đ© Mark Twain â âA Cure for the Bluesâ đĄ- 1871
In a world that takes itself too seriously, one man discovers a remedy for despair â and it isnât found in any doctorâs bag.
Mark Twainâs A Cure for the Blues begins as a simple confession: a man plagued by melancholy claims to have found a miraculous cure. Yet, as he tells his story, we realize that his medicine is laughter itself â laughter at human folly, hypocrisy, and the grand absurdity of life.
With razor-sharp wit, Twain skewers pretension and self-righteousness, transforming gloom into amusement. The cure he prescribes isnât faith or philosophy, but the ability to see through nonsense â and to laugh at it.
đŹ In this brief, brilliant satire, Twain reminds us that the surest antidote to the blues is not solemnity, but humor â that warm, dangerous light that exposes truth and heals the spirit.
âš A Cure for the Blues endures as a timeless dose of Twainâs finest medicine: irony, laughter, and a touch of rebellion against the worldâs self-importance.