The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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come here and see us I will--what? Put the MS in your hands, with the  
places to skip marked? No. I won't trust you quite that far. I'll read  
messages to you. This book will never be published--in fact it couldn't  
be, because it would be felony to soil the mails with it, for it has  
much Holy Scripture in it of the kind that... can't properly be read  
aloud, except from the pulpit and in family worship. Paine enjoys it,  
but Paine is going to be damned one of these days, I suppose.  
The autumn splendors passed you by? What a pity. I wish you had been  
here. It was beyond words! It was heaven and hell and sunset and  
rainbows and the aurora all fused into one divine harmony, and you  
couldn't look at it and keep the tears back. All the hosannahing strong  
gorgeousnesses have gone back to heaven and hell and the pole, now, but  
no matter; if you could look out of my bedroom window at this moment,  
you would choke up; and when you got your voice you would say: This  
is not real, this is a dream. Such a singing together, and such a  
whispering together, and such a snuggling together of cosy soft colors,  
and such kissing and caressing, and such pretty blushing when the sun  
breaks out and catches those dainty weeds at it--you remember that  
weed-garden of mine?--and then--then the far hills sleeping in a dim  
blue trance--oh, hearing about it is nothing, you should be here to see  
it.  
Good! I wish I could go on the platform and read. And I could, if it  
could be kept out of the papers. There's a charity-school of 400 young  
girls in Boston that I would give my ears to talk to, if I had some  
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