"Cliff Notes - Tom Sawyer" - читать интересную книгу автора (Cliff Notes)MARK TWAIN: THE AUTHOR AND HIS TIMES Mark Twain's life illustrates a point he makes in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer--that there is no single, simple formula for success. A school dropout at eleven, he spent twenty years in a variety of jobs. He was a typesetter, but, by his own admission, not a very good one. He piloted riverboats, but the Civil War put him out of work. He tried soldiering--and deserted. He spent a disastrous year mining gold and silver. In desperation, he became a newspaper reporter in Nevada. Running afoul of the law, he fled to San Francisco, found another newspaper job--and got fired. Twain was thirty now, and about this time he sat in his room, pointed a gun at his head, and contemplated pulling the trigger. It was a good thing he held back. For he soon discovered that he had a talent for "literature," as he wrote his brother, "of a low order--i.e., humorous." Over the next two decades, he wrote several books, which made him rich and world famous. Among those books were two of America's most important contributions to world literature: The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Sawyer--the boy who breaks every rule imaginable, longs for a romantic death, and ends up a rich and revered member of his community. How did Twain manage this feat? For an answer, you should take a close look at the man, his art, and the times in which he lived. Twain was born on November 30, 1835, in the frontier hamlet of Florida, Missouri. His parents named the sickly child, their fifth, Samuel Langhorne Clemens. (He adopted the pen name Mark Twain in 1863.) In 1839, John Clemens moved his family from their poor, two-room shack in Florida to Hannibal, Missouri, on the banks of the Mississippi River. Hannibal boasted only 450 citizens when they arrived, but the town seemed destined to thrive and raise the Clemens family's fortunes with it. Hannibal grew, but the Clemenses did not prosper. Although John Clemens became one of the town's most respected citizens, he went bankrupt, lost all his property in Hannibal, and died of pneumonia in 1847. Samuel was eleven at the time of his father's death. His mother, Jane Clemens, took him into the room where his father's coffin lay and made him promise to behave. "I will promise anything," Twain would remember saying, "if |
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