''' *TWAIN'-D* WHEN TEMPLE-'D '''
FROM A TO Z OF ENGLISH -one delightful truth to write about is *Mark Twain's* Damned Human Race.
The Adventures Of Huckleberry Finn, first published in America in January 1885, had always been in trouble.
According to Ernest Hemingway, it was the ''one book from which *all modern American literature* came, and contemporary critics and scholars have treated it as-
*One of the greatest American works of art*.
Of all Mark Twain's novels, it was also one that sold at its initial appearance.
On the other hand, it was condemned by many reviewers in Twain's time as grainy and by many commentators in our time as racist.
In 1885, it was banished from the shelves of the Concord Public Library, an act that attracted a lot of publicity and discussion in newspapers.
These days the good, the bad and the ugly are all just so camouflaged and the truths and untruths and utter straight and manipulative lies come as *mined ambushes* hard to differentiate.
As Yee all reminisce the year that had been, in the political scene, the world over, we had had ourselves inundated with incoherent statements from people in power making it difficult for all of us to distinguish falsities from facts.
The social media had not made it any easier, for which the repeated onslaughts, even lies are just not distinguishable.
In this context, something about Mark Twain comes to mind, ''If you tell the truth, you don't have to remember anything,'' and that is so true. Only with fabrication one needs the over-use of the memory power.
If we remember, an adventurer and wily intellectual, Mark Twain wrote the classic American novels:
*The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn*.
*It is he who said that he would not allow schooling to interfere with his education and in this context we have multiple degree holders holding high positions who have grown too big for humanity and hence all we have is sheer wastefulness*.
*If you read Twain's Huckleberry, you will understand that the novel is an ambitious and blunt examination of the society condemned with institutionalized acts of slavery, violence, bigotry and ignorance*.
The Adventure's of Huckleberry Finn, is the story of young boy, Huck, and runaway slave, Jim.
'The story picks up after the end of Twain's previous novel, The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, at the end of which Huck found a large sum of money.
The novel is an intense examination of the society that nurtured the writer and the two types of Southerners who largely populated the novel:
The ones who were grossly and adversely influenced by the environment and the better ones who only partly digressed from the path.
The protagonist and narrator of the novel, Huck is a 13 year old son of the local drunk of St Petersburg, Missouri, a town on the Mississippi River.
The boy is often seen as an outcast because of wayward ways that he did not have a polished education added to his denial of a decent rating from his country folk.
Notwithstanding that Huck is thoughtful and intelligent as we know, while he journeys through the novel
This reminds me of the incident in Bangalore, India on New Year's Eve, where young women gathering to usher in the New Year were physically and verbally abused by men.
The sad part of this is not the accident itself but the post-incident statement from a minister who unabashedly blamed the women for the turn of events.
He said donning of western clothing and adopting western culture were the cause and reason behind the attack. This lifted off a series of criticisms from women groups as well as from wise men, not necessarily educated, writes Bhavani Krishna Iyer.
Hence, in a cult system created by power hungry men, education is a shameful incongruity, rather, power alone speaks.
And in this masterly work of Mark Twain, one of the finest lessons Huck learns is that:
*Adults are not always right in their thinking and decisions and education does not necessarily buy men the power to act wisely*.
Instead, reasoning between right and wrong is one that comes with experience and exposure in life, and this is a theme we see repeatedly in Twain's Huckleberry Finn.
Best Wishes for the World, from !WOW! -the World Students Society, and Sam Daily Times ''the voice of the voiceless''.
And if you, Students, and, or the world, are short or lost on resolution, Try Humanity! That would be a great change for the better.
With respectful dedication to the Students, Professors and Teachers of the world. See Ya on !WOW! -the World Students Society and.........Twitter-!E-WOW! -the Ecosystem 2011:
''' The Shadows '''
Good Night and God Bless
SAM Daily Times - the Voice of the Voiceless
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