Page:Initials and pseudonyms, first series (Cushing).djvu/296

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Turdus Merula. ' Frau Emil von Quanten, who, under this name, has ob- tained a reputation as a translator.

Turkish Spy, A. Giovanni Paolo Marana. Letters writ by ... L. 1770. See"Mahmutthe Spy."

Turnham, Trevelyan, Esq. James Flamank. Tracings of men and things . . . L. 1854.

Tutor, A. William Jones, F.R.8. Let- ters ... to his pupils. L. 1780.

Tutor, and Fellow of a College in Oxford, A. Rev. Edward Bentham. A letter to a young gentleman, n.p. 1748

Tuvar, Lorenzo. Wilson Armistead. Tales and legends of the English lakes and mountains . . . Compiled by ... L. about 1855.

Twain, Mark. Samuel Langhorne Clemens. The Innocents abroad; and other works. 1871-85.

In 1877 the " San Franctsco (Gal ) Alta " pub- lished the following letter from Mr. Clemens to Mr. John A. McPherson of that city, in -which the former gentleman explains bow be came to adopt the pseudonym

" DBAS SIB, * Mark Twain ' was tbe nom de plume of one Capt. Isaiah Sellers, who used to write river news over it for tbe New Orleans Picayune.' He died in 1863, and as he could no longer need that signature, I laid violent hands upon it without asking permission of the propri- etor's remains. That is the history of the nom deplume I hear. Yours truly,

SAMUEL L. CLEMENS."


Twig, Timothy, Esq. Joseph Moser, Esq. The adventures of ... in a series of poetical epistles L. 1794.

Twig, Timothy, Esq. Alexander Campbell. The guinea note: a poem. Edinb. 1797.

Twist-wit, Christopher, Esq. Chris- topher Anstey. Madge's addresses to C. W., Esquire, Bath-laureat, and Miller's PLUMLA.N professor. L. 1777.

Twitcher, Jemmy. Lord Sandwich, the "Jemmy Twitcher" of the news- papers during the latter part of the last century,

Two Americans. Arthur and Augustus Beaumont. Adventures of . . in the siege of Brussels, September, 1830. By one of them. L. 1830.

Two Brothers. A. and George Henry Mooney. Sevastopol: our tent in the Crimea, L. 1856.

Two Brothers. Jfdius Charles and Augustus William Hare. Guesses at truth. L. 1827-48.

Two Brothers. Alfred and Charles Tennyson. Poems. L. 1827.

Two Candidates for the Bachelor's Degree. Theodore Parsons and Eliphalet Pearson. A forensic dispute on the legal-


ity of enslaving the Africans, held at the public Commencement in Cambridge,New England, July 21st, 1773. B. 1778.

Two Children Elaine and Dora Goodale. Verses by . N.Y 1878.

Two Clergymen. Rev. James Ell alt/ and Rev. A. S. Thelwall. Anti-mammon ; or, an exposure of the unscriptural state- ments of "Mammon" ... L. 1837

Two English Gentlemen. W. R+ and Eustace Chetwood. A tour through Ireland, in several entertaining letters. Dublin, 1748. See "N. & Q," 3d Ser., II, 148, 258.

Two Englishmen. Rivington and Hams. Reminiscences of America in 1869. L. 1870.

Two Friends. John James Piatt and William Dean Howells. Poems of ... N.Y. 1860.

Two Gentlemen of Harvard. John Tyler Wheelwright and Fiederic Jesup Stimson. Rollo's journey to Cambridge. B. 1880.

Two Merry Men Francis Edward Smedley and Edmund Hodgson Yates. Mirth and metre. By ... L. 1855.

Two Mounted Sentries. Lt.-Col. John Josiah Hort. The Horse Guards ... L. 1851

Two Oxford Men. Rev. Robert Ste- phen Hawker, M.A. A ride from Bude to Boss. By ... "Belgravia," lii. 328- 37 (1867).

Two Priests of the Church of Eng- land. John Mason Neale and Rev. Joseph Haskoll. The history and fate of sacrilege. Edited by ... L. 1853.

Two Private Soldiers. Lemuel Lyon and S. Haws. Military journals of ... 1758-1775 . . . Poughkeepsie, N.Y.> 1855.

Two Sisters. Madeline Wallace and Rosalind Dunlop. The timely retreat. By... L. 1858.

Two Sisters, The. Eliza and Sarah Gr. Walcott The two sisters' poems and memoirs. New Haven, 1830.

Two Sisters of the West. Mrs. Catherine Ann (Ware) Warfidd and Mrs. Eleanor Percy (Ware) Lee. Poems by ... NX 1843.

Two of themselves. Mrs. Elizabeth (Rundle) Charles. Chronicles of the Schbnberg-Cotta family, by ... L. 1864.

Tydus-Pooh-Pooh. Sir John Bow- ring, in the " Maclise Portrait Gallery."

" To a grateful and discerning public ... we- gladly submit the effigy of our MAN OP Ghsmrcrs . . . * Tydus-Pooh-Pooh, the translator of the poetry of the Sandwich Islands.'

"Further on in the pages of Fraser (vol. xxi.,.