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[News Clip: Mark Twain]
Video footage from the WBAP-TV television station in Fort Worth, Texas, to accompany a news story about the family of Dallas insurance man E.C. Stradley discovering letters written to Mrs. Stradley's uncle by author Mark Twain
Mark Twain Portrait
Portrait of Mark Twain, Newsboy, New York. Samuel L. Clemens, also known as Mark Twain was a famous American writer whose works gained worldwide recognition for their humor and historical significance
Mark Twain Portrait
Undated portrait of Mark Twain. Samuel L. Clemens, also known as Mark Twain was a famous American writer whose works gained worldwide recognition for their humor and historical significance
Mark Twain Postcard
Postcard autographed by Mark Twain.
Samuel L. Clemens, also known as Mark Twain was a famous American writer whose works gained worldwide recognition for their humor and historical significance
Mark Twain Portrait, 1873
Autographed, double portrait of Mark Twain that was photographed and published by Jeremiah Gurney, an American daguerreotype photographer. Samuel L. Clemens, also known as Mark Twain was a famous American writer whose works gained worldwide recognition for their humor and historical significance
Mark Twain Portrait, 1899 November
Picture of Mark Twain from "The Century Magazine" Vol. LIX, No.1., 1899. Samuel L. Clemens, also known as Mark Twain was a famous American writer whose works gained worldwide recognition for their humor and historical significance
Mark Twain circular
Issues date from 2014-2020 (volumes 28.2-34.2)"A newsletter of the Mark Twain journal.
Mark Twain Speaking
Originally published in 1976 and reissued in 2006 after many years out of print, Mark Twain Speaking assembles Twain's lectures, after-dinner speeches, and interviews from 1864 to 1909. Explanatory notes describe occasions, identify personalities, and discuss techniques of Twain's oral craftsmanship. A chronology listing date, place, and title of speech or type of engagement completes the collection.Intro -- Contents -- Introduction -- Acknowledgments -- Selection of Texts -- Abbreviations -- 1. Presentation Speech -- 2. Sandwich Islands Lecture -- 3. Concluding Remarks -- 4. Address to the Czar -- 5. Woman-The Pride of Any Profession and the Jewel of Ours -- 6. Pilgrim Life -- 7. Introductory Remarks -- 8. The American Vandal Abroad -- 9. Concluding Remarks -- 10. The Reliable Contraband -- 11. Artemus Ward Lecture -- 12. Roughing It Lecture -- 13. On Governor Nye -- 14. Aldine Dinner -- 15. Savage Club -- 16. Whitefriars Club -- 17. Meeting of Americans -- 18. The Ladies -- 19. The Guests -- 20. Introducing the Reverend Charles Kingsley -- 21. Massachusetts Press Association -- 22. Curtain Speech -- 23. Insurance Dinner -- 24. Curtain Speech -- 25. Spelling Match -- 26. Republican Mass Meeting -- 27. The Weather of New England -- 28. Curtain Speech -- 29. Putnam Phalanx -- 30. Whittier Birthday Dinner -- 31. Bayard Taylor Dinner -- 32. Anglo American Club -- 33. Stanley Club -- 34. Stomach Club -- 35. Introducing General Hawley -- 36. Army of the Tennessee Reunion -- 37. The Babies -- 38. Holmes Breakfast -- 39. Welcome to General Grant -- 40. Republican Rally -- 41. Funeral Oration -- 42. Papyrus Club -- 43. Army of the Potomac Reunion -- 44. De Woman wid de Gold'n Arm -- 45. Montreal Dinner -- 46. New England Society -- 47. Frechette Dinner -- 48. Saturday Morning Club -- 49. New England Society -- 50. Introducing George W. Cable -- 51. On Adam -- 52. Wheelmen -- 53. Turncoats -- 54. Mugwump Rally -- 55. Mock Oration on the Dead Partisan -- 56. On Speech-Making Reform -- 57. Actors Fund Fair -- 58. Huck Saves Jim -- 59. The Compositor -- 60. Remarks on Copyright -- 61. Our Children -- 62. Yankee Smith of Camelot -- 63. Introducing Henry M. Stanley -- 64. Stationers Board of Trade -- 65. An Author's Soldiering -- 66. Daly's Theatre67. Army and Navy Club -- 68. Post-Prandial Oratory -- 69. Yale College Speech -- 70. Introducing Nye and Riley -- 71. The Long Clam -- 72. The Grand Tour-I. The Sandwich Islands -- 73. Fellowcraft Club -- 74. The Humorist on the Copyright Question -- 75. The Christening Yarn -- 76. Curtain Speech -- 77. On Foreign Critics -- 78. National Wholesale Druggists Association -- 79. Robert A. Pryor Dinner -- 80. Lotos Club -- 81. Brander Matthews Dinner -- 82. Advice -- 83. Cramp's Shipyard -- 84. Curtain Speech -- 85. Morals Lecture -- 86. Interview -- 87. His Grandfather's Old Ram -- 88. Yorick Club -- 89. Australian Institute of Journalists -- 90. Savage Club -- 91. Commemoration Luncheon -- 92. Punch, Brothers, Punch -- 93. Interview -- 94. Die Schrecken Der Deutschen Sprache -- 95. Jubilee of the Hungarian Press, -- 96. Savage Club -- 97. Authors Club -- 98. Whitefriars Club -- 99. New Vagabonds Club -- 100. The Day We Celebrate -- 101. Remarks on Copyright -- 102. Literature -- 103. The Drama -- 104. Reading Room Opening -- 105. Travelogue -- 106. Galveston Orphans Bazaar -- 107. Woman's Press Club -- 108. Lotos Club -- 109. New York Press Club -- 110. Society of American Authors -- 111. The Disappearance of Literature -- 112. Public Education Association -- 113. Our City -- 114. Introducing Winston S. Churchill -- 115. The Causes of Our Present Municipal Corruption -- 116. Hebrew Technical School for Girls -- 117. University Settlement Society -- 118. Lincoln Celebration -- 119. Remarks on Osteopathy -- 120. New York Senate -- 121. Training That Pays -- 122. Lotos Club -- 123. Poughkeepsie Eastman Club -- 124. University Club -- 125. Missouri Society -- 126. Speech-Making Experiment -- 127. Edmund Burke on Croker and Tammany -- 128. Two Political Speeches -- 129. Mock Eulogy of Tammany -- 130. Good Citizenship Association -- 131. Lotos Club132. Scotch Humor -- 133. Yale Alumni Association -- 134. Society of Medical Jurisprudence -- 135. Hannibal High School Graduation -- 136. University of Missouri Commencement -- 137. Harbor Boat Christening -- 138. Eugene Field Commencement -- 139. Speech on Art -- 140. Lotos Club -- 141. Sixty-seventh Birthday Dinner -- 142. Seventieth Birthday Dinner -- 143. Benefit Matinee for Russian Sufferers -- 144. Society of Illustrators -- 145. Tuskegee Institute Meeting -- 146. Manhattan Dickens Fellowship -- 147. Ends of the Earth Club -- 148. Introducing Dr. Henry Van Dyke -- 149. West Side Branch Y.M.C.A. -- 150. Barnard College Reception -- 151. Freundschaft Society -- 152. New York State Association for the Blind -- 153. Women's University Club Reception -- 154. Club A Dinner -- 155. Robert Fulton Monument Association -- 156. San Francisco Relief Meeting -- 157. Billiards Exhibition -- 158. Associated Press -- 159. Concert Debut of Clara Clemens -- 160. Interview -- 161. Remarks on Copyright -- 162. Burlesque Temperance Lecture -- 163. Reminiscences of Longfellow and Others -- 164. Curtain Speech -- 165. Actors Fund Fair -- 166. Government House, Annapolis -- 167. Interview -- 168. Royal Garden Party -- 169. Our Guest -- 170. Lord Mayor's Dinner -- 171. The Day We Celebrate -- 172. Savage Club -- 173. Lord Mayor's Dinner, Liverpool -- 174. Interview -- 175. Fulton Day -- 176. Bishop Speech -- 177. Curtain Speech -- 178. Association Societies of Engineers -- 179. Pleiades Club -- 180. Lotos Club -- 181. Pilgrims Club -- 182. Garrison Children, Bermuda -- 183. Interview -- 184. Humorists and Cartoonists -- 185. Curtain Speech -- 186. C.C.N.Y. Dedication -- 187. Associated Alumni of C.C.N.Y. -- 188. American Booksellers Association -- 189. Queen Victoria-An American Tribute -- 190. Opening of the Mark Twain Library191. New York Postgraduate Medical School -- 192. Lotos Club -- 193. Henry H. Rogers Dinner -- 194. William Travers Jerome Dinner -- 195. Misses Tewksbury's School Graduation -- MARK TWAIN SPEAKING: A Chronology -- IndexOriginally published in 1976 and reissued in 2006 after many years out of print, Mark Twain Speaking assembles Twain's lectures, after-dinner speeches, and interviews from 1864 to 1909. Explanatory notes describe occasions, identify personalities, and discuss techniques of Twain's oral craftsmanship. A chronology listing date, place, and title of speech or type of engagement completes the collection.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
Mark Twain, Lettere dalle Hawaii
La prima edizione italiana delle lettere che Mark Twain inviò dalle Hawaii al "Sacramento Daily Union"The letters Mark Twain sent from Hawaii to " The Sacramento Daily Union"
Information Pamphlet ''Your Mark Twain''
A pamphlet advertising a collection of Mark Twain's words. Each page has photos of Mark Twain at the top, short paragraphs about his life and works, accompanied by a drawing that depicts scenes from his work. The pamphlet advertises a 25-volume collection of Mark Twain's works, to be applied for with an application blank that was to accompany the pamphlet. A photo of Mark Twain holding a cat and smoking a cigar is on the front cover, with his name signed on the back cover
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