

That poor old Geronimo! I am glad his grand old patriot heart is at peace, no more to know wrong & insult at the hands of the Christian savage.

February 27, 1909 Saturday

February 27 Saturday Pieter Bausch wrote from Amsterdam, Holland to thank Sam for his letter and for the $50 sent. A photo of a somber Mr. & Mrs. Bausch is in the file [MTP]. Note: “P. Bausch / Interesting (Photo)”; Sam paid Bausch in order to use his letter in his Autobiography. Bausch kept writing until he became a pest and Sam would not answer. Bausch then wrote to Harpers.

February 28, 1909 Sunday

February 28 Sunday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to Margery H. Clinton.

Dear Plumber who can’t plumb:

If opportunity offers, you must shake hands with Mr. Taft for me, that able & lovely man. And can’t you also do the like for yourselves—you & your beautiful pal?

I inquire to know.

With love & best wishes to you both [MTP].

March 1909

March — The Virginia Railway and H.H. Rogers sent an invitation to a dinner for H.H. Rogers upon the completion of the Virginia Railway. Endorsed: “Accept formally. S.L.C.” [MTP; not in MTHHR).

Paul Thompson’s article “A Day with Mark Twain” ran in Burr McIntosh Monthly, p. 22-4. Tenney: “Superficial description of a visit to MT at his ‘Stormfield’ home in Redding, Connecticut; illustrated with two photographs of MT and two of the house” [48].