The Autobiography of Mark Twain by Mark Twain (good book recommendations .TXT) ๐
Description
The Autobiography of Mark Twain is a collection of reminiscences and reflections. Twain began dictating them in 1870, and in 1906 he published Chapters from My Autobiography in twenty-five installments in the North American Review. He continued to write stories for his autobiography, most of which werenโt published in his lifetime due to a lack of access to his papers, or their private subject matters. After Twainโs death, numerous editors have tried to organize this collection of published and unpublished autobiographical works, producing various differing editions. The most recent attempt is by the Mark Twain Project at the University of California, Berkeley, which published a three-volume edition; but, through what many consider legal trickery, the University of California, Berkeley has claimed copyright on that edition until 2047โ137 years after Twainโs death.
This Standard Ebooks production is based on Harper and Brothersโ 1924 collection, compiled by Albert Bigelow Paine.
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- Author: Mark Twain
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I will insert here this letter, and as it will not see the light until Higbie and I are in our graves, I shall allow myself the privilege of copying his punctuation and his spelling, for to me they are a part of the man. He is as honest as the day is long. He is utterly simple-minded and straightforward, and his spelling and his punctuation are as simple and honest as he is himself. He makes no apology for them, and no apology is needed. They plainly state that he is not educated, and they as plainly state that he makes no pretense to being educated.
Greenville, Plumas Co., California
March 15โ โ1906,
Saml. L. Clemens.
New York City,N.Y.
My Dear Sirโ โ
Two or three parties have ben after me to write up my recolections of Our associations in Nevada, in the early 60โs and have come to the conclusion to do so, and have ben jocting down incidents that came to mind, for several years. What I am in dout is, the date you came to Aurora, Nevadaโ โallso, the first trip you made over thee Sieras to California, after coming to Nev. allso as near as possable date, you tended sick man, on, or near Walker River, when our mine was jumped, dont think for a moment that I intend to steal any of your Thunder, but onely to mention some instances that you failed to mention, in any of your articles, Books etc. that I ever saw. I intend to submit the articles to you so that you can see if anything is objectionabl, if so to erase, same, and add anything in its place you saw fit.
I was burned out a few years since, and all old data, went up in smoke, is the reason I ask for above dates, have ben sick more or less for 2 or 3 years, unable to earn anything to speak of, and the finances are getting pretty low, and I will admit that it is mainly for the purpose of Earning a little money, that my first attempt at writing will be made- and I should be so pleased to have your candid opinion, of its merits, and what in your wisdom in such matters, would be its value for publication. I enclose a coppy of Herald in answer to enquiry I made, if such an article was desired.
Hoping to hear from you as soon as convenient, I remain with great respect,
Yours &c
C. H. Higbie.
[Copy.]
New York, Mar. 6โ โโ06
C. H. Higbie,
Greenville, Cal.
DrSir
I should be glad indeed to receive your account of your experiences with Mark Twain, if they are as interesting as I should imagine they would be the Herald would be quite willing to pay you verry well for them, of course, it would be impassible for me to set a price on the matter until I had an opertunity of examining it. If you will kindly send it on, with the privilege of our authenticating it through Mr. Clemens, I shall be more than pleased, to give you a quick decision and make you an offer as it seems worth to us. However, if you have any particular sum in mind which you think should be the price I would suggest that you communicate with me to that effect.
Yours truly
New York Herald,
By Geo. R. Miner.
Sunday Editor.
I have written Higbie and asked him to let me do his literary trading for him. He can shovel sand better than I canโ โas will appear in the next chapterโ โbut I can beat him all to pieces in the art of fleecing a publisher.
Tuesday, March 27, 1906Higbieโs spellingโ โMr. Clemensโs scheme for getting Higbie a job at the Pioneerโ โIn 1863 Mr. Clemens goes to Virginia City to be sole reporter on โTerritorial Enterpriseโโ โMr. Clemens tries his scheme for finding employment for the unemployed, on a young St. Louis reporter, with great success. Also worked the scheme for his nephew, Mr. Samuel E. Moffett.
I have allowed Higbie to assist the Herald manโs spelling and make it harmonize with his own. He has done it well and liberally and without prejudice.
To my mind he has improved it, for I have had an aversion to good spelling for sixty years and more, merely for the reason that when I was a boy there was not a thing I could do creditably except spell according to the book. It was a poor and mean distinction, and I early learned to disenjoy it. I suppose that this is because the ability to spell correctly is a talent, not an acquirement. There is some dignity about an acquirement, because it is a product of your own labor. It is wages earned, whereas to be able to do a thing merely by the grace of God, and not by your own effort, transfers the distinction to our heavenly homeโ โwhere possibly it is a matter of pride and satisfaction, but it leaves you naked and bankrupt.
Higbie was the first person to profit by my great and infallible scheme for finding work for the unemployed. I have tried that scheme, now and then, for forty-four years. So far as I am aware it has always succeeded, and it is one of my high prides that I invented it, and that in basing it upon what I conceived to be a fact of human nature I estimated that fact of human nature accurately.
Higbie and I were living in a cotton-domestic lean-to at the base of a mountain. It was very
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