The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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running a risk of hurting her. No one would hurt Jeannette Gilder  
purposely, and no one would want to run the risk of doing it  
unintentionally. She is my neighbor, six miles away, now, and I must ask  
her about this ancient letter.  
I note with pride and pleasure that I told no untruths in my unsent  
answer. I still have the habit of keeping unfinished books lying around  
years and years, waiting. I have four or five novels on hand at present  
in a half-finished condition, and it is more than three years since I  
have looked at any of them. I have no intention of finishing them. I  
could complete all of them in less than a year, if the impulse should  
come powerfully upon me: Long, long ago money-necessity furnished that  
impulse once, ("Following the Equator"), but mere desire for money has  
never furnished it, so far as I remember. Not even money-necessity was  
able to overcome me on a couple of occasions when perhaps I ought to  
have allowed it to succeed. While I was a bankrupt and in debt two  
offers were made me for weekly literary contributions to continue during  
a year, and they would have made a debtless man of me, but I declined  
them, with my wife's full approval, for I had known of no instance where  
a man had pumped himself out once a week and failed to run "emptyings"  
before the year was finished.  
As to that "Noah's Ark" book, I began it in Edinburgh in 1873;--[This is  
not quite correct. The "Noah's Ark" book was begun in Buffalo in  
1
870.] I don't know where the manuscript is now. It was a Diary, which  
professed to be the work of Shem, but wasn't. I began it again several  
06  
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