Читать книгу The Prince and the Pauper (Illustrated Children's Classic) - Mark Twain - Страница 66
ОглавлениеII. The Fortunes of John and Jane Clemens
VII. The Little Town of Hannibal
X. Early Vicissitude and Sorrow
XIV. The Passing of John Clemens
XVIII. The Beginning of a Literary Life
XIX. In the Footsteps of Franklin
XXI. Scotchman Named MacFarlane
XXII. The Old Call of the River
XXV. Love-Making and Adventure
XXVI. The Tragedy of the "Pennsylvania"
XXXI. Over the Hills and Far Away
XXXIV. Territorial Characteristics
XLI. The Cream of Comstock Humor
XLIV. Governor of the "Third House"
XLVI. Getting Settled in San Francisco
XLVIII. The Refuge of the Hills
LII. A Commission to the Sandwich Islands
LIII. Anson Burlingame and the "Hornet" Disaster
LVII. Old Friends and New Plans
LVIII. A New Book and a Lecture
LXII. The Return of the Pilgrims
LXIII. In Washington—A Publishing Proposition
LXV. A Contract with Elisha Bliss, Jr.
LXVIII. The Rev. "Joe" Twichell
LXX. Innocents at Home—And "the Innocents Abroad"
LXXI. The Great Book of Travel
LXXII. The Purchase of a Paper
LXXIII. The First Meeting with Howells
LXXVI. On the Buffalo "Express"
LXXXI. Some Further Literary Matters
LXXXII. The Writing of "Roughing It"
LXXXV. A Birth, A Death, and A Voyage
LXXXVII. The Book that Was Never Written
XCII. Further London Lecture Triumphs
XCIII. The Real Colonel Sellers-Golden Days
XCV. An "Atlantic" Story and a Play
XCVIII. "Old Times on the Mississippi"
XCIX. A Typewriter, and a Joke on Aldrich
C. Raymond, Mental Telegraphy, Etc.
CI. Concluding "Tom Sawyer"—Mark Twain's "Editors"
CVI. His First Stage Appearance
CVII. Howells, Clemens, and "George"
CVIII. Summer Labors at Quarry Farm
CIX. The Public Appearance of "Tom Sawyer"
CX. Mark Twain and Bret Harte Write a Play
CXII. A New Play and a New Tale
CXIV. The Whittier Birthday Speech
CXVIII. Tramping with Twichell
CXXI. Paris, England, and Homeward Bound
CXXIII. The Grant Speech of 1879
CXXIV. Another "Atlantic" Speech
CXXV. The Quieter Things of Home
CXXVII. Letters, Tales, and Plans
CXXVIII. Mark Twain's Absent-Mindedness
CXXIX. Further Affairs at the Farm
CXXX. Copyright and Other Fancies
CXXXIII. The Three Fires—Some Benefactions
CXXXIV. Literary Projects and a Monument to Adam
CXXXV. A Trip with Sherman and an Interview with Grant
CXXXVI. "The Prince and the Pauper"
CXXXVII. Certain Attacks and Reprisals
CXXXIX. Financial and Literary
CXLI. Literature and Philosophy
CXLII. "Life on the Mississippi"
CXLIV. A Summer Literary Harvest
CXLV. Howells and Clemens Write a Play
CXLVII. The Fortunes of a Play
CXLVIII. Cable and His Great Joke
CLIII. Huck Finn Comes Into His Own
CLIV. The Memoirs of General Grant
CLVI. The Close of a Great Career
CLVII. Minor Matters of a Great Year
CLX. A Great Publisher at Home
CLXII. Browning, Meredith, and Meisterschaft
CLXIII. Letter to the Queen of England
CLXIV. Some Further Account of Charles L. Webster & Co.
CLXV. Letters, Visits, and Visitors
CLVXI. A "Player" and a Master of Arts
CLXVII. Notes and Literary Matters
CLXVIII. Introducing Nye and Riley and Others
CLXX. "The Prince and the Pauper" on the Stage
CLXXI. "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court"
CLXXII. The "Yankee" in England
CLXXV. "The Claimant"—Leaving Hartford
CLXXIX. A Dinner With William II.
CLXXXI. Nauheim and the Prince of Wales
CLXXXIII. The Sieur de Conte and Joan
CLXXXIV. New Hope in the Machine
CLXXXV. An Introduction to H. H. Rogers
CLXXXVI. "The Belle of New York"
CLXXXVII. Some Literary Matters
CLXXXIX. An Eventful Year Ends
CXC. Starting on the Long Trail
CXCI. Clemens Had Been Ill in Elmira with a Carbuncle
CXCII. "Following the Equator"
CXCIV. Winter in Tedworth Square
CXCV. "Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc".
CXCVI. Mr. Rogers and Helen Keller
CXCVII. Finishing the Book of Travel
CXCVIII. A Summer in Switzerland
CCIV. The Second Winter in Vienna
CCV. Speeches that Were Not Made
CCVIII. Mark Twain and the Wars
CCIX. Plasmon, and a New Magazine
CCXII. The Return of the Conqueror
CCXIII. Mark Twain—General Spokesman
CCXIV. Mark Twain and the Missionaries
CCXVI. Riverdale—A Yale Degree
CCXVII. Mark Twain in Politics
CCXVIII. New Interests and Investments
CCXX. Mark Twain and the Philippines
CCXXI. The Return of the Native
CCXXII. A Prophet Honored in His Country
CCXXIV. The Sixty-Seventh Birthday Dinner
CCXXV. Christian Science Controversies
CCXXVI. "Was It Heaven? Or Hell?"
CCXXVII. The Second Riverdale Winter
CCXXXIX. The Last Summer at Elmira
CCXXXI. The Close of a Beautiful Life
CCXXXIII. Beginning Another Home
CCXXXIV. Life at 21 Fifth Avenue
CCXXXV. A Summer in New Hampshire
CCXXXVIII. The Writer Meets Mark Twain
CCXXXIX. Working With Mark Twain
CCXL. The Definition of a Gentleman
CCXLI. Gorky, Howells, and Mark Twain
CCXLII. Mark Twain's Good-By to the Platform
CCXLIII. An Investment in Redding
CCXLIV. Traits and Philosophies
CCXLVI. The Second Summer at Dublin
CCXLVIII. "What is Man?" And the Autobiography
CCLIII. An Evening With Helen Keller
CCLVII. A True English Welcome
CCLVIII. Doctor Of Literature, Oxford
CCLX. Matters Psychic And Otherwise
CCLXI. Minor Events and Diversions
CCLXII. From Mark Twain's Mail
CCLXIII. Some Literary Luncheons
CCLXIV. "Captain Stormfield" in Print
CCLXIX. First Days at Stormfield
CCLXXI. Death of "Sam" Moffett
CCLXXII. Stormfield Adventures
CCLXXIII. Stormfield Philosophies
CCLXV. A Mantel and a Baby Elephant
CCLXXVI. Shakespeare-Bacon Talk
CCLXXVII. "Is Shakespeare Dead?"
CCLXXVIII. The Death of Henry Rogers
CCLXXIX. An Extension of Copyright
CCLXXXI. The Last Summer at Stormfield
CCLXXXIII. Astronomy and Dreams
CCLXXXV. A Wedding at Stormfield
CCLXXXVII. Mark Twain's Reading
CCLXXXVIII. A Bermuda Birthday