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Mon, 23 Apr 2007 18:53:39 EDT |
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In a message dated 4/23/2007 3:23:45 P.M. Pacific Daylight Time,
[log in to unmask] writes:
I don't recall reading of any first hand experience Twain had with raft
building or rafting on the MIssissippi. I know he nearly drowned nine times
and
his mother declared that "a pe4rson born to hang is safe around water."
Thanks for any assistance or source material you can point me to.
ACR
Well, you might check Wecter; I assume that any and all the boys in
Hannibal
would have had rafting experience; it's simply one thing that boys did on
the River. Besides the thousand or so steamboats that docked in Hannibal,
there
must have been all shapes and sizes of watercraft, even crude rafts of all
sorts. So, Sam's "first hand experience" was in growing up on the river.
And
we all know of his powers of observations. So many details in Sam's fiction
were taken from his boyhood, even if seasoned with his imagination, that
it's
difficult to believe he didn't know a bit about making and using a raft.
I'd recommend *Dark Waters* by Powers as well. And there was that rafting
episode with Twichell on their "tramp" adventure through the Black Forest.
DHF
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