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)

March 27, 1909 Saturday

March 27 Saturday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to John Albert Macy, who had sent Sam Granville George Greenwood’s book, The Shakespeare Problem Restated (1908) and Some Acrostic Signatures of Francis Bacon, etc. (1909) by William Stone Booth.

Dear Mr. Macy: / Alas!

I can’t (by sticking strictly to the directions given) succeed in digging out any of the acrostics submerged in the Shakespeare text.

March 28, 1909 Sunday

March 28 Sunday - In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to Frances Nunnally.

Dear heart, where are you going to be—well, about the 10 or 12 of April? Because at that time I shall be publishing a booklet, Shall I send it to Atlanta, or to St. Timothy’s?

March 29, 1909 Monday

March 29 Monday - Raymond A. Blakemore wrote from Boston to advise Sam that he’d invented a “word counter” to be attached to a typewriter, and asked the favor of Sam’s opinion if “such a machine would be of material advantage to you and other authors”’ [MTP].

March 31, 1909 Wednesday

March 31 Wednesday — In Redding, Conn. Sam finished the “lost” Mar. 5 postcard to Dorothy Quick.

March 31. Dear me, I wrote that 3 or 4 weeks ago, & I must have been called away, as I did not finish it. I have now found it in my table drawer, with two other unfinished letters, written the same week. I give you my word, dear heart, that I had not been drinking.

I am just leaving, now, for Virginia, with Ashcroft, to be gone a week or ten days. / With lots of love, / SLC [ [MTP].

April 1909

April — Sam inscribed a photograph of himself seated for Elizabeth, not further identified [Ebay, Bestdarnautographs, 2010].

Sam also inscribe a photograph of himself (in a two-piece white suit smoking a cigar) to Sir Gilbert Parker: “To / Sir Gilbert Parker / with the love of / Mark Twain / April/09.” [Sotheby’s, June 19, 2003, Lot 133]. Note this photo was used for the cover of Sotheby’s catalog for the Mark Twain Collection of Nick Karanovich.

April 1, 1909 Thursday

April 1 Thursday — Sam was in New York, having spent the night at the home of H.H. Rogers. A 3 p.m. he caught the steamer Jefferson for Norfolk, Va. to attend a banquet honoring H.H. Rogers for opening a new railroad there [Mar, 28 to Nunnally]. The New York Times, p.1, Apr. 2, 1909 reported their departure:

H.H. ROGERS OFF TO VIRGINIA.

Mark Twain and Others Accompany Him to the Opening of His Railway.

April 3, 1909 Saturday

April 3 Saturday — Sam and H.H. Rogers attended the banquet in Norfolk, Va. celebrating the completion of Rogers’ railroad there. The New York Times of Apr. 4, reported the event on p.10:

VIRGINIANS GIVE PRAISE TO ROGERS

Show Recognition of His Accomplishment in Building the Virginian Railway.

$20 BANQUET IN NORFOLK

Rogers Says Road is a Business Enterprise, but His Interests Are Common with State

Special to The New York, Times.

April 5, 1909 Monday

April 5 Monday — In the evening Sam sailed for New York City, where he evidently stayed two days before continuing on to Redding, Conn. [Mar. 28 to Nunnally].

The Norfolk LEDGER-DISPATCH reported Sam’s presence in Norfolk on this day:

MARK TWAIN DELIGHTED THE LITTLE ONES

Famous Humorist at the City Kindergarten and the High School

TOTS GIVE HIM A DOSE OF HIS OWN MEDICINE

April 8, 1909 Thursday

April 8 Thursday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to John A. Macy.

Dear Mr. Macy: / I emptied into my Autobiography some remarks about Mr. Greenwood’s able book, and then took a notion to slam them into Harper’s Monthly: but that would put them off much too long, so I made a booklet of them, to be issued to-day. Now that is too early by three entire weeks, as I found last night when I got back from a week’s absence in the South and read your letter. It’s vexatious! but let it go, it can’t be helped.

April 9, 1909 Friday

April 9 Friday - Sam recorded events at Stormfield “‘a day or two” after his Apr. 7 arrival from NY:

As I have said, I reached Stormfield on the 7th of April. Things were buzzing so to speak. Ashcroft came up a day or two later. Meantime I had not happened to see anything of Horace, & was too busy to look into his case. When Ashcroft arrived he paid Horace to date, & I signed the check. He paid him at the old rate—a confession, apparently, that Horace had not been “discharged,” & that Ashcroft knew it.

April 10, 1909 Saturday

April 10 Saturday — In Redding, Conn., Isabel V. Lyon wrote for Sam to Frederick T. Leigh.

“Tell the Major to bring out the Stormfield book at a dollar & we'll see if what he says is true, Nobody’s word is worth a damn anyway, & now we'll have figures to prove it,”’

Dear Major Leigh:

April 12, 1909 Monday

April 12 Monday — In Redding, Conn. Sam wrote to Frederick A. Duneka.

Dear Duneka: /PAGE 31 OF VOL I, “Letters of James Russell Lowell.”

That page is what I want, (to read at a banquet to Jerome May 7.) Tear it out & send it to me. It is part of a letter to E. L. Godkin (1869), & is just what I want as a text, in case I should wish to get up & talk. / Ys ever

/ Mark [MTP].

Sam’s new guestbook:

April 13, 1909 Tuesday

April 13 TuesdayIn the evening Sam attended daughter Clara’s concert at Mendelssohn Hall, NYC. The New York Times, Apr. 14, p.11, gave her performance mixed reviews, as did other city papers. One unnamed paper follows the Times report:

MISS CLARA CLEMENS SINGS.

Mark Twain’s Daughter Heard at Recital with Miss Littlehales.

April 15, 1909 Thursday

April 15. Thursday — Sam noted in his after Sept. 25, 1909 letter that on this day, “The Lioness abolished.” In his L-A MS “‘letter to Howells” he gave particulars:

On the 15 I gave Miss Lyon a month’s notice—sent it to her room by a maid. In the forenoon. Claude [Benchotte] (butler) arrived at noon. In the afternoon Miss Lyon sent me her reply by a maid. She had been married about a month, but was still called by her unwedded name, & she was still using it herself, & so it came natural to her to sign the present note in that way.

April 17, 1909 Saturday

April 17 Saturday - At 3 a.m. in Redding, Conn., Sam began a letter to William Dean Howells, that he added to at 10 a.m.

My pen has gone dry, & the ink is out of reach. Howells, Did you write me day-before-day-before yesterday, or did I dream it? In my mind’s eye I most vividly see your handwrite on a square blue envelop in the mail-pile. I have hunted the house over but there is no such letter. Was it an illusion?

April 18, 1909 Sunday

April 18 Sunday - Sam’s original guestbook, since replaced by the newer, more elegant gift from Mary B. Rogers, for some reason lists this date for Frederick E. Robson, Toronto, Canada. Under Robson’s name: James Parks, Bank House, Birkdale, Lancashire 0.8 V. 09 [Mac Donnell TS 7].