The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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the houses warp till they look like short joints of stove pipe split  
lengthwise.  
(Remainder missing.)  
In this letter is something of the "wild freedom of the West," which  
later would contribute to his fame. The spirit of the frontier--of  
Mark Twain--was beginning to stir him.  
There had been no secretary work for him to do, and no provision for  
payment. He found his profit in studying human nature and in  
prospecting native resources. He was not interested in mining not  
yet. With a boy named John Kinney he made an excursion to Lake  
Bigler--now Tahoe--and located a timber claim, really of great  
value. They were supposed to build a fence around it, but they were  
too full of the enjoyment of camp-life to complete it. They put in  
most of their time wandering through the stately forest or drifting  
over the transparent lake in a boat left there by lumbermen. They  
built themselves a brush house, but they did not sleep in it. In  
'Roughing It' he writes, "It never occurred to us, for one thing;  
and, besides, it was built to hold the ground, and that was enough.  
We did not wish to strain it."  
They were having a glorious time, when their camp-fire got away from  
them and burned up their claim. His next letter, of which the  
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