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Add to My Citations To Moncure D. Conway
10 December 1873 • London, England
(Paraphrase: AAA 1925, lot 27, UCCL 11886)
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A. L. S. One page 12 mo, Dec. 10, no year. Signed,—“Mark.” To Moncure D. Conway, saying his book will be issued soon and asking him to [exchange.] 1

Explanatory Notes | Textual Commentary

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1 Clemens replied to the following note from Conway, written on Wednesday, 10 December (CU-MARK):
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For the club invitation see 16 Dec 73 to Colborne, n. 1. Conway’s “big book” was The Sacred Anthology: A Book of Ethnical Scriptures (London: Trübner and Co.), announced in the Publishers’ Circular for 17 January 1874 (“New Works,” 8). It comprised a selection of writings from Eastern religions, intended, as Conway later explained, to “provide thoughtful readers with some idea of the ethical and religious geography, so to say, of the world; and also to provide myself with a book of ethnical scriptures from which to read lessons from my pulpit.” The book was a popular success, earning Conway good profits even though he published it at his own expense (Conway 1904, 2:329, 332). Clemens acquired a copy of the book, presumably from Conway in exchange for The Gilded Age (MTB, 3:1584). Sir Samuel White Baker (1821–93), a well-known adventurer and explorer, had recently returned from a four-year term in the service of the Egyptian government as governor-general of the Equatorial Nile basin. He was honored at a reception by the Royal Geographical Society on the evening of 8 December, at which Albert Edward, the Prince of Wales, delivered “a few words of welcome” (“Sir Samuel Baker’s Expedition,” London Morning Post, 9 Dec 73, 5).



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Paraphrase, AAA 1925, lot 27.

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