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Mark Twain

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Mark Twain Helen Keller Easton Redding Mark Twain Tourism Project The goal of this project is to raise awareness and make Connecticut a destination for Mark Twain ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mark Twain


1
Mark Twain
Helen Keller
Easton
Redding
2
Mark Twain Tourism Project
  • The goal of this project is to raise awareness
    and make Connecticut a destination for Mark Twain
    tourism and research in the future.
  • We feel that merging information about Twain with
    information about the "Friends of Twain" in the
    many towns and cities that have a Twain
    Connection is a great way to promote town pride
    and Connecticut tourism in the future.

3
The Connections are all over the State!
4
Twains ConnecticutTheres more to it than you
think.
5
Fairfield County
  • Redding, Connecticut- Twain arrived on June 18th,
    1908 and departed on April 21, 1910.
  • Bridgeport Connecticut- P.T. Barnum was mayor of
    Bridgeport (born in Bethel).
  • Westport, Connecticut- Edgar "Ned" Wakeman was
    born in Westport, Connecticut.
  • Ridgefield, Connecticut- Cass Gilbert, Edward W.
    Kemble and Edward M. Knox
  • Stamford, Connecticut- Edward Quintard, M.D.
  • Easton, Connecticut- Helen Keller Ida M.
    Tarbell.

6
Easton Redding
  • I grew up in Redding, yet it was not until a
    recent discovery that I realized there was a
    connection between Redding and Easton outside of
    each town originally being a part of the Town of
    Fairfield and the Region 9 school district Joel
    Barlow High School. As I was digging through the
    Mark Twain Library archives last winter out
    popped a note about Samuel L. Clemens and his
    home written by Helen Keller in 1909.
  • "I have been in Eden three days and I saw a King.
    I knew he was a King the minute I touched him.
    Though I had never touched a King before."
  • -A Daughter of Eve

7
Twain Keller
  • They first met in March 1895 at a luncheon held
    in Kellers honor at West 34th Street in NYC. It
    was the home of Laurence Hutton, an editor and
    critic who was Twains friend and one of Helens
    early benefactors.
  • Henry Rogers was there with Twain and about a
    dozens others to welcome wish Helen well during
    her stay in NYC where she had come to study
    speech at the School for the Deaf.
  • During the luncheon the two spent time together
    and Helen seemed to feel more at ease with Twain
    than with any of the other guests. Hutton later
    said He was peculiarly tender and lovely with
    her-even for Mr. Clemens- and she kissed him when
    he said good-bye.

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Keller Describes Twain
  • Mark Twain has his own way of thinking, saying
    and doing everything. I can feel the twinkle of
    his eye in his handshake. Even while he utters
    his cynical wisdom in an indescribably droll
    voice, he makes you feel that his heart is a
    tender Iliad of human sympathy.
  • How she felt the twinkle of his eyeWhen Helen
    was talking with an intimate friend, her hand
    went to her friend's face to see, "the twist of
    the mouth." In this way she was able to get the
    meaning of those half sentences which people
    complete unconsciously from the tone of the voice
    or the twinkle of the eye.

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Twain Keller
  • Letter to Mrs. Henry RogersFor in behalf of
    Helen Keller, Mr. Rogers will remember our
    visit with that astonishing girl at Lawrence
    Huttons house when she was 14 years old. Last
    July, in Boston, when she was 16 she underwent
    the Harvard examination for admission to
    Radcliffe College. She passed without a single
    condition. She was allowed only the same amount
    of time that is granted to other applicants,
    this was shortened in her case by the fact that
    the question-papers had to be read to her. Yet
    she scored an average of 90, as against an
    average of 78 on the part of the other
    applicants.

12
Twain Keller
  • Letter to Mrs. Henry Rogers, (Continued)It
    wont do for America to allow this marvelous
    child to retire from her studies because of
    poverty. If she can go on with them she will make
    a fame that will endure in history for centuries.
    Along her special lines she is the most
    extraordinary product of all the ages.
  • I beg you to lay siege to your husband get him
    to interest himself and Messrs. John D. William
    Rockefeller the other Standard Oil chiefs in
    Helens caseto pile that Standard Oil Helen
    Keller College Fund as high as they please they
    have my consent.

13
Twain Keller
  • The result of this letter was that Mr. Rogers
    personally took charge of Helen Kellers
    fortunes, and out of his own means made it
    possible for her to continue her education and to
    achieve for herself the enduring fame which Mark
    Twain had foreseen.
  • The Reply It is superb! And I am beyond measure
    grateful to you both. I knew you would be
    interested in that wonderful girl, that Mr.
    Rogers was already interested in her touched by
    her I was sure that if nobody else helped her
    you two would but you have gone far away
    beyond the sum I expectedmay your lines fall in
    pleasant places here, Hereafter for it!
  • Ever sincerely yours, S. L. CLEMENS.

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Twain Keller
  • Helen Keller visited Twain for three days in
    January of 1909. She was 28 years old and had
    recently released her second major work The
    World I Live In
  • The copy Twain received was inscribed Dear Mr.
    Clemens, come live in my world a little
    while/Helen Keller.
  • In response, he had said that she must come to
    his world first, and to bring Annie (Sullivan)
    Macy John Macy with her.
  • I command you all three, to come and spend a few
    days with he in Stormfield.

17
Helen Keller Visits in January 1909
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Twain Keller
  • Of all the visitors to Stormfield none wrote a
    more vivid description of the place than Helen
    Keller. Nothing escaped her senses, from the
    tang in the air of cedar and pine as she made
    her approach to the smell of burning fireplace
    logs, orange tea and toast with strawberry jam
    which were served shortly after her arrival.
  • That which she could not see was spelled into
    her hands by her teacher, Annie Sullivan Macy,
    a.k.a. The Miracle Worker as Twain called her.

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23
Twain Keller
  • It was not generally known that Keller had a
    great sense of humor, but it was one of the
    things Twain liked best about her.
  • When he showed her to her room on the first night
    at Stormfield, he told her that if she needed
    anything, she would find an ample supply of
    cigars and bourbon in the bathroom.
  • When he gave her a tour of the billiards room, he
    offered to teach her the game. She took the bait
    and innocently replied, Oh Mr. Clemens, it takes
    sight to play billiards. Not the way his friends
    played, he answered. The blind couldnt play
    worse.

24
Kellers Sense of Humor
  • When she met Dr. Furness, the Shakespearean
    scholar, he warned her not to let the college
    professors tell her too many assumed facts about
    the life of Shakespeare all we know, he said, is
    that Shakespeare was baptized, married, and died.
  • "Well," she replied, "he seems to have done all
    the essential things."

25
Twain Keller
  • The highlight of Helens visit came on the final
    evening when Twain read to her his short story
    Eves Diary.
  • He sat in a big armchair by the fire while Helen
    followed the story with an ecstatic expression on
    her face. At the very last line Wherever she
    was, there was Eden. (Twains tribute to his
    wife Livy) Helen became tearful.In her journal,
    his secretary wrote She quivered with delight,
    and he was shaken with emotion could hardly
    find his voice again. It was a marvel to behold.

26
I have been in Eden three days and I saw a King.
I knew he was a King the minute I touched him
though I had never touched a King before. A
Daughter of Eve. Helen Keller Jan. 11
27
Twain Keller
  • Twain understood her meaning so completely that
    he wrote beside it
  • The point of what Helen says above, lies in
    this that I read the Diary of Eve all through,
    to her last night in it Eve frequently mentions
    things she saw for the first time but instantly
    knew what they were named them- though she had
    never seen them before.In Kellers The Story
    of My Life, she recalls the joy of learning the
    names of things after she acquired the gift of
    language the more I handled things and learned
    their names and uses, the more joyous confident
    grew my sense of kinship with the rest of the
    World.

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Nothing to hear nor see
  • Twain was amazed that Helen had been able to
    transform everything around her into a reality
    only she could imagine.
  • A well put together unreality is pretty hard to
    beat, was his response to a friend who remarked
    that Helens concept of thingsmust lack
    reality.
  • In Huckleberry Finn- written long before he met
    Helen Twain wrote
  • its lovely to live on a raftnothing to hear
    nor nothing to see.

30
Twain Keller
  • Two of a Kind

31
Two of a Kind
  • Mark Twain was a pre-mature baby with little hope
    of surviving, let alone succeeding.
  • Helen Keller lost her vision and hearing at 19
    months and had little hope for success.
  • Both survived and became successful Authors,
    Public Speakers and Celebrities.

32
Two of a Kind
  • Helen came to accept religious and political
    beliefs quite different from those of her family
    and friends.
  • In 1906, Twain pondered what future audiences
    would say about his unpublished comments on
    religious bigotry and social hypocrisy
  • The edition of 2006 will make a stir when it
    comes out.

33
Two of a Kind
  • "As she had her entire life, the luminous Helen
    inspired intrigues and power struggles, as her
    acquaintances and advisers fought with one
    another to gain possession of her."
  • The same can be said for Twain who endured a
    painful power struggle between his daughters
    and business associates in the final year of his
    life.

34
Two of a Kind
  • During her lifetime, Helen Keller lived in many
    different placesTuscumbia, Alabama Cambridge
    and Wrentham, Massachusetts Forest Hills, New
    York, but perhaps her favorite residence was her
    last, the house in Easton, Connecticut she called
    "Arcan Ridge."
  • The same can be said about Samuel L. Clemens. He
    too lived in many places, and yet fell in love
    with the beauty of his final residence Redding,
    Connecticut.

35
Two of a Kind
  • Helen died in her sleep on June 1, 1968 at the
    age of 87. The cause of her death was heart
    disease.
  • In the twilight of April 21, 1910, at the age of
    74, Mark Twain sunk into unconsciousness from
    which he glided almost imperceptibly into death.
    The cause of his death was heart disease.

36
Two of a Kind
  • Since their deaths, their names have lived on
  • She will live on, one of the few, the immortal
    names not born to die. Her spirit will endure as
    long as man can read and stories can be told of
    the woman who showed the world there are no
    boundaries to courage and faith.
  • Eulogy by Senator J. Lister Hill of Alabama

37
The reports of my death have been greatly
exaggerated
38
Eastons Other Connection
  • Ida Tarbell. Tarbells history of Standard Oil
    appeared in 1904 with an account of Twains
    friend, Henry Rogers, that cast him in a better
    light than Rockefeller. Twain pretended to be
    greatly disappointed.
  • Henry H, the woman has been bought!
  • The truth was that Twain had made arrangements
    for Tarbell to meet Rogers, who laid on the
    charm.

39
Tarbell Visits Stormfield
  • Ida Tarbell and Jeannette Gilder visited Twain at
    Stormfield to welcome him to the neighborhood.
  • In her journal, Twains secretary wrote
  • It was a pleasant company, and the King approves
    of those two fine old girls. They love the house
    with its mellow colorings, its mouthwatering
    colorings as Jeannette Gilder calls it.

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This presentation is over for now, I thank you
all for watching!! Someone please have a whiskey
a smoke for me.
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