The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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MY DEAR BRO.,--Every man must learn his trade--not pick it up.  
God requires that he learn it by slow and painful processes. The  
apprentice-hand, in black-smithing, in medicine, in literature, in  
everything, is a thing that can't be hidden. It always shows.  
But happily there is a market for apprentice work, else the "Innocents  
Abroad" would have had no sale. Happily, too, there's a wider market for  
some sorts of apprentice literature than there is for the very best of  
journey-work. This work of yours is exceedingly crude, but I am free to  
say it is less crude than I expected it to be, and considerably better  
work than I believed you could do, it is too crude to offer to any  
prominent periodical, so I shall speak to the N. Y. Weekly people. To  
publish it there will be to bury it. Why could not same good genius have  
sent me to the N. Y. Weekly with my apprentice sketches?  
You should not publish it in book form at all--for this reason: it is  
only an imitation of Verne--it is not a burlesque. But I think it may be  
regarded as proof that Verne cannot be burlesqued.  
In accompanying notes I have suggested that you vastly modify the first  
visit to hell, and leave out the second visit altogether. Nobody  
would, or ought to print those things. You are not advanced enough in  
literature to venture upon a matter requiring so much practice. Let me  
show you what a man has got to go through:  
462  


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