. St. Nicholas [serial]. tAt the Appetite CureAurelias Unfortunate Young ManThe £1,000,000 Bank-noteThe $30,000 BequestA Burlesque BiographyThe Office BoreConcerning ChambermaidsJohn Chinaman in New YorkA Connecticut Yankee in King Ar-thurs CourtA Cure for the BluesThe Death DiskMy Debut as a Literary PersonA Double-barrelled Detective StoryThe Stolen White ElephantThe Esquimau Maidens RomanceEves Diary The Facts in the Case of George Fischer, DeceasedFollowing the EquatorThe Gilded AgeRunning for GovernorThe Facts in the Case of the Great Beef ContractThe Man That Corrupted HadleyburgWas it H


. St. Nicholas [serial]. tAt the Appetite CureAurelias Unfortunate Young ManThe £1,000,000 Bank-noteThe $30,000 BequestA Burlesque BiographyThe Office BoreConcerning ChambermaidsJohn Chinaman in New YorkA Connecticut Yankee in King Ar-thurs CourtA Cure for the BluesThe Death DiskMy Debut as a Literary PersonA Double-barrelled Detective StoryThe Stolen White ElephantThe Esquimau Maidens RomanceEves Diary The Facts in the Case of George Fischer, DeceasedFollowing the EquatorThe Gilded AgeRunning for GovernorThe Facts in the Case of the Great Beef ContractThe Man That Corrupted HadleyburgWas it Heaven? or Hell?How I Once Edited an Agricultural Paper How the Author Was Sold in NewarkThe Adventures of Huckleberry FinnThe Innocents AbroadIntroduction to * The New Guide of the Conversation in Portugese and Without a MasterItalian with GrammarPersonal Recollections of Joan of ArcThe Jumping FrogPrivate History of the Jumping Frog StoryPuddnhead WilsonPunch, Brothers, PunchRoughing ItSaint Joan of Arc. THE LINCOLN OFOUR LITERATURE Like Abraham Lincoln, Mark Twain, in his youth, had toendure many hardships and to make the most of very Hm-ited opportunities. His was no easy road. Like Lincoln,too, he thought out his own philosophy of life. He studiedthe great book of human nature in the school of experience,and his views were always colored by a quaint, homely,rugged humor that could, at will, be turned into a weaponof deadly effectiveness for rebuking hypocrisy, falsehood orinsincerity. As Lincoln stood for the highest Americanideals in statesmanship and national policy, so Mark Twainrepresents what is truest and most typically American inour literature. We are now offering on exceptionally favorable terms thecollected writings of MARK TWAIN all the great books of travel, the immortal boy-tales, thehistorical writings, the novels, sketches, essays and shortstories that have given Mark Twain his place as Americasforemost and best-loved writer. ?Every word and


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Keywords: ., bookauthordodgemar, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookyear1873