The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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To Mrs. Clemens, in Paris:  
Dec. 2, '93.  
LIVY DARLING,--Last night at John Mackay's the dinner consisted of soup,  
raw oysters, corned beef and cabbage, and something like a custard.  
I ate without fear or stint, and yet have escaped all suggestion of  
indigestion. The men present were old gray Pacific-coasters whom I knew  
when I and they were young and not gray. The talk was of the days when  
we went gypsying a long time ago--thirty years. Indeed it was a talk  
of the dead. Mainly that. And of how they looked, and the harum-scarum  
things they did and said. For there were no cares in that life, no aches  
and pains, and not time enough in the day (and three-fourths of the  
night) to work off one's surplus vigor and energy. Of the mid-night  
highway robbery joke played upon me with revolvers at my head on the  
windswept and desolate Gold Hill Divide, no witness is left but me, the  
victim. All the friendly robbers are gone. These old fools last night  
laughed till they cried over the particulars of that old forgotten  
crime.  
John Mackay has no family here but a pet monkey--a most affectionate and  
winning little devil. But he makes trouble for the servants, for he is  
full of curiosity and likes to take everything out of the drawers and  
examine it minutely; and he puts nothing back. The examinations of  
877  


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