Short Story Review, “A Campaign That Failed” by Mark Twain
This story on the American Civil War is fascinating, interesting, and provocative. A lot is going to be lost in sensation taken however it’s realized for appreciation of war and conflict until it comes back with revenge, or taste rather than merely sensation. Good amounts of nature are expressed through “A Campaign That Failed”. With courage, with doubt, with curiosity on dangerous sides you’ll find the narrator to be rather exclusive for something to appeal on: war, destruction, and strange deaths. I’m not saying all this with the intention of being malevolent and irresponsible. Funny how mystery gets a hold of us however we approach war due to sensation that may not end up being built up into taste for which Twain expresses amusement over odds and ends near some Southern places, including a village where he was born. Dumb stuff happens when we’re so enthused about violence no matter what privilege proceeds on sanity within reason. Mark Twain could comment on this; he was extraordinary to pursuit, or I can speak of what he does in the present tense for respect and analysis. Fashionable matters for what’s perceived to be normal to him makes history the more impressive from the sheer oddity of sensation in the name of bias or poor craftsmanship; I know this, because I’m reading the pages on Twain’s story and not being so biased about the general terms used and abused for tale-setting ideas. Maybe there’s more to Civil War in American history than meets the eye: blood, sweat, and tears which no longer exist on clothes that are now either perished or collectibles. Visions improve opinion unless no sensation leads to taste. Sometimes we’re quite prone to our own ways of thinking from the very nature of conflict between the shades of grey, so civility in war goes hand in hand with realizing better futures for dead individualisms by the fallen persons. George Carlin, a comedian from today’s age, doesn’t think there’s such thing as a “civil war”. Well, George, try looking at this story and looking at the onslaught which occurs out of random luck instead of pure reason; Twain killed a man as the story’s narrator and expresses nothing but regret even if the dead man gets to walking again. Of course Twain sinned. By the order of nature and privilege he’s gone berserk and ended up home polite and dandy in a fair share of temperament conjoined with other individuals’.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Private_History_of_a_Campaign_That_Failed
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