Prince and the Pauper

Prince and the Pauper

by Mark Twain, Frank T. Merrill (Illustrator), Everett Emerson (Afterword)
Publisher: Reader's Digest
Hardcover, 238 pages
Used Price: $8.00 (1 in stock) Condition Policy

Historical Setting: England, 1547AD

They are the same age. They look alike. In fact, there is but one difference between them: Tom Canty is a child of the London slums; Edward Tudor is heir to the throne of England. Just how insubstantial this difference is becomes all too clear when a chance encounter leads to an exchange of clothing—and of roles. . .with the pauper caught up in the pomp and folly of the royal court, and the prince wandering horror-stricken through the lower depths of sixteenth-century English society.

Out of the theme of switched identities Mark Twain fashioned both a scathing attack upon social hypocrisy and injustice, and an irresistible comedy imbued with the sense of high-spirited play that belongs to his happiest creative period.

The Prince and the Pauper is, in the words of Kenneth S. Lynn, ". . .expressive of its author's genius. Indeed, nothing he ever wrote, not even Huckleberry Finn, introduces us to more of the themes that preoccupied—and finally obsessed—Mark Twain's imagination."

Did you find this review helpful?