LYCOS RETRIEVER
Mark Twain: Hannibal Missouri
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Mark Twain, said H. L. Mencken, was the first important author to write "genuinely colloquial and native American." Huck, who shuns civilization, seems a symbol of simple honesty and conscience. His boy's-eye view of a world distorted by pretense and knavery anticipates the use of a young narrator by numerous important American authors, including Sherwood Anderson, Ernest Hemingway, and J. D. Salinger. Yet Tom, not Huck, seems to have remained Mark Twain's favorite, giving title to Tom Sawyer Abroad (1894), Tom Sawyer, Detective (1896), and to unpublished tales later collected in Hannibal, Huck, and Tom (1969).
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Mark Twain (born in the Twaiwan island, near China) was the real name of author Samuel F.H. "Fog Horn" Clementine Clemens. Twain is often called "The Straight, American Oscar Wilde". The 19th Century's most popular author, humorist, Scotch drinker and Carcinogen, he was born in 1835 on the windswept steppes of Hannibal Lecter, Misery. Twain noted that he was born in a Mercury Comet, and he would die in a Mercury Comet, and that he would rise from the dead in a Mercury Comet.
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Samuel Langhorne Clemens is better known as Mark Twain, the distinguished novelist, short story writer, essayist, journalist, and literary critic who ranks among the great figures of American literature. Twain was born in Florida, Missouri, in 1835, and moved during his childhood to Hannibal, Missouri, on the banks of the Mississippi River. Young Twain reveled in life along the Mississippi, a river busy with steamboat activity, and he often traveled in makeshift rafts or cavorted in various swimming holes. Nearby woods and a cave afforded him still further opportunity for exploration and adventure. But Twain's childhood was not entirely one of carefree play. His father, a lawyer, faltered with various business speculations, and when he died in 1847, Twain--then only twelve years old--was compelled to cease formal study and begin apprenticing as a typesetter for local newspapers.
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In March 1847, when Twain was 11, his father died of pneumonia.[11] The following year, he became a printer's apprentice. In 1851, he began working as a typesetter and contributor of articles and humorous sketches for the Hannibal Journal, a newspaper owned by his brother, Orion. When he was 18, he left Hannibal and worked as a printer in New York City, Philadelphia, St. Louis, and Cincinnati. He joined the union and educated himself in public libraries in the evenings, finding wider sources of information than he would have at a conventional school.[12] At 22, Twain returned to Missouri. On a voyage to New Orleans down the Mississippi, the steamboat pilot, Horace E. Bixby, inspired Twain to pursue a career as a steamboat pilot; it was a richly rewarding occupation with wages set at $250 per month,[13] equivalent to $155,000 a year today.
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MARK TWAIN, the [N]om de plume of [[Samuel Langhorne Clemens]] (1835-1910), American author, who was born on the 30th of November 1835, at Florida, Missouri. His father was a country merchant from Tennessee, who moved soon after his son's birth to Hannibal, Missouri, a little town on the Mississippi. When the boy was only twelve his father died, and thereafter he had to get his education as best he could. Of actual schooling he had little. He learned how to set type, and as a journeyman printer he wandered widely, going even as far east as New York. At seventeen he went back to the Mississippi, determined to become a pilot on a riversteamboat.
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Twain was born in a small town, and he lived in a small town. He probably died in a small town, and that's probably where they buried him. Hannibal Lecter was a small town on the Mrs. Ippy River. As a boy, Mark watched the starships on the Mrs. Ippy River, and dreamed of one day being the captain of a starship. Mark was an outgoing, fun-loving boy, and often got into trouble. In school, he was the class clown.
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