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Twain


Louis, New York City, Philadelphia, and even Cincinnati working at various print shops. Then his family duty called so Clemens went back to help his brother in Keokuk, Iowa with his printing business. Later in 1957, Clemens decided to travel to South America and experience the foreign lifestyles. However, the next decision would change Samuel Langhorne Clemens's life forever, he changed his mind and wanted to be a riverboat pilot. He bugged pilot Horace Bixby to teach him the ways of the water. Two years later Sam received his license for operating a riverboat.
             Shortly thereafter the civil war came about. The war put a close on all commercial traffic on the Mississippi River, meaning Clemens could no longer drive his boat. Sam then served for the Confederate Army for a whole two weeks and decided not to get involved with the war. He then went to Carson City, Nevada with Orion in 1861. The two had high hopes of getting rich quick by searching for silver and gold. Unfortunately the found nothing and short after Sam moved to Virginia City, Nevada to work at the Territorial Enterprise. On February 3, 1863 Samuel Langhorne Clemens began writing under his pen name, Mark Twain. Sam's pen name, which stood for "two fathoms," came from his life operating and living by the Mississippi River. After publishing some writings Mark moved west to San Francisco to work for the Californian.
             In 1866 Twain traveled to the Hawaiian Islands to be a correspondent for the Sacramento Union. When he came back he made money by lecturing to others about the beautiful Islands of Hawaii. It was then that Twain realized that his literature talents had no limitations and he had "a practical commercial Mind" (Emerson 157).
             About a year later Mark left for Europe via steamship. The boat's name was Quaker City. On this ship Twain unknowingly met his future brother-in-law. Mark's mission for his trip was to write insights about the European worlds, which were collected in a book called The Innocents Abroad.


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