MARK TWAIN stronger light, so that I could see her better. Beautiful little creature, with the dearest friendly ways and sin- cerity, and simplicity, and sweetnesses—the ideal princess of the fairy tales. She is 16 or 17, I judge. Kaltenleutgeben, May 27, '98. We have some insane customs, of course. All countries have insane customs. The stranger notices that they are insane—the native doesn't; he is used to them, hardened to them, they are matters of course to him. In Vienna when you take a flat you pay the rent twice a year in advance. In the country when you take a villa you pay the whole year in advance. "It may burn down the first night," you say, "what then?" The proprietor answers-— "I have other houses; you can have one of those." "It would not suit; we examined every house in the place—there is not another house that would begin to suit" "I should do the best I could for you." "The best you could do would be a long way from satisfactory." "One can but do one's best." "You don't suggest refunding the money." "It is not the custom." "When a man comes to the cure, he knows his term is six weeks, and he must be under the doctor's advice all the time. Does the doctor collect the whole fee in advance?" "Oh, no." "Why not?" "The man—" "Go on. You were going to say the man might die the first day." "Yes." "Just as the house might burn down." The Being who to me is the real God is the One who 360