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Index
Mark Twain - Complete Works of Mark Twain.
Main Table of Contents.
The Novels.
The Gilded Age - A Tale Of Today (1873) (Illustrated)
The Gilded Age Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. Squire Hawkins and His Tennessee Land—He Decides to Remove to Missouri.
Chapter 2. He Meets With and Adopts the Boy Clay.
Chapter 3. Uncle Daniel's Apparition and Prayer.
Chapter 4. The Steamboat Explosion.
Chapter 5. Adoption of the Little Girl Laura—Arrival at Missouri—Reception by Colonel Beriah Sellers.
Chapter 6. Trouble and Darkness in the Hawkins Family—Proposed Sale of the Tennessee Land.
Chapter 7. Colonel Sellers at Home—His Wonderful Clock and Cure for Rheumatism.
Chapter 8. Colonel Sellers Makes Known His Magnificent Speculation Schemes and Astonishes Washington Hawkins.
Chapter 9. Death of Judge Hawkins.
Chapter 10. Laura Hawkins Discovers a Mystery in Her Parentage and Grows Morbid Under the Village Gossip.
Chapter 11. A Dinner with Col Sellers—Wonderful Effects of Raw Turnips.
Chapter 12. Philip Sterling and Henry Brierly—Arrangements to Go West as Engineers.
Chapter 13. Rail—Road Contractors and Party Traveling—Philip and Harry form the Acquaintance of Col Sellers.
Chapter 14. Ruth Bolton and Her Parents.
Chapter 15. Visitors of the Boltons—Mr Bigler "Sees the Legislature"—Ruth Bolton Commences Medical Studies.
Chapter 16. The Engineers Detained at St Louis—Off for Camp—Reception by Jeff.
Chapter 17. The Engineer Corps Arrive at Stone's Landing.
Chapter 18. Laura and Her Marriage to Colonel Selby—Deserted and Returns to Hawkeye.
Chapter 19. Harry Brierly Infatuated With Laura and Proposes She Visit Washington.
Chapter 20. Senator Abner Dilwortliy Visits Hawkeye—Addresses the People and Makes the Acquaintance of Laura.
Chapter 21. Ruth Bolton at Fallkill Seminary—The Montagues—Ruth Becomes Quite Gay—Alice Montague.
Chapter 22. Philip and Harry Visit Fallkill—Harry Does the Agreeable to Ruth.
Chapter 23. Harry at Washington Lobbying For An Appropriation For Stone's Landing —Philip in New York Studying Engineering.
Chapter 24. Washington and Its Sights—The Appropriation Bill Reported From the Committee and Passed.
Chapter 25. Energetic Movements at Stone's Landing—Everything Booming—A Grand Smash Up
Chapter 26. The Boltons—Ruth at Home—Visitors and Speculations.
Chapter 27. Col Sellers Comforts His Wife With His Views on the Prospects.
Chapter 28. Visit to Headquarters in Wall Street—How Appropriations Are Obtained and Their Cost.
Chapter 29. Philip's Experience With the Rail—Road Conductor—Surveys His Mining Property.
Chapter 30. Laura and Col Sellers Go To Washington On Invitation of Senator Dilworthy.
Chapter 31. Philip and Harry at the Boltons'—Philip Seriously Injured—Ruth's First Case of Surgery.
Chapter 32. Laura Becomes a Famous Belle at Washington.
Chapter 33. Society in Washington—The Antiques, the Parvenus, and the Middle Aristocracy.
Chapter 34. Grand Scheme For Disposing of the Tennessee Land—Laura and Washington Hawkins Enjoying the Reputation of Being Millionaires.
Chapter 35. About Senators—Their Privileges and Habits.
Chapter 36. An Hour in a Book Store.
Chapter 37. Representative Buckstone and Laura's Strategic Coquetry.
Chapter 38. Reception Day in Washington—Laura Again Meets Col. Selby and the Effect Upon Her.
Chapter 39. Col. Selby Visits Laura and Effects a Reconciliation.
Chapter 40. Col. Sellers' Career in Washington—Laura's Intimacy With Col. Selby is Talked About.
Chapter 41. Harry Brierly Becomes Entirely Infatuated With Laura—Declares His Love and Gets Laughed At.
Chapter 42. How The Hon Mr Trollop Was Induced to Vote For Laura's Bill.
Chapter 43. Progress of the Bill in the House.
Chapter 44. Philip in Washington—Visits Laura.
Chapter 45. The Passage of the Bill in the House of Representatives.
Chapter 46. Disappearance of Laura, and Murder of Col. Selby in New York.
Chapter 47. Laura in the Tombs and Her Visitors.
Chapter 48. Mr Bolton Says Yes Again—Philip Returns to the Mines.
Chapter 49. The Coal Vein Found and Lost Again—Philip and the Boltons—Elated and Then Cruelly Disappointed.
Chapter 50. Philip Visits Fallkill and Proposes Studying Law With Mr Montague—The Squire Invests in the Mine—Ruth Declares Her Love for Philip.
Chapter 51. Col Sellers Enlightens Washington Hawkins on the Customs of Congress.
Chapter 52. How Senator Dilworthy Advanced Washington's Interests.
Chapter 53. Senator Dilworthy Goes West to See About His Re—election—He Becomes a Shining Light.
Chapter 54. The Trial of Laura for Murder.
Chapter 55. The Trial Continued—Evidence of Harry Brierly.
Chapter 56. The Trial Continued—Col Sellers on the Stand and Takes Advantage of the Situation.
Chapter 57. The Momentous Day—Startling News—Dilworthy Denounced as a Briber and Defeated——The Bill Lost in the Senate.
Chapter 58. Verdict, Not Guilty!—Laura Free and Receives Propositions to Lecture—Philip back at the Mines.
Chapter 59. The Investigation of the Dilworthy Bribery Case and Its Results.
Chapter 60. Laura Decides on her Course—Attempts to Lecture and Fails—Found Dead in her Chair
Chapter 61. Col Sellers and Washington Hawkins Review the Situation and Leave Washington.
Chapter 62. Philip Discouraged—One More Effort—Finds Coal at Last.
Chapter 63. Philip Leaves Ilium to see Ruth—Ruth Convalescent—Alice.
Appendix.
The Adventures Of Tom Sawyer (1876) (Illustrated)
Adventures of Tom Sawyer Table of Contents.
Preface.
Chapter 1. Y-o-u-u Tom-Aunt Polly Decides Upon her Duty—Tom Practices Music—The Challenge—A Private Entrance.
Chapter 2. Strong Temptations—Strategic Movements—The Innocents Beguiled.
Chapter 3. Tom as a General—Triumph and Reward—Dismal Felicity—Commission and Omission.
Chapter 4. Mental Acrobatics—Attending Sunday—School—The Superintendent—"Showing off"—Tom Lionized.
Chapter 5. A Useful Minister—In Church—The Climax.
Chapter 6. Self-Examination—Dentistry—The Midnight Charm—Witches and Devils—Cautious Approaches—Happy Hours.
Chapter 7. A Treaty Entered Into—Early Lessons—A Mistake Made.
Chapter 8. Tom Decides on his Course—Old Scenes Re-enacted.
Chapter 9. A Solemn Situation—Grave Subjects Introduced—Injun Joe Explains.
Chapter 10. The Solemn Oath—Terror Brings Repentance—Mental Punishment.
Chapter 11. Muff Potter Comes Himself—Tom's Conscience at Work.
Chapter 12. Tom Shows his Generosity—Aunt Polly Weakens.
Chapter 13. The Young Pirates—Going to the Rendezvous—The Camp—Fire Talk.
Chapter 14. Camp-Life—A Sensation—Tom Steals Away from Camp.
Chapter 15. Tom Reconnoiters—Learns the Situation—Reports at Camp.
Chapter 16. A Day's Amusements—Tom Reveals a Secret—The Pirates take a Lesson —A Night Surprise—An Indian War.
Chapter 17. Memories of the Lost Heroes—The Point in Tom's Secret.
Chapter 18. Tom's Feelings Investigated—Wonderful Dream—Becky Thatcher Overshadowed—Tom Becomes Jealous—Black Revenge.
Chapter 19. Tom Tells the Truth.
Chapter 20. Becky in a Dilemma—Tom's Nobility Asserts Itself.
Chapter 21. Youthful Eloquence—Compositions by the Young Ladies—A Lengthy Vision—The Boy's Vengeance Satisfied.
Chapter 22. Tom's Confidence Betrayed—Expects Signal Punishment.
Chapter 23. Old Muff's Friends—Muff Potter in Court—Muff Potter Saved.
Chapter 24. Tom as the Village Hero—Days of Splendor and Nights of Horror—Pursuit of Injun Joe.
Chapter 25. About Kings and Diamonds—Search for the Treasure—Dead People and Ghosts.
Chapter 26. The Haunted House—Sleepy Ghosts—A Box of Gold—Bitter Luck.
Chapter 27. Doubts to be Settled—The Young Detectives.
Chapter 28. An Attempt at No. Two—Huck Mounts Guard.
Chapter 29. The Pic-nic—Huck on Injun Joe's Track—The "Revenge" Job—Aid for the Widow.
Chapter 30. The Welchman Reports—Huck Under Fire—The Story Circulated—A New Sensation—Hope Giving Way to Despair.
Chapter 31. An Exploring Expedition—Trouble Commences—Lost in the Cave—Total Darkness—Found but not Saved.
Chapter 32. Tom tells the Story of their Escape—Tom's Enemy in Safe Quarters.
Chapter 33. The Fate of Injun Joe—Huck and Tom Compare Notes—An Expedition to the Cave—Protection Against Ghosts—"An Awful Snug Place"—A Reception at the Widow Douglas's.
Chapter 34. Springing a Secret—Mr. Jones' Surprise a Failure.
Chapter 35. A New Order of Things—Poor Huck—New Adventures Planned.
The Prince And The Pauper (1881) (Illustrated)
Prince and the Pauper Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. The birth of the Prince and the Pauper.
Chapter 2. Tom's early life.
Chapter 3. Tom's meeting with the Prince.
Chapter 4. The Prince's troubles begin.
Chapter 5. Tom as a Patrician.
Chapter 6. Tom receives instructions.
Chapter 7. Tom's first royal dinner.
Chapter 8. The Question of the Seal.
Chapter 9. The river pageant.
Chapter 10. The Prince in the toils.
Chapter 11. At Guildhall.
Chapter 12. The Prince and his Deliverer.
Chapter 13. The disappearance of the Prince.
Chapter 14. 'Le Roi est mort—vive le Roi.'
Chapter 15. Tom as King.
Chapter 16. The State Dinner.
Chapter 17. Foo-foo the First.
Chapter 18. The Prince with the Tramps.
Chapter 19. The Prince with the peasants.
Chapter 20. The Prince and the hermit.
Chapter 21. Hendon to the rescue.
Chapter 22. A Victim of Treachery.
Chapter 23. The Prince a prisoner.
Chapter 24. The Escape.
Chapter 25. Hendon Hall.
Chapter 26. Disowned.
Chapter 27. In Prison.
Chapter 28. The sacrifice.
Chapter 29. To London.
Chapter 30. Tom's progress.
Chapter 31. The Recognition procession.
Chapter 32. Coronation Day.
Chapter 33. Edward as King.
Conclusion. Justice and retribution.
Footnotes.
Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn (1884) (Illustrated)
Huckleberry Finn Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. Civilizing Huck.—Miss Watson.—Tom Sawyer Waits.
Chapter 2. The Boys Escape Jim.—Torn Sawyer's Gang.—Deep-laid Plans.
Chapter 3. A Good Going-over.—Grace Triumphant.—"One of Tom Sawyers's Lies".
Chapter 4. Huck and the Judge.—Superstition.
Chapter 5. Huck's Father.—The Fond Parent.—Reform.
Chapter 6. He Went for Judge Thatcher.—Huck Decided to Leave.—Political Economy.—Thrashing Around.
Chapter 7. Laying for Him.—Locked in the Cabin.—Sinking the Body.—Resting.
Chapter 8. Sleeping in the Woods.—Raising the Dead.—Exploring the Island.—Finding Jim.—Jim's Escape.—Signs.—Balum.
Chapter 9. The Cave.—The Floating House.
Chapter 10. The Find.—Old Hank Bunker.—In Disguise.
Chapter 11. Huck and the Woman.—The Search.—Prevarication.—Going to Goshen.
Chapter 12. Slow Navigation.—Borrowing Things.—Boarding the Wreck.—The Plotters.—Hunting for the Boat.
Chapter 13. Escaping from the Wreck.—The Watchman.—Sinking.
Chapter 14. A General Good Time.—The Harem.—French.
Chapter 15. Huck Loses the Raft.—In the Fog.—Huck Finds the Raft.—Trash.
Chapter 16. Expectation.—A White Lie.—Floating Currency.—Running by Cairo.—Swimming Ashore.
Chapter 17. An Evening Call.—The Farm in Arkansaw.—Interior Decorations.—Stephen Dowling Bots.—Poetical Effusions.
Chapter 18. Col. Grangerford.—Aristocracy.—Feuds.—The Testament.—Recovering the Raft.—The Wood—pile.—Pork and Cabbage.
Chapter 19. Tying Up Day—times.—An Astronomical Theory.—Running a Temperance Revival.—The Duke of Bridgewater.—The Troubles of Royalty.
Chapter 20. Huck Explains.—Laying Out a Campaign.—Working the Camp—meeting.—A Pirate at the Camp—meeting.—The Duke as a Printer.
Chapter 21. Sword Exercise.—Hamlet's Soliloquy.—They Loafed Around Town.—A Lazy Town.—Old Boggs.—Dead.
Chapter 22. Sherburn.—Attending the Circus.—Intoxication in the Ring.—The Thrilling Tragedy.
Chapter 23. Sold.—Royal Comparisons.—Jim Gets Home-sick.
Chapter 24. Jim in Royal Robes.—They Take a Passenger.—Getting Information.—Family Grief.
Chapter 25. Is It Them?—Singing the "Doxologer."—Awful Square—Funeral Orgies.—A Bad Investment.
Chapter 26. A Pious King.—The King's Clergy.—She Asked His Pardon.—Hiding in the Room.—Huck Takes the Money.
Chapter 27. The Funeral.—Satisfying Curiosity.—Suspicious of Huck,—Quick Sales and Small.
Chapter 28. The Trip to England.—"The Brute!"—Mary Jane Decides to Leave.—Huck Parting with Mary Jane.—Mumps.—The Opposition Line.
Chapter 29. Contested Relationship.—The King Explains the Loss.—A Question of Handwriting.—Digging up the Corpse.—Huck Escapes.
Chapter 30. The King Went for Him.—A Royal Row.—Powerful Mellow
Chapter 31. Ominous Plans.—News from Jim.—Old Recollections.—A Sheep Story.—Valuable Information.
Chapter 32. Still and Sunday—like.—Mistaken Identity.—Up a Stump.—In a Dilemma.
Chapter 33. A Nigger Stealer.—Southern Hospitality.—A Pretty Long Blessing.—Tar and Feathers.
Chapter 34. The Hut by the Ash Hopper.—Outrageous.—Climbing the Lightning Rod.—Troubled with Witches.
Chapter 35. Escaping Properly.—Dark Schemes.—Discrimination in Stealing.—A Deep Hole.
Chapter 36. The Lightning Rod.—His Level Best.—A Bequest to Posterity.—A High Figure.
Chapter 37. The Last Shirt.—Mooning Around.—Sailing Orders.—The Witch Pie.
Chapter 38. The Coat of Arms.—A Skilled Superintendent.—Unpleasant Glory.—A Tearful Subject.
Chapter 39. Rats.—Lively Bed—fellows.—The Straw Dummy.
Chapter 40. Fishing.—The Vigilance Committee.—A Lively Run.—Jim Advises a Doctor.
Chapter 41. The Doctor.—Uncle Silas.—Sister Hotchkiss.—Aunt Sally in Trouble.
Chapter 42. Tom Sawyer Wounded.—The Doctor's Story.—Tom Confesses.—Aunt Polly Arrives.—Hand Out Them Letters.
Chapter the Last. Out of Bondage.—Paying the Captive.—Yours Truly, Huck Finn.
A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court. (1889) (Illustrated)
A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court Table of Contents
Preface.
A Word Of Explanation.
Chapter 1. Camelot.
Chapter 2. King Arthurs's Court.
Chapter 3. Kinghts of the Round Table.
Chapter 4. Sir Dinadan The Humorist
Chapter 5. An Inspiration.
Chapter 6. The Eclipse.
Chapter 7. Merlin's Tower
Chapter 8. The Boss.
Chapter 9. The Tournament.
Chapter 10. Beginnings Of Civilization.
Chapter 11. The Yankee In Search Of Adventures.
Chapter 12. Slow Torture.
Chapter 13. Freemen.
Chapter 14. "Defend Thee, Lord"
Chapter 15. Sandy's Tale.
Chapter 16. Morgan Le Fay.
Chapter 17. A Royal Banquet.
Chapter 18. In The Queen's Dungeons.
Chapter 19. Knight-Errantry As A Trade.
Chapter 20. The Ogre's Castle.
Chapter 21. The Pilgrims.
Chapter 22. The Holy Fountain.
Chapter 23. Restoration Of The Fountain.
Chapter 24. A Rival Magician.
Chapter 25. A Competitive Examination.
Chapter 26. The First Newspaper.
Chapter 27. The Yankee And The King Travel Incognito.
Chapter 28. Drilling The King.
Chapter 29. The Smallpox Hut.
Chapter 30. The Tragedy Of The Manor-House.
Chapter 31. Marco.
Chapter 32. Dowley's Humiliation.
Chapter 33. Sixth Century Political Economy.
Chapter 34. The Yankee And The King Sold As Slaves.
Chapter 35. A Pitiful Incident.
Chapter 36. An Encounter In The Dark.
Chapter 37. An Awful Predicament.
Chapter 38. Sir Launcelot And Knights To The Rescue.
Chapter 39. The Yankee's Fight With The Knights.
Chapter 40. Three Years Later.
Chapter 41. The Interdict.
Chapter 42. War!
Chapter 43. The Battle Of The Sand Belt.
Chapter 44. A Postscript By Clarence.
The American Claimant. (1892) (Illustrated)
American Claimant Table of Contents.
Explanatory.
The Weather In This Book.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Chapter 12.
Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Chapter 16.
Chapter 17.
Chapter 18.
Chapter 19.
Chapter 20.
Chapter 21.
Chapter 22.
Chapter 23.
Chapter 24.
Chapter 25.
Appendix.
Tom Sawyer Abroad (1894)
Tom Sawyer Abroad Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. Tom Seeks New Adventures.
Chapter 2. The Balloon Ascension.
Chapter 3. Tom Explains.
Chapter 4. Storm.
Chapter 5. Land.
Chapter 6. It's A Caravan.
Chapter 7. Tom Respects The Flea.
Chapter 8. The Disappearing Lake.
Chapter 9. Tom Discourses On The Desert.
Chapter 10. The Treasure-Hill.
Chapter 11. The Sand-Storm.
Chapter 12. Jim Standing Siege.
Chapter 13. Going For Tom's Pipe.
Pudd'nhead Wilson (1894)
Pudd'nHead Wilson Table of Contents.
A Whisper To The Reader.
Chapter 1. Pudd'nhead Wins His Name.
Chapter 2. Driscoll Spares His Slaves.
Chapter 3. Roxy Plays A Shrewd Trick.
Chapter 4. The Ways Of The Changelings.
Chapter 5. The Twins Thrill Dawson's Landing.
Chapter 6. Swimming In Glory.
Chapter 7. The Unknown Nymph.
Chapter 8. Marse Tom Tramples His Chance.
Chapter 9. Tom Practices Sycophancy.
Chapter 10. The Nymph Revealed.
Chapter 11. Pudd'nhead's Thrilling Discovery.
Chapter 12. The Shame Of Judge Driscoll.
Chapter 13. Tom Stares At Ruin.
Chapter 14. Roxana Insists Upon Reform.
Chapter 15. The Robber Robbed.
Chapter 16. Sold Down The River.
Chapter 17. The Judge Utters Dire Prophesy.
Chapter 18. Roxana Commands.
Chapter 19. The Prophesy Realized.
Chapter 20. The Murderer Chuckles.
Chapter 21. Doom.
Conclusion.
Author's Note To "Those Extraordinary Twins"
Tom Sawyer, Detective (1896)
Tom Sawyer Detecive Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. An Invitation For Tom And Huck.
Chapter 2. Jake Dunlap.
Chapter 3. A Diamond Robbery.
Chapter 4. The Three Sleepers.
Chapter 5. A Tragedy In The Woods.
Chapter 6. Plans To Secure The Diamonds.
Chapter 7. A Night's Vigil.
Chapter 8. Talking With The Ghost.
Chapter 9. Finding Of Jubiter Dunlap.
Chapter 10. The Arrest Of Uncle Silas.
Chapter 11. Tom Sawyer Discovers The Murderers.
Personal Recollections Of Joan Of Arc (1896)
Recollections of Joan of Arc Table of Contents.
Translator's Preface.
A Peculiarity Of Joan Of Arc's History.
The Sieur Louis De Conte.
Book 1 - In Domremy.
Chapter 1. When Wolves Ran Free in Paris.
Chapter 2. The Fairy Tree of Domremy.
Chapter 3. All Aflame with Love of France.
Chapter 4. Joan Tames the Mad Man.
Chapter 5. Domremy Pillaged and Burned.
Chapter 6. Joan and Archangel Michael.
Chapter 7. She Delivers the Divine Command.
Chapter 8. Why the Scorners Relented.
Book 2 - In Court And Camp.
Chapter 1. Joan Says Good-By.
Chapter 2. The Governor Speeds Joan.
Chapter 3. The Paladin Groans and Boasts.
Chapter 4. Joan Leads Us Through the Enemy.
Chapter 5. We Pierce the Last Ambuscades.
Chapter 6. Joan Convinces the King.
Chapter 7. Our Paladin in His Glory.
Chapter 8. Joan Persuades Her Inquisitors.
Chapter 9. She Is Made General-in-Chief.
Chapter 10. The Maid's Sword and Banner.
Chapter 11. The War March Is Begun.
Chapter 12. Joan Puts Heart in Her Army.
Chapter 13. Checked by the Folly of the Wise.
Chapter 14. What the English Answered.
Chapter 15. My Exquisite Poem Goes to Smash.
Chapter 16. The Finding of the Dwarf.
Chapter 17. Sweet Fruit of Bitter Truth.
Chapter 18. Joan's First Battle-Field.
Chapter 19. We Burst In Upon Ghosts.
Chapter 20. Joan Makes Cowards Brave Victors.
Chapter 21. She Gently Reproves Her Dear Friend.
Chapter 22. The Fate of France Decided.
Chapter 23. Joan Inspires the Tawdry King.
Chapter 24. Tinsel Trappings of Nobility.
Chapter 25. At Last—Forward!
Chapter 26. The Last Doubts Scattered.
Chapter 27. How Joan Took Jargeau.
Chapter 28. Joan Foretells Her Doom.
Chapter 29. Fierce Talbot Reconsiders.
Chapter 30. The Red Field of Patay.
Chapter 31. France Begins to Live Again.
Chapter 32. The Joyous News Flies Fast.
Chapter 33. Joan's Five Great Deeds.
Chapter 34. The Jests of the Burgundians.
Chapter 35. The Heir of France is Crowned.
Chapter 36. Joan Hears News from Home.
Chapter 37. Again to Arms.
Chapter 38. The King Cries "Forward!"
Chapter 39. We Win, But the King Balks.
Chapter 40. Treachery Conquers Joan.
Chapter 41. The Maid Will March No More.
Book 3 - Trial And Martyrdom
Chapter 1. The Maid in Chains.
Chapter 2. Joan Sold to the English.
Chapter 3. Weaving the Net About Her.
Chapter 4. All Ready to Condemn.
Chapter 5. Fifty Experts Against a Novice.
Chapter 6. The Maid Baffles Her Persecutors.
Chapter 7. Craft That Was in Vain.
Chapter 8. Joan Tells of Her Visions.
Chapter 9. Her Sure Deliverance Foretold.
Chapter 10. The Inquisitors at Their Wits' End.
Chapter 11. The Court Reorganized for Assassination.
Chapter 12. Joan's Master-Stroke Diverted
Chapter 13. The Third Trial Fails.
Chapter 14. Joan Struggles with Her Twelve Lies.
Chapter 15. Undaunted by Threat of Burning.
Chapter 16. Joan Stands Defiant Before the Rack.
Chapter 17. Supreme in Direst Peril.
Chapter 18. Condemned Yet Unafraid.
Chapter 19. Our Last Hopes of Rescue Fail.
Chapter 20. The Betrayal.
Chapter 21. Respited Only for Torture.
Chapter 22. Joan Gives the Fatal Answer.
Chapter 23. The Time Is at Hand.
Chapter 24. Joan the Martyr.
Conclusion.
A Horse's Tale (1906)
A Horse's Tale Table of Contents.
Acknowledgements.
Part 1.
Chapter 1. Soldier Boy—Privately To Himself.
Chapter 2. Letter From Rouen—To General Alison.
Chapter 3. General Alison To His Mother.
Chapter 4. Cathy To Her Aunt Mercedes.
Chapter 5. General Alison To Mercedes.
Chapter 6. Soldier Boy And The Mexican Plug.
Chapter 7. Soldier Boy And Shekels.
Chapter 8. The Scout-Start. Bb And Lieutenant-General Alison.
Chapter 9. Soldier Boy And Shekels Again.
Chapter 10. General Alison And Dorcas.
Chapter 11. Several Months Later. Antonio And Thorndike.
Chapter 12. Mongrel And The Other Horse.
Part 2. In Spain.
Chapter 13. General Alison To His Mother.
Chapter 14. Soldier Boy—To Himself.
Chapter 15. General Alison To Mrs. Drake, The Colonel’s Wife.
The Mysterious Stranger (1916)
Mysterious Stranger Table of Contents.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
The Non Fiction.
Old Times On The Mississippi (1875)
Old Times On The Mississippi Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. The Boys’ Ambition.
Chapter 2. I Want To Be A Cub-Pilot.
Chapter 3. A Cub-Pilot’s Experience.
Chapter 4. A Daring Deed.
Chapter 5. Perplexing Lessons.
Chapter 6. Continued Perplexities.
Chapter 7. Completing My Education.
Chapter 8. The River Rises.
Chapter 9. Sounding.
Chapter 10. A Pilot’s Needs.
Chapter 11. Rank And Dignity Of Piloting.
Chapter 12. The Pilots’ Monopoly.
Chapter 13. Racing Days.
Chapter 14. Cut-Offs And Stephen.
Life on the Mississippi (1883)
Life on the Mississippi Table of Contents.
The 'Body Of The Nation'
Chapter 1. The River and Its History.
Chapter 2. The River and Its Explorers.
Chapter 3. Frescoes from the Past.
Chapter 4. The Boys' Ambition.
Chapter 5. I Want to be a Cub-pilot.
Chapter 6. A Cub-pilot's Experience.
Chapter 7. A Daring Deed.
Chapter 8. Perplexing Lessons.
Chapter 9. Continued Perplexities.
Chapter 10. Completing My Education.
Chapter 11. The River Rises.
Chapter 12. Sounding.
Chapter 13. A Pilot's Needs.
Chapter 14. Rank and Dignity of Piloting.
Chapter 15. The Pilots' Monopoly.
Chapter 16. Racing Days.
Chapter 17. Cut-offs and Stephen.
Chapter 18. I Take a Few Extra Lessons.
Chapter 19. Brown and I Exchange Compliments.
Chapter 20. A Catastrophe.
Chapter 21. A Section in My Biography.
Chapter 22. I Return to My Muttons.
Chapter 23. Traveling Incognito.
Chapter 24. My Incognito is Exploded.
Chapter 25. From Cairo to Hickman.
Chapter 26. Under Fire.
Chapter 27. Some Imported Articles.
Chapter 28. Uncle Mumford Unloads.
Chapter 29. A Few Specimen Bricks.
Chapter 30. Sketches by the Way.
Chapter 31. A Thumb-print and What Came of It.
Chapter 32. The Disposal of a Bonanza.
Chapter 33. Refreshments and Ethics.
Chapter 34. Tough Yarns.
Chapter 35. Vicksburg During the Trouble.
Chapter 36. The Professor's Yarn.
Chapter 37. The End of the 'Gold Dust'
Chapter 38. The House Beautiful.
Chapter 39. Manufactures and Miscreants.
Chapter 40. Castles and Culture.
Chapter 41. The Metropolis of the South.
Chapter 42. Hygiene and Sentiment.
Chapter 43. The Art of Inhumation.
Chapter 44. City Sights.
Chapter 45. Southern Sports.
Chapter 46. Enchantments and Enchanters.
Chapter 47. Uncle Remus and Mr. Cable.
Chapter 48. Sugar and Postage.
Chapter 49. Episodes in Pilot Life.
Chapter 50. The 'Original Jacobs'
Chapter 51. Reminiscences.
Chapter 52. A Burning Brand.
Chapter 53. My Boyhood's Home.
Chapter 54. Past and Present.
Chapter 55. A Vendetta and Other Things.
Chapter 56. A Question of Law.
Chapter 57. An Archangel.
Chapter 58. On the Upper River.
Chapter 59. Legends and Scenery.
Chapter 60. Speculations and Conclusions.
Appendix A.
Appendix B.
Appendix C.
Appendix D.
Editorial Wild Oats (1905)
Editorial Wild Oats Table of Contents.
My First Literary Venture.
Journalism in Tennessee.
Nicodemus Dodge—Printer.
Mr. Bloke's Item.
How I Edited an Agricultural Paper.
The Killing of Julius Cæsar "Localized"
Christian Science (1907)
Christian Science Table of Contents.
Preface.
Book 1. Christian Science.
Book 1. Christian Science.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Book 2.
Book 2.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Postscript.
Chapter 5.
Summary.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 6. The Pastor Emeritus.
Chapter 6. The Board Of Directors.
Chapter 6. The President.
Chapter 6. Treasurer And Clerk.
Chapter 6. Board Of Trustees.
Chapter 6. Readers.
Chapter 6. Election Of Readers.
Chapter 6. The Aristocracy.
Chapter 6. Church Membership.
Chapter 6. And Some English Required.
Chapter 6. "Readers" Again.
Chapter 6. Monopoly Of Spiritual Bread.
Chapter 7. The New Infallibility.
Chapter 7. The Sacred Poems.
Chapter 7. The Church Edifice.
Chapter 7. Prayer.
Chapter 7. The Lord's Prayer-Amended.
Chapter 7. The New Unpardonable Sin.
Chapter 7. Axe And Block.
Chapter 7. Reading Letters At Meetings.
Chapter 7. Honesty Requisite.
Chapter 7. Further Applications Of The Axe.
Chapter 7. More Self-Protections.
Chapter 7. Board Of Education.
Chapter 7. Public Teachers.
Chapter 7. Board Of Lectureship.
Chapter 7. Missionaries.
Chapter 7. The By-Laws.
Chapter 7. The Creed.
Chapter 7. Christian Science Publishing Association.
Chapter 7. The Christian Science Publishing Society.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 8. "Mother-Church Unique"
Chapter 8. "No First Members"
Chapter 8. "The"
Chapter 8. A Life-Term Monopoly.
Chapter 8. A Perpetual One.
Chapter 8. The Sanctum Sanctorum And Sacred Chair.
Chapter 8. The Christian Science Pastor-Universal.
Chapter 8. Price Of The Pastor-Universal.
Chapter 8. Seven Hundred Per Cent.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Chapter 12.
Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Appendix A.
Appendix B.
Appendix C.
Appendix D.
Appendix E.
Appendix F.
Mrs. Eddy In Error.
Main Parts Of The Machine.
Distribution Of The Machine's Powers And Dignities.
Conclusion.
Queen Victoria’s Jubilee (1910)
Queen Victoria’s Jubilee.
My Platonic Sweetheart (1912)
My Platonic Sweetheart.
The Travel Writing.
The Innocents Abroad (1869)
The Innocents Abroad Table of Contents.
Preface.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Chapter 12.
Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Chapter 16.
Chapter 17.
Chapter 18.
Chapter 19.
Chapter 20.
Chapter 21.
Chapter 22.
Chapter 23.
Chapter 24.
Chapter 25.
Chapter 26.
Chapter 27.
Chapter 28.
Chapter 29.
Chapter 30.
Chapter 31.
Chapter 32.
Chapter 33.
Chapter 34.
Chapter 35.
Chapter 36.
Chapter 37.
Chapter 38.
Chapter 39.
Chapter 40.
Chapter 41.
Chapter 42.
Chapter 43.
Chapter 44.
Chapter 45.
Chapter 46
Chapter 47.
Chapter 48.
Chapter 49.
Chapter 50.
Chapter 51.
Chapter 52.
Chapter 53.
Chapter 54.
Chapter 55.
Chapter 56.
Chapter 57.
Chapter 58.
Chapter 59.
Chapter 60
Chapter 61.
Conclusion.
Roughing It (1872)
Roughing It Table of Contents.
Prefatory.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Chapter 12.
Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Chapter 16.
Chapter 17.
Chapter 18.
Chapter 19.
Chapter 20.
Chapter 21.
Chapter 22.
Chapter 23.
Chapter 24.
Chapter 25.
Chapter 26.
Chapter 27.
Chapter 28.
Chapter 29.
Chapter 30.
Chapter 31.
Chapter 32.
Chapter 33.
Chapter 34.
Chapter 35.
Chapter 36.
Chapter 37.
Chapter 38.
Chapter 39.
Chapter 40.
Chapter 41.
Chapter 42.
Chapter 43.
Chapter 44.
Chapter 45.
Chapter 46.
Chapter 47.
Chapter 48.
Chapter 49.
Chapter 50.
Chapter 51.
Chapter 52.
Chapter 53.
Chapter 54.
Chapter 55.
Chapter 56.
Chapter 57.
Chapter 58.
Chapter 59.
Chapter 60.
Chapter 61.
Chapter 62.
Chapter 63.
Chapter 64.
Chapter 65.
Chapter 66.
Chapter 67.
Chapter 68.
Chapter 69.
Chapter 70.
Chapter 71.
Chapter 72.
Chapter 73.
Chapter 74.
Chapter 75.
Chapter 76
Chapter 77.
Chapter 78.
Chapter 79.
Appendix.
A Tramp Abroad (1880)
A Tramp Abroad Table of Contents.
Chapter 1. The Knighted Knave of Bergen.
Chapter 2. Heidelberg - Landing a Monarch at Heidelberg
Chapter 3. Baker's Bluejay Yarn - What Stumped the Blue Jays
Chapter 4. Student Life - The Laborious Beer King.
Chapter 5. At the Students' Dueling Ground - Dueling by Wholesale.
Chapter 6. A Sport that Sometimes Kills.
Chapter 7. How Bismark Fought.
Chapter 8. The Great French Duel - I Second Gambetta in a Terrific Duel.
Chapter 9. What the Beautiful Maiden Said.
Chapter 10. How Wagner Operas Bang Along.
Chapter 11. I Paint a "Turner" upto
Chapter 12. What the Wives Saved.
Chapter 13. My Long Crawl in the Dark.
Chapter 14. Rafting Down the Neckar.
Chapter 15. Charming Waterside Pictures.
Chapter 16. An Ancient Legend of the Rhine - The Lorelei.
Chapter 17. Why Germans Wear Spectacles.
Chapter 18. The Kindly Courtesy of Germans.
Chapter 19. The Deadly Jest of Dilsberg.
Chapter 20. My Precious, Priceless Tear-Jug.
Chapter 21. Insolent Shopkeepers and Gabbling Americans.
Chapter 22. The Black Forest and Its Treasures.
Chapter 23. Nicodemus Dodge and the Skeleton.
Chapter 24. I Protect the Empress of Germany.
Chapter 25. Hunted by the Little Chamois.
Chapter 26. The Nest of the Cuckoo-clock.
Chapter 27. I Spare an Awful Bore.
Chapter 28. The Jodel and Its Native Wilds.
Chapter 29. Looking West for Sunrise.
Chapter 30. Harris Climbs Mountains for Me.
Chapter 31. Alp-scaling by Carriage.
Chapter 32. The Jungfrau, the Bride, and the Piano.
Chapter 33. We Climb Far—by Buggy.
Chapter 34. The World's Highest Pig Farm.
Chapter 35. Swindling the Coroner.
Chapter 36. The Fiendish Fun of Alp-climbing.
Chapter 37. Our Imposing Column Starts Upward.
Chapter 38. I Conquer the Gorner Grat.
Chapter 39. We Travel by Glacier.
Chapter 40. Piteous Relics at Chamonix.
Chapter 41. The Fearful Disaster of 1865.
Chapter 42. Chillon has a Nice, Roomy Dungeon.
Chapter 43. My Poor Sick Friend Disappointed.
Chapter 44. I Scale Mont Blanc—by Telescope.
Chapter 45. A Catastrophe Which Cost Eleven Lives.
Chapter 46. Meeting a Hog on a Precipice.
Chapter 47. Queer European Manners.
Chapter 48. Beauty of Women—and of Old Masters.
Chapter 49. Hanged with a Golden Rope.
Chapter 50. Titian Bad and Titian Good.
Appendix A. The Portier.
Appendix B. Heidelberg Castle.
Appendix C. The College Prison.
Appendix D. The Awful German Language.
Appendix E. Legend Of The Castles.
Appendix F. German Journals.
Following The Equator (1897)
Following the Equator Table of Contents.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Chapter 12.
Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Chapter 16.
Chapter 17.
Chapter 18.
Chapter 19.
Chapter 20.
Chapter 21.
Chapter 22.
Chapter 23.
Chapter 24.
Chapter 25.
Chapter 26.
Chapter 27.
Chapter 28.
Chapter 29.
Chapter 30.
Chapter 31.
Chapter 32.
Chapter 33.
Chapter 34.
Chapter 35.
Chapter 36.
Chapter 37.
Chapter 38.
Chapter 39.
Chapter 40.
Chapter 41.
Chapter 42.
Chapter 43.
Chapter 44.
Chapter 45.
Chapter 46.
Chapter 47.
Chapter 48.
Chapter 49.
Chapter 50.
Chapter 51.
Chapter 52.
Chapter 53.
Chapter 54.
Chapter 55.
Chapter 56.
Chapter 57.
Chapter 58.
Chapter 59.
Chapter 60.
Chapter 61.
Chapter 62.
Chapter 63.
Chapter 64.
Chapter 65.
Chapter 66.
Chapter 67.
Chapter 68.
Chapter 69.
Conclusion.
Some Rambling Notes Of An Idle Excursion (1877)
Some Rambling Notes Of An Idle Excursion Table of Contents.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
The Short Story Collections.
The Jumping Frog And Other Humorous Sketches (1869)
The Jumping Frog And Other Humorous Sketches Table of Contents.
1. The Jumping Frog Of Calaveras County.
2. A Complaint About Correspondents, Dated In San Francisco.
3. Aurelia's Unfortunate Young Man.
4. Curing A Cold.
5. Answers To Correspondents.
6. The Story Of The Bad Little Boy Who Didn't Come To Grief.
7. Among The Fenians.
8. Literature in the Dry Diggings.
9. An Inquiry About Insurances.
10. Among The Spirits.
11. An Item Which The Editor Himself Could Not Understand.
12. The Killing Of Julius Caesar "Localized."
13. ”After" Jenkins.
14. Lucretia Smith's Soldier.
15. Brief Biographical Sketch Of George Washington.
16. A Touching Story Of George Washington's Boyhood.
17. The Launch Of The Steamer "Capital"
18. A Page From A Californian Almanac.
19. Origin Of Illustrious Men.
20. Information For The Million.
21. Short And Singular Rations.
22. Honoured As A Curiosity In Honolulu.
23. Remarkable Instances Of Presence Of Mind.
24. The Steed "Oahu"
25. A Strange Dream.
26. Advice For Good Little Girls.
27. Concerning Chambermaids.
Mark Twain's Burlesque Autobiography (1871)
Burlesque Autobiography Table of Contents.
A Burlesque Autobiography.
Awful, Terrible Medieval Romance.
Chapter 1. The Secret Revealed.
Chapter 2. Festivity And Tears.
Chapter 3. The Plot Thickens.
Chapter 4. The Awful Revelation.
Chapter 5. The Frightful Catastrophe.
Sketches New and Old (1875)
Sketches New and Old Table of Contents.
1. My Watch.
2. Political Economy.
3. The Jumping Frog.
4. Journalism In Tennessee.
5. The Story Of The Bad Little Boy.
6. The Story Of The Good Little Boy.
7. A Couple Of Poems By Twain And Moore.
8. Niagara.
9. Answers To Correspondents.
10. To Raise Poultry.
11. Experience Of The Mcwilliamses With Membranous Croup.
12. My First Literary Venture.
13. How The Author Was Sold In Newark.
14. The Office Bore.
15. Johnny Greer.
16. The Facts In The Case Of The Great Beef Contract.
17. The Case Of George Fisher.
18. Disgraceful Persecution Of A Boy.
19. The Judge's "Spirited Woman"
20. Information Wanted.
21. Some Learned Fables, For Good Old Boys And Girls In Three Parts.
22. My Late Senatorial Secretaryship.
23. A Fashion Item.
24. Riley—Newspaper Correspondent.
25. A Fine Old Man.
26. Science v.s. Luck.
27. The Late Benjamin Franklin.
28. Mr. Bloke's Item.
29. A Medieval Romance.
30. Petition Concerning Copyright.
31. After-Dinner Speech.
32. Lionizing Murderers.
33. A New Crime.
34. A Curious Dream.
35. A True Story.
36. The Siamese Twins.
37. Speech At The Scottish Banquet In London.
38. A Ghost Story.
39. The Capitoline Venus.
40. Speech On Accident Insurance.
41. John Chinaman In New York.
42. How I Edited An Agricultural Paper.
43. The Petrified Man.
44. My Bloody Massacre.
45. The Undertaker's Chat.
46. Concerning Chambermaids.
47. Aurelia's Unfortunate Young Man.
48 “After" Jenkins.
49. About Barbers.
50 “Party Cries" In Ireland
51. The Facts Concerning The Recent Resignation
52. History Repeats Itself.
53. Honored As A Curiosity.
54. First Interview With Artemus Ward.
55. Cannibalism In The Cars.
56. The Killing Of Julius Caesar "Localized"
57. The Widow's Protest.
58. The Scriptural Panoramist.
59. Curing A Cold.
60. A Curious Pleasure Excursion.
61. Running For Governor.
62. A Mysterious Visit.
Merry Tales (1892)
Merry Tales Table of Contents.
1. The Private History Of A Campaign That Failed.
2. The Invalid’s Story.
3. Luck.
4. The Captain´s Story.
5. A Curious Experience.
6. Mrs. Mcwilliams And The Lightning.
7. Meisterschaft.
The £1,000,000 Bank-Note and Other New Stories (1893)
The £1,000,000 Bank-Note and Other New Stories Table of Contents.
1. The £1,000,000 Bank-Note.
2. Mental Telegraphy.
3. A Cure For The Blues.
4. The Enemy Conquered; or, Love Triumphant.
5. About All Kinds Of Ships.
6. Playing Courier.
7. The German Chicago.
8. A Petition To The Queen Of England.
9. A Majestic Literary Fossil.
10. Endnotes.
The $30,000 Bequest, and Other Stories (1906)
The $30,000 and Other Stories Table of Contents.
1. The $30,000 Bequest.
2. A Dog's Tale.
3. Was It Heaven? Or Hell?
4. A Cure For The Blues.
5. The Curious Book.
6. The Californian's Tale.
7. A Helpless Situation.
8. A Telephonic Conversation.
9. Edward Mills And George Benton: A Tale.
10. The Five Boons Of Life.
11. The First Writing-Machines.
12. Italian Without A Master.
13. Italian With Grammar.
14. A Burlesque Biography.
15. How To Tell A Story.
16. General Washington's Negro Body-Servant.
17. Wit Inspirations Of The "Two-Year-Olds"
18. An Entertaining Article.
19. A Letter To The Secretary Of The Treasury.
20. Amended Obituaries.
21. A Monument To Adam.
22. A Humane Word From Satan.
23. Introduction To "The New Guide Of The Conversation In Portuguese And English" By Pedro Carolino.
24. Advice To Little Girls.
25. Post-Mortem Poetry (1)
26. The Danger Of Lying In Bed.
27. Portrait Of King William III.
28. Does The Race Of Man Love A Lord?
29. Extracts From Adam's Diary.
30. Eve's Diary.
31. Extract From Adam's Diary.
The Curious Republic Of Gondour, And Other Whimsical Sketches (1919)
The Curious Republic Of Gondour, And Other Whimsical Sketches Table of Contents.
Note.
1. The Curious Republic Of Gondour.
2. A Memory.
3. Introductory To "Memoranda"
4. About Smells.
5. A Couple Of Sad Experiences.
6. Dan Murphy.
7. The "Tournament" In A. D. 1870.
8. Curious Relic For Sale.
9. A Reminiscence Of The Back Settlements.
10. A Royal Compliment.
11. The Approaching Epidemic.
12. The Tone-Imparting Committee.
13. Goldsmith's Friend Abroad Again.
14. Our Precious Lunatic.
15. The European War.
16. The Wild Man Interviewed.
17. Last Words Of Great Men.
The Short Stories.
The Short Stories Table of Contents.
1601 Conversation, As It Was The Social Fireside, In The Time Of The Tudors.
A Double Barrelled Detective Story.
A Fable
A Genuine Mexican Plug
A Majestic Literary Fossil.
Abelard and Heloise.
About Magnanimous-Incident Literature.
An Encounter With An Interviewer.
Captain Stormfield’s Visit To Heaven.
Concerning The American Language.
Dick Baker's Cat.
Hunting The Deceitful Turkey.
Legend Of Sagenfeld, In Germany.
On The Decay Of The Art Of Lying.
Paris Notes.
Punch, Brothers, Punch.
Rogers.
Speech On The Babies.
Speech On The Weather.
The Canvasser’s Tale.
The Facts Concerning The Recent Carnival Of Crime In Connecticut.
The Great Revolution In Pitcairn.
The Loves Of Alonzo Fitz Clarence And Rosannah Ethelton.
The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg.
The Mcwilliamses And The Burglar Alarm.
The Stolen White Elephant.
The Stranger’s Narrative.
The Tomb of Adam.
The War Prayer.
Those Extraordinary Twins.
The Essays of Mark Twain.
The Essays of Mark Twain Table of Contents.
1. How To Tell A Story.
2. The Wounded Soldier.
3. The Golden Arm.
4. Mental Telegraphy Again.
5. The Invalid’s Story.
6. A Salutation Speech From The Nineteenth Century To The Twentieth.
7. The Battle Hymn Of The Republic, Updated.
8. To The Person Sitting In Darkness.
9. Private History Of The “Jumping Frog” Story.
10. Fenimore Cooper’s Literary Offences.
11. Running For Governor.
12. Times In Austria.
13. Concerning The Jews.
14. Comments On The Moro Massacre.
15. Carl Schurz, Pilot.
16. Taming The Bicycle.
17. To My Missionary Critics.
18. King Leopold’s Soliloquy.
19. In Defense Of Harriet Shelley.
20. Essays On Paul Bourget.
21. What Is Man?
22. The Death Of Jean.
23. The Turning-Point Of My Life.
24. How To Make History Dates Stick.
25. The Memorable Assassination.
26. A Scrap Of Curious History.
27. Switzerland, The Cradle Of Liberty.
28. At The Shrine Of St. Wagner.
29. William Dean Howells.
30. English As She Is Taught.
31. On Girls.
32. A Simplified Alphabet.
33. As Concerns Interpreting The Deity.
34. Concerning Tobacco.
35. The Bee.
36. Is Shakespeare Dead?
37. The United States Of Lyncherdom.
38. Letters From The Earth.
39. Advice To Youth.
Letters of Mark Twain.
Letters of Mark Twain Table of Contents.
Mark Twain's Letters Vol1 - 1853 - 1866
Foreword.
Mark Twain—A Biographical Summary.
1. Early Letters, 1853. New York And Philadelphia.
2. Letters 1856-61. Keokuk, And The River. End Of Piloting.
3. Letters 1861-62. On The Frontier. Mining Adventures. Journalistic Beginnings.
4. Letters 1863-64. "Mark Twain." Comstock Journalism. Artemus Ward.
5. Letters 1864-66. San Francisco And Hawaii.
6. Letters 1866-67. The Lecturer. Success On The Coast. In New York. The Great Ocean Excursion.
Mark Twain's Letters Vol2 - 1867 - 1875
7. Letters 1867. The Traveler. The Voyage Of The "Quaker City"
8. Letters 1867-68. Washington And San Francisco. The Proposed Book Of Travel. A New Lecture.
9. Letters 1868-70. Courtship, And "The Innocents Abroad"
10. Letters 1870-71. Mark Twain In Buffalo. Marriage. The Buffalo Express. "Memoranda." Lectures. A New Book.
11. Letters 1871-72. Removal To Hartford. A Lecture Tour. "Roughing It." First Letter To Howells.
12. Letters 1872-73. Mark Twain In England. London Honors. Acquaintance With Dr. John Brown. A Lecture Triumph. "The Gilded Age".
13. Letters 1874. Hartford And Elmira. A New Study. Beginning "Tom Sawyer." The Sellers Play.
14. Letters 1874. Mississippi Chapters. Visits To Boston. A Joke On Aldrich.
15. Letters From Hartford, 1875. Much Correspondence With Howells.
Mark Twain's Letters Vol3 - 1876 - 1885
16. Letters, 1876, Chiefly To W. D. Howells. Literature And Politics. Planning A Play With Bret Harte.
17. Letters, 1877. To Bermuda With Twichell. Proposition To Th. Nast. The Whittier Dinner.
18. Letters From Europe, 1878-79. Tramping With Twichell. Writing A New Travel Book. Life In Munich.
19. Letters 1879. Return To America. The Great Grant Reunion.
20. Letters Of 1880, Chiefly To Howells. "The Prince And The Pauper." Mark Twain Mugwump Society.
21. Letters 1881, To Howells And Others. Assisting A Young Sculptor. Literary Plans.
22. Letters, 1882, Mainly To Howells. Wasted Fury. Old Scenes Revisited. The Mississippi Book.
23. Letters, 1883, To Howells And Others. A Guest Of The Marquis Of Lorne. The History Game. A Play By Howells And Mark Twain.
24. Letters, 1884, To Howells And Others. Cable's Great April Fool. "Huck Finn" In Press. Mark Twain For Cleveland. Clemens And Cable.
25. The Great Year Of 1885. Clemens And Cable. Publication Of "Huck Finn." The Grant Memoirs. Mark Twain At Fifty.
Mark Twain's Letters Vol4 - 1886 - 1900
26. Letters, 1886-87. Jane Clemens's Romance. Unmailed Letters, Etc.
27. Miscellaneous Letters Of 1887. Literary Articles. Peaceful Days At The Farm. Favorite Reading. Apology To Mrs. Cleveland, Etc.
28. Letters,1888. A Yale Degree. Work On "The Yankee." On Interviewing, Etc.
29. Letters, 1889. The Machine. Death Of Mr. Crane. Conclusion Of The Yankee.
30. Letters 1890, Chiefly To Jos. T. Goodman. The Great Machine Enterprise.
31. Letters, 1891, To Howells, Mrs. Clemens And Others. Return To Literature. American Claimant. Leaving Hartford. Europe. Down The Rhine.
32. Letters, 1892, Chiefly To Mr. Hall And Mrs. Crane. In Berlin, Mentone, Bad-Nauheim, Florence.
33. Letters 1893, To Mr. Hall, Mrs. Clemens, And Others. Florence. Business Troubles. "Pudd'nhead Wilson." "Joan Of Arc." At The Players, New York.
34. Letters 1894. A Winter In New York. Business Failure. End Of The Machine.
35. Letters 1895-96, To H. H. Rogers And Others. Finishing "Joan Of Arc." The Trip Around The World. Death Of Susy Clemens.
36. Letters 1897. London, Switzerland, Vienna.
37. Letters 1898, To Howells And Twichell. Life In Vienna. Payment Of The Debts. Assassination Of The Empress.
38. Letters 1899, To Howells And Others. Vienna. London. A Summer In Sweden.
39. Letters Of 1900, Mainly To Twichell. The Boer War. Boxer Troubles. The Return To America.
Mark Twain's Letters Vol5 - 1901 - 1906
40. Letters Of 1901, Chiefly To Twichell. Mark Twain As A Reformer. Summer At Saranac. Assassination Of President Mckinley.
41. Letters Of 1902. Riverdale. York Harbor. Illness Of Mrs. Clemens.
42. Letters Of 1903. To Various Persons. Hard Days At Riverdale. Last Summer At Elmira. The Return To Italy.
43. Letters Of 1904. To Various Persons. Life In Villa Quarto. Death Of Mrs. Clemens. The Return To America.
44. Letters Of 1905. To Twichell, Mr. Duneka And Others. Politics And Humanity. A Summer At Dublin. Mark Twain At 70.
45. Letters, 1906, To Various Persons. The Farewell Lecture. A Second Summer In Dublin. Billiards And Copyright.
Mark Twain's Letters Vol6 - 1907 - 1910
46. Letters 1907-08. A Degree From Oxford. The New Home At Redding.
47. Letters, 1909. To Howells And Others. Life At Stormfield. Copyright Extension. Death Of Jean Clemens.
48. Letters Of 1910. Last Trip To Bermuda. Letters To Paine. The Last Letter.
Speeches of Mark Twain.
Speeches of Mark Twain Table of Contents.
Introduction.
Preface.
1. The Story Of A Speech.
2. Plymouth Rock And The Pilgrims.
3. Compliments And Degrees.
4. Books, Authors, And Hats.
5. Dedication Speech.
6. Die Schrecken Der Deutschen Sprache [The Horrors Of The German Language]
7. German For The Hungarians.
8. A New German Word.
9. Unconscious Plagiarism.
10. The Weather.
11. The Babies.
12. Our Children And Great Discoveries.
13. Educating Theatre-Goers.
14. The Educational Theatre.
15. Poets As Policemen.
16. Pudd’nhead Wilson Dramatized.
17. Daly Theatre.
18. The Dress Of Civilized Woman.
19. Dress Reform And Copyright.
20. College Girls.
21. Girls.
22. The Ladies.
23. Woman’s Press Club.
24. Votes For Women.
25. Woman-An Opinion.
26. Advice To Girls.
27. Taxes And Morals.
28. Tammany And Croker.
29. Municipal Corruption.
30. Municipal Government.
31. China And The Philippines.
32. Theoretical Morals.
33. Layman’s Sermon.
34. University Settlement Society.
35. Public Education Association.
36. Education And Citizenship.
37. Courage.
38. The Dinner To Mr. Choate.
39. On Stanley And Livingstone.
40. Henry M. Stanley.
41. Dinner To Mr. Jerome.
42. Henry Irving.
43. Dinner To Hamilton W. Mabie.
44. Introducing Nye And Riley.
45. Dinner To Whitelaw Reid.
46. Rogers And Railroads.
47. The Old-Fashioned Printer.
48. Society Of American Authors.
49. Reading-Room Opening.
50. Literature.
51. Disappearance Of Literature.
52. The New York Press Club Dinner.
53. The Alphabet And Simplified Spelling.
54. Spelling And Pictures.
55. Books And Burglars.
56. Authors’ Club.
57. Booksellers.
58. “Mark Twain’s First Appearance”
59. Morals And Memory.
60. Queen Victoria.
61. Joan of Arc.
62. Accident Insurance - Etc.
63. Osteopathy.
64. Water-Supply.
65. Mistaken Identity.
66. Cats And Candy.
67. Obituary Poetry.
68. Cigars And Tobacco.
69. Billiards.
70. The Union Right Or Wrong.
71. An Ideal French Address.
72. Statistics.
73. Galveston Orphan Bazaar.
74. San Francisco Earthquake.
75. Charity And Actors.
76. Russian Republic.
77. Russian Sufferers.
78. Watterson And Twain As Rebels.
79. Robert Fulton Fund.
80. Fulton Day, Jamestown.
81. Lotos Club Dinner In Honor Of Mark Twain.
82. Copyright.
83. In Aid Of The Blind.
84. Dr. Mark Twain, Farmeopath.
85. Missouri University Speech.
86. Business.
87. Carnegie The Benefactor.
88. On Poetry, Veracity, And Suicide.
89. Welcome Home.
90. An Undelivered Speech.
91. Sixty-Seventh Birthday.
92. To The Whitefriars.
93. The Ascot Gold Cup.
94. The Savage Club Dinner.
95. General Miles And The Dog.
96. When In Doubt, Tell The Truth.
97. The Day We Celebrate.
98. Independence Day.
99. Americans And The English.
100. About London.
101. Princeton.
102. The St. Louis Harbor-Boat “Mark Twain”
103. Seventieth Birthday.
The Biographies.
Chapters from My Autobiography by Mark Twain.
Chapters from My Autobiography Table of Contents.
Preface.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 1. Introduction.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 2.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 3.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 4.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 5.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 6.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 7.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 8.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 9.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 10.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 11.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 12.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 13.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 14.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 15.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 16.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 17.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 18.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 19.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 20.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 21.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 22.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 23.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 24.
Chapters From My Autobiography. 25.
Mark Twain A Biography by Albert Bigelow Paine.
Mark Twain A Biography Table of Contents.
An Acknowledgment.
Prefatory Note.
Volume 1. Part 1 - 1835-1866.
Volume 1. Part 1: 1835-1866 Note.
Chapter 1. Ancestors.
Chapter 2. The Fortunes Of John And Jane Clemens.
Chapter 3. A Humble Birthplace.
Chapter 4. Beginning A Long Journey.
Chapter 5. The Way Of Fortune.
Chapter 6. A New Home.
Chapter 7. The Little Town Of Hannibal.
Chapter 8. The Farm.
Chapter 9. School-Days.
Chapter 10. Early Vicissitude And Sorrow.
Chapter 11. Days Of Education.
Chapter 12. Tom Sawyer's Band.
Chapter 13. The Gentler Side.
Chapter 14. The Passing Of John Clemens.
Chapter 15. A Young Ben Franklin.
Chapter 16. The Turning-Point.
Chapter 17. The Hannibal "Journal"
Chapter 18. The Beginning Of A Literary Life.
Chapter 19. In The Footsteps Of Franklin.
Chapter 20. Keokuk Days.
Chapter 21. Scotchman Named Macfarlane.
Chapter 22. The Old Call Of The River.
Chapter 23. The Supreme Science.
Chapter 24. The River Curriculum.
Chapter 25. Love-Making And Adventure.
Chapter 26. The Tragedy Of The "Pennsylvania"
Chapter 27. The Pilot.
Chapter 28. Piloting And Prophecy.
Chapter 29. The End Of Piloting.
Chapter 30. The Soldier.
Chapter 31. Over The Hills And Far Away.
Chapter 32. The Pioneer.
Chapter 33. The Prospector.
Chapter 34. Territorial Characteristics.
Chapter 35. The Miner.
Chapter 36. Last Mining Days.
Chapter 37. The New Estate.
Chapter 38. One Of The "Staff"
Chapter 39. Philosophy And Poetry.
Chapter 40. "Mark Twain"
Chapter 41. The Cream Of Comstock Humor.
Chapter 42. Reportorial Days.
Chapter 43. Artemus Ward.
Chapter 44. Governor Of The "Third House"
Chapter 45. A Comstock Duel.
Chapter 46. Getting Settled In San Francisco.
Chapter 47. Bohemian Days.
Chapter 48. The Refuge Of The Hills.
Chapter 49. The Jumping Frog.
Chapter 50. Back To The Tumult.
Chapter 51. The Corner-Stone.
Chapter 52. A Commission To The Sandwich Islands.
Chapter 53. Anson Burlingame And The "Hornet" Disaster.
Volume 1, Part 2 - 1866-1875.
Chapter 54. The Lecturer.
Chapter 55. Highway Robbery.
Chapter 56. Back To The States.
Chapter 57. Old Friends And New Plans.
Chapter 58. A New Book And A Lecture.
Chapter 59. The First Book.
Chapter 60. The Innocents At Sea.
Chapter 61. The Innocents Abroad.
Chapter 62. The Return Of The Pilgrims.
Chapter 63. In Washington—A Publishing Proposition.
Chapter 64. Olivia Langdon.
Chapter 65. A Contract With Elisha Bliss, Jr.
Chapter 66. Back To San Francisco.
Chapter 67. A Visit To Elmira.
Chapter 68. The Rev. "Joe" Twichell.
Chapter 69. A Lecture Tour.
Chapter 70. Innocents At Home—And "The Innocents Abroad"
Chapter 71. The Great Book Of Travel.
Chapter 72. The Purchase Of A Paper.
Chapter 73. The First Meeting With Howells.
Chapter 74. The Wedding-Day.
Chapter 75. As To Destiny.
Chapter 76. On The Buffalo "Express"
Chapter 77. The "Galaxy"
Chapter 78. The Primrose Path.
Chapter 79. The Old Human Story.
Chapter 80. Literary Projects.
Chapter 81. Some Further Literary Matters.
Chapter 82. The Writing Of "Roughing It"
Chapter 83. Lecturing Days.
Chapter 84. "Roughing It".
Chapter 85. A Birth, A Death, And A Voyage.
Chapter 86. England.
Chapter 87. The Book That Was Never Written.
Chapter 88. "The Gilded Age"
Chapter 89. Planning A New Home.
Chapter 90. A Long English Holiday.
Chapter 91. A London Lecture.
Chapter 92. Further London Lecture Triumphs.
Chapter 93. The Real Colonel Sellers-Golden Days.
Chapter 94. Beginning "Tom Sawyer"
Chapter 95. An "Atlantic" Story And A Play.
Chapter 96. The New Home.
Chapter 97. The Walk To Boston.
Chapter 98. "Old Times On The Mississippi"
Chapter 99. A Typewriter, And A Joke On Aldrich.
Chapter 100. Raymond, Mental Telegraphy, Etc.
Chapter 101. Concluding "Tom Sawyer"—Mark Twain's "Editors"
Chapter 102. "Sketches New And Old"
Chapter 103. "Atlantic" Days.
Chapter 104. Mark Twain And His Wife.
Volume 2, Part 1 - 1875-1886.
Chapter 105. Mark Twain At Forty.
Chapter 106. His First Stage Appearance.
Chapter 107. Howells, Clemens, And "George"
Chapter 108. Summer Labors At Quarry Farm.
Chapter 109. The Public Appearance Of "Tom Sawyer"
Chapter 110. Mark Twain And Bret Harte Write A Play.
Chapter 111. A Bermuda Holiday.
Chapter 112. A New Play And A New Tale.
Chapter 113. Two Domestic Dramas.
Chapter 114. The Whittier Birthday Speech.
Chapter 115. Hartford And Billiards.
Chapter 116. Off For Germany.
Chapter 117. Germany And German.
Chapter 118. Tramping With Twichell.
Chapter 119. Italian Days.
Chapter 120. In Munich.
Chapter 121. Paris, England, And Homeward Bound.
Chapter 122. An Interlude.
Chapter 123. The Grant Speech Of 1879.
Chapter 124. Another "Atlantic" Speech.
Chapter 125. The Quieter Things Of Home.
Chapter 126. "A Tramp Abroad"
Chapter 127. Letters, Tales, And Plans.
Chapter 128. Mark Twain's Absent-Mindedness.
Chapter 129. Further Affairs At The Farm.
Chapter 130. Copyright And Other Fancies.
Chapter 131. Working For Garfield.
Chapter 132. A New Publisher.
Chapter 133. The Three Fires—Some Benefactions.
Chapter 134. Literary Projects And A Monument To Adam.
Chapter 135. A Trip With Sherman And An Interview With Grant.
Chapter 136. "The Prince And The Pauper"
Chapter 137. Certain Attacks And Reprisals.
Chapter 138. Many Undertakings.
Chapter 139. Financial And Literary.
Chapter 140. Down The River.
Chapter 141. Literature And Philosophy.
Chapter 142. "Life On The Mississippi"
Chapter 143. A Guest Of Royalty.
Chapter 144. A Summer Literary Harvest.
Chapter 145. Howells And Clemens Write A Play.
Chapter 146. Distinguished Visitors.
Chapter 147. The Fortunes Of A Play.
Chapter 148. Cable And His Great Joke.
Chapter 149. Mark Twain In Business.
Chapter 150. Farm Pictures.
Chapter 151. Mark Twain Mugwumps.
Chapter 152. Platforming With Cable.
Chapter 153. Huck Finn Comes Into His Own.
Chapter 154. The Memoirs Of General Grant.
Chapter 155. Days With A Dying Hero.
Chapter 156. The Close Of A Great Career.
Chapter 157. Minor Matters Of A Great Year.
Chapter 158. Mark Twain At Fifty.
Chapter 159. The Life Of The Pope.
Chapter 160. A Great Publisher At Home.
Chapter 161. History: Mainly By Susy.
Volume 2, Part 2 - 1886-1900.
Chapter 162. Browning, Meredith, And Meisterschaft.
Chapter 163. Letter To The Queen Of England.
Chapter 164. Some Further Account Of Charles L. Webster & Co.
Chapter 165. Letters, Visits, And Visitors.
Chapter 166. A "Player" And A Master Of Arts.
Chapter 167. Notes And Literary Matters.
Chapter 168. Introducing Nye And Riley And Others.
Chapter 169. The Coming Of Kipling.
Chapter 170. "The Prince And The Pauper" On The Stage.
Chapter 171. "A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court"
Chapter 172. The "Yankee" In England.
Chapter 173. A Summer At Onteora.
Chapter 174. The Machine.
Chapter 175. "The Claimant"—Leaving Hartford.
Chapter 176. A European Summer.
Chapter 177. Kornerstrasse,7.
Chapter 178. A Winter In Berlin.
Chapter 179. A Dinner With William II.
Chapter 180. Many Wanderings.
Chapter 181. Nauheim And The Prince Of Wales.
Chapter 182. The Villa Viviani.
Chapter 183. The Sieur De Conte And Joan.
Chapter 184. New Hope In The Machine.
Chapter 185. An Introduction To H. H. Rogers.
Chapter 186. "The Belle Of New York"
Chapter 187. Some Literary Matters.
Chapter 188. Failure.
Chapter 189. An Eventful Year Ends.
Chapter 190. Starting On The Long Trail.
Chapter 191. Clemens Had Been Ill In Elmira With A Carbuncle.
Chapter 192. "Following The Equator"
Chapter 193. The Passing Of Susy.
Chapter 194. Winter In Tedworth Square.
Chapter 195. "Personal Recollections Of Joan Of Arc".
Chapter 196. Mr. Rogers And Helen Keller.
Chapter 197. Finishing The Book Of Travel.
Chapter 198. A Summer In Switzerland.
Chapter 199. Winter In Vienna.
Chapter 200. Mark Twain Pays His Debts.
Chapter 201. Social Life In Vienna.
Chapter 202. Literary Work In Vienna.
Chapter 203. An Imperial Tragedy.
Chapter 204. The Second Winter In Vienna.
Chapter 205. Speeches That Were Not Made.
Chapter 206. A Summer In Sweden.
Chapter 207. 30, Wellington Court.
Chapter 208. Mark Twain And The Wars.
Chapter 209. Plasmon, And A New Magazine.
Chapter 210. London Social Affairs.
Chapter 211. Dollis Hill And Home.
Volume 3, Part 1 - 1900-1907.
Chapter 212. The Return Of The Conqueror.
Chapter 213. Mark Twain—General Spokesman.
Chapter 214. Mark Twain And The Missionaries.
Chapter 215. Summer At "The Lair"
Chapter 216. Riverdale—A Yale Degree.
Chapter 217. Mark Twain In Politics.
Chapter 218. New Interests And Investments.
Chapter 219. Yachting And Theology.
Chapter 220. Mark Twain And The Philippines.
Chapter 221. The Return Of The Native.
Chapter 222. A Prophet Honored In His Country.
Chapter 223. At York Harbor.
Chapter 224. The Sixty-Seventh Birthday Dinner.
Chapter 225. Christian Science Controversies.
Chapter 226. "Was It Heaven? Or Hell?"
Chapter 227. The Second Riverdale Winter.
Chapter 228. Proffered Honors.
Chapter 229. The Last Summer At Elmira.
Chapter 230. The Return To Florence.
Chapter 231. The Close Of A Beautiful Life.
Chapter 232. The Sad Journey Home.
Chapter 233. Beginning Another Home.
Chapter 234. Life At 21 Fifth Avenue.
Chapter 235. A Summer In New Hampshire.
Chapter 236. At Pier 70.
Chapter 237. Aftermath.
Chapter 238. The Writer Meets Mark Twain.
Chapter 239. Working With Mark Twain.
Chapter 240. The Definition Of A Gentleman.
Chapter 241. Gorky, Howells, And Mark Twain.
Chapter 242. Mark Twain's Good-By To The Platform.
Chapter 243. An Investment In Redding.
Chapter 244. Traits And Philosophies.
Chapter 245. In The Day's Round.
Chapter 246. The Second Summer At Dublin.
Chapter 247. Dublin, Continued.
Chapter 248. "What Is Man?" And The Autobiography.
Chapter 249. Billiards.
Chapter 250. Philosophy And Pessimism.
Chapter 251. A Lobbying Expedition.
Chapter 252. Theology And Evolution.
Chapter 253. An Evening With Helen Keller.
Chapter 254. Billiard-Room Notes.
Chapter 255. Further Personalities.
Volume 3, Part 2 - 1907-1910.
Chapter 256. Honors From Oxford.
Chapter 257. A True English Welcome.
Chapter 258. Doctor Of Literature, Oxford.
Chapter 259. London Social Honors.
Chapter 260. Matters Psychic And Otherwise.
Chapter 261. Minor Events And Diversions.
Chapter 262. From Mark Twain's Mail.
Chapter 263. Some Literary Luncheons.
Chapter 264. "Captain Stormfield" In Print.
Chapter 265. Lotos Club Honors.
Chapter 266. A Winter In Bermuda.
Chapter 267. Views And Addresses.
Chapter 268. Redding.
Chapter 269. First Days At Stormfield.
Chapter 270. The Aldrich Memorial.
Chapter 271. Death Of "Sam" Moffett.
Chapter 272. Stormfield Adventures.
Chapter 273. Stormfield Philosophies.
Chapter 274. Citizen And Farmer.
Chapter 275. A Mantel And A Baby Elephant.
Chapter 276. Shakespeare-Bacon Talk.
Chapter 277. "Is Shakespeare Dead?"
Chapter 278. The Death Of Henry Rogers.
Chapter 279. An Extension Of Copyright.
Chapter 280. A Warning.
Chapter 281. The Last Summer At Stormfield.
Chapter 282. Personal Memoranda.
Chapter 283. Astronomy And Dreams.
Chapter 284. A Library Concert.
Chapter 285. A Wedding At Stormfield.
Chapter 286. Autumn Days.
Chapter 287. Mark Twain's Reading.
Chapter 288. A Bermuda Birthday.
Chapter 289. The Death Of Jean.
Chapter 290. The Return To Bermuda.
Chapter 291. Letters From Bermuda.
Chapter 292. The Voyage Home.
Chapter 293. The Return To The Invisible.
Chapter 294. The Last Rites.
Chapter 295. Mark Twain's Religion.
Chapter 296. Postscript.
Appendix A.
Appendix B.
Appendix C.
Appendix D.
Appendix E.
Appendix F.
Appendix G.
Appendix H.
Appendix I.
Appendix J.
Appendix K.
Appendix L.
Appendix M.
Appendix N.
Appendix O.
Appendix P.
Appendix Q.
Appendix R.
Appendix S.
Appendix T.
Appendix U.
Appendix V
Appendix W.
My Mark Twain by William Dean Howells.
My Mark Twain Table of Contents.
Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Chapter 3.
Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Chapter 7.
Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Chapter 12.
Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Chapter 16.
Chapter 17.
Chapter 18.
Chapter 19.
Chapter 20.
Chapter 21.
Chapter 22.
Chapter 23.
Chapter 24.
Etext Editor's Bookmarks.
The Boys Life of Mark Twain by Albert Bigelow Paine.
The Boys Life of Mark Twain Table of Contents.
Preface.
Chapter 1. The Family Of John Clemens.
Chapter 2. The New Home, And Uncle John Quarles's Farm.
Chapter 3. Education Out Of School.
Chapter 4. Tom Sawyer And His Band.
Chapter 5. Closing School-Days.
Chapter 6. The Apprentice.
Chapter 7. Orion's Paper.
Chapter 8. The Open Road.
Chapter 9. A Wind Of Chance.
Chapter 10. The Long Way To The Amazon.
Chapter 11. Renewing An Old Ambition.
Chapter 12. Learning The River.
Chapter 13. River Days.
Chapter 14. The Wreck Of The "Pennsylvania"
Chapter 15. The Pilot.
Chatper 16. The End Of Piloting.
Chapter 17. The Soldier.
Chapter 18. The Pioneer.
Chapter 19. The Miner.
Chapter 20. The Territorial Enterprise.
Chapter 21. "Mark Twain"
Chapter 22. Artemus Ward And Literary San Francisco.
Chapter 23. The Discovery Of "The Jumping Frog"
Chapter 24. Hawaii And Anson Burlingame.
Chapter 25. Mark Twain, Lecturer.
Chapter 26. An Innocent Abroad, And Home Again.
Chapter 27. Olivia Langdon. Work On The "Innocents"
Chapter 28. The Visit To Elmira And Its Consequences.
Chapter 29. The New Book And A Wedding.
Chapter 30. Mark Twain In Buffalo.
Chapter 31. At Work On "Roughing It"
Chapter 32. In England.
Chapter 33. A New Book And New English Triumphs.
Chapter 34. Beginning "Tom Sawyer"
Chapter 35. The New Home.
Chapter 36. "Old Times," "Sketches," And "Tom Sawyer"
Chapter 37. Home Pictures.
Chapter 38. Tramping Abroad.
Chapter 39. "The Prince And The Pauper"
Chapter 40. General Grant At Hartford.
Chapter 41. Many Investments.
Chapter 42. Back To The River, With Bixby.
Chapter 43. A Reading-Tour With Cable.
Chapter 44. "The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn"
Chapter 45. Publisher To General Grant.
Chapter 46. The High-Tide Of Fortune.
Chapter 47. Business Difficulties. Pleasanter Things.
Chapter 48. Kipling At Elmira. Elsie Leslie. The "Yankee"
Chapter 49. The Machine. Good-By To Hartford. "Joan" Is Begun.
Chapter 50. The Failure Of Webster & Co. Around The World. Sorrow.
Chapter 51. European Economies.
Chapter 52. Mark Twain Pays His Debts.
Chapter 53. Return After Exile.
Chapter 54. A Prophet At Home.
Chapter 55. Honored By Missouri.
Chapter 56. The Close Of A Beautiful Life.
Chapter 57. Mark Twain At Seventy.
Chapter 58. Mark Twain Arranges For His Biography.
Chapter 59. Working With Mark Twain.
Chapter 60. Dictations At Dublin, N. H.
Chapter 61. A New Era Of Billiards.
Chapter 62. Living With Mark Twain.
Chapter 63. A Degree From Oxford.
Chapter 64. The Removal To Redding.
Chapter 65. Life At Stormfield.
Chapter 66. The Death Of Jean.
Chapter 67. Days In Bermuda.
Chapter 68. The Return To Redding.
Chapter 69. The Close Of A Great Life.
Notes
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