id author title date pages extension mime words sentences flesch summary cache txt 2987 Paine, Albert Bigelow Mark Twain: A Biography. Volume III, Part 2: 1907-1910 .txt text/plain 94906 5832 81 Clemens said that his first word of the matter had been a newspaper In a dictation following his return, Mark Twain said: In the library Clemens was presented to a Mr. Pole, a plain-looking man, sleep reading his books, and then he came down to personal things and shocked to read on a great placard, "Mark Twain Arrives: Ascot Cup DEAR, KIND MARK TWAIN,--For years I have wanted to write and thank think we could have sat there and let the days and years slip away this time, but long enough to cure him, he said, and he came back full of played billiards for a time, then set out for a walk, following the long Mark Twain's second present came at Christmas-time. One of the pleasant things that came to Mark Twain that year was the In a letter which Clemens wrote to Miss Wallace at this time, he tells of ./cache/2987.txt ./txt/2987.txt