The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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While Livy and Miss Spaulding have been writing at this table, I have  
sat tilted back, near by, with a pipe and the last Atlantic, and read  
Charley Warner's article with prodigious enjoyment. I think it is  
exquisite. I think it must be the roundest and broadest and completest  
short essay he has ever written. It is clear, and compact, and  
charmingly done.  
The hotel grounds join and communicate with the Castle grounds; so we  
and the children loaf in the winding paths of those leafy vastnesses a  
great deal, and drink beer and listen to excellent music.  
When we first came to this hotel, a couple of weeks ago, I pointed to a  
house across the river, and said I meant to rent the centre room on  
the 3d floor for a work-room. Jokingly we got to speaking of it as my  
office; and amused ourselves with watching "my people" daily in their  
small grounds and trying to make out what we could of their dress, &c.,  
without a glass. Well, I loafed along there one day and found on that  
house the only sign of the kind on that side of the river: "Moblirte  
Wohnung zu Vermiethen!" I went in and rented that very room which I  
had long ago selected. There was only one other room in the whole  
double-house unrented.  
(It occurs to me that I made a great mistake in not thinking to deliver  
a very bad German speech, every other sentence pieced out with English,  
at the Bayard Taylor banquet in New York. I think I could have made it  
one of the features of the occasion.)--[He used this plan at a gathering  
475  


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