Mark Twain's Work
Writing Habits
Samuel Clemens had a tough time finishing the books he wrote. In the middle of The Adventures of Tom Sawyer “the story made a sudden and determined halt and refused to proceed another step,” he reported. He stuffed unfinished manuscripts into pigeonhole cabinets in his study. “My tank had run dry; it was empty; the stock of materials in it was exhausted.…I made the great discovery that when the tank runs dry you’ve only to leave it alone and it will fill up again in time, while you are asleep.”
Writing for Clemens was a year-round occupation, but he was far more productive during the summer months. He found refuges for writing. At home in Hartford, he moved from his study to a Carriage House office, and then to the billiard room, and finished A Connecticut Yankee at King Arthur’s Court at a friend’s house nearby. In Elmira, New York, he had the elegant study on a hilltop that his sister-in-law provided. In Saranac Lake, New York, he had a “writing tent.” In York Harbor, Maine, a friend reported, “he had taken a room in the house of a friend and neighbor, a fisherman and boatman; there was a table where he could write, and a bed where he could lie down and read.”
“I do not claim that I can tell a story as it ought to be told,” Samuel Clemens wrote in 1897. “I only claim to know how a story ought to be told, for I have been almost daily in the company of the most expert story-tellers for many years.”
Clemens was heavily influenced in his work by the people of the Mississippi River valley where he grew up, which had a long tradition of tales, brags, and word-duels. In particular, there were the tales told around the fire by Daniel Quarles (who carried the last name of his enslaver, Clemens’s uncle) during the author’s boyhood summers. In later years, when the family summered in Elmira, New York, Twain credits Mary Ann Cord, another formerly enslaved person, as the source of “A True Story,” published in 1875.
At home in Hartford, Samuel continued to practice his storytelling craft– he used the nightly tales he told his daughters— he was required to use every object on the library mantelpiece in them—as five-finger exercises for his greater narratives.
His Elmira Study
In the spring of 1874, while the Clemenses’ house in Hartford was under construction, they traveled to Elmira and found a surprise: On a knoll about 100 feet from the Quarry Farm farmhouse Susan Crane had built an elegant octagonal study for Samuel Clemens to use for writing during the family’s summer visits.
The structure looked as if it had been detached from their Hartford residence and moved to Elmira’s hills. In fact, the architect was Alfred H. Thorp, who had worked with the Hartford house’s architect, Edward Tuckerman Potter. The structure’s shape and woodwork, and the jigsaw work around the edge of the roof echoed the shape and detail of the prominent billiard-room balcony in the house in Hartford.
Clemens found the study a lofty refuge: “It sits in perfect isolation on top of an elevation that commands leagues of valley & city & retreating ranges of distant blue hills…& when the storms sweep down the remote valley & the lightning flashes among the hills beyond, & the rain beats upon the roof over my head, imagine the luxury of it!”
Clemens went to the study at 10 in the morning and remained until 5, skipping lunch. He wrote to a friend in 1875: “I can write ten chapters in Elmira where I can write one here [in Hartford]. I work at work here, but I don’t accomplish anything worth speaking of.”
Mark Twain's study is now on the ground of Elmira Colleage and is cared for by the Center for Mark Twain Studies.
1869 The Innocents Abroad
Mark Twain’s account, adapted from his own newspaper reports, of his adventures traveling through Europe and the Middle East with other Americans. Voyaging on the steamship Quaker City, the sightseers first make stops in Europe, including Paris, Milan‚ Venice, Florence‚ Rome and Athens. Their journey culminates in an extended trip through the Holy Land and Egypt. Throughout the book, Twain lampoons the meeting of these pilgrims from the New World filled with a pretentious reverence and awe with the hallowed culture of the Old World, often represented by Twain as not equaling its reputation.
1872 Roughing It
In 1861, a 25 year-old Samuel Clemens, having left his job as a riverboat pilot on the Mississippi River because of the outbreak of the Civil War, set out by stagecoach with his older brother, Orion, for the Nevada Territory. Roughing It, part autobiography, part travelog, part tall tale, is Twain’s account of the people and places he experienced when he and the American West still were young.
1873 The Gilded Age
The Gilded Age, which Twain wrote in collaboration with his Hartford neighbor Charles Dudley Warner, gave its name to the mood of materialistic excess and cynical political corruption that started with the Grant administration in 1869 and prevailed into the 1870s and beyond. To be “gilded” is to be coated in gold, so the phrase “The Gilded Age” refers directly to the opulent tastes and jaded sensibilities of America’s wealthy during this period.
1876 The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
From the Preface: “Most of the adventures recorded in this book really occurred; one or two were experiences of my own, the rest those of boys who were schoolmates of mine. Huck Finn is drawn from life; Tom Sawyer also, but not from an individual – he is a combination of the characteristics of three boys whom I knew, and therefore belongs to the composite order of architecture… Part of my plan has been to try to pleasantly remind adults of what they once were themselves, and of how they felt and thought and talked, and what queer enterprises they sometimes engaged in.”
1880 A Tramp Abroad
The third of the five travel books authored by Mark Twain. A Tramp Abroad contains the experiences of Twain’s “walking” tour of Germany‚ Switzerland, and France. Typical of Twain’s style in drafting travel novels‚ A Tramp Abroad places Twain as the narrator of an oftentimes uninformed American tourist visiting and discovering the mysteries of the European continent – a wonderful satire for those who have visited Europe or are planning a trip to “the continent.”
1881 The Prince and the Pauper
Edward Tudor and Tom Canty are the same age and share the same features, but one of them is a pauper’s child and the other is the heir to the throne of England. When chance brings the boys together, they decide for fun to switch clothes, but fate suddenly casts them into each other’s worlds. Tom learns what is to be caught in the pomp and folly of the royal court and the young prince learns what it is to survive in the lower depths of 16th-century English society. Through the switched identities Mark Twain fashioned both a scathing attack on social hypocrisy and injustice, and an irresistible comedy imbued with the sense of spirited play that belongs to this creative period.
1883 Life on the Mississippi
This was Mark Twain’s seminal work on the river that gave birth to much of his most successful fiction. Entertaining‚ yet enlightening‚ Life on the Mississippi is a textbook on the history‚ life and lore of the Great River during the 19th century‚ but also a primer on the “science” of the piloting the Mississippi during the heyday of the great steamboats that once traveled the greatest inland waterway of America.
1884 Adventure of Huckleberry Finn
Mark Twain’s classic novel‚ Adventures of Huckleberry Finn‚ tells the story of a teenage misfit who finds himself floating on a raft down the Mississippi River with an escaping slave‚ Jim. In the course of their perilous journey, Huck and Jim meet with adventure, danger, and a cast of characters who are sometimes menacing and often hilarious. Although the story was mostly written in the 1880s, it is set in the time of slavery prior to the Civil War. Twain uses Huck’s predicaments to illustrate the failure of reconstruction in the post-Civil War South.
1889 A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court
Hank Morgan, superintendent at the Colt Firearms Factory in Hartford‚ Connecticut‚ is knocked unconscious in a fight. He wakes up in the time of King Arthur. Hank introduces such innovations as schools, factories, and gunpowder. At first, Hank is convinced that his ideas will do the citizens of Arthur’s court good, but as he takes command he turns more and more to violence and loses control of the results of his entrepreneurial efforts. A Connecticut Yankee was one of the last large-scale novels Mark Twain produced and its dark‚ cynical themes foreshadow ideas he would delve into more deeply in much of his later work.
1893/1905 The Diaries of Adam and Eve
Extracts from Adam’s Diary (1893) is a witty and whimsical look at the Biblical creation story and Adam’s adventures as he explores his new world. Twain uses this work as a forum to express his irreverent thoughts on conventional religion. By contrast‚ Eve’s Diary (1905) is Twain’s tribute to his beloved wife‚ Olivia. The story from Eve’s viewpoint speaks eloquently of kindness and human goodness – overall a commentary on Olivia’s gentle nature. Adam’s last words at Eve’s grave are: “Wheresoever she was, there was Eden.”
1894 The Tragedy of Pudd’nhead Wilson
A murder mystery set in a town on the Mississippi featuring strong and weak characters‚ some black and some white. The book has a strong female character, unusual in Mark Twain’s writing. While trying to solve the mystery you will enjoy reading great quotes at the beginning of each Chapter from Pudd’nhead Wilson’s Calendar such as: “Why is it that we rejoice at a birth and grieve at a funeral?”
1896 Personal Recollections of Joan of Arc
Twain said he regarded this work as his best: his version of the story of the Maid of Orleans who, in 1429, at the age of 17, led a French rebellion against English domination. She was tried for witchcraft and heresy by French priests, supporters of the English, and burned at the stake. Twain viewed Joan of Arc as his bid to be considered a “serious” writer. Joan is considered to be Twain’s ideal woman: gentle, selfless and pure, but also courageous and eloquent. Twain’s Joan is said to be modeled after his oldest daughter, Susy died tragically three months after Joan of Arc was published.
1897 Following the Equator
Twain’s fifth and last travel book is a relatively straightforward narrative of his round-the-world lecture tour of 1895-96. It includes discussions of Australian history and economic development, Asian culture, British rule in India and South African politics. It contains many humorous passages, but is generally more serious in tone than the author’s earlier travel works.
1916 The Mysterious Stranger
An adult tale set in a medieval European village‚ The Mysterious Stranger tells of some boys who encounter a young stranger who performs wonderful feats of magic and shows the boys different times and places in mankind’s history. The stranger turns out to be a nephew of Satan. In this work, not published during his lifetime and not in its entirety for decades after his death, Twain explored and explained his feelings about religion and faith, good and evil.