Oh what a wonderful subject! One of the best writers that I have ever read. You're doing him great justice Professor!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@CliftonBowers-pc2xu5 ай бұрын
@djschumacher8012much are simular also are distantly related..Sharon is who would know a granddaughter to Suzie I belive ..😊
@mrwaterschoot56175 ай бұрын
mark twain has been gone for a while. but he lives on as he is like Elvis recount that hal hholbrook did mark twain paisley as there are. impersonators. one mark Twain any time i see a white washed Pickett fene i think of the little rasvel 1950 show. with the kids raising mone white fences for money like mark twain wrote in some of his stories. as a child in elementary school it was manditory to read a mark twain novel. if samuel clemens were alive i believe in his story telling and i wold vote for him as president of america in 2024 . . he was old enough to know heter than our presidental fake news clowns . samuel is a good name like sam adams beer. billy currington rote a verse. god is great beer is good and people are crazy i will add samuel clemens is crazy good and young enough to care. i he and i might be of kindred spirits . if we were related i could call him uncle sam and we would way american flags.on a forth of july parade he was born in the usa and since i am a dutch born naturaled american. i can never be president. and i think that is a job that i would never want. ii heard it thru the grape vine that a president ages over 10 years in a 4 year term in office in office. the trumpster celebrated 78 year on rarth but add 10 years he is convict felon and over the is over capital hill. and a lost cause of fake news and out right lies. and as for mr biden he is smoking old at 81 he has a bad case of dementia on the brain as he keeps falling down. if i were a biden supporter i might .use miy mind as an empathic second grader and cmodify a jack and jill story to smoking ols joe biden and dr jill went capital hill to fetch presidenti powe. joe fell down and broke his crown and dr jill came tumbling after . ans the vie pres harris brought the watter from the washington dc swamp land.. mark twain also was quoted if you can explain something to a 2nd grader you have a good xunderstandibg of the concept or something like that. i guess story telling like a parody yooject on youe tube by don caron. you have to present the truth in a song or humourous way. i liked his series or the trump mess . like biden the want to build a border wall in texas to srop migrant farm woerkers from coming noth from mezico . i guess we still have an american mexican hat dance. tho oly thing a border wall makes a mess with our global relation toward the sratue of liberty values. bring us use workers for a land of opportunities and other challenges. .
@macareuxmoine4 ай бұрын
He surely was one of a kind 🥰
@CliftonBowers-pc2xu4 ай бұрын
@DMS1759 speaking of which I think the man they have sentenced 16 years I Russia is similar type of writer too..
@TheLolapuff5 ай бұрын
“When I get the urge to exercise, I lay down until it passes.” Twain
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
So many witticisms!
@mrwaterschoot56175 ай бұрын
a.nother thought if you do what you love?, you never work a day in your life. samuel closets . loved sinning yarns and
@saraf90812 ай бұрын
Lol
@ianking-jv4hgАй бұрын
Like Samuel, i also enjoy exercising my laziness
@loriedmundson7825 ай бұрын
Twain's daughter Suzy wrote a biography titled, "My Papa, Mark Twain." A must read for Twain lovers. Enjoyed part 1, and waiting with strained patience for part 2. Love you channel.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon!
@susankeith3265 ай бұрын
He has been my heroes since 2nd grade when my teacher read Huckleberry Finn alous throughout the entire school year. This was 40 miles or so from Hannibal, where I grew up. My dad was a towboat engineer. My now deceased best friend married a descendent of the Clemens family.Thankt so much for the film.
@MichaelLeBlanc-p4f5 ай бұрын
Can't recall when Twain wasn't font line news interrst to me. Still is. He's become imortal for those able to thirn̈k
@SherryHill-k5y4 ай бұрын
He most certainly had wanderlust but had he not, he wouldn't have written what he did or left us with his many quotes. Thank you so much for this post!
@sharonjack858217 күн бұрын
I really appreciate how you observe the people you study, Dr. Graeme. You are actually opening windows for many of us out here who are creative. We KNOW our brains work in certain ways and seeing others who have similar vocations to ours is very comforting. THANK YOU so much for often using the word 'different' to describe we creatives. I am a mind studying my own mind. Your input about all of your video-subjects is incredibly helpful and liberating. USA
@elliepascoe59545 ай бұрын
Love this beautiful doc about Mark Twain!I grew up with Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn❤🇳🇱
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@stoobydootoo40983 ай бұрын
Who are you? Oliver Twist?
@ginnylorenz52655 ай бұрын
Very interesting and entertaining. I like your calm voice, too. Thank you. I'm eager for part 2!!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon!
@Leslie12.665 ай бұрын
It is great learning more about this famous writer. He did so much which he folded into his writing. Thank you!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@SherryHill-k5y4 ай бұрын
Thank you so much! Your voice adds so much. Mark Twain left us so much food for thought-- which is rare among a lot of writers.
@michaelfritts62495 ай бұрын
When I was in Junior High and my Dad realized that grounding me for "whatever" was a pointless and never-ending exercise, he started assigning books instead.. 1-3 depending on the offense with a timeline. I could go to the beach if I wanted but had to determine a balance.. I often went to the beach with a book. He would give me a "quiz" on each book afterward, Cliffs notes would not suffice, as he had read the books himself. Anyway, he suggested early on that I read Huck Finn every 5 to 10 years.. "You will get something new out of it every time.." Last time I read it was about 6 years ago.. I guess I may be "due".. 🤔
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
And have you got something new out of it each time?
@michaelfritts62495 ай бұрын
@@professorgraemeyorston Yes! I saw Tom Sawyer in 1973 when I was 8.. it was Spring, and I went to school barefoot, cutoffs and t-shirt.. they called my Mom and by 10am I had shoes, socks, Sears Toughskins and a longsleeve flannel shirt to put over my t-shirt. Huck was one of the first books my Dad had me read. I was 12. Summer before 7th grade. He thought Tolkien was “bubblegum”.. he never read Tolkien. The first time, as a “dumb kid”, I felt it was now ok to use the “N” word.. it was literature! No.. it was a common colloquialism back then.. so my next book was Catcher in the Rye. Years have passed, lessons learned. My Dad read alot of James Michener, James Clavell and Leon Uris. Coincidentally, so did I. My Grandpa (Mom's Dad) was an early Wobbly organizer along with my Great Grandpa (passed when I was 5, age 100) in Onalaska, Washington. Grandpa wrote his “memoirs” and I helped him learn how to use a word processor when he was in his 90's. As the youngest of 4 kids, I assumed these had been given to my uncle or possibly one of my older siblings.. or my Aunt Donna who was more like a sister or cousin. My Grandparents fostered alot of children. Donna was a Makah (Native American). She passed from cancer 14 years ago. Anyway, my Mom recently found my Grandpa's “histories” and gave them to me. I knew that my GG Grandpa had volunteered in the 80th Indiana Regiment, but one of the stories my Grandpa wrote about was his Grandpa witnessing a slave being beaten for dropping a bucket of fish. Having shortly beforehand arriving with at least 3 brothers (kinda vague on that) from Ireland after their father sent them money for passage, those 4 joined the the Union army.. my GG Grandpa lost an eye at the battle of Perryville. Sorry… kinda rambling.. Each encounter with new “characters” Huck and Jim met along the way can be read as simple entertainment or (Twain would be amused, annoyed or satisfied) tales of moral and ethical dilemma's or just simple truths of human nature. I worked as a “page” at a local library when I was 15. I checked out his Autobiography. I chose not to return it but told the Librarian that I had lost it. I asked them if I should just pay for it or have the cost deducted from my paycheck. They did neither.. maybe because I could re-index the cardfiles and organize the microfiche in half the time as the other pages. I still have his autobiography.. 👍😏😎😁 Be Well!!! 😃
@stoobydootoo40983 ай бұрын
I could never fathom his work. Well, maybe twice I could.
@professorgraemeyorston3 ай бұрын
Very good!
@elizabethlinsay91933 ай бұрын
Clever!
@actualkarenokboomer31583 ай бұрын
I read Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn many times. I used to pretend to be Tom.
@stardresser12 ай бұрын
Haha, well done!
@riomartinez79.5 ай бұрын
Thank you, professor ❤this is a good way to learn American history. There is no need to pay for an expensive university. Watching and listening to your channel is PRICELESS ❤
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@baylorsailor2 ай бұрын
Most universities today are a waste of money. It's become a money-making industry, and that's all they care about.
@2Uahoj5 ай бұрын
Great video. Favorite Twain quote (on his return from Germany): Journalist: "Mr. Twain, do the Germans have a sense of humor?" Twain: "Yes they do, but it's no laughing matter." 🙂
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Good one!
@elizabethlinsay91933 ай бұрын
Brilliant!
@sharonjack858217 күн бұрын
P.S. You have a very clear soothing voice to listen to.
@bretfisher72865 ай бұрын
My earliest memories of enjoyment in reading were made reading Mark Twain. Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn. I can still vividly recall my fascination with his exquisite prose. He began my love affair with language.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I struggled a bit with nineteenth century writing when I was younger, but love the elegance of it now.
@bretfisher72865 ай бұрын
@professorgraemeyorston It's definitely an adjustment. Rather verbose, often. Really a different thing going on.. but on the whole, anyone publishing at that time had a lot more to offer from grammar and usage than half of our authors today. Good God, some of the nonsense that's out there now.. .
@bretfisher72865 ай бұрын
@@professorgraemeyorston Looking forward to the second half, Sir!
@chriswest83895 ай бұрын
My most magical movie viewing experience was at a kiddies matinae - Readers digest Huckelberry Fin. I remember being transfixed and transported to a time” so long ago”Harvey Korman as the King of France or was that The Dauphin, should have been nominated for an academy award.
@eileenbauer46015 ай бұрын
Very much enjoyed this presentation, lots of things about Twain I didn’t know before. From the mid 1980’s- early 1990’s my husband and I (Americans) lived in Switzerland. Just about all of our American ex-pat friends and we read Twain’s “The Innocents Abroad”.. Amazing how applicable and funny this book was even though it was written so long ago! We all used to laugh at some of the parts and how we had similar experiences. Twain was funny in a rather snide way, but at the same time making serious points. Fond memories……….
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I think that is the sign of a great writer that he/she remains relevant!
@BDot-dv7lq4 ай бұрын
Religion was born when the first con man met the first fool. Mark Twain.
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
Good one!
@granthurlburt40625 ай бұрын
Excellent. You have a marvelous reading voice. Great cadence. I recently listened to Vol. 1 of Twain's autobiography and am listening to recorded versions of the The Innocents Abroad and Life on the Mississisippi. The death of his wife and particularly one daughter really broke him up. Except for the damage it did him, it is almost amusing how he kept investing the money he had in inventions and projects that don't work. He had two great talents (at least) writing and lecturing- and yet turned to trying to invest in businesses for which he had no talent or ability. He was also taken advantage of by people who were publishing his work. Truly a great man. Too many don't understand the extent to which his description of Jim and Huck's attitude in Huckleberry Finn was an unequivocal condemnation of slavery and the notion that blacks were in any way inferior.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you, it is sad how people miss his condemnation of slavery and focus on the n word and want to ban him.
@TedSawyer-v5o5 ай бұрын
This just popped up on my KZbin feed. Very enjoyable so I subscribed.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard!
@nonprofitgirl5 ай бұрын
This is so well done! Thank you! Love from California 🌺
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@vanquocbui-e2d3 ай бұрын
You make complex topics so easy to understand. 📚 Thank you for being an incredible educator!
@professorgraemeyorston3 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@LB-id6wf5 ай бұрын
Brilliant! We need to get you to the 100 000! Well done and lovely to see you today!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thanks Louise - likewise - not long until I get my 100k plaque from KZbin!
@jilkat255 ай бұрын
Where is Part 2? Please post a link. Excellent presentation! Love the typed quotes! Roughing It is one of my all time favorite books! When are you going to tackle Charles Dickens?
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Part 2 is coming soon! - I have done one on Scrooge which covers some of Dickens' life.
@doreekaplan25895 ай бұрын
Beautiful drawings
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Was it the Normal Rockwell Tom Sawyer illustrations you liked?
@robertberger86425 ай бұрын
Very interesting! I look forward to listening to the rest of your accounting of Mr. Clemens’ life.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thanks for listening, it's coming soon!
@luv2sail665 ай бұрын
Very interesting. Thank you for posting this.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@tombotelevision26165 ай бұрын
Knew the broad strokes of the Master's life.... enjoyed your insights in this video. Thank you.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@MylesNewman-cc1tx5 ай бұрын
Twain was best buds with Tesla and got a thrill when lightning bolts danced around him. He claimed it also kept him regular.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
He visited his laboratory often.
@MBRMrblueroads5 ай бұрын
Looking forward to part two 👍👍
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon!
@TM-yn4iu5 ай бұрын
Excellent, appreciated - waiting for next....but know the story. Sometimes a narrative about what we already know is entertaining.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@voyaristika56735 ай бұрын
Looking forward to part ll. 👍
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon! Hopefully tomorrow!
@troydaum47285 ай бұрын
Love your channel and your superb breakdowns!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Glad you like them!
@MichaelLeBlanc-p4f5 ай бұрын
Love -'Twain'. He speaks to me over time - much like his good friend Kipling. Both proved Shakespeak was right. Nothing changes escept for cast and scenery. The script remains eternally the same.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Kipling is an interesting character - a bit underrated these days.
@MichaelLeBlanc-p4fАй бұрын
@@professorgraemeyorston Indeed ! Extremely under rated and more than relevant today
@pamchambersconsulting321016 күн бұрын
I am very glad to have come across your channel. I love it!
@patmcstuff6715 ай бұрын
I grew up in Illinois up the river about 7 miles from Hannibal, the river around here is beautiful and worth a visit, if u come please see the Mark Twain Cave
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I am planning a big US trip with lots of literary sites, so I'll add it to the list!
@pofoto19505 ай бұрын
Excellent biography & I loved the old photos and especially the Mardi Gras parade video!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@anahitpetrosyan17495 ай бұрын
Thank you very much, I subscribed the channel.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Welcome aboard.
@elizabethwallace74953 ай бұрын
Love Professor Graeme Y. Such a lovely manner.
@professorgraemeyorston3 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@petergaffney49155 ай бұрын
I moved into a new apartment in 1965 at 13. The previous owners left behind a complete set of Samuel Clemens' works. I read every word and reread parts. This will sound strange to his fans: Clemens never left his Know-Nothing cultural background. His constant stream of Adam and Eve stories showed his disdain for fundamentalist Protestants. Yet never having any real contact with Catholics he penned A Connecticut Yankee with a gut-level hatred for all those knights, bishops and priests machined gunned at the end.
@chris555295 ай бұрын
Great documentary, bro!!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thanks for listening
@D.H.-mg2cz5 ай бұрын
As much as I'm enjoying your excellent content, I'm a bit scared when to expect part two, as I'm still waiting for the "Andy Warhol - the later years" video 🙈
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
It should be out in a fortnight - the Andy Warhol Part 2 has been out for ages!
@D.H.-mg2cz5 ай бұрын
Gosh, I missed that... sorry, my bad!
@starbright12565 ай бұрын
❤ thank you for information on great people. I learned many things i never knew. Im a subscriber to your great content. ❤
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you, glad your enjoying them.
@CSchaeken5 ай бұрын
Thank you Dr Yorston, I didn’t know a lot about this author, he had a very interesting life and I am looking forward to his later years.👍❤️
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon.
@ibbjos084 ай бұрын
Your editing is phenomenal.
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
Thank you, our editing is done by Manavi Sakunika.
@doreekaplan25895 ай бұрын
He entertained teenage girls in lieu of so many lost family members including grandkids. He had no sons.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
He had a son Langdon who died at 19 months of age.
@jamesthecat5 ай бұрын
That was wonderful, thank you!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@PaulSaether5 ай бұрын
Enjoyed that, Prof. My favourite MT story was of the printer who abbreviated "Jesus Christ" to "J. Christ". When told by the angry clergyman who commissioned the pamphlet that "The Lord's name must never be abbreviated!" the printer obliged and set "Jesus H. Christ." Twain found that amusing and so did I.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
That's a good one!
@AHLUser4 ай бұрын
The name "Jesus" is a Greek version of his real Jewish name "Yeshua", which in English could be called "Joshua"... In India, where "Yeshua" most likely fled after his Step Father "Joseph" passed away, and his older Step-Brother James took over the Responsibility for the Family, his name was "Isa" which means "Lord"... He probably studied Yoga in a Ashram with a Guru, and learned his Buddhist-Hindu lessons (The Missing Years), before returning to his homeland to free the Jewish People from the 'Bondage of the Bible' and the Priests & Pharisees that controlled the Jews with Laws and Taxes. Ironic that he was Anti-Temple, Anti-Priest, Anti-Jewish Law, Anti-Statues, Anti-Robes and lived his life like Mahatma Gandi. He kissed men and women, believed that "Love & Forgiveness is the Answer"... Sounds like a Hippy.
@ElkoJohn5 ай бұрын
Much obliged.
@jilltagmorris4 ай бұрын
THANK YOU. Your content and narration is wonderful ❤😊
@nippynf4l8315 ай бұрын
Wonderful subject!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@Sally-y8s5 ай бұрын
I loved this narrative.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@timfinneran50475 ай бұрын
Interesting - such an interesting character
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
He certainly lived a full life.
@PhilipCallicoat-k9z2 ай бұрын
"Never do anything wrong if anyone can see you ".... The man was a true phenomena ..🤔
@ClaireJohnson-te4jd5 ай бұрын
You have an exceptional channel!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@MartiWilliams-r2zАй бұрын
Thank you!
@Dovietail4 ай бұрын
Don't set up a false dichotomy for his approach in his later years - it's not so simple - and don't imply he was a pedophile and just leave that sitting there! I've always felt that he was trying to regain the freshness and joie de vivre of his lost daughters. Twain was "self medicating" with cross-generational friendships.
@tomroberts97945 ай бұрын
Thank you for your work on Twain.
@MsGaella3 ай бұрын
Excellent. Thank you so much.
@MichaelLeBlanc-p4f2 ай бұрын
'Mark' is all of the best of us and the rest of gentile humanity.
@whiskeymonk40855 ай бұрын
Any student of Thomas Paine is a friend of mine.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
He was a fascinating man as well.
@Americaone15 ай бұрын
The coldest winter i ever spent was a summer in San Francisco(Mark Twain)😀😀
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Good one!
@cmaden783 ай бұрын
I grew up in and around local bars( VFW's ,DAV's Moose Lodge 's etc) so as a teen and young girl I had many grown and older men as friends. Honestly it was like having a tribe of men as dads, uncles, or older brothers. I never understood people that thought it was weird. It never was, and I am grateful that they were a part of my life. The only people that find it weird are weird people 😊✨🖤✨
@giselematthews79495 ай бұрын
You got new bookshelves!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I had the whole room refurbished - still working out where to put things.
@forgottensage-o5o5 ай бұрын
Funny how his experiences traveling through Egypt so closely mirror mine. Being related to Uncle Sam, I have to wonder if part of my take on Misr (Egypt) has a genetic component. Funny, intelligent, down to earth, and being very observant is a common trait amongst a lot of the men in our family line. My brother a year older than me looks eerily like Mr. Samuel, down to that scowl he had when he was a young man. My brother writes part time, has publish & I've been writing since I was 11 years old but my words are for me & not the world (except for maybe these words? LOL).
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Interesting - most personality traits have a genetic component so why not a sense of humour!
@saraf90812 ай бұрын
Love Mark Twain
@denisetulloch7275 ай бұрын
Really intresting presentation. Where can I find part 2?
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
It will be released soon.
@AHLUser4 ай бұрын
Oh What'ta Tease...!! "See Ya in Part 2".... Is this a Classic 'Cliff-Hanger' type ending or What...?? BTW, 'Part 1' is titled "The Early Years" and 'Part 2' is called "The Later Years"... Thank You Professor Graeme Yorston.... It takes a 'Good Chap' from Britain to tell the life story about a famous American Author..!! I appreciate your genuine interest in our 'American Culture'... Great Accent too.
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed them!
@thomas16994 ай бұрын
I have read much of Tom Sawyer and Roughing It, as an adult. I have trouble putting Roughing It down, after I start reading. My wife always wants to know what is so funny. (The tale doesn't sound so funny when I tell it to her.)
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
They're great books.
@MrGMawson24383 ай бұрын
Very interesting indeed thank you Professor G Yorston
@professorgraemeyorston3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@lisaquigley-moon95835 ай бұрын
I read his books in school as a kid. They were great. Its sad they are not part of the reading curriculum now. The language was period & didn't make me want to use the language. They need to stop trying to hide history & great writings from these supposedly little fragile minds.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I agree.
@pamelacorbett87745 ай бұрын
Loved it!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@MrSuzuki11874 ай бұрын
The river you see at 4:02 in this video is NOT the Mississippi, it is the Missouri River. Note the swiift current, eddies and whirlpools. I grew up on the Missouri so I quickly recognized my old friend.
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
My apologies, I found it very difficult to find stock footage of the Mississippi that didn't have modern boats.
@GTMemes25 ай бұрын
' 🤔...I don't know why they call it common sense? When common sense ain't to common ' _ Mark Twain /Samuel Clemens
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Good one - like so many of his quotes - they are really quite profound!
@lilykatmoon45085 ай бұрын
I cannot wait for part two! I didn’t really know much about him at all prior to this video other than some of the stuff he wrote and his true name. He sounds like a bit of a hot mess, but a like able guy for all that. I bet he’d have a million followers if he were a KZbinr, lol! Fascinating video!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you, yes he would have been great on KZbin! Part Two will hopefully be out tomorrow!
@peredavi5 ай бұрын
Always love Professor Yorston’s wonderful calm and sober short history and biography lessons. Mark Twain is one of my favorite American characters. I lived near Virginia City ,Nevada, Reno for a time and enjoyed rereading some of Twain’s works. Now retired in Wyoming, I do enjoy reading about the more optimistic times in America, post civil war to my birth era 1960. I can only imagine what Twain would say of the buffoons in Washington DC at this time of Big Government,wokeness and bufoonery!
@darlenelarochelle40115 ай бұрын
You had me until *wokeness* . I looked up "woke". It is not a bad thing. Looking ahead, try to do better, is not a bad thing.
@peredavi5 ай бұрын
@@darlenelarochelle4011 look into Gad Saad, professor evolutionary psychology. Wrote a book called ' The Parasitic mind" . The fact that students and professors at universities have to tread a narrow path and cannot speak their mind if they have a conservative view, else they will not gain tenure or they will be 'cancelled". This is not a good thing. Young people have been indoctrinated not taught to think.
@ahbushnell13 ай бұрын
Excellent Video.
@professorgraemeyorston3 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it
@sylvias20625 ай бұрын
Excellent research and presentation as always but where have the smurfs gone?
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
They'll probably make a come back at some point!
@sarasmith995 ай бұрын
I think that "The Big Muddy" refers to the Missouri River and not the Mississippi.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Apologies - I was looking for nicknames for the Mississippi and that's what Google came up with - I should have double checked!
@sarasmith995 ай бұрын
You realize that Tom Sawyer and Huck Finn are on the list of recently banned books?
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I know that there has been a lot of debate about whether they are "racist" or not, but I hadn't realised that they have been officially banned.
@kambrose15495 ай бұрын
I wonder what witty response Twain would have made to this madness😂
@geoffreyhall20344 ай бұрын
No this is so wrong
@stuckinlodi1004 ай бұрын
I suspect Twain might have been amused while Sam may have been outraged; or vice versa.
@cindyhorn57864 ай бұрын
I wish people would realize history is important. It is crazy to try to change it by confusing and eliminating details. They shouldn’t be able to get away with this.
@omfug71485 ай бұрын
Professor can I give you a suggestion for a subject? I have been obsessed with Sylvia Plath since I was 17 but it isn't her mental health issues that I am interested in, that is a subject that has been written about for over 50 years and has been well covered, rather it is her husband British Poet Ted Hughes who I don't understand, 2 women committed suicide after he dumped them, after Plath he never bothered with fidelity again even cheating on his 2nd wife of 30 years, I think that we would call him a sex addict these days, I have read every book written about him and still can't get a grip on what made him tick, I will say that even the books that claim to be unbiased written about him do not paint him in a good light yet his children & many friends were devoted to him. Please give it some consideration.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
I think Sylvia and Ted would both make good subjects - the difficulty is that the biographies are very partisan, so it is hard to know who or what to believe.
@omfug71485 ай бұрын
@@professorgraemeyorston You might take a look at the last big bio written about Hughes by Jonathan Bate who claims that his bio is unbiased and is more concerned with Ted the poet, also the older biography, Her Husband written by Diane Middlebrook when Hughes was still alive, again, Middlebrook tried to be fair to Ted, even so, I found a great degree of honesty on what a complicated man he was. I honestly think that Plath's mental health issues are pretty straight forward--depression and similar disorders ran in her family, but apparently Hughes also had some of that in his family history. At any rate, 2 of the poetic giants of the 20thc, & fascinating subjects for a neuroscientist IMO.
@jacksalisbury-i5e4 ай бұрын
I just read the book of MT s time in Hawaii, or sandwich islands as they were called in those days. His humor came though and I learned a lot of info about the whaling industry tied to Hawaii. It is composed of his letter to people while he lived in Hawaii. Good read.
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
I agree, his sense of humour is already well formed in these early writings.
@analauraaznar15525 ай бұрын
Wait for part two ! :)
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon!
@MercyOnASinnerLikeMe5 ай бұрын
Brian: "Did I miss anything while I was gone?" Chris: "Captain Crunch was here! Didn't you pass him on the stairs!?"
@timhansen33763 ай бұрын
When I was growing up in the 60s. Everybody was making such a big deal about him.
@grandcrowdadforde61274 ай бұрын
""When i wuz young, i believed everything... whether it happened or not "" M T
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
Great quote.
@ccooper87855 ай бұрын
"I would not join any club that would have me as a member" hang on, that was by Groucho Marx.... Very much looking forward to part 2.
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Coming soon!
@stephenmarmer5434 ай бұрын
Very fascinating portrait of a great American. Do you think there is any indication that he had Bipolar-2?
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
It is certainly a possibility, but I didn't get a sense of a cycling mood disorder from my readings, more a riotous youth and slow disillusionment with humanity as he got older. If I had to attach a label I would put my money on ADHD, but the evidence is far from convincing.
@gleneverett97283 ай бұрын
Outstanding
@JCPJCPJCP5 ай бұрын
I suspect it's very American to think of oneself as "THE American."
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
It's certainly very Mark Twain!
@JCPJCPJCP5 ай бұрын
Very Walter Whitman, too. Maybe even more so.
@vijay-15 ай бұрын
Well narrated
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thank you.
@nonprofitgirl5 ай бұрын
Amazing..
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Thanks a lot 😊
@kennethjones5005 ай бұрын
His greatest book written after 1867 trip to the holy land the innocents abroad research this book
@bassandteacher2 ай бұрын
AMAZING! Sounds just like Chicago.
4 ай бұрын
I know the Twain bio but I like the summery here. I say twain was a superior observationist which led to superior description abilities and this translated into humor that followed his experiences. He also, as said, must of had a above average memory and so maybe the spectrum of OCD and so on. I don't know. however his interpretations i of his obsevations find wanting. He was very wild in the west and said the folks on the trip overseas were very boring as being very Christian. he was seen , saw himself without undue arrogance, as one of the most intelligent men in America.Forgotten today. Also his winning stories today hide the stories that made him first famous and rich.
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it.
@pbarsamian5262 ай бұрын
nicely done!
@chriswest83895 ай бұрын
He appears in chapter one of my yet to be written first novel.”Names Clemons. Samual” “Kids, we’re not in Kansas anymore”
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Sounds interesting.
@chriswest83895 ай бұрын
@@professorgraemeyorston …Kansas? I thought you said you were from Connecticut…..” Could you give us a moment “ said Mz Avery”. “ I recon. You be adviced not to dadle though. Put some space between you and those yahoos. I’m headin to St. Louis then West for the territories.” Feel free to join me if you like. “ Could we have a family moment here said Mz. Avery? “ certainly mam. “ He tipped his cap and headed down the trail. Now Out of earshot Mz Avery said: “ Do you know who that was?”Laquise nodded her head.Dunk ,Julie and Dionne shook theirs. “ Mark Twain!”. Dionne fiddled with his mowhawk, Dunk stared into space. Julie was the first to speakOh yeah. That episode of Star treckvthe next generation I think it was called. That old white guy who’s sitting on someone’s front porch Whitling..” “ Whitling? “ said Dunk. “ whitling” replied Julie. She continued.” Dressed from head to toe in white except for a black tie or something with a big S hock of grey/ white hair and stash” @ yeah” said Dionne somewhat recoverd now”Cept for no glasses.and if you swint, a dead ringer for colonial Sanders”
@chriswest83895 ай бұрын
@@professorgraemeyorston Coukdnt help myself. A work in progress.
@patriciafeehan773212 күн бұрын
Twain, traveled west to San Francisco, where he worked with his brother as a typesetter. This is how he published his first short story “The Leaping Frog of Calaveras County”
@ChubbyUnicorn15 күн бұрын
As a child, I was heavily influenced by Mark Twain. My father's family lived near Hannibal Missouri & we visited often. Letters from the Earth is my favorite book. I'm a bit nervous to see your 2nd part on his life as old, disillusioned famous men rarely live decently.
@BluMecker-of9uy4 ай бұрын
Part 2! please
@professorgraemeyorston4 ай бұрын
It is Mark Twain - the Later Years.
@2msvalkyrie5295 ай бұрын
Completely irrelevant but at some point in future would you share your thoughts on Melville 's " Bartleby The Scrivener ".? Which remains one of the most thought provoking short stories of the last ( and even this ! ) century..!
@professorgraemeyorston5 ай бұрын
Melville is on the list and I'll be sure to read this story.
@darrellborland1194 ай бұрын
He was an amazing guy.
@marianemartin2644Ай бұрын
Do others pronounce Orion in that way? I have never heard it nor does the dictionary show it the way you say it.