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    The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County

    by Mark Twain
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    (_underscores_ denote italics)

    [From _The Saturday Press_, Nov. 18, 1865. Republished in _The
    Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County, and Other Sketches_
    (1867), by Mark Twain, all of whose works are published by Harper &
    Brothers.]

    In compliance with the request of a friend of mine, who wrote me from
    the East, I called on good-natured, garrulous old Simon Wheeler, and
    inquired after my friend's friend, Leonidas W. Smiley, as requested to
    do, and I hereunto append the result. I have a lurking suspicion that
    _Leonidas W_. Smiley is a myth; and that my friend never knew such a
    personage; and that he only conjectured that if I asked old Wheeler
    about him, it would remind him of his infamous _Jim Smiley_, and he
    would go to work and bore me to death with some exasperating
    reminiscence of him as long and as tedious as it should be useless to
    me. If that was the design, it succeeded.

    I found Simon Wheeler dozing comfortably by the barroom stove of the
    dilapidated tavern in the decayed mining camp of Angel's, and I
    noticed that he was fat and bald-headed, and had an expression of
    winning gentleness and simplicity upon his tranquil countenance. He
    roused up, and gave me good-day. I told him a friend had commissioned
    me to make some inquiries about a cherished companion of his boyhood

    named _Leonidas W_. Smiley--_Rev. Leonidas W._ Smiley, a young
    minister of the Gospel, who he had heard was at one time a resident of
    Angel's Camp. I added that if Mr. Wheeler could tell me anything about
    this Rev. Leonidas W. Smiley, I would feel under many obligations to
    him.

    Simon Wheeler backed me into a corner and blockaded me there with his
    chair, and then sat down and reeled off the monotonous narrative which
    follows this paragraph. He never smiled, he never frowned, he never
    changed his voice from the gentle-flowing key to which he tuned his
    initial sentence, he never betrayed the slightest suspicion of
    enthusiasm; but all through the interminable narrative there ran a
    vein of impressive earnestness and sincerity, which showed me plainly
    that, so far from his imagining that there was anything ridiculous or
    funny about his story, he regarded it as a really important matter,
    and admired its two heroes as men of transcendent genius in _finesse_.
    I let him go on in his own way, and never interrupted him once.

    "Rev. Leonidas W. H'm, Reverend Le--well, there was a feller here once
    by the name of _Jim_ Smiley, in the winter of '49--or may be it was
    the spring of '50--I don't recollect exactly, somehow, though what
    makes me think it was one or the other is because I remember the big
    flume warn't finished when he first came to the camp; but any way, he
    was the curiousest man about always
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