At the time Twain wrote this item, which appeared in the 1875 printing of sketches, the Irish composed the most recent wave of immigrants of any size, with the Chinese segment growing, especially after the 1867 treaty with china, but before the chinese exclusion act of 1881. Twain was well informed regarding the chinese immigration, through his california experiences and friendship with anson burlingame, an emissary and negotiator of the U.S. treaty with china, the subject of a twain editorial in an 1867 edition of the NY Herald Tribune(?). the sketch can be read as a wry comment on the substitution of one abused immigrant population for another. martin zehr, kansas city, missouri -------------- Original message ---------------------- From: Xilao Li <[log in to unmask]> > In "John Chinaman in New York"'[Sketches New and Old], the "exile" person > in front of the tea store answers, "Divil a cint but four dollars a week > and find > meself; but it's aisy, barrin' the troublesome furrin clothes that's so > expinsive." > How do we know it's Irish? Could someone shed light please? > > Xilao Li