The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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Yours in, haste,  
CHAS. THOS. PARSLOE.  
The play drew some good houses in Washington, but it could not hold  
them for a run. Never mind what was the matter with it; perhaps a  
very small change at the right point would have turned it into a  
fine success. We have seen in a former letter the obligation which  
Mark Twain confessed to Harte--a debt he had tried in many ways to  
repay--obtaining for him a liberal book contract with Bliss;  
advancing him frequent and large sums of money which Harte could  
not, or did not, repay; seeking to advance his fortunes in many  
directions. The mistake came when he introduced another genius into  
the intricacies of his daily life. Clemens went down to Washington  
during the early rehearsals of "Ah Sin."  
Meantime, Rutherford B. Hayes had been elected President, and  
Clemens one day called with a letter of introduction from Howells,  
thinking to meet the Chief Executive. His own letter to Howells,  
later, probably does not give the real reason of his failure, but it  
will be amusing to those who recall the erratic personality of  
George Francis Train. Train and Twain were sometimes confused by  
the very unlettered; or pretendedly, by Mark Twain's friends.  
416  


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