• Italy, Spring of 1892

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    March 24 Thursday – Sam and Livy left Menton for Pisa, Italy with Joseph Verey, their courier.
    March 25 Friday – Sam and Livy were in Pisa, Italy. Sam’s notebook lists the Eden Hotel:
    March 26 Saturday – Sam and Livy were in transit from Pisa to Rome, Italy.
    March 27 Sunday – In Rome, at the Hotel Molaro, for "a charming five weeks."

  • March 24, 1892 Thursday

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    March 24 Thursday – Sam and Livy left Menton for Pisa, Italy with Joseph Verey, their courier. The plan was for Verey to leave them at Pisa and return to Berlin to guide the rest of the party to Rome. The entire trip from Menton to Rome was about 400 miles. Sam and Livy may have stayed in Pisa a day, but arrived in Rome on Mar. 27 [Mar. 27 to Chatto].

    Frederick J. Hall wrote to Sam

  • March 27, 1892 Sunday

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    March 27 Sunday – In Rome Sam wrote to Chatto & Windus.

    We have just arrived here & shall remain two or three weeks. …

    I received the two copies of the magazine in Berlin & got lots of entertainment out of them. I ought to have thanked you long ago, but I was attending to the influenza & couldn’t.

  • March 28, 1892 Monday

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    March 28 Monday – In Rome, Sam cabled Henry C. Robinson, his old Hartford attorney and billiards friend.

    Accept the offer provided one half of Paige & Hammersley’s interests in the company be added to it. Otherwise decline [MTP; also in NB 31 TS 34].

  • March 29, 1892 Tuesday

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    March 29 Tuesday – In Rome, Sam cabled a one-liner to Henry C. Robinsons Mar. 28 cable:

    No, it is the only hold I have on P[aige] [MTP; also NB 31 TS 34].

    Sam’s notebook:

    Hotel Molaro. Capole Casi.

  • March 31, 1892 Thursday

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    March 31 Thursday – In Rome, Italy on this day or the next Sam put a memo in his notebook: “Get Roba di Roma,” which referred to William Wetmore Story’s two-volume Roba di Roma (1863) [Gribben 669; NB 31, TS 35].

  • April 1892

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    April – In Rome, sometime during the month, Livy wrote an undated letter on Sam’s behalf to Daniel Willard Fiske (1831-1904), librarian and professor at Cornell, who was in Rome at the time. After the 1881 death of his wife, Jennie McGraw, Fiske spent a great deal of time in Italy collecting manuscripts. He bequeathed a large collection to Cornell, known now as the Fiske Collection.

  • April 1, 1892 Friday

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    April 1 Friday – In Rome, Sam sent a cable to Henry C. Robinson:

    Keep me posted by cable [MTP; also NB 31 TS 35].

    Note: their communication during this period had to do with the Paige typesetter, and its move to Chicago, and Sam’s rights.

  • April 2, 1892 Saturday

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    April 2 Saturday – From the Cincinnati Commercial Gazette, p.13, “Brief Mention of New Books”:

    Mark Twain’s humor isn’t always of a delicate sort, but one forgives that fault for the laughs with which every page of his work is sprinkled. It is the intention of the publishers to bring out in this series all the popular little classics in the French, Spanish and Italian as well as the English language [Budd, Contemporary 323].

  • April 3, 1892 Sunday

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    April 3 Sunday – A shorter reprint of Sam’s Europe letter, “German Chicago” ran in the Boston Daily Globe, p.23 under the title, “CITY WITHOUT NEWSBOYS.” See Oct. 13, 1891.

  • April 4, 1892 Monday

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    April 4 Monday – In Rome, Sam wrote two letters to Frederick J. Hall, relating the entire history of the aborted play Colonel Sellers as a Scientist (The American Claimant), including A.P. Burbanks efforts, Howells and his loss of money and a past proposal of Alfred Arnold to dramatize the story for “Crane the comedian” (William H. Crane (1845-1928) actor/comedian).

  • April 5, 1892 Tuesday

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    April 5 Tuesday – In Rome Sam sent a cable to Henry C. Robinson:

    Do they offer no modification of the proposition? [MTP; also NB 31 TS 36].

    Sam’s notebook : “Ezekiel’s Studio — 4 p.m. Tuesday” [NB 31 TS 37]. Note: placement in the NB suggests this day or Apr. 12.

    Ben W. Austin wrote from Oak Cliff, Texas to Sam, asking for the autographs of John Raymond and Charles S. Webster [MTP].

  • April 7, 1892 Thursday

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    April 7 ThursdayHorace Rutherford wrote from Trenton, Ky. He enclosed under another cover, a “genuine Kentucky Meerschaum. It has been in training for two or three weeks, and I trust it is ancient enough for you. I saw an article several weeks ago,by Luke Sharp in the Louisville Times in which it stated that you were very fond of smoking an old Kentucky cob pipe, and as you could not stand a new pipe, you hired some old tough to flavor it for you, etc.” [MTP].

  • April 8, 1892 Friday

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    April 8 Friday – At the Grand Hotel Sud Tirol In Trient, Austria en route to Florence, Italy, Susy Clemens wrote her “beloved,” Louise Brownell. Joseph Verey and Susan Crane escorted the Clemens girls. The letter was postmarked Apr. 16, but this is the date assigned by the MTP.

  • April 9, 1892 Saturday

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    April 9 SaturdayFrederick J. Hall wrote to Sam of the need for Webster & Co. to close ranks:

    …that after next year, instead of making it our policy, as we have heretofore, to push forward and enlarge the firm in all directions, it would be wiser to commence at that time to concentrate; to bend our efforts…in keeping what we have, doing it with less expense, and making it more profitable [MTLTP 300].

  • April 10, 1892 Sunday

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    April 10 Sunday – From the San Francisco Chronicle, p.9, “Literature”:

    Merry Tales is a little volume of old stories and sketches by Mark Twain, published in a new form. The volume includes among others that terribly tedious sketch called “Meisterschaft,” which the author may have thought funny, but which no one else ever did. If Mark Twain wants to “turn the barrel” he should exercise better judgment in making his selections for republication [Budd, Contemporary 323].

  • April 13, 1892 Wednesday

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    April 13 Wednesday – The Hartford Courant divined that some of the stories in Merry Tales were reprints, p.6, “Mark Twain”:

    There are seven of these funny stories, not all here presented for the first time….a very various assortment of tales, some funny and one or two not so droll (as the Fort Trumbull story of New London). But they are all more or less enjoyable, and some are particularly humorous [Budd, Contemporary 324].

  • April 15, 1892 Friday

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    April 15 FridayA.L. Bancroft for Bancroft & Co., Pianos and Subscription books of San Francisco, wrote asking what Sam thought of “the ten-block system of numbering country houses,” or the “Contra Costa Plan” for numbering country houses (clippings encl. Jan. 10, 1891 and others from Contra Costa Gazette) [MTP].

  • April 19, 1892 Tuesday

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    April 19 Tuesday – Sam’s notebook reveals a likely telegram, not extant, to Henry C. Robinson:

    Apl. 19, wrote Robinson I would take ¼ million & 1/6 of Paige’s interest, but would prefer ¼ [NB 31 TS 37].

  • April 20, 1892 Wednesday

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    April 20 Wednesday – In Rome Sam sent a cable to Webster & Co.:

    Close with Arnold if you like [MTP; also NB 31 TS 37].

    Note: this relates to Alfred Arnold’s desire to acquire dramatization rights for AC. See Apr. 4 entry. Evidently, negotiations had concluded favorably.

    Susy wrote to Louise Brownell on or about this day: