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F E E L A T H O M E www.azindiatimes.com PAGE - 23 Jan 2019 1-844-AZINDIA Weight Management Clinic 2051 W Warner rd, #5 Chandler , AZ 85224 480-855-0425 Vanquish Me - Nonsurgical Fat removal Exilis ultra - skin tightening Cellutone - cellulite reduction Prescribed Stimulant appetite suppressants All–natural non-stimulant appetite suppressants HCG weight loss Better faster fat reduction , body contouring and improved skin texture Mark Twain and his ‘Pet’ Collections Mark Twain, whose real name was Samuel Clem- ens , was one of the world’s most influential writers. His books, including The Adventures of Huckle- berry Finn , continue to be studied in high school classrooms and university lecture halls all over the world. But Mark Twain the man was a little bit… odd. According to The Paris Review , the author devel- oped a rather strange habit when he turned 70. The Tom Sawyer writer began “collecting” young, un- derage girls who he referred to as his “ angelfish ”. He publicly defended the move, telling people who asked that he just longed for his own grandchildren. His daughters were grown up by then and his favour- ite daughter, Susy, had already passed away. “ As for me ,” Twain wrote three years later. “ I collect pets: young girls – girls from 10 to 16 years old; girls who are pretty and sweet and naive and inno- cent – dear young creatures to whom life is a perfect joy and to whom it has brought no wounds, no bit- terness, and few tears. ” The Clemens home in Redding, Connecticut was known as "Innocence at Home" in honor of the an- gelfish. It was later renamed "Stormfield." It all began when a 15-year-old girl named Gertrude Natkin saw Twain leaving Carnegie Hall on Decem- ber 27, 1905, after a matinee performance. The teen- ager went up and spoke to the famous author and shook his hand. The next day she sent him a thank you letter. “ I am very glad I can go up and speak to you now… as I think we know each other,” she wrote. “I am the little girl who loves you. ” Twain replied, calling himself Gertrude’s “oldest and latest conquest”, and they continued to exchange flir- ty letters until Gertrude turned 16 and Twain turned his attention to younger girls. By 1908, Twain had “collected” 10 schoolgirls who he referred to as his “ angelfish ”. He gave them mem- bership to his “ Aquarium Club ” and had enamel lapel pins designed for them to wear on their left breasts – just above their hearts. “ The Bermudian angelfish, ” Twain said in an auto- biographical dictation in April 1908, “ with its splen- did blue decorations, is easily the most beautiful fish that swims, I think. So I thought I would call my ten pets angelfishes, and their club, the Aquarium .” Twain spent large amounts of time writing letters to his angelfish and inviting them to spend time at his mansion in Redding, Connecticut. “ I have built this house largely, indeed almost chief- ly, for the comfort & accommodation of the Aquar- ium ,” he said in a document he sent to the angelfish. On a ship returning from a trip to England, Twain befriended a nine-year-old girl named Dorothy Quick (picture below). The pair were inseparable throughout the trip, and Dorothy was often spotted with her head resting against Twain’s shoulder. Later that year Twain’s daughter, Clara, returned from a European concert tour and put an end to her father’s new obsession. She renamed the house Stormfield and stopped the angelfish from visiting. Just two years later, in 1910, Twain died of a heart attack. He went on to be regarded as one of the most bril- liant literary minds and his obsession with adoles- cent girls was rarely mentioned. Conclusion: Samuel Clemens enjoyed the company of women of all ages. Many of his "angel-fish" were accompanied by their mothers or a governess when they visited him -- providing additional female com- panionship. His correspondence with them and the entertaining of them in his homes and abroad pro- vided him a release from loneliness that often sur- rounded him after members of his own family had died or embarked on separate careers. Clemens was an author with a compulsion to write and many of his young correspondents provided him with an outlet for his playful expressions, thoughts and phrasings that would have otherwise been repressed and lost -- expressions that now remain insights into the crea- tive mind of his genius. Gleaned from Internet For further reference visit: http://www.twain - quotes.com/angelfish/angelfish.html Extraordinary Tales

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