He was a deserter from service in the Confederate militia in the Civil War and fled to the far West. Even his earliest writings reflect an ability to see the mirror image of life. I think Twain was as he suggests a pessimist. Certainly, personal tragedies such as the death of his child deepened his darkest perceptions.
If one looks at Huckleberry Finn which is a searing indictment of slavery, its brilliance lies partly in the fact that Twain works his magic by writing the mirror image of his intended result. For example, Huck Finn's decision that he will commit a mortal sin and go to hell by being a friend to "Nigger Jim" leaves the reader to reverse the logic and in doing so penetrate the veil of rationalization which had sustained slavery and Jim Crow.
Huckleberry Finn is perhaps the great American novel as Hemmingway said (I agree) because Twain makes the reader really part of the process of grappling with America's original sin but he gives the devil every advantage yet still succeeds in making all of us believers.
The irony of modern race baiters agitating to remove Huckleberry Finn from libraries because it contains the word "Nigger" is very sad.
I find it interesting that Twain could pen a book like “Reminiscence of Joan of Arch “.
If Im not mistaken,,And I may well be,,Didnt Helen Keller also say disabled people should be euthanized even tho she herself was disabled?
http://www.uffl.org/vol16/gerdtz06.pdf
I think it's hilarious to watch wicked people "outsmart" themselves.
Always interesting, nb. I appreciate your insight.
Andrew Levy, “Huck Finn’s America: Mark Twain And The Era That Shaped His Masterpiece”. About 90 pages in. Fairly met. Helen Keller indexed at 161-163.