The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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The Ticknor referred to in a former letter was Professor George  
Ticknor, of Harvard College, a history-writer of distinction. On  
the margin of the "Diary" Mark Twain once wrote, "Ticknor is a  
Millet, who makes all men fall in love with him." And adds: "Millet  
was the cause of lovable qualities in people, and then he admired  
and loved those persons for the very qualities which he (without  
knowing it) had created in them. Perhaps it would be strictly truer  
of these two men to say that they bore within them the divine  
something in whose presence the evil in people fled away and hid  
itself, while all that was good in them came spontaneously forward  
out of the forgotten walls and comers in their systems where it was  
accustomed to hide."  
It is Frank Millet, the artist, he is speaking of--a knightly soul  
whom all the Clemens household loved, and who would one day meet his  
knightly end with those other brave men that found death together  
when the Titanic went down.  
The Clemens family was still at Quarry Farm at the end of August,  
and one afternoon there occurred a startling incident which Mark  
Twain thought worth setting down in practically duplicate letters to  
Howells and to Dr. John Brown. It may be of interest to the reader  
to know that John T. Lewis, the colored man mentioned, lived to a  
good old age--a pensioner of the Clemens family and, in the course  
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