
A sharply satirical essay opens with a startling scene: a neatly dressed Sunday‑school boy hauled off to jail for throwing stones at a Chinese immigrant in San Francisco. The narrator immediately turns the incident into a courtroom‑style rumination, questioning the boy’s upbringing, the city’s laws, and the broader moral climate that so readily condemns the vulnerable while excusing the powerful. Through witty irony and vivid description, the piece lays bare the contradictions of a society that preaches justice yet practices prejudice.
From there the essay widens its lens, exposing the tangled web of taxes, police complacency, and newspaper sensationalism that fuels anti‑Chinese sentiment. It blends historical detail with razor‑sharp humor, prompting listeners to consider how past injustices reverberate in today’s conversations about race and fairness. The result is an engaging, thought‑provoking portrait of a city’s collective conscience, delivered with the lively voice of a keen observer who refuses to let cruelty go unnoticed.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (83K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2004-06-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1835–1910
Best known for bringing the Mississippi River, small-town America, and sharp humor vividly to life, this American writer turned everyday speech into unforgettable literature. Under the pen name Mark Twain, Samuel Langhorne Clemens became one of the most famous and most quoted authors of the 19th century.
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