Experience of the McWilliamses with Membranous Croup

Submitted by scott on Wed, 07/27/2011 - 00:17
p085

I had only a single guest, Varooka, during this reading. She's a great fan, however, so I read her this one sketch. This tale is included in the volume Sketches New and Old, published in 1875.

Political Economy

Submitted by scott on Mon, 07/25/2011 - 00:01
p021

A sketch from the volume Sketches New and Old. Mark buys more lightning rods than are necessary. The consequences are rather spectacular.

Roughing It - Chapter 60

Submitted by scott on Wed, 07/20/2011 - 12:51
The Old Collegiate

All about "Pocket Mining". Life in the foothills of Tuolumne after the gold rush.

Roughing It - Chapter 59

Submitted by scott on Wed, 07/20/2011 - 12:45
Slinking

Mark hits bottom, financially, but finds a companion in a like situation who has a strange adventure in poverty.

Roughing It - Chapter 58

Submitted by scott on Sun, 07/17/2011 - 22:57
The Grace of a Kangaroo

Mark lived the high life of a social butterfly for a short time, then the silver mine stocks collapsed. This is followed by the San Francisco Earthquake of October 1865. We are treated to some strangely humorous descriptions of the havoc caused.

Roughing It - Chapter 57

Submitted by scott on Sun, 07/17/2011 - 22:47
Fetch Her Out

We get a description of the gold rush population and an anecdote about one missing part of that population, the arrival of a woman. We are also treated to an anecdote about the meeting of a miner and a small child in the streets of San Francisco.

Roughing It - Chapter 56

Submitted by scott on Tue, 07/12/2011 - 15:07
An Eastern Landscape

Mark enters California but it compare unfavorably for him to New England. It's okay from a distance but he thinks it monotonous close up.

Roughing It - Chapter 55

Submitted by scott on Tue, 07/12/2011 - 14:58
An Old Friend

Mark is tired of the Nevada Territory and decides to go to California. His last look at Mt Davidson reminds him of the day that the Union forces defeat the Confederate forces at Gettysburg. The flag on the top of Mt Davidson seems to signal this event but no one knows because of a journalistic monopoly that dictates all news of the East must first be printed in California papers.