MARK TWAIN (lid's costume is plain, simple, graceful, shapely and topped with brimless fur cap, often a black fur cape, hand- somer than sealskin; then there arc often fur borders to the clothing. The drevsses are short. This nipping air is delicious and gives everybody splendid rudely checks. The complexions are very fair among the girls and also darkish—half and half—English and French. The French went to church in troops and droves, from 8 till 9 this Sunday morning, and the English from 10 to n. Drove halfway to Falls of Montmorency, then came back and bought a photograph. The wind down on the low ground was mighty cold. The photograph is very satisfactory. I am so indolent, and all forms of study are so hateful to me, that although I was several years living constantly on steamboats 1 never learned all the parts of a steam- boat. The names of parts were in my ear daily whose office and locality I was ignorant of, and I never inquired the meaning of those names. For instance, I think I never saw the day when I could describe the marks on a lead line. I never knew what "in the run" meant—I couldn't find the run in a steamboat today and be sure I was right. After my first voyage at sea I never took any interest in knowing the parts of the ship. I cannot name two- thirds of the sails in a full-rigged ship; I do not know the names or functions of half a dozen ropes. The line "A wet sheet and a flowing sea" (wind?) has always been meaningless to me. I do not know whether a sail is meant, or the rope called a "sheet"—and I have never had energy enough to inquire. 160