The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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burnt, like the injudicious believer.  
I am mighty glad you are done your book (this is from a man who, above  
all others, feels how much that sentence means) and am also mighty glad  
you have begun the next (this is also from a man who knows the felicity  
of that, and means straightway to enjoy it.) The Undiscovered starts off  
delightfully--I have read it aloud to Mrs. C. and we vastly enjoyed it.  
Well, time's about up--must drop a line to Aldrich.  
Yrs ever,  
MARK.  
In a letter which Mark Twain wrote to his brother Orion at this  
period we get the first hint of a venture which was to play an  
increasingly important part in the Hartford home and fortunes during  
the next ten or a dozen years. This was the type-setting machine  
investment, which, in the end, all but wrecked Mark Twain's  
finances. There is but a brief mention of it in the letter to  
Orion, and the letter itself is not worth preserving, but as  
references to the "machine" appear with increasing frequency, it  
seems proper to record here its first mention. In the same letter  
he suggests to his brother that he undertake an absolutely truthful  
autobiography, a confession in which nothing is to be withheld. He  
cites the value of Casanova's memories, and the confessions of  
541  


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