Life on the Mississippi, Part 8.

audiobook

Life on the Mississippi, Part 8.

by Mark Twain

EN·~49 minutes

Chapters

Description

A young land‑surveyor sets out for California aboard a cramped ship, preferring the quiet of his own thoughts to the chatter of fellow passengers. While professional gamblers fill the upper decks with smoke and profanity, a good‑natured farmer from Ohio, John Backus, keeps the narrator company on daily promenades, sharing stories of cattle, family, and the simple rhythms of frontier life. Their conversation reveals a surprising chemistry: the surveyor’s technical jargon intrigues Backus, who affectionately dubs him “Triangle,” while the farmer’s passion for livestock lights up every mention of a herd.

Backus soon slides an unexpected proposal across the table—a plan to use the surveyor’s right to claim “gores” of land for profit by stocking them with cattle. The offer tests the narrator’s professional integrity, prompting a firm refusal and a tense, uneasy silence. As the ship sails onward, the encounter hints at the moral choices and adventures that await on the untamed West.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~49 minutes (47K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by David Widger

Release date

2004-07-10

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Mark Twain

Mark Twain

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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