Quote:
Originally posted by Snake:
Reminds me of the "disclaimer" Twain put in Huck Finn...or was it A CT. Yankee in King Arthur's Court??
No. Definatley "Huck Finn". Great work, by the way. Read it earlier this year in Language Arts and it is one of the ddefinative American works. Twain's humour is evident and yet there is such a statement and a heart to this work that it really enders it and let's it's message last even today. Althoughin the backdrop of 1840's Southern U.S.A. , the fact is that it's more than just a tale about a boy and his slave. It's a boy, confronted with the worlds faults who comes of age and learns the most important things about friendship and life and being a man.

These are not news matters. These are matters that matter.


Madness! Madness!
- Major Clipton
The Bridge On The River Kwai

GOLD - GOLD - GOLD - GOLD. Bright and Yellow, Hard and Cold, Molten, Graven, Hammered, Rolled, Hard to Get and Light to Hold; Stolen, Borrowed, Squandered - Doled.
- Greed

Nothing Is Written
Lawrence Of Arabia