The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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literary earnings, however large, did not appeal to him.  
Furthermore, he was convinced that he was without literary ability  
and that a book by him would prove a failure.  
But then, by and by, came a failure more disastrous than anything he  
had foreseen--the downfall of his firm through the Napoleonic  
rascality of Ward. General Grant was utterly ruined; he was left  
without income and apparently without the means of earning one. It  
was the period when the great War Series was appeasing in the  
Century Magazine. General Grant, hard-pressed, was induced by the  
editors to prepare one or more articles, and, finding that he could  
write them, became interested in the idea of a book. It is  
unnecessary to repeat here the story of how the publication of this  
important work passed into the hands of Mark Twain; that is to say,  
the firm of Charles L. Webster & Co., the details having been fully  
given elsewhere.--[See Mark Twain: A Biography, chap. cliv.]--  
We will now return for the moment to other matters, as reported in  
order by the letters. Clemens and Cable had continued their  
reading-tour into Canada, and in February found themselves in  
Montreal. Here they were invited by the Toque Bleue Snow-shoe Club  
to join in one of their weekly excursions across Mt. Royal. They  
could not go, and the reasons given by Mark Twain are not without  
interest. The letter is to Mr. George Iles, author of Flame,  
Electricity, and the Camera, and many other useful works.  
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