The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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We have not before heard of Miss Castle, who appears to have been  
one of the girls who accompanied Jane Clemens on the trip which her  
son gave her to New Orleans, but we may guess that the other was his  
cousin and good comrade, Ella Creel. One wishes that he might have  
left us a more extended account of that long-ago river journey, a  
fuller glimpse of a golden age that has vanished as completely as  
the days of Washington.  
We may smile at the natural youthful desire to air his reading, and  
his art appreciation, and we may find his opinions not without  
interest. We may even commend them--in part. Perhaps we no longer  
count the leaves on Church's trees, but Goldsmith and Cervantes  
still deserve the place assigned them.  
He does not tell us what boat he was on at this time, but later in  
the year he was with Bixby again, on the Alonzo Child. We get a bit  
of the pilot in port in his next.  
To Orion Clemens, in Keokuk, Iowa:  
"ALONZO CHILD," N. ORLEANS, Sep. 28th 1860.  
DEAR BROTHER,--I just received yours and Mollies letter yesterday--they  
had been here two weeks--forwarded from St. Louis. We got here  
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