Masonic references in Mark Twain’s fiction |
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Samuel Langhorne Clemens, under the pen name of Mark Twain, is considered to rank amongst the finest American writers. |
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Innocents Abroad (1869) “…and in a spirit of thankfulness which is entirely unaccountable, considering the slim foundation there was for it, he praised his Maker that he was as he was, and went on enjoying his little life just the same as if he really had been deliberately designed and erected by the great Architect of the Universe.” [chap. xxiii]. Tom Sawyer’s Conspiracy (written 1897, published 1969) “[H]e was Inside Sentinel of the Masons, and Outside Sentinel of the Odd Fellows, and a kind a head bung-starter or something of the Foes of the Flowing Bowl, and something or other to the Daughters of Rebecca, and something like it to the King’s Daughters, and Royal Grand Warden to the Knights of Morality, and Sublime Grand Marshal of the Good Templars, and there warn’t no fancy apron agoing but he had a sample, and no turnout but he was in the procession, with his banner or his sword, or toting a bible on a tray, and looking awful serious and responsible, and yet not getting a cent. A good man, he was, they don’t make no better.” [chap. iii, pp. 159-60]. “…being a pillow of the church and taking up the collection, Sundays, and doing it wide open and square” [p. 159]. A Tramp Abroad (1880) “What’s your father’s religious denomination?” ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]()
A Tramp Abroad. 328 illus. Tall 8vo, original brown cloth; front hinge cracked. Hartford, 1880. First Edition. BAL 3386. Second state frontis. & engraved port. chap. xxiii.
Twain, Mark, 1835-1910), Personal recollections of Joan of Arc…. New York : Harper & Bros., 1896. xiv, 461, [3] p., [36].21 cm. LCCN : 04000902. Volume 1, Book 2, Chapter 11. |