1890.
(See Chapters clxxii to clxxiv.)
Letter to Andrew Lang about English Criticism. (No important literary matters this year. Mark Twain engaged promoting the Paige typesetting-machine.)
1891.
(See Chapters clxxv to clxxvii.)
American claimant (Hartford) syndicated;
also book (Webster & Co.), May,
1892. U. E.
European letters to New York Sun.
Down the Rhone (unfinished).
Kornerstrasse (unpublished).
1892.
(See Chapters clxxx to clxxxii.)
The German Chicago (Berlin—Sun.)
U. E.
All kinds of ships (at sea).
U. E.
Tom Sawyer abroad (Nauheim)—St.
Nicholas, November, ’93, to April, ’94.
U. E.
Those extraordinary twins (Nauheim).
U. E.
Pudd’nhead Wilson (Nauheim and Florence)—Century,
December, ’93, to
June, ’94 U. E.
$100,000 Bank-note (Florence)—Century,
January, ’93. U. E.
1893.
(See Chapters clxxxiii to clxxxvii.)
Joan of arc begun (at Villa Viviani, Florence) and completed up to the raising of the Siege of Orleans. Californian’s tale (Florence) Liber Scriptorum, also Harper’s. Adam’s diary (Florence)—Niagara Book, also Harper’s. Esquimau MAIDEN’S romance—Cosmopolitan, November. U. E. Is he living or is he dead?—Cosmopolitan, September. U. E. Traveling with A reformer—Cosmopolitan, December. U. E. In defense of Harriet Shelley (Florence)—N. A.—Rev., July, ’94. U. E. Fenimore Cooper’s literary offenses—[This may not have been written until early in 1894.]—(Players, New York)—N. A. Rev., July,’95 U. E.
1894.
(See Chapters clxxxviii to cxc.)
Joan of arc continued (Etretat and
Paris).
What Paul Bourget thinks of
us (Etretat)—N. A. Rev., January,
’95 U. E.
Tom Sawyer abroad—book (Webster
& Co.), April. U. E.
Pudd’nhead Wilson—book
(Am. Pub. Co.), November. U. E.
The failure of Charles L. Webster & Co., April 18.
The derelict—poem (Paris) (unpublished).
1895.
(See Chapters clxxxix and cxcii.)
Joan of arc finished (Paris), January
28, Harper’s Magazine, April to
December.
Mental telegraphy again—Harper’s,
September. U. E.
A little note to Paul Bourget.
U. E.
Poem to Mrs. Beecher (Elmira) (not published).
U. E.
Lecture-tour around the world, begun at Elmira, July
14, ended July 31.
1896.
(See Chapters cxci to cxciv.)