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What are some differences between Twain’s experience of travel and ours today? We’re there any joys on his trip that you might not get traveling today?

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Answer:

Samuel Langhorne Clemens was an American writer, lecturer and humorist. He was well known by the pet name Mark Twain.

He viewed traveling as a dangerous factor to bigotry, and narrow-mindedness and prejudice. He had the notion of people traveling to experience different cultures and experiences rather than just staying in one part of the world.His travel was initially for greener pasture before he squashed his main aim and decided to explore.

He travelled to explore different cultures, area and people while in this modern day people travel solely for financial purposes

Traveling was more enjoyable than presently because he travelled with the sole aim of connecting with different people in different parts of the world. In the current world, traveling isn’t embarked upon for that purpose.

User Nexana
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Answer:

It was all part of his lifelong need to see and experience new things, a need that in itself was deeply and characteristically American. “I am wild with impatience to move—move—Move!” Twain wrote to his mother in 1867. “My mind gives me peace only in excitement and restless moving from place to place. I wish I never had to stop anywhere.” He seldom did.

But our travels this days his minimal because of internet and books

Yes! Like war

Step-by-step explanation:

Twain displayed at all times an avid curiosity for his physical surroundings and the baffling, sometimes exasperating people who lived there. He was truly a citizen of the world, and one of the great travelers of the nineteenth—or indeed any—century. “The world is a book and those who do not travel read only a chapter,” said St. Augustine, and Mark Twain in his time read many chapters. He even wrote a few himself.

User Michael Grogan
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