Vienna/Visit to Parliament: Difference between revisions

From Mark Twain in the German Language Press

Created page with "thumb|right|350px|{{File:Austrian_parliament_harpers_1897.jpg}} Shortly after arriving in Vienna, Mark Twain started to take an interest in local politics. On 28th October 1897, he attended a sitting of the Austro-Hungarian parliament for the first time ([https://www.zotero.org/groups/4437667/mtxdigital/search/dolmetsch/titleCreatorYear/items/97PABR4V/item-list Dolmetsch] 72). He describes it in great detail in his essay "St..."
 
mNo edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Austrian_parliament_harpers_1897.jpg|thumb|right|350px|{{File:Austrian_parliament_harpers_1897.jpg}}]]
[[File:Austrian_parliament_harpers_1897.jpg|frameless|right|350px|{{File:Austrian_parliament_harpers_1897.jpg}}]]


Shortly after arriving in Vienna, Mark Twain started to take an interest in local politics. On 28th October 1897, he attended a sitting of the Austro-Hungarian parliament for the first time ([https://www.zotero.org/groups/4437667/mtxdigital/search/dolmetsch/titleCreatorYear/items/97PABR4V/item-list Dolmetsch] 72). He describes it in great detail in his essay "Stirring Times in Austria", first published in ''Harper's New Monthly Magazine'' in March 1898 and later republished in the collection ''How To Tell a Story''. Twain writes that the event was constantly disrupted by heckling of the politicians. Curses and threats were made against the speaker and everybody had wooden planks that were banged on the desks to make loud noises. Many sittings of the parliament went like this, making actual debates almost impossible.
Shortly after arriving in Vienna, Mark Twain started to take an interest in local politics. On 28th October 1897, he attended a sitting of the Austro-Hungarian parliament for the first time ([https://www.zotero.org/groups/4437667/mtxdigital/search/dolmetsch/titleCreatorYear/items/97PABR4V/item-list Dolmetsch] 72). He describes it in great detail in his essay "Stirring Times in Austria", first published in ''Harper's New Monthly Magazine'' in March 1898 and later republished in the collection ''How To Tell a Story''. Twain writes that the event was constantly disrupted by heckling of the politicians. Curses and threats were made against the speaker and everybody had wooden planks that were banged on the desks to make loud noises. Many sittings of the parliament went like this, making actual debates almost impossible.

Revision as of 10:29, 21 August 2025

Illustration of a tumultuous scene in the Austrian parliament on 28th October 1897 from Harper's New Monthly Magazine. Source: Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 96, March 1898, 532, https://archive.org/details/harpersnew096various/page/532.
Illustration of a tumultuous scene in the Austrian parliament on 28th October 1897 from Harper's New Monthly Magazine. Source: Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 96, March 1898, 532, https://archive.org/details/harpersnew096various/page/532.

Shortly after arriving in Vienna, Mark Twain started to take an interest in local politics. On 28th October 1897, he attended a sitting of the Austro-Hungarian parliament for the first time (Dolmetsch 72). He describes it in great detail in his essay "Stirring Times in Austria", first published in Harper's New Monthly Magazine in March 1898 and later republished in the collection How To Tell a Story. Twain writes that the event was constantly disrupted by heckling of the politicians. Curses and threats were made against the speaker and everybody had wooden planks that were banged on the desks to make loud noises. Many sittings of the parliament went like this, making actual debates almost impossible.