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  • '''Mark Twain''' was the pen name of '''Samuel Langhorne Clemens''' (b 1835 in Florida, [ ...of which 11,000 have been preserved, and 2300 are now online.<ref> see ''Mark Twain's Letters, 1853–1880'' (6 volume print edition 1888-2002), 2300 letters [
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  • 12 bytes (1 word) - 01:33, 22 December 2007
  • 142 bytes (20 words) - 14:39, 16 June 2008
  • 923 bytes (146 words) - 12:40, 10 March 2009
  • | title = The Official Web Site of Mark Twain | publisher = Estate of Mark Twain }}
    179 bytes (26 words) - 17:12, 30 May 2010
  • ...ain’s wife and daughters.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Clara, Jean, Livy and Susy, Mark Twain’s wife and daughters, 1880s]] ...nturies. The first of three projected volumes was published in 2010 by the Mark Twain Project, a hundred years after his death,. The text was among the personal
    613 bytes (101 words) - 12:06, 11 April 2011
  • | title = The Autobiography of Mark Twain – review | Books | The Observer | title = Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1 - The Globe and Mail
    560 bytes (68 words) - 00:30, 10 April 2011
  • 102 bytes (13 words) - 16:16, 8 April 2011
  • 827 bytes (133 words) - 16:16, 8 April 2011
  • ...ct.org Mark Twain Project Online] has an online copy of ''Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1'' and will eventually include everything published by the project ...nd Celebrated Writings of Mark Twain] includes relatively unknown works by Mark Twain.
    632 bytes (94 words) - 18:09, 8 April 2011

Page text matches

  • ...ct.org Mark Twain Project Online] has an online copy of ''Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1'' and will eventually include everything published by the project ...nd Celebrated Writings of Mark Twain] includes relatively unknown works by Mark Twain.
    632 bytes (94 words) - 18:09, 8 April 2011
  • | title = The Official Web Site of Mark Twain | publisher = Estate of Mark Twain }}
    179 bytes (26 words) - 17:12, 30 May 2010
  • ...ain’s wife and daughters.JPG|right|thumb|250px|Clara, Jean, Livy and Susy, Mark Twain’s wife and daughters, 1880s]] ...nturies. The first of three projected volumes was published in 2010 by the Mark Twain Project, a hundred years after his death,. The text was among the personal
    613 bytes (101 words) - 12:06, 11 April 2011
  • #REDIRECT [[Mark Twain]]
    24 bytes (3 words) - 12:55, 3 March 2008
  • | title = The Autobiography of Mark Twain – review | Books | The Observer | title = Autobiography of Mark Twain, Volume 1 - The Globe and Mail
    560 bytes (68 words) - 00:30, 10 April 2011
  • ...books written by American men."<ref>Both quotes are from ''The Unabridged Mark Twain, Opening Remarks by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr'', edited by Lawrence Teacher, Runnin There have been disputes about Mark Twain's use of the word "nigger", a word freely used by Huck, who is the narrator
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  • One of the great [[American]] [[novel]]s, by [[Mark Twain]].
    96 bytes (13 words) - 10:11, 21 June 2009
  • '''Mark Twain''' was the pen name of '''Samuel Langhorne Clemens''' (b 1835 in Florida, [ ...of which 11,000 have been preserved, and 2300 are now online.<ref> see ''Mark Twain's Letters, 1853–1880'' (6 volume print edition 1888-2002), 2300 letters [
    4 KB (601 words) - 09:26, 6 July 2023
  • ...tesque and subversive style, who illustrated [[Voltaire]]'s [[Candide]], [[Mark Twain]]'s 1601 and [[Edgar Allan Poe|Poe's]] [[The Fall of the House of Usher]].
    231 bytes (31 words) - 17:49, 26 October 2009
  • * [[Hannibal, Missouri]] &ndash; American city where [[Mark Twain]] spent his boyhood.
    456 bytes (55 words) - 05:54, 10 July 2023
  • ...rthur Conan Doyle]], [[Rudyard Kipling]], [[Robert Louis Stevenson]] and [[Mark Twain]]. In 1906, McClure's was re-styled as a women's magazine and ran inconsis
    556 bytes (71 words) - 19:08, 23 September 2023
  • {{r|Mark Twain}}
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  • {{r|Mark Twain}}
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  • ...]]. He illustrated an English edition of [[Voltaire]]'s ''[[Candide]]'', [[Mark Twain]]'s ''1601'' and [[Edgar Allan Poe]]'s ''[[The Fall of the House of Usher]]
    511 bytes (77 words) - 09:36, 18 February 2010
  • {{r|Mark Twain}}
    459 bytes (60 words) - 07:46, 8 January 2010
  • ...ee in King Arthur's Court]], an 1889 novel by American humorist and writer Mark Twain
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  • {{r|Mark Twain}}
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  • {{r|Mark Twain}}
    863 bytes (138 words) - 12:39, 10 March 2009
  • ...early proprietary name for a [[telegram]]). Self-titled books, such as [[Mark Twain]]'s [[Adventures of Huckleberry Finn|Huckleberry Finn]], Henry Fielding's [
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  • ...works and raised his family, among other historically significant sites. [[Mark Twain]] wrote in 1868, "Of all the beautiful towns it has been my fortune to see
    4 KB (617 words) - 10:35, 6 August 2023
  • ...muel Clemens]], humorist and commentator, who published under the pen name Mark Twain; [[H. L. Mencken]]; [[William Randolph Hearst]]; [[Joseph Pulitzer]]; and t
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  • ...n]] from [[Vienna]] and a very capable neuroanatomist.<ref>Stone JL (2003) Mark Twain on phrenology. ''Neurosurgery'' 53:1414-6; discussion 1416-7, UI: 14633308. ...were willing to test their conclusions. The following quote from one of [[Mark Twain]]'s letters nicely portrays the lack of a noted phrenologist's boldness in
    8 KB (1,298 words) - 14:23, 30 December 2020
  • ...udonyms do not necessarily confer anonymity &mdash; it was well known that Mark Twain was actually Samuel Clemens, for example &mdash; but sometimes they allow t
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  • *[[Mark Twain]], author, self-identified as a Mugwump in his essay, ''[[Christian Science * Blount, Roy [http://www.theatlantic.com/issues/2001/07/blount.htm Mark Twain's Reconstruction] ''The Atlantic,'' July 2001.
    9 KB (1,334 words) - 16:50, 22 March 2023
  • {{Image|12516r.jpg|left|150px|Mark Twain's ''Joan of Arc'', 1896}} The most ambitious attempt to retell Joan's story in fictional form was [[Mark Twain]]'s ''Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc, by the Sieur Louis de Conte'''
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  • [[Mark Twain]], in "The Entertaining History of the Scriptural Panoramist" (1866), gives
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  • ...y specimens by [[Washington Irving]] (''History of New York'', 1809) and [[Mark Twain]] (''Life on the Mississippi'', 1883).<ref>''Merriam Webster’s Encycloped ...e or less literary forms by [[Poggio Bracciolini|Poggio]], Raspe, Töpffer, Mark Twain and others, popular tradition is subject to decay, which makes it impossibl
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  • The title is a paraphrased partial quote of a line from [[Mark Twain]]'s ''[[The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn]]'': "Hain’t we got all the fo
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  • ...reaking a church window." <ref>{{cite news |first=Mark |last=Twain |title=MARK TWAIN IN MONTREAL |url=http://www.twainquotes.com/18811210.html |work=New York Ti
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  • ...l. Rowling is not Quirrell, nor is Rowling Potter; Dickens is not Scrooge; Mark Twain is not Huckleberry Finn.
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  • ...wist, like her famous poem ''"[[Because I Could Not Stop for Death]]"''. [[Mark Twain]]'s (1835-1910) style was greatly influenced by his journalistic work. Like ...e]] - [[Nathaniel Hawthorne]] - [[Herman Melville]] - [[Walt Whitman]] - [[Mark Twain]] - [[Theodore Dreiser]] - [[Stephen Crane]] - [[Henry James]] - [[Emily Di
    9 KB (1,383 words) - 15:19, 20 March 2023
  • ...http://www.twainquotes.com/interviews/AbleYachtsman.html Twainquotes.com ''Mark Twain, Able Yachtsman, on Why Lipton Failed to Lift the Cup'']</ref>
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  • ...istorically, the term refers to residents of [[New England]], as used by [[Mark Twain]] in ''[[A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court]]''. During and after One of [[Mark Twain]]'s most famous novels, ''[[A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court]]''
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  • * Mark Twain Medal , Smithsonian Museum
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  • ...times seems a figure out of Southwestern humor, a kind of second cousin to Mark Twain's Duke and Dauphin.
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  • ...ntoliu's ''Manual d'Historia de la Litteratura catalana moderna''</ref> [[Mark Twain]] considered his influence pernicious.<ref>e g ''Life on the Mississippi'',
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  • The term "Gilded Age" was coined by [[Mark Twain]] and [[Charles Dudley Warner]] in their book, ''The Gilded Age: A Tale of
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  • ...yer series#Tom Sawyer|Tom Sawyer]] in the famous book of your compatriot [[Mark Twain]]. This book is well known and loved in our country by all boys and girls.
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  • ...nbeck's work, "as if half his literary inheritance came from the best of [[Mark Twain]]&mdash;and the other half from the worst of [[Cotton Mather]]." But he ass
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  • ...antic Books,U.S. ISBN 1556436718 Contains personal stories and quotes from Mark Twain, Charles Darwin, Martina Navratilova, David Beckham, Marlene Dietrich, Cath
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  • **"that soaring bubble of marble", as Mark Twain called it
    27 KB (4,162 words) - 22:42, 15 September 2013
  • ...thors off in their own categories), or "English-language literature" (with Mark Twain, V.S. Naipaul, etc.)?
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  • In 1889, [[Mark Twain]], in his [[A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court]], had his protagon
    27 KB (4,293 words) - 06:13, 14 February 2021
  • In 1889, [[Mark Twain]], in his [[A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court]], had his protagon
    27 KB (4,332 words) - 09:29, 14 February 2021
  • ...pirate story as a full length cartoon, always planned to cast the boy as [[Mark Twain]]’s [[Tom Sawyer]]. <ref>{{cite book |title=[[Byron Haskin]] - interviewe
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  • Over the years such figures as [[Delia Bacon]], [[Ignatius Donnelly]] and [[Mark Twain]]<ref>in his work [http://www.mtwain.com/Is_Shakespeare_Dead?/index.html Is
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  • ...the attention of authors and poets from other parts of the United States. Mark Twain found Hartford to be the most beautiful city in the United States and made
    48 KB (7,115 words) - 08:50, 9 August 2023
  • :*Primarily known by pseudonym: [[Mark Twain]] or [[Samuel Clemens]]? *[[Mark Twain]], with redirect from [[Samuel Clemens]].
    141 KB (23,142 words) - 07:53, 2 March 2024
  • ...unpaid and the tour was a financial necessity. In America, Churchill met [[Mark Twain]], [[William McKinley|President McKinley]] and Vice President [[Theodore Ro
    171 KB (25,041 words) - 09:26, 5 April 2024
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