The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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express. If they want letters from here, who'll run from morning till  
night collecting materials cheaper. I'll write a short letter twice a  
week, for the present, for the "Age," for $5 per week. Now it has been  
a long time since I couldn't make my own living, and it shall be a long  
time before I loaf another year.....  
If I get the other 25 feet in the Johnson ex., I shan't care a d---n.  
I'll be willing to curse awhile and wait. And if I can't move the bowels  
of those hills this fall, I will come up and clerk for you until I get  
money enough to go over the mountains for the winter.  
Yr. Bro.  
SAM.  
The Territorial Enterprise at Virginia City was at this time owned  
by Joseph T. Goodman, who had bought it on the eve of the great  
Comstock silver-mining boom, and from a struggling, starving sheet  
had converted it into one of the most important--certainly the most  
picturesque-papers on the coast. The sketches which the Esmeralda  
miner had written over the name of "Josh" fitted into it exactly,  
and when a young man named Barstow, in the business office, urged  
Goodman to invite "Josh" to join their staff, the Enterprise owner  
readily fell in with the idea. Among a lot of mining matters of no  
special interest, Clemens, July 30th, wrote his brother: "Barstow  
has offered me the post as local reporter for the Enterprise at $25  
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