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Who is Mark Twain

Mark Twain was born in Missouri and died on April 21, 1910, in Redding, Connecticut. He was an American humorist, journalist, lecturer, and novelist who became famous around the world for his travel writing, especially The Innocents Abroad (1869), Roughing It (1872), and Life on the Mississippi (1883), and for his stories about boyhood adventures, especially The Adventures of Tom (1885).

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Who is Mark Twain

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  1. Who is Mark Twain

  2. Who is Mark Twain • Mark Twain was born in Missouri and died on April 21, 1910, in Redding, Connecticut. He was an American humorist, journalist, lecturer, and novelist who became famous around the world for his travel writing, especially The Innocents Abroad (1869), Roughing It (1872), and Life on the Mississippi (1883), and for his stories about boyhood adventures, especially The Adventures of Tom (1885). 

  3. Youth • Samuel Clemens was born two months early and had bad health for the first ten years of his life. He was the six child of John Marshall and Jane Lampton Clemens. During those early years, his mother tried different allopathic and hydropathic treatments on him. His memories of those times, along with other memories from his childhood, would end up in Tom Sawyer and other works. Because he was sick, Clemens was often coddled, especially by his mother.

  4. Business Failures • If Clemens got his sense of humour from anyone, it would have been from his mother and not from his father. All accounts say that John Clemens was a serious man who rarely showed affection. There’s no doubt that his mood was affected by his worries about money, which were made worse by a string of business failures. • Read Also: victoriachlebowski

  5. Romantic Dreamer • Clemens was a romantic dreamer, and that’s why he liked to think about his childhood in Hannibal so much. In “Old Times on the Mississippi,” a book he wrote in 1875. He wrote that the village was a “white town sleeping in the sunshine of a summer morning” until a riverboat came along and made it a busy place. A young boy would have been impressed by the gamblers, stevedores, and pilots, as well as the loud rafts men and elegant travelers. They were all going somewhere glamorous and exciting, which would have sparked his already active imagination.

  6. Accident • Clemens wasn’t on the ship when the accident happened, but he thought it was his fault. His time as a cub and then as a full-fledged pilot taught him discipline and direction in a way that he might not have learned anywhere else. After only two weeks, during which the soldiers mostly ran away from rumors that Union troops were nearby, the group broke up. Some of the men joined other Confederate units, but most of them, including Clemens, went their separate ways.

  7. New York Newspapers • He was already getting known outside the territory. Some of his articles and sketches had been published in New York newspapers, and he was hired by the San Francisco Morning Call to cover Nevada. He moved from Virginia City to San Francisco and started working full-time for the Call. When he got tired of that work, he started writing for the Golden Era and Bret Harte’s new literary magazine, the Californian.

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