The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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It gravels me to think what a goose I was to make Livy and Clara  
remain in Durban; but I wanted to save them the 30-hour railway trip  
to Johannesburg. And Durban and its climate and opulent foliage were  
so lovely, and the friends there were so choice and so hearty that  
I sacrificed myself in their interests, as I thought. It is just the  
beginning of winter, and although the days are hot, the nights are cool.  
But it's lovely weather in these regions, too; and the friends are as  
lovely as the weather, and Johannesburg and Pretoria are brimming with  
interest. I talk here twice more, then return to Johannesburg next  
Wednesday for a fifth talk there; then to the Orange Free State capital,  
then to some town on the way to Port Elizabeth, where the two will join  
us by sea from Durban; then the gang will go to Kimberley and presently  
to the Cape--and so, in the course of time, we shall get through and  
sail for England; and then we will hunt up a quiet village and I will  
write and Livy edit, for a few months, while Clara and Susy and Jean  
study music and things in London.  
We have had noble good times everywhere and every day, from Cleveland,  
July 15, to Pretoria, May 24, and never a dull day either on sea or  
land, notwithstanding the carbuncles and things. Even when I was laid  
up 10 days at Jeypore in India we had the charmingest times with English  
friends. All over India the English well, you will never know how good  
and fine they are till you see them.  
Midnight and after! and I must do many things to-day, and lecture  
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