The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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life, for he shall need it.'"  
This portion of Mr. Twichell's sermon made a great impression upon me,  
and I was grieved that some one had not wakened me earlier so that I  
might have heard what went before.  
S. L. CLEMENS.  
Mr. Sykes (of the firm of Sykes & Newton, the Allen House Pharmacy)  
replied that he had read the letter to the committee and that it had  
set those gentlemen right who had not before understood the  
situation. "If others were as ready to do their part as yourself  
our poor would not want assistance," he said, in closing.  
We come now to an incident which assumes the proportions of an  
episode-even of a catastrophe--in Mark Twain's career. The disaster  
was due to a condition noted a few pages earlier--the inability of  
genius to judge its own efforts. The story has now become history  
--printed history--it having been sympathetically told by Howells in  
My Mark Twain, and more exhaustively, with a report of the speech  
that invited the lightning, in a former work by the present writer.  
The speech was made at John Greenleaf Whittier's seventieth birthday  
dinner, given by the Atlantic staff on the evening of December 17,  
1
877. It was intended as a huge joke--a joke that would shake the  
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