The Letters Of Mark Twain, Complete


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With love,  
S. L. C.  
If this splendid enthusiasm had not cooled by the time a reply came  
from Mr. Rogers, it must have received a sudden chill from the  
letter which he inclosed--the brief and concise report from a  
carpet-machine expert, who said: "I do not feel that it would be of  
any value to us in our mills, and the number of jacquard looms in  
America is so limited that I am of the opinion that there is no  
field for a company to develop the invention here. A cursory  
examination of the pamphlet leads me to place no very high value  
upon the invention, from a practical standpoint."  
With the receipt of this letter carpet-pattern projects would seem  
to have suddenly ceased to be a factor in Mark Twain's calculations.  
Such a letter in the early days of the type-machine would have saved  
him a great sum in money and years of disappointment. But perhaps  
he would not have heeded it then.  
The year 1898 brought the Spanish-American War. Clemens was  
constitutionally against all wars, but writing to Twichell, whose  
son had enlisted, we gather that this one was an exception.  
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974 975 976 977 978

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1 314 629 943 1257