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Mon, 27 Jan 2025 19:47:14 -0800 |
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Found in a Day By Day entry for July 18, 1902: Sam wrote a letter to an
unidentified person.
York Harbor, July 18.—Dear Sir.—I thank you very much. That book is even
more flatteringly isolated than was one a stranger wrote me about, years
ago, from the Far West. He said: ‘In a 400-mile horseback ride through
the cattle domain I found but a solitary two books among the
cowboys—“The Innocents Abroad” and the Bible.’ And he added, ‘The Bible
was in good condition.’—Very truly yours, Mark Twain.
That "stranger" was Jack Van Nostrand, a fellow traveler on the Quaker
City. He had written to Sam in 1875. “Jack Van Nostrand to SLC, 29 June
1875 · Manitou, Colo., (UCLC 32191).”
--
/*Unaffiliated Geographer and Twain aficionado*/
Visit B. Scott Holmes <https://bscottholmes.com>
Twain's Geography <https://twainsgeography.com>
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