Mark Twain, born Samuel Langhorne Clemens in 1835, led one of
the most exciting and adventuresome of literary lives. Raised in
the river town of Hannibal, Missouri, Twain had to leave school at
age twelve to seek work. He was successfully a journeyman printer,
a steamboat pilot, a halfhearted Confederate soldier (for a few
weeks), and a prospector, miner, a reporter in the western
territories. With the publication in 1865 of “The Celebrated
Jumping Frog of Calaveras County,” Twain gained national attention
as a frontier humorist, and with The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn
(1855), he was acknowledged by the literary establishment as one of
the greatest writers America would ever produce.
In 1880 Twain began promoting and financing heavily the ill-fated
Paige typesetter, an invention designed to make the printing
process fully automatic. This enterprise drained his energy and
funds for almost fifteen years, until it drove him to the brink of
bankruptcy. Ironically at the height of his naively optimistic
involvement in his technological “wonder,” he published his
satirical A Connecticut Yankee in King’s Arthur’s Court (1889), as
though the writer in him could see the dangers the investor in him
was blind to.
Toward the end of his life, plagued by personal tragedy and
financial failure, Mark Twain grew more and more pessimistic–an
outlook not alleviated by his natural skepticism and sarcasm.
Though his fame continued to widen. Twain spent his last years in
gloom and exasperation, writing fables about “the damned human
race.”
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