The second half of The Wit and Wisdom of Mark Twain wasn’t much better than the first.
In fact, I found it less amusing and/or witty than the first half.
By the time I came to the end of the book,
I had only marked 12 quotations that I had found funny or that had made me
think. The fact that I only found 12 quotations interesting enough to mark for
later reference out of a 257 page book says a lot, I think.
Nevertheless, I have narrowed down my
favorite quotations for tomorrow’s class, and I have selected my favorite
quotation to blog about tonight. My favorite quotation can be found on pages
76-77:
“Returning home after a weekend in the
Maine woods, Mark Twain was lounging in the smoking car of the train to Boston,
He could not resist the temptation to boast to the rustic-looking New Englander
seated beside him about the twelve big fish he had caught.
“‘The season is closed for fishing now,’
he confided, ‘ but just between you and me, my friend, out there in the baggage
car I’ve got two hundred pounds of the best rock bass that you ever laid eyes
on.’
“‘Waal,’ drawled the New Englander, ‘that’s
interestin’, but d’ye know who I am?’
“‘No,’ said Twain. ‘Who are you?’
“‘Waal,’ said the homespun gentleman, ‘I’m
the state game warden.’
“Mark Twain puffed on his cigar. ‘That’s
interestin’,’ he said. ‘But d’ye know who I am?’
“‘No. Who are you?’ asked the warden.
“‘I’m the damnedest liar in the United
States.’”
I found this quotation very funny. I did
not expect the cognitive shift of Twain using his reputation as a liar to get
out of the trouble he had put himself into, and I thought it was very witty of
him to do so. The nature of this wit and cognitive shift reminded me a lot of
what we read in Tales of Juha.
Juha is usually presented as a character
who can get out of any situation with extreme wit and unexpected wisdom, and I
feel like several of the Twain quotations I marked as favorites involved
Juha-esque wit.
With that being said, however, I’d like to
point out that my overall reading experience with this book has not been
pleasant. I enjoyed Tales of Juha
very much, and even though a few of Mark Twain’s quotations reminded me of
things Juha would say or do, there were too few of them in The Wit and Wisdom of Mark Twain.
As I said in my last blog, I feel like
this book was mostly filled with pointless quotations that were neither witty
nor funny. I’m glad I found a few quotations that I enjoyed, but I do not feel
as though I found enough enjoyment in this book to want to recommend it to
anybody else to read.
Agreed, 257 pages of quotes yielded little interest or thought on my end. I had to suffer through 25 pages of idleness between each thought-proviking quote. There were, like you said, 10-15 quotations that I dog-eared.
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