Abroad with Mark Twain and Eugene Field - Tales They Told to a Fellow Correspondent
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57
1922
English
- Editor’s Note
- Author’s Preface
- How Mark Would Safeguard England
- Mark Philosophized on Willie
- Mark - Regicide
- The Funniest Speech Mark Ever Gave
- Monarchical Atavism
- Democratic Mark and Austrian Aristocracy
- Phil Sheridan's Friend
- "Elizabeth was a He", said Mark
- Mark, the Sleight-of-hand Man
- Mark and the Imperial Mistress
- Mark on Lynch Law
- Recollections of King Charles and Grant
- Mark Missed Gallows-land
- Think of Her Sorrow
- Breaking the News Gently
- Dukes and Unborn Car Horses
- "Pa Used to Be a Terrible Man"
- Mark on the Berlin Cops
- The Sausage Room
- Mark's Glimpse of Schopenhauer
- "Murderer" Blücher in Oxford
- Mark's Human Side
- An Australian Surprise
- Mark in France and Italy
- Why Mark Wouldn't Like to Die Abroad
- The Left Hand Didn't Know
- American Humorists
- Telepathy or Suggestion
- Trying to Be Serious Didn't Work
- Assorted Beauties
- Mark's Children Knew Him
- Mark, Dogs, Dagoes, and Cats
- The Tragedy of Genius
- Kilties and the Lassie
- A Wise Provision of Providence
- The Awful German Language
- Artist or Photographer
- Mark Interviewed the Barber about Harry Thaw
- His Portrait—a Mirror
- Mark, Bismarck, Lincoln, and Darwin
- Mark at the Stock Exchange, Vienna
- Mark and the Prussian Lieutenant
- Mark Studies the Costermonger Language
- That Beautiful Funeral
- Ada's Beast of a Man
- Jealousy in Lowland
- The Troubles of Liz
- The French Madame
- The Great Disappointment
- Rheumatism and Prodding
- On Literary Friendships
- Bayard Taylor's German
- Genius in Extremis
- What May Happen to You after You Are Dead
- Kings in Their Birthday Suits
- Mark on Lincoln's Humanity
- An English Lover of Kings and a Hater
- Mark Got Arrested in Berlin
- Books that Weren't Written
- Mark Enjoyed Other Humorists
- Mark and the English Hack-writer
- Mark Thought Joan of Arc Was Slandered
- Running Amuck—Almost
- Mark's Idiomatic Gems
- Mark and the Girls that Love a Lord
- Mark's Martyrdom
- Slang Not in Mark's Dictionary
- Mark "No Gentleman"
- Mark, Poetry, and Art
- Mark Sheds Light on English History
- Mark Explains Dean Swift
- Mark in Tragedy and Comedy
- "Ambition Is a Jade that More Than One Man Can Ride"
- Mark as a Translator
- Mark in England
- Why Mark Was Uncomfortable in the King of Sweden's Presence
- Mark's Idea of High Art
- Mark Meets King Leopold—Almost
- Sizing Up of Aristocracy by Mark
- The Bald-headed Woman
- When a Publisher Dines and Wines You
- Mark in Politics
- Mark on "Royal Honors"
- American Women the Prettiest
- Where Tay Pay Isn't Tay Pay
- The Man Who Didn't Get Used to Hanging
- Stray Sayings of Mark
- Eugene Field and His Troubles in Chicago
- More of Eugene Field's Trials in London
- Gene, a "Success of Curiosity"
- Dire Consequences of American Horseplay
- Field's Library of Humor
- Those German Professors
- Eugene Field and Northern Lore
- Little Boy Blue
This work brings new understanding of the life and work of Samuel Clemens (Mark Twain) while living and traveling abroad. Twain and fellow humorist Eugene Field experienced a wide variety of people, places and things together and author Henry Fischer brings them together here, for the first time. - Summary by John Greenman
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