45 pages • 1 hour read
The narrator and main character of the book, Twain presents a complex and multifaceted persona. A blunt-speaking American from the West, he sees through pretense and fraud immediately. He is sometimes comically belligerent and irritable, sometimes times fun-loving and affable. He is a man with a keen sense of justice and strong democratic sympathies. In a few places, Twain shows a mischievous tendency that recalls Huck Finn (e.g., breaking into Athens at night and stealing grapes from a field). Despite his satirical irreverence, Twain also has a sentimental streak and a reverence for beauty. Twain’s juggling of these different sides of his persona creates the variety of tone in the book, from bitingly sardonic to lyrically poetic.
Twain implicitly identifies with Western (he uses the word “Christian”) culture with its distinctive ideals and standards of living, and he grows more critical of cultures the further removed they are from the Anglo-Saxon world. He is severely critical of Turkish society and mores, for example. However, Twain’s humane sympathy for life underlies even his harshest cultural criticisms. He laments the trampling of local religious sensibilities, mistreatment of animals, and the disrespect shown by an Plus, gain access to 8,500+ more expert-written Study Guides. Including features:
By Mark Twain