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Page 16 text:
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N 1111 fr If 1 ff S xxxx m xxxx m xxxxxxxxxxxxx x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx x xxxxxx xxxxxxxx Q. X xxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx m x xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx m xxxxxx as xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxsxxxxx m xxxxm xxxxx m xxxg xxxxx xx xxxxxxxxxxxx xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx x gg HAME'S BEST 5 During his colorful lifetime, Mark Twain lived in a variety of houses: S from a house of two rooms to one of sixty rooms. 5 The house in which he was born was a small frame building of one Z storey. lt was composed of two rooms and lean-to kitchen. When Mark E 'l'wain was several months old, his father, john Clemens, built a more E commodious house than the first. The rooms were larger, and there was 3 S at least one extension for kitchen and dining-room uses. In the kitchen was N S a big fireplace with a wide hearth. lt was here the children. would gather X B, S after supper, and Uncle Ned, the man of all work, would tell hair-raising f X E tales of ha'nts, lonely roads, and witch-work that would make the chil- E S dren shiver with terror and delight. -It was not the most healthful entertain- S S mint bgit the kinddtoliculrvfate imagination that would one day create S 5 'om 'awyer an uc inn. 5 E The town did not flourish, and soon after the death of one of the children, f R S the Clemens family moved from Florida, Missouri, to Hannibal, a Mississippi X 1 5 River town. S i . E Because of his poor health, Mrs. Clemens took Samuel to spend the 3 N 3 summers on Uncle john Quarles' farm. The farm house was a big double Q S log building. In the corner of the yard, there were hickory and black wal- X S nut trees, and just over the fence was a rare place in which to wade. Big 3 E swings hung in the shady pasture. The family room of the house had a Q I 5 trundle-bed in one corner and a spinning wheel in the other. The vast fire- S X S place was usually piled high with logs, and the dogs and cat would lie S . E before it. Split-bottom chairs were placed here and there about the room. E E It was little Sam's delight to go to Uncle Iohn's. E S On their arrival in Hannibal, the Clemens family stayed at the Pavey S C 2 Hotel, but they moved twice in the next few years and finally occupied .a 2 new house which Judge Clemens had built on Hill Street. The house is 3 A i 2 still standing and is called the Mark Twain Home. N 5 After Mark Twain's marriage to Olivia Langdon., her father presented Q S them with a new mansion in Buffalo. It was beautifully and expensively Q 5 furnished. 5 S Mr. and Mrs. Clemens next decided to build a house in l'lartford,. Con- E necticut. The kitchen wing was in front, extending toward Farmington s E Avenue. Mark Twain always said this was done so that the maids would E not have to run around to the front to see a parade when it passed by. ' The X E 3 hall opened on a parlor, where there was a grand piano, and on to the dining- ........ E room and library, which in turn opened on a little conservatory. In the li- i brary, was an old carved mantel, which Mr. and Mrs. X S G M xxxx E W xxXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX Clemens had bought in Scotland, it had been saved SX E from an old castle. There was a mahogany room, rrist . ........... . ....................... ............ . .............. . .................. . ............. ............ ............................ . ........ . . . X s X N3
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Page 15 text:
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Page 17 text:
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