The mention of Moncure Conway brings out this lurker. I lived in Fredericksburg, Va., near Falmouth, where Conway spent his youth. I'm intrigued by the link to Twain. Conway left Virginia in the 1850s for Cambridge, Mass., where he became friends with Ralph Waldo Emerson and joined the abolition movement. He later became a Unitarian minister in Washington, continuing his fight against slavery there. A recent story in the Fredericksburg Free Lance-Star newspaper by local historian Ruth Fitzgerald noted that Conway's activities weren't very popular back home. His father urged him not to visit: "Daring a return to Falmouth, he was ordered to leave that village of about 1,000. He was told he was spared being tarred and feathered only because of local respect for his family." After the war, Conway returned to give a speech. The Virginia Herald reported that he was warmly welcomed. In later writings, Conway mentioned that visit and the Falmouth boys who forced him to leave. Few were present that day, he said---"they were in Confederate graves." Works by Conway include "Addresses and Reprints," 1850-1907; "Autobiography, Memories and Experiences, Volumes I and II;" "Barons of the Potomack and the Rappahannock;" and "Testimonies Concerning Slavery." I've read little of them, but I think they're back on my reading list. Daryl Lease Fredericksburg