Mark Twain — "There is nothing so annoying as to have two people go right on talking when you'…"
There is nothing so annoying as to have two people go right on talking when you're interrupting.
There is nothing so annoying as to have two people go right on talking when you're interrupting.
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"But the truth is, that when a Library expels a book of mine and leaves an unexpurgated Bible lying around where unprotected youth and age can get hold of it, the deep unconscious irony of it delights …"
"The test of any good fiction is that you should care something for the characters; the good to succeed, the bad to fail. The trouble with most fiction is that you want them all to land in hell togethe…"
"The trouble is not in dying for a friend, but in finding a friend worth dying for."
"Nothing is so annoying as to have two people talking at once, unless it is when no one will talk to you."
"Life: we laugh and laugh, then cry and cry, then feebler laugh, then die."
American humorist and inventor of the American vernacular novel; author of Huckleberry Finn (1884) and The Adventures of Tom Sawyer. Closely associated with William Dean Howells (his close friend, editor, and 'Dean of American Letters') and Bret Harte (early collaborator on Western frontier humor). For an intellectual contrast, see Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Christian Science movement — Twain's Christian Science (1907) is a 200-page sustained polemic against Eddy's claims of supernatural healing — the longest sustained attack of his career.
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