Twain the Optimist
Mark Twain has an underlying theme
of optimism throughout a lot of his short stories. In order to find this
optimism one needs to look deep into the meaning behind his stories because on
the surface, many of them can seem cynical or even tragic. This can be
highlighted most intensely I think by the story “A Day at Niagara.” The first
story’s optimism is less apparent and can only be seen by first acknowledging the
faults in society and the negatives of tourism or commercialization. He makes a
social satire about the American culture just following the beaten path laid
before and missing out on the actual beauty of something like Niagara Falls. I
will go more in depth with this and where optimism comes into play in the
following paragraphs.
First, I will talk about “A Day at
Niagara.” Twain is often a critic of the corporate or commercialization side of
America. This can be seen with statements throughout the story such as. “It is
worth the price of admission to hear the guide tell the story nine times in
succession to different parties, and never miss a word or alter a sentence or
gesture” (Twain, 17). Here, Twain effectively uses sarcasm here by saying it’s
worth the price to hear the same mundane story to every group that takes a
tour. The commercialization comes in by taking something as beautiful as Niagara
Falls, one of the seven Wonders of the World, and making it seem like just
another product to sell.
One can take this two ways, the
first being that Twain is at the height of cynicism with the commercialization idea.
Or the second, which is that really Twain is making a commentary that we
shouldn’t be a “hackful of small reptiles was deemed temporarily necessary to
fill a crack in the world’s unnoted myriads… and decades of ages after they
shall have gathered themselves to their blood-relations, the other worms, and
been mingled with the unremembering dust” (Twain 17-18). Here, the writer
suggests that all the visitors on this tour are “small reptiles” (Twain, 17) which
is quite cynical. But what I believe he is really trying to get at is the fact
that people need to break from this commercialized path and yes, take in the
touristy stuff, but also admire the complete natural beauty of the Falls. This
is the optimism that Twain embeds in the story. I think he believes that people
are innately looking for this beautiful experience and the tour is just a
superficial tool created to try and achieve this.
In usual Twain fashion, he likes to
pose problems but no solutions, or a solution so ludicrous that it would never
actually happen. Later on in the story, the main character actually gets thrown
into the Falls and taken around 44 times. I believe this is Twain’s way of
alluding to, again, the idea that one needs to experience the beauty of the
Falls in their own way. Preferably not by deciding the answer is to throw one’s
self over a cliff and into one of the largest waterfalls in the entire world. But,
nonetheless he is a humorist and there couldn’t be a serious commentary in his
stories without it being poked fun at as well.
Works
Cited
Twain, Mark. The
Complete Short Stories of Mark Twain. New
York: Bantam Books, 1957. Print.
2 Comments:
Kyle,
That's an interesting way to look at the story. I agree tours provide the same experience for everyone, since it is the same speech and the same route each tourist takes. Do you think though, that there are more to tours than Twain suggests? That if all anyone does is take a tour, it is then commercialized? I've taken a few tours myself and sometimes they feel routine, but other times they help tourists to see things they wouldn't have to thought to on their own. Even though tours decide what tourists should see and think about a place, what people take away from it is always different. It is true, that exploring on your own makes your experience more unique though. There's more to commercialization than tours of course, but I find it interesting that he choses to make tours the foundation of his story. How different do you think this story would be if he used something else like gift shops as his foundation? Twain makes some interesting points!
I really liked the points you made about the story, A Day In Niagara. I was thinking the same thing when you said that one of Twain's themes is optimism and one should look deeper into the stories meaning. I agree there is much sarcasm in his stories, especially in A Day in Niagara. At the beginning of the story, he states that Niagara Falls has nice hotels, a good place to fish and the price is right. What Twain really meant was that Niagara Falls is an awful place to fish, the hotels are probably bad and it is overpriced.
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