Mark Twain: One of America's Best Known and Best Loved Writers |
|
Written by Shelley Gollust |
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VOICE
ONE:
I’m
Barbara Klein.
VOICE
TWO:
And I’m
Bob Doughty with People in America in VOA Special English. Today we tell
about one of America’s best-known writers, Mark Twain. We also talk about
his famous book, “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”
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VOICE
ONE:
Mark
Twain wrote “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” in eighteen eighty-four.
Since then, the book has been published in at least sixty languages. Some
people say it is the best book ever created by an American writer.
American students still read “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.” And
parents, teachers and literary experts still debate the issues discussed in the
book.
VOICE
TWO:
The
writer who became Mark Twain was born Samuel Langhorne Clemens in eighteen
thirty-five. He grew up in Hannibal, Missouri on the Mississippi
River. After his father died in eighteen forty-seven, young Samuel went
to work as an assistant to a publisher. Ten years later, he became a
pilot on a steamboat that sailed on the Mississippi. He heard the
riverboat workers call out the words “mark twain!” That was a measure for
the depth of water.
In
eighteen sixty-one, the American Civil War put an end to steamboat traffic on
the Mississippi. So Clemens traveled west and became a reporter for
newspapers in Nevada and California.
VOICE
ONE:
Later,
he wrote funny stories and called himself Mark Twain. Twain became famous
for his story, “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” in eighteen
sixty-five. It tells about a jumping competition among frogs.
Twain
also traveled a lot and began writing books about his travels. His
stories about a trip to Europe and the Middle East were published in “The
Innocents Abroad.” And his stories about life in the western United
States became the book called “Roughing It.”
In
eighteen seventy, he married Olivia Langdon and moved to Hartford,
Connecticut. During the eighteen eighties, he wrote books for children,
such as “The Prince and the Pauper.” It tells about a poor boy who trades
identities with a member of England’s ruling family. Twain also wrote
“Life on the Mississippi.” This book describes his days as a steamboat
pilot and his return to the river twenty years later.
VOICE
TWO:
Mark
Twain was already a successful writer before he became famous as a public
speaker. Over the years, he had invested a lot of money in unsuccessful
businesses. In eighteen ninety-three, he found himself deeply in
debt. So to earn money, he traveled around the world giving humorous
talks. His speeches made people laugh and remember events they had
experienced.
However,
his later life was not a happy one. Two of his daughters died. His
wife died in nineteen-oh-four after a long sickness. Some critics think
Mark Twain’s later works were more serious because of his sadness. He
died of heart failure in nineteen ten.
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VOICE
ONE:
Mark
Twain was the first writer to use the speech of common Americans in his books.
He showed that simple American English could be as fine an instrument for great
writing as more complex language. Through his books, he captured American
experiences as no other writer had.
Many of
the stories take place in Hannibal, Missouri. The small wooden house
where he lived as a boy still stands there. Next to the house is a wooden
fence. It is the kind described in Twain's book, “The Adventures of Tom
Sawyer,” published in eighteen seventy-six.
In that
story, Tom has been told to paint the fence. He does not want to do
it. But he acts as if the job is great fun. He tricks other boys
into believing this. His trick is so successful that they agree to pay
him money to let them finish his work. “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” is
considered one of the best books about an American boy’s life in the eighteen
hundreds.
VOICE
TWO:
Tom
Sawyer's good friend is Huckleberry, or "Huck," Finn. Mark
Twain tells this boy's story in “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn.”
Huck is a poor child, without a mother or home. His father drinks too
much alcohol and beats him.
Huck's
situation has freed him from the restrictions of society. He explores in
the woods and goes fishing. He stays out all night and does not go to
school. He smokes tobacco.
Huck
runs away from home. He meets Jim, a black man who has escaped from
slavery. They travel together on a raft made of wood down the Mississippi
River. Huck describes the trip:
READER:
"It
was lovely to live on the raft. Other places seem so cramped up and smothery,
but a raft don't. You feel mighty free and easy and comfortable on a
raft... Sometimes we'd have that whole river to ourselves for the longest
time... We had the sky up there, all speckled with stars, and we used to lay on
our backs and look up at them, and discuss about whether they was made or only
just happened. Jim, he allowed they was made, but I allowed they
happened; I judged it would have took too long to make so many."
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VOICE
ONE:
Mark
Twain started writing “Huckleberry Finn” as a children's story. But it
soon became serious. The story tells about the social evil of slavery,
seen through the eyes of an innocent child. Huck’s ideas about people
were formed by the white society in which he lived. So, at first, he does
not question slavery. Huck knows that important people believe slavery is
natural, the law of God. So, he thinks it is his duty to tell Jim's
owners where to find him. Here is part of the story after Huck decides he
must do this.
READER:
"I
felt good and all washed clean of sin for the first time I had ever felt.
And I knowed I could pray now. But I didn't do it straight off, but laid
the paper down and set there thinking -- thinking how good it was all this
happened so, and how near I come to being lost and going to hell. And
went on thinking...
And I
see Jim before me all the time; in the day and in the night-time, sometimes
moonlight, sometimes storms, and we a-floating along, talking and singing and
laughing. But somehow I couldn't seem to strike no places to harden me
against him, but only the other kind."
VOICE
TWO:
Huck
comes to understand that Jim is a good man. He finds he cannot carry out
his plan to tell Jim’s owners where to find him. Instead, he decides to
help Jim escape. He decides to do this, even if God punishes him.
Huck's
moral search is part of Twain's humor. Huck's heart leads him to do the
right thing, even when everything he has been taught tells him it is
wrong. Huck's nature is good, but he has no idea of it. Twain tells
us more through Huck's voice than Huck himself knows.
VOICE
ONE:
It took
Mark Twain longer to write “The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn” than any of his
other books. He started writing in eighteen seventy-six, but put the
story away after about two years of work. He returned to it in eighteen
eighty-three. It was published the next year.
From
the beginning, the book was hotly debated. Some early critics praised its
realism and honesty. But the leading critics of Twain's time hated
it. They objected to the personality of Huck -- a rough, dirty and
disobedient boy.
They
were insulted by Twain’s attacks on the commonly accepted morals and traditions
of white society. And they disliked the way Twain used the language of a
common, uneducated person to tell the story. No writer had ever done that
before.
VOICE
TWO:
The
debate over “Huckleberry Finn” re-opened in recent years, but for different
reasons. The book uses the racist expressions of its time. So some
people say reading it is too painful and insulting for black children.
They
know that Twain was really attacking racism. But he attacked indirectly,
and with humor. So they feel young people will not understand what he was
attempting to do. A few American schools have banned the book for young
children. A few have banned it for all students. Some schools used
a version in which all racist words have been removed.
Other
people say young people can understand “Huckleberry Finn” if they study it with
a good teacher. They say the book remains one of the best denunciations
of racism ever written.
|
Ernest Hemingway |
VOICE
ONE:
There
is no longer any debate about the importance of “The Adventures of Huckleberry
Finn” in American literature. In nineteen thirty-five, Ernest Hemingway
wrote: “All modern American literature comes from one book by Mark Twain called
‘Huckleberry Finn.’ There was nothing before. And there has been
nothing as good since.”
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VOICE
TWO:
This
program was written by Shelley Gollust. Caty Weaver was our
producer. Doug Johnson read the part of Huckleberry Finn. I’m Bob
Doughty.
VOICE
ONE:
And I’m
Barbara Klein. Join us again next week for People in America in VOA
Special English.