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Chapter 9 A WIND OF CHANCE

Word Count: 1416    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

St. Louis, where he remained until the following year, rooming with a youth named Burrough, a journeyman chair-make

Keokuk, Orion offered him five dollars a week and his board to remain. He accepted. Henry Clemens, now seventeen, was also in Orion's employ, and

cially, became a distinguished member of that body. He was never a great musician, but with his good nature, his humor, his slow, quaint speech and originality, he had no rival in popularity. He was twenty now, and much with young ladies, yet he was always a beau rather than a suitor, a good comrade to all, full of pranks an

ad a long rubber stem, something like the Turkish hubble-bubble. He liked to fill the big bowl and smoke at ease through the entire evening. But sometimes the pipe went out, which meant that he must strike a match and lean far over to apply it, jus

come

ead in the door. The

ou have, Sam

, and I'm in trouble. I want

ight it yourself

d be along in a few minute

a match, stooped do

you read

unny book. One of these days I'

n't, Sam," he said. "You're t

k, Mark Twain said that he supposed the most untruthful man in the

am got no wages at all, though this was of less consequence, since his mother, now living with Pamela, was well provided for. The disorder of the office, however, distressed him. He

through long evenings, and nightly made fabulous fortunes collecting cocoa and other rare things-resolving, meantime, to start in person for the upper Amazon with no unnecessary delay. Boy and man,

doing things and reflecting afterward . . . . When I am reflec

d be there at the head of an expedition, piling up untold wealth. He even stirred the imaginations of two othe

ermined to start to Brazil, if possible, in six weeks from now, in order to look carefully i

methods of raising it. One of them was to go to New York or Cincinnati and work at his trade until he saved the amount. He would then sail from New York direct, or take boat for

nt on reading Herndon, trying meantime to raise money enough to get him out of Keokuk. Was it fate or Providence that suddenly placed it in h

seven years later, it was the wind again that directed his fortune. It was a day in early November-bleak, bitter, and gusty, with whirling snow; most persons were indoors. Samuel Clemens, going down Main Street, Keokuk, saw a flyin

had always a troublesome conscience. He went to a newspaper off

t the owner would turn up and take away my fortune. By and by I couldn't stand it any longer. My c

e one assigned to him by his mother in childhood. As a matter of fact, he remained for an ample time, and nobody came for the money. What was its

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Contents

Chapter 1 THE FAMILY OF JOHN CLEMENS Chapter 2 THE NEW HOME, AND UNCLE JOHN QUARLES'S FARM Chapter 3 EDUCATION OUT OF SCHOOL Chapter 4 TOM SAWYER AND HIS BAND Chapter 5 CLOSING SCHOOL-DAYS Chapter 6 THE APPRENTICE Chapter 7 ORION'S PAPER Chapter 8 THE OPEN ROAD Chapter 9 A WIND OF CHANCE Chapter 10 THE LONG WAY TO THE AMAZON Chapter 11 RENEWING AN OLD AMBITION
Chapter 12 LEARNING THE RIVER
Chapter 13 RIVER DAYS
Chapter 14 THE WRECK OF THE PENNSYLVANIA
Chapter 15 THE PILOT
Chapter 16 THE END OF PILOTING
Chapter 17 THE SOLDIER
Chapter 18 THE PIONEER
Chapter 19 THE MINER
Chapter 20 THE TERRITORIAL ENTERPRISE
Chapter 21 MARK TWAIN
Chapter 22 ARTEMUS WARD AND LITERARY SAN FRANCISCO
Chapter 23 THE DISCOVERY OF THE JUMPING FROG
Chapter 24 HAWAII AND ANSON BURLINGAME
Chapter 25 MARK TWAIN, LECTURER
Chapter 26 AN INNOCENT ABROAD, AND HOME AGAIN
Chapter 27 OLIVIA LANGDON. WORK ON THE INNOCENTS
Chapter 28 THE VISIT TO ELMIRA AND ITS CONSEQUENCES
Chapter 29 THE NEW BOOK AND A WEDDING
Chapter 30 MARK TWAIN IN BUFFALO
Chapter 31 AT WORK ON ROUGHING IT
Chapter 32 IN ENGLAND
Chapter 33 A NEW BOOK AND NEW ENGLISH TRIUMPHS
Chapter 34 BEGINNING TOM SAWYER
Chapter 35 THE NEW HOME
Chapter 36 OLD TIMES, SKETCHES, AND TOM SAWYER
Chapter 37 HOME PICTURES
Chapter 38 TRAMPING ABROAD
Chapter 39 THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER
Chapter 40 GENERAL GRANT AT HARTFORD
Chapter 41 MANY INVESTMENTS
Chapter 42 BACK TO THE RIVER, WITH BIXBY
Chapter 43 A READING-TOUR WITH CABLE
Chapter 44 THE ADVENTURES OF HUCKLEBERRY FINN
Chapter 45 PUBLISHER TO GENERAL GRANT
Chapter 46 THE HIGH-TIDE OF FORTUNE
Chapter 47 BUSINESS DIFFICULTIES. PLEASANTER THINGS
Chapter 48 KIPLING AT ELMIRA. ELSIE LESLIE. THE YANKEE
Chapter 49 THE MACHINE. GOOD-BY TO HARTFORD. JOAN IS BEGUN
Chapter 50 THE FAILURE OF WEBSTER & CO. AROUND THE WORLD. SORROW
Chapter 51 EUROPEAN ECONOMIES
Chapter 52 MARK TWAIN PAYS HIS DEBTS
Chapter 53 RETURN AFTER EXILE
Chapter 54 A PROPHET AT HOME
Chapter 55 HONORED BY MISSOURI
Chapter 56 THE CLOSE OF A BEAUTIFUL LIFE
Chapter 57 MARK TWAIN AT SEVENTY
Chapter 58 MARK TWAIN ARRANGES FOR HIS BIOGRAPHY
Chapter 59 WORKING WITH MARK TWAIN
Chapter 60 DICTATIONS AT DUBLIN, N. H.
Chapter 61 A NEW ERA OF BILLIARDS
Chapter 62 LIVING WITH MARK TWAIN
Chapter 63 A DEGREE FROM OXFORD
Chapter 64 THE REMOVAL TO REDDING
Chapter 65 LIFE AT STORMFIELD
Chapter 66 THE DEATH OF JEAN
Chapter 67 DAYS IN BERMUDA
Chapter 68 THE RETURN TO REDDING
Chapter 69 THE CLOSE OF A GREAT LIFE
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