Mark Twain’s The Adventures of Tom Sawyer
is one of the classics in American literature. The novel is apparently a
child’s adventure story in form of a bildungsroman, a type of novel whose
principal subject is the moral, psychological and intellectual development of a
youthful protagonist. The novel remain an eternal favourite as it appeals to
both the children and the adults for the adventures that are intriguing and
delightful and they appeal to the basic instincts of all regardless of time and
culture. The plot of the novel narrates the growth and maturation of Tom; but
what is most striking is that behind the narrative of Tom Sawyer, Twain speaks
his own life-story. David Copperfield is often described as the
autobiographical novel of Charles Dickens. In the same fashion, perhaps, be not
wrong to say that Tom Sawyer is a fictional autobiographical narrative of Mark
Twain.
Mark Twain was born in Florida, Missouri in 1835,
and grown up in nearby Hannibal, a small Mississipi river town. Hannibal
becomes the model for St. Petersburg, the fictionalized setting of Mark Twains
two most popular novels, The Adventure of Tom Sawyer and The Adventure of
Huckleberry Finn. The River Mississipi plays an important role in the novel.
The structure of the book is largely depended on the river Mississipi which
flows continuously by affecting the life of Tom, Huck, Jim and by bringing
before the reader an overall and comprehensive pictures of heterogeneous
American culture on its shore. The river has its living presence in the novel. The
river plays its symbolic function as well as its structural role most
effectively in the novel because of Twain’s personal experiences of the various
facets of the river Mississipi.
Twain based the novel largely on his personal
memories of growing up in Hannibal in the 1840s. In his preface to the novel,
he states that “most of the adventures recorded in this book really occurred” and
that the character of Tom Sawyer has a basis in “a combination of…three boys whom
I knew”. Indeed, nearly every character of the novel comes from young
Twain’s village experience- Aunt Polly shares many characteristics with twain’s
mother; Merry is based on Twain’s sister Pamela; and Sid resembles Twain’s
younger brother, Henry. Huck Finn, Widow Douglas, and even Injun Joe also have
real life counterparts.
The structure of the novel is broadly episodic
because Twain composed the novel on three memories of his childhood which came
to mind, waited until he remembered some more, and then added them to his
manuscript. The episodic nature of the novel therefore suggests that the novel
is based on his childhood memories. In fact, in his preface to the first
edition Twain wrote “Although my book is intended mainly for the entertainment of the boys
and girls are part of my plan has been to pleasantly remind adults of what they
felt and thought.” So the novel is the combination of the past and the
present of well remembered events from childhood told in such a way as to evoke
remembrance in the adult mind.
The actions and the places narrated in the novel
become lively as they have close resemblances with the events of Mark Twain
himself. The young Twin grew up in a prosperous family but he was sent out to
work at the age of twelve after his father’s death. As a young man he travelled
frequently as a stream boat pilot. In that profession he became familiar with
river life that furnishes much material for his writing. The Jackson’s island narrated in the novel is
an actual island located near St. Louis. The cave that Injun Joe inhabited
still exists, as for the houses that Widow Douglas and Aunt Polly inhabited.
So the characters and places and events narrated in
the novel have their autobiographical significance; but Twain has transformed
them into fictional objects to make Tom Sawyer a classic example of fictional
narrative with realistic overtones.
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