Mark Twain (Samuel Clemens, 1835–1910), often called the father of American literature, was the greatest humorist of his age and a writer who brought distinctive American themes and language to readers for more than three decades. Twain was a master of colloquial speech and, with inimitable genius, produced countless works, from essays on America’s unacceptable social realities to such classics as The Adventures of Tom Sawyer and Adventures of Huckleberry Finn. Twain was born during a visit by Halley’s Comet and went out with it as well, dying the day after the comet’s return.

Photograph by A. F. Bradley.

Corn-Pone Opinions

An Essay

by Mark Twain

Fifty years ago, when I was a boy of fifteen and helping to inhabit a Missourian village on the banks of the Mississippi, I had a friend whose society was very dear to me because I was forbidden by my mother to partake of it. He was a gay and impudent and satirical and delightful young black man—a slave—who daily preached sermons from the top of his master’s woodpile, with me for sole audience. He imitated the pulpit style of the several clergymen of the village, and did it well, and with fine passion and energy. To me he was a wonder. I believed he was the greatest orator in the United States and would some day be heard from. But it did not happen; in the distribution of rewards he was overlooked. It is the way, in this world.

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