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See also additional letters in the collection from Twain.
Twain states, "I want you to write my next lecture. You can do it better than I," and then goes on to discuss the fees for lectures in various locations. The American Publishing Company, Hartford, wants a book from him, and he has written to ask for details including "how much bucksheesh [payment]" he will gain. He closes with a postscript, "If you know of any villainy here that has money in it, let me know." Novelist, essayist, lecturer, prospector, river pilot, and journalist, Samuel Langhorne Clemens used the pseudonym "Mark Twain," a river pilot's catchphrase for measuring depth. His boyhood and early apprenticeship as a river boat pilot on the Mississippi provided much of the background for his most well-known works _The Adventures of Tom Sawyer_ (1876) and _The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn_ (1884).
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