A Connecticut Yankee In King Arthur's Court

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Imagine waking up in the night in shining armor time era. Everyone you know and loved including yourself were not even thought of, more or less being born. In A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s court by Mark Twain Young gentleman named Hank Morgan got hit on the head and woke up to a knight asking who he was. After a while Hank remembers the dates of events and ends up tricking everyone to think he is he was wizard. King Arthur believes in Hank, though the Kings trusty sidekick that is also a magician, Merlin, doesn’t fall for hanks tricks. Hank is promoted to the prime minister, or the name he prefers “the boss”, and tries to civilize Camelot like his home was back in Connecticut. Mark twain addresses the 19th centuries issues of the churches being overpowered and the discrimination between higher and lower classes by using irony and satire to connect the events in the novel to 19th-century America. …show more content…

Twain states “ he must bring nothing outside -we will go in- in among the dirt, and possibly other repulsive things and take the food with the household.”(chapter 27, paragraph 2) Hank has been on the top of the higher class since he tricked the king into him being a sorcerer. Being that Hank is not from this time era, he has not experienced the lower class until he takes disguise as the quote from the novel states his planning. Otherwise, Hank has not been treated like a peasant so he makes fun of them and looks down upon them. Twain has set a bar of discrimination between the upper and lower class in Camelot and this issue is still occurring in America's nineteenth

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