Read Autobiography of Mark Twain Online
Authors: Mark Twain
1885a.
Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
. New York: Charles L. Webster and Co.
1885b. “The Private History of a Campaign That Failed.”
Century Magazine
31 (December): 193–204. Reprinted in Budd 1992b, 863–82.
1887. “English as She Is Taught.”
Century Magazine
33 (April): 932–36.
1889.
A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
. New York: Charles L. Webster and Co.
1891a. “The Innocents Adrift.” MS of 174 pages, CU-MARK. Published in part as “Down the Rhone” in SLC 1923, 129–68.
1891b. “Mental Telegraphy.”
Harper’s New Monthly Magazine
84 (December): 95–104.
1892.
The American Claimant
. New York: Charles L. Webster and Co.
1893. “The Back Number: A Monthly Magazine.” MS of five leaves, NNPM.
1894a.
Tom Sawyer Abroad
. New York: Charles L. Webster and Co.
1894b.
The Tragedy of Pudd’nhead Wilson and the Comedy Those Extraordinary Twins
. Hartford: American Publishing Company.
1895. “Mental Telegraphy Again.”
Harper’s New Monthly Magazine
91 (September): 521–24.
1896a.
Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc
. New York: Harper and Brothers.
1896b.
Tom Sawyer Abroad, Tom Sawyer, Detective and Other Stories Etc., Etc
. New York: Harper and Brothers.
1896c. “Tom Sawyer, Detective.”
Harper’s New Monthly Magazine
93 (August–September): 344–61, 519–37.
1896–1906. “Memorial to Susy.” MS of 104 leaves, various drafts and parts, CU-MARK.
1897a.
Following the Equator: A Journey around the World
. Hartford: American Publishing Company.
1897b.
More Tramps Abroad
. London: Chatto and Windus.
1897c. Untitled MS of thirty-nine leaves concerning Wilhelmine, Margravine of Bayreuth, CU-MARK.
1897d. “England’s Jubilee Pageant to Be the Greatest in History.” San Francisco
Examiner
, 20 June, 13. Reprinted in SLC 1923, 193–206.
1897e. “His Jubilee Art.” San Francisco
Examiner
, 20 June, 13–14.
1897f. “All Nations Pay Homage to Victoria.” San Francisco
Examiner
, 23 June, 1, 4. Reprinted in SLC 1923, 206–10.
1897g. “Villagers of 1840–3.” MS of forty-three leaves, written in July–August, CU-MARK. Published in
Inds
, 93–108.
1897–?1902. “Tom Sawyer’s Conspiracy.” MS of 241 pages, CU-MARK. Published in
HH&T
, 152–242, and
Inds
, 134–213.
1898a. “Dueling.” MS of sixteen pages, written on 8 March, CU-MARK.
1898b. “At the Appetite-Cure.”
Cosmopolitan
25 (August): 425–33.
1898c. “Schoolhouse Hill.” MS of 139 pages, written in November–December, CU-MARK. Published in
MSM
, 175–220, and
Inds
, 214–59.
1899a. “Samuel Langhorne Clemens.” MS of fourteen leaves, notes written in March for Samuel E. Moffett to use in preparing a biographical sketch, NN-BGC.
1899b. “Concerning the Jews.”
Harper’s New Monthly Magazine
99 (September): 527–35. Reprinted in SLC 1900a, 250–75.
1899c. “Christian Science and the Book of Mrs. Eddy.”
Cosmopolitan
27 (October): 585–94.
1899d. “My Début as a Literary Person.”
Century Magazine
59 (November): 76–88.
1899e. “My First Lie and How I Got Out of It.” New York
World
, 10 December, Supplement, 1–2. Reprinted in Budd 1992b, 439–46.
1900a.
How to Tell a Story and Other Essays
. The Writings of Mark Twain. Édition de Luxe. Volume 22. Hartford: American Publishing Company.
1900b.
The Man That Corrupted Hadleyburg and Other Stories and Essays
. New York: Harper and Brothers.
1901. “Two Little Tales.”
Century Magazine
63 (November): 24–32.
1902a. “Aguinaldo.” MS of sixty-two leaves and TS of twenty-one leaves, CU-MARK. Published as “Review of Edwin Wildman’s Biography of Aguinaldo” in Zwick 1992, 86–108.
1902b. “Huck.” MS of one page, probably written in 1902, CU-MARK.
1902c. “A Defence of General Funston.”
North American Review
174 (May): 613–24. Reprinted in Zwick 1992, 119–32.
1902d. “Christian Science.”
North American Review
175 (December): 756–68.
1903a.
My Début as a Literary Person with Other Essays and Stories
. Hartford: American Publishing Company.
1903b. “Christian Science—II.”
North American Review
176 (January): 1–9.
1903c. “Christian Science—
III.” North American Review
176 (February): 173–84.
1903d. “Mrs. Eddy in Error.”
North American Review
176 (April): 505–17.
1903e. “Major General Wood, M.D.” MS of ten leaves, written 15 December, and TS of five leaves, typed and revised before 28 December, CU-MARK. Published in Zwick 1992, 151–55.
1904a. “The Countess Massiglia.” MS of thirty-six leaves, CU-MARK.
1904b. “Saint Joan of Arc.”
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
110 (December): 3–12.
1905a.
King Leopold’s Soliloquy: A Defense of His Congo Rule
. Boston: P. R. Warren Company.
1905b. “Concerning Copyright: An Open Letter to the Register of Copyrights.”
North American Review
180 (January): 1–8. Reprinted in Budd 1992b, 627–34.
1905c. “From My Unpublished Autobiography.”
Harper’s Weekly
49 (18 March): 391. Reprinted as “Mark Twain Was Pioneer in Use of Typewriter,” Atlanta
Constitution
, 3 April, 6.
1905d. “ ‘Russian Liberty Has Had Its Last Chance,’ Says Mark Twain.” Letter to the editor dated 29 August. Boston
Globe
, 30 August, 4 (morning edition), 11 (evening edition). Also known as “The Treaty of Portsmouth.”
1905e. “John Hay and the Ballads.”
Harper’s Weekly
49 (21 October): 1530.
1905f. “ ‘Mark Twain’ Talks Peace.” Chicago
Tribune
, 5 November, 1. Text of speech available online at
http://www.twainquotes.com/Peace.html
.
1905g. “Mark Twain’s 70th Birthday: Souvenir of Its Celebration.” Supplement to
Harper’s Weekly
49 (23 December): 1883–1914. Facsimile available at
MTPO
.
1906a. “A Family Sketch.” MS of sixty-five pages, CLjC.
1906b.
What Is Man?
New York: De Vinne Press.
1906c. “A Horse’s Tale.”
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
113 (August–September): 327–42, 539–49.
1906d. “Hunting the Deceitful Turkey.”
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
114 (December): 57–58.
1909a. “To Rev. S. C. Thompson.” MS of seventeen pages, written 23 April, CU-MARK. Published in part in
MTB
, 1:482–83.
1909b. “Ashcroft-Lyon Manuscript.” MS of 464 leaves, written May–September, CU-MARK.
1909c. “H. H. Rogers.” MS of twenty pages, consisting of several pagination sequences, written between August and December, CU-MARK. Published in
MTA
, 1:256–65.
1909d. “Marjorie Fleming, the Wonder Child.”
Harper’s Bazar
43 (December): 1182–83, 1229.
1909e. “Closing Words of My Autobiography.” MS of forty-four pages, written on 24, 25, and 26 December, CU-MARK. Published as “The Death of Jean” in
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
122 (January 1911): 210–15.
1910. “The Turning Point of My Life.”
Harper’s Bazar
44 (February): 118–19. Reprinted in Budd 1992b, 929–38, and
WIM
, 455–64.
1917.
What Is Man? And Other Essays
. New York: Harper and Brothers.
1922a. “Unpublished Chapters from the Autobiography of Mark Twain: Part I.”
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
144 (February): 273–80.
1922b. “Unpublished Chapters from the Autobiography of Mark Twain: Part II.”
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
144 (March): 455–60.
1922c. “Unpublished Chapters from the Autobiography of Mark Twain.”
Harper’s Monthly Magazine
145 (August): 310–15.
1923.
Europe and Elsewhere
. With an Appreciation by Brander Matthews and an Introduction by Albert Bigelow Paine. New York: Harper and Brothers.
1981.
Wapping Alice:Printed for the First Time, Together with Three Factual Letters to Olivia Clemens; Another Story, the McWilliamses and the Burglar Alarm; and Revelatory Portions of the Autobiographical Dictation of April 10, 1907
. . . . Berkeley: Friends of The Bancroft Library.
1982.
The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
. Foreword and notes by John C. Gerber; text established
by Paul Baender. The Mark Twain Library. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
1990.
Mark Twain’s Own Autobiography: The Chapters from the
North American Review. With an introduction and notes by Michael J. Kiskis. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press.
1996.
Chapters from My Autobiography
. With an introduction by Arthur Miller and an afterword by Michael J. Kiskis. The Oxford Mark Twain, edited by Shelley Fisher Fishkin. New York: Oxford University Press.
2004.
Mark Twain’s Helpful Hints for Good Living: A Handbook for the Damned Human Race
. Edited by Lin Salamo, Victor Fischer, and Michael B. Frank. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.
2009.
Who Is Mark Twain? Edited
, with a note on the text, by Robert H. Hirst. New York: HarperStudio.
Smith, Elizabeth H. 1965. “Reuel Colt Gridley.”
Tales of the Paradise Ridge
6 (June): 11–18.
Smith, Henry Nash.
1955. “That Hideous Mistake of Poor Clemens’s.”
Harvard Library Bulletin
9 (Spring): 145–80.
1962.
Mark Twain: The Development of a Writer
. Cambridge: Belknap Press of Harvard University Press.
Smith, Jean Edward. 2001.
Grant
. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Smith, Stephanie. 2006.
Former Presidents: Federal Pension and Retirement Benefits
. CRS Report for Congress.
http://www.senate.gov/reference/resources/pdf/98–249.pdf
. Accessed 13 July 2006.
Sonoma Census
. 1860.
Population Schedules of the Eighth Census of the United States, 1860.
Roll M653
. California: Sonoma, Sonoma County
. Photocopy in CU-MARK.
Soria, Regina. 1964. “Mark Twain and Vedder’s Medusa.”
American Quarterly
16:602–6.
StEdNL. National Library of Scotland, Edinburgh [formerly UkENL].
Stein, Bernard L. 2001. “Life on the Hudson: A Mark Twain Idyll.”
Riverdale Press
52 (25 October): A1, B1, B4.
Stewart, A. A., comp. 1912.
The Printer’s Dictionary of Technical Terms
. Boston: School of Printing, North End Union.
Stoddard, Charles Warren.
1867.
Poems
. San Francisco: A. Roman.
1873.
South-Sea Idyls
. Boston: James R. Osgood and Co.
1885.
A Troubled Heart and How It Was Comforted at Last
. Notre Dame, Ind.: Joseph A. Lyons.
1903.
Exits and Entrances: A Book of Essays and Sketches
. Boston: Lothrop Publishing Company.
Stoddard, Lothrop. 1931.
Master of Manhattan: The Life of Richard Croker
. New York: Longmans, Green and Co.
Stone, H. N., D. M. Davidson, and W. R. McIntosh. 1885.
Stone, Davidson & Co.’s Hannibal City Directory
. Hannibal: Stone, Davidson and Co.