• October 16, 1871 Monday

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    October 16 Monday to February 27  1872 Lecture Tour:

    Sam returned to the lecture circuit under the management of James Redpath and the Boston Lyceum Bureau. There were at least 77 engagements using three different speeches.

  • October 17, 1871 Tuesday

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    October 17 Tuesday  Sam lectured in Allentown, Penn. He wrote from Allentown to Livy:

          Livy darling, this lecture will never do. I hate it & won’t keep it. I can’t even handle these chuckle-headed Dutch with it.

          Have blocked out a lecture on Artemus Ward, & shall write it next Saturday & deliver it next Monday in Washington [MTL 4: 474-5].

  • October 18, 1871 Wednesday

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    October 18 Wednesday  Sam lectured (“Uncommonplace Characters”) in Music Hall, Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania.  Sam enlisted the help of “an old Californian friend” (unidentified) to cancel lectures in Easton, Penn., and Reading, Penn. for Oct. 19 and 20. The Easton Free Press had called the lectures in Bethlehem and Allentown a “failure,” so Sam was:

  • October 19, 1871 Thursday 

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    October 19 Thursday  Sam wrote from Wilkes-Barre, Penn. to Elisha Bliss. The typesetters had lost part of Ch. 18 of Roughing It, which described crossing the alkali desert. Sam could not focus to rewrite it and suggested perhaps they might have to omit the whole chapter [MTL 4: 477].

  • October 23, 1871 Monday

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    October 23 Monday  Sam gave the “Artemus Ward” lecture in Lincoln Hall, Washington, D. C. [One version of this speech is found in Mark Twain Speaking, 41-7]. The lecture attracted a record crowd for Lincoln Hall, some 2,000, with 150 crowded on stage. The reviews were mixed, and Sam found it difficult to lecture about a dead humorist, or to tell Ward’s jokes and make them funny [MTL 4: 480n3].

  • October 24, 1871 Tuesday

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    October 24 Tuesday  Sam lectured in Institute Hall, Wilmington, Delaware  “Artemus Ward. 

    In Washington, D.C. at the Arlington Hotel, Sam wrote to James Redpath:

    (The only hotel in this town) {WILLARD’S—O, my!—seventh-rate hash-house.}

  • October 25, 1871 Wednesday

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    October 25 Wednesday  Sam lectured in Odd Fellows Hall, Norristown, Penn.  “Artemus Ward.” That morning Sam met Susan Dickinson, sister of the famous suffrage lecturer Anna E. Dickinson, who wrote to her sister:

  • October 27, 1871 Friday

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    October 27 Friday  Sam lectured in Sumner Hall, Great Barrington, Mass.  “Artemus Ward.” Sam wrote at midnight (into Oct. 28) from Great Barrington to Livy that the lecture “went off very handsomely.” But the Great Barrington Berkshire Courier of Nov. 1 claimed that of the crowd of 400, at least 390 went away disappointed and dissatisfied [MTL 4: 482-3].

  • November 1871

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    November – Sam’s article “A Big Scare” ran in American Publishing Co.’s in-house promotional monthly, American Publisher [Camfield, bibliog.].

  • November 2, 1871 Thursday

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    November 2 Thursday – Sam went to the memorable lunch at Ober’s Greek Revival Restaurant on Winter Place, described by William Dean Howells as Sam’s introduction into the Boston literary circle. Ralph Keeler (1840-1873), a young bohemian Sam had known at the Golden Era, organized the lunch. In attendance: publisher James T.

  • November 4–5, 1871 Sunday

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    November 45 Sunday  Clemens used Hartford as his base while lecturing in New England, so it’s likely that on this open weekend he returned home to Livy and “cubbie.” Newspapers were calling the Artemus Ward lecture “plagiarism,” and that “Mark Twain is capable of better things.” The critical responses to Sam’s lecture stayed mixed, though Sam tweaked the material.

  • 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].