Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from Artemus Ward (Charles Farrar Browne): A Biography and Bibliography
V. Nasby, of humorous fame, and had also been neighbors of my father in his youth, when the senior Locke owned a farm near that tilled by his own people. The print-shop into which Artemus had fallen was that of the Seneca Advertiser, still existing. Furthermore, the Cleveland Plain Dealer, in whose Office the wan derer first found fame, was a household word in our part of Ohio. It seems strange that 'way down In Maine it should have been my fortune to bring together these incidental con tact.letters, written to Charles A. Shaw, of Boston, who told me they contained much that was funnier than any thing ever printed from the pen of A. W. He said he had given them to Mrs. Shaw, who cherished the idea of making a book out of the material, and he would have to await her pleasure. He died in 1908. Mrs. Shaw survived until 1916, but after her death, though most diligently sought, no trace of the letters could be found.
I write, therefore, belatedly and to a new generation, more for the purpose of adding to the annals of Amer ican literature than of reaching a wide circle, and of giving to present-day readers some record of the life and personality of the gentle jester at whose out pourings their fathers and grandfathers laughed so uproariously.
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