Thursday, January 23, 2020
Samuel Clemens in Buffalo: A Woman and an Artist Essay -- Samuel Cleme
Samuel Clemens in Buffalo: A Woman and an Artist    Preface    While literary critics and historians alike have thoroughly examined the influence of Samuel Langhorne Clemensââ¬â¢ Missouri boyhood and foreign travels on his writing, scholars outside of Western New York consistently overlook the importance of the eighteen months he spent in Buffalo from August 1869 to March 1871. Though a Buffalo resident for the past twenty years, I was also only vaguely aware that Clemens passed through until Dr. Walter Sharrow of the Canisius College History Department mentioned his local stay.   The suggestion that Americaââ¬â¢s best satirist lived in Buffaloââ¬âa location that could provide a contemporary wit with a wide range of materialââ¬âtickled my historical sensibilities. Nearly immediately, I began to speculate why Americaââ¬â¢s most famous writer would migrate to Buffalo. After I discarded my first ideasââ¬âthe weather, the Buffalo Bills, the efficiency and effectiveness of our local political leadersââ¬âI concluded it must be because of a woman. Indeed, my early research echoed this assumption, reinforcing my interest in Twainââ¬â¢s experience here and inspiring the first section of this paper.     When furthering my research, I developed a second point of interest. Two local scholars, Martin B. Fried and Tom Reigstad both suggest that Buffalo was a major point of transition for Clemens. Fried writes, ââ¬Å"His Buffalo experience, scanted in most biographies, has significance because it was the final stage in a long campaign for an artistic existence free of financial worries and of the burdens of journalistic writing.â⬠  This suggestionââ¬âthat his time in Buffalo inspired his development from humorist and journalist to the novelist who produced Huck Finnââ¬âintrigued me de...              ...287    _____________. 11 and 13 March 1871.Mark Twainââ¬â¢s Letters, vol. 4, 349-350.    Langdon, Olivia. 17 June 1868. Mark Twainââ¬â¢s Letters, vol. 2, 286.     Twain, Mark. ââ¬Å"Salutatory,â⬠ Buffalo Express. August 21, 1869: reprinted in Joseph B. 	McCullough and Janice McIntire-Strasburg, Mark Twain and the Buffalo Express, 	5.    Twain, Mark. ââ¬Å"A General Reply.â⬠ Buffalo Express. November 12, 1870: reprinted in 	Joseph 	B. McCullough and Janice McIntire-Strasburg, Mark Twain and the 	Buffalo Express, 	254.    Secondary Sources     Martin B. Fried, ââ¬Å"Mark Twain in Buffalo,â⬠ Niagara Frontier 5, no. 4 (Buffalo: Buffalo 	Historical 	Society,   Winter 1959): 89.    Justin Kaplan, Mr. Clemens and Mr. Twain, (New York: Simon and Schuster, 1966), 52.    Joseph B. McCullough and Janice McIntire-Strasburg, Mark Twain and the Buffalo 	Express. DeKalb: Northern Illinois Press: 1999, xix.                        
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