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Date: | Fri, 11 Aug 2006 13:22:25 EDT |
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"Sammy's long speech," as his mother Jane Lampton Clemens called it, was
acquired from her. Ron Powers in Dangerous Waters: "Jane Lampton was in
many
ways the feminine version of the son who would in turn render her immortal
as
Aunt Polly...She was small and red-haired, as Sam would be, with small feet
and
hands; yet she was a passionate dancer, and her son would be a dancer too.
She spoke in the soft, almost mannered drawl that Sam would inherit and use
to
mesmerize his close-up listeners and his lecture-hall audiences--the drawl
that could be mistaken for a drunken slur, and which he once lampooned as
'my
drawling infirmity of speech.'" p 32
It may have been Sam's slow, measured speech that contributed to Horace
Bixby's agreement to train him as a cub Pilot in April of 1857. I've read
somewhere Bixby's reaction to meeting Sam and his drawl was distinctive.
From my readings, I would not call Sam's speech a "Southern accent," as
much
as an idiosyncrasy he aped from his mother. It was simply one of the
things
he learned at his mother's knee.
David H Fears
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