MARK TWAIN writers I ever read. The book merits its enormous success simply as literature-" My books arc water; those of the great geniuses are wine. Everybody drinks water. What is biography? Unadorned romance. What is ro- mance? Adorned biography. Adorn it less and it will be better than it is. Special Providence! That phrase nauseates me—with its implied importance of mankind and triviality of God. In my opinion these myriads of globes are merely the blood corpuscles ebbing and flowing through the arteries of God and we but animalcule that infest them, disease them, pollute them; and God does not know we are there and would not care if He did. Nine-tenths of the pages of his notebooks now are filled with comments, estimates, and the like concerning the machine, but occasionally he has a diversion like this: August 31, 1886. Revealed to Livy my project of buy- ing the remains of Christopher Columbus and placing them in the base of the Statue of Liberty Enlightening the World in New York Harbor. No—rotunda of the Capitol at Washington, In Wales the parson came to collect tithes. The farm- er's wife said—"Parson, I have eleven children—will you take one of them? You take the tenth pig, will you have the tenth child?" And is "tithes" a tenth of all a man's crop alive and otherwise? However, call it a tenth of the animal crop of live stock only, and think what a frightful tax it is on a poor man. It does leave a gap as if one of his family had 190