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Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain)

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Biographies are but clothes and buttons of the man — the biography of the man himself cannot be written.
--
Vol. I, p. 2.

 
Samuel Langhorne Clemens (Mark Twain)

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Then she generated the light, and the sight of her room, flooded with radiance and studded with electric buttons, revived her. There were buttons and switches everywhere — buttons to call for food for music, for clothing. There was the hot-bath button, by pressure of which a basin of (imitation) marble rose out of the floor, filled to the brim with a warm deodorized liquid. There was the cold-bath button. There was the button that produced literature. and there were of course the buttons by which she communicated with her friends. The room, though it contained nothing, was in touch with all that she cared for in the world.

 
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