The Innocents Abroad

by Mark Twain

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The Innocents Abroad

The Innocents Abroad by Mark Twain is a travel narrative that humorously chronicles Twain's 1867 voyage through Europe and the Holy Land with a group of American tourists. Twain satirizes both the...

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The Innocents Abroad

Twain's mockery of his fellow passengers in The Innocents Abroad is particularly marked in the early chapters, such as IV and V, when they are on the boat together and there are no other targets for...

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The Innocents Abroad

The phrase "Africa and Spain were forgotten" occurs in Chapter 7 of The Innocents Abroad as Mark Twain describes a shift in focus. Initially, he reflects on the scenery and history of the African and...

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The Innocents Abroad

During his journey from Fayal to Gibraltar in The Innocents Abroad, the author, Mark Twain, became exasperated by the repeated question of whether he would travel from Gibraltar through Spain to...

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The Innocents Abroad

The new annoyance in Mark Twain's The Innocents Abroad refers to a persistent legend told by Gibraltar guides about a Spanish queen who vowed not to leave her hilltop seat until the English flag was...

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The Innocents Abroad

The narrator of The Innocents Abroad describes himself as "a helpless orphan in a foreign land" to a tour guide in Gibraltar, expressing frustration over repeatedly hearing the legend of the "Queen's...

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The Innocents Abroad

The author describes the Moors' "staunch old castle" as grim, ancient, and battle-scarred, reflecting its long history and the many sieges it has endured. Located in Gibraltar, the castle is...

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