I joined this listserv right before going on spring break. When I returned today, I found all the interesting material from you guys and gals ready for my perusal. It has amazed me that all these academic people do not seem to understand that we speak and write a multiple language in this country and always have. No, I am not speaking about French, Spanish, etc., but the English language itself. Twain's love of language and it variety are reflected in his tremendous use of dialect. One can make fun or satirize that which one greatly admires. I believe he would approve of so-called academic jargon as well as he did riverboat jargon. That is part of the beauty of our language and the power of its staying power, among other things of course. Some of you put down this academic jargon as being unreadable. It is no more "unreadable" than Twain is to many people. Talk to any teacher of American literature in high school. Many of them will tell you that students often struggle with Twain's use of dialect. Do we throw Twain out. I do not think so. We acknowledge the complexity and beauty of our language at its various levels. It is not simply whether to use "big" words or "small" words: it is the knowing of when to use a particular form of English. I just thought I would share my feelings. Nick Huffman