The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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When we exchange visits I'll show you an unfinished sketch of  
Elizabeth's time which shook David Gray's system up pretty exhaustively.  
Yrs ever,  
MARK.  
The MS. sketch mentioned in the foregoing letter was "The  
Canvasser's Tale," later included in the volume, Tom Sawyer Abroad,  
and Other Stories. It is far from being Mark Twain's best work, but  
was accepted and printed in the Atlantic. David Gray was an able  
journalist and editor whom Mark Twain had known in Buffalo.  
The "sketch of Elizabeth's time" is a brilliant piece of writing  
--an imaginary record of conversation and court manners in the good  
old days of free speech and performance, phrased in the language of  
the period. Gray, John Hay, Twichell, and others who had a chance  
to see it thought highly of it, and Hay had it set in type and a few  
proofs taken for private circulation. Some years afterward a West  
Point officer had a special font of antique type made for it, and  
printed a hundred copies. But the present-day reader would hardly  
be willing to include "Fireside Conversation in the Time of Queen  
Elizabeth" in Mark Twain's collected works.  
Clemens was a strong Republican in those days, as his letters of  
this period show. His mention of the "caves" in the next is another  
405  


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