Boston Daily Globe
Feb. 20, 1885
p. 4

Mark Twain makes the hero of his new book tell the story in what is supposed to be a boy's dialect. On the very second page this "low-down," uneducated urchin is made to say "commence," where any boy, especially if he hadn't been to school, would have said "begin." The less education the more Anglo-Saxon, and, generally, the better grammar. Mark ought to know this.