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Analysis Of The Story ' Life On The Mississippi '

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When Romanticism Becomes a Terrible Reality In the story Life on the Mississippi, the narrator describes a young man’s inspiring dreams to be a glorious steam boat captain, traveling up and down the Mississippi River from St Louis to New Orleans. The young boy had missed his chance to be a pirate it seemed, as there had been no pirates for some time, the time of the buccaneer had gone. There was only the steamboat now, the most beautiful thing man had ever created, and he was to be a part of it. The narrator explains to us through the boy how beautiful the sound was when a steamboat was approaching, and how the whole town would flock to the docks to see this beautiful creation of man. The crew of the steamboat was thought to be more glorious than any pirate could ever have been, and they were paid very well too. The boy’s mind was made up. He was to become a glorified crew member on a steamboat; no matter what challenges he faced, he was going to be looked upon as a god, in his mind, but the boy would soon realize that the life upon a steam boat was everything but glamorous. In the time period that the story was written, it was the beginning of the industrial revolution and stream engines were the source of power. Ships were being built with steam engines instead of masts. The mighty Mississippi river could only be navigated going down stream, but could now be traveled in both directions. Steamboats were the work horse of the day. When steamboats would approach a river

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