CXXXVI. "The Prince and the Pauper"
CXXXVII. Certain Attacks and Reprisals
CXXXIX. Financial and Literary
CXLI. Literature and Philosophy
CXLII. "Life on the Mississippi"
CXLIV. A Summer Literary Harvest
CXLV. Howells and Clemens Write a Play
CXLVII. The Fortunes of a Play
CXLVIII. Cable and His Great Joke
CLIII. Huck Finn Comes Into His Own
CLIV. The Memoirs of General Grant
CLVI. The Close of a Great Career
CLVII. Minor Matters of a Great Year
CLX. A Great Publisher at Home
CLXII. Browning, Meredith, and Meisterschaft
CLXIII. Letter to the Queen of England
CLXIV. Some Further Account of Charles L. Webster & Co.
CLXV. Letters, Visits, and Visitors
CLVXI. A "Player" and a Master of Arts
CLXVII. Notes and Literary Matters
CLXVIII. Introducing Nye and Riley and Others
CLXX. "The Prince and the Pauper" on the Stage
CLXXI. "A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court"
CLXXII. The "Yankee" in England
CLXXV. "The Claimant"—Leaving Hartford
CLXXIX. A Dinner With William II.
CLXXXI. Nauheim and the Prince of Wales
CLXXXIII. The Sieur de Conte and Joan
CLXXXIV. New Hope in the Machine
CLXXXV. An Introduction to H. H. Rogers
CLXXXVI. "The Belle of New York"
CLXXXVII. Some Literary Matters
CLXXXIX. An Eventful Year Ends
CXC. Starting on the Long Trail