The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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away down town, and will simply whirl together a sentence or two for  
good-fellowship. I have bought photographs of Coquelin and Jane Hading  
and will ask them to sign them. I shall meet Coquelin tomorrow night,  
and if Hading is not present I will send her picture to her by somebody.  
I am to breakfast with Madame Nordica in a few days, and meantime I hope  
to get a good picture of her to sign. She was of the breakfast company  
yesterday, but the picture of herself which she signed and gave me does  
not do her majestic beauty justice.  
I am too busy to attend to the photo-collecting right, because I have  
to live up to the name which Jamie Dodge has given me--the "Belle of  
New York"--and it just keeps me rushing. Yesterday I had engagements to  
breakfast at noon, dine at 3, and dine again at 7. I got away from the  
long breakfast at 2 p. m., went and excused myself from the 3 o'clock  
dinner, then lunched with Mrs. Dodge in 58th street, returned to the  
Players and dressed, dined out at 9, and was back at Mrs. Dodge's at 10  
p. m. where we had magic-lantern views of a superb sort, and a lot of  
yarns until an hour after midnight, and got to bed at 2 this morning--a  
good deal of a gain on my recent hours. But I don't get tired; I sleep  
as sound as a dead person, and always wake up fresh and strong--usually  
at exactly 9.  
I was at breakfast lately where people of seven separate nationalities  
sat and the seven languages were going all the time. At my side sat  
a charming gentleman who was a delightful and active talker, and  
894  


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Quick Jump
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