Mark, thanks for the post. Here are some entries for my nearly completed volume 1 of Mark Twain Day-by-Day which is slated to publish later this year. It seems that there has been controversy on the exact date that Sam met Livy, but I come down on Dec. 27th as the date: December 27 Friday, Sam accepted an invitation from the Langdons for dinner at the St. Nicholas Hotel. There he met Olivia Louise Langdon, his wife to be. That first meeting was Dec. 27, 1867, and the next one was at the house of Mrs. Berry, five days later. Miss Langdon had gone there to help Mrs. Berry receive New Year guests [MTL 2: 145 n3]. Sanborn claims their first meeting was on New Year's Day, and the second was at the St. Nicholas Hotel, on either Jan. 2 or 3,and that they went to a Dickens reading, but Sam recalled Dickens reading David Copperfield [380]. The only evening Dickens read that work was Dec. 31 [MTL 2: 146 n3]. Skandera-Trombley admits to the controversy involving the exact date, and points to Dec. 31 as their day of meeting [p. xx]. Sam's article Facts Concerning the Recent Resignation ran in the New York Tribune [Camfield, bibliog.]. December 29 Sunday, Sam's Holy Land Excursion. Letter from Mark Twain Number Thirty-two dated Sept. at Banias ran in the Alta California [McKeithan 204-8]. December 30 Monday, Sam wrote from New York to the Brooklyn Eagle, responding to an article Trouble among the Pilgrims, which had appeared on Dec. 24. In your issue of the 24 inst , you called upon me, as upon a sort of Fountain-head of Facts (an intimation which touched the very marrow of my ambition, and sent a thrill of ecstasy throughout my being), to pour out some truth upon the Quaker City muddle, which Captain Duncan and Mr. Griswold have lately stirred up between them, and thus so rectify and clarify that muddle, that the public can tell at a glance whether the Pilgrims behaved themselves properly or not during the progress of the recent excursion around the world [MTL 2: 139-143; Brooklyn Eagle p3, online]. Sam then proceeded to masterfully illustrate how easily a lie can be spread by citing the oppositeE28094to wit, how Captain Duncan repeatedly did not show up drunk at breakfast. Sam was terrific at making light of quarrels, a nd he loved to stir some people up. Plus, he'd held back about Duncan throughout the voyage and didn't need much of an excuse to blast away. (See Jan 2, 1868 entry for Duncan's immediate reply.) December 31 Tuesday, Sam's article on Duncan appeared in the Brooklyn Eagle. That evening Sam went with the Langdons to Charles Dickens' read from David Copperfield at Steinway Hall in New York. Sam noted that Dickens not only read, but acted, an important lesson Sam noted about successful platform speakers. It is probable this is the day Sam met Olivia. (In 1906 Sam recalled the date as December 27, but in 1907 remembered the Dickens reading of Copperfield, which only took place on the 31st.) [MTL 2:146 n3; Powers, MT A Life 229n]. David H Fears