The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County | Reading Pointers for Sharper Insights

Reading Pointers for Sharper Insights

To fully appreciate Twain's fiction, note the following:

Historical Note:

This story was not original with Mark Twain. He had heard it told many times in mining camps and other places he visited prior to his writing it.

Satire:

Twain is satirizing several aspects of American life, but especially the country bumpkins who tend to speak at length about subjects that are close to them but are really unimportant and nonsensical.

Narration:

  • “The Celebrated Jumping Frog of Calaveras County” uses the framework of a story within a story, with the search for the Reverend Smiley being the least important part of the story.

  • The main narrator, Simon Wheeler, uses a serious, deadpan and understated style that gives the tale an overall humorous effect. As Wheeler weaves his story, the story gets more ridiculous and ironic—pay particular attention to the description of the horse's illnesses, the dog, and Smiley's attempts at teaching the frog.

Unique Elements in Twain's Story:

  • Note Twain's use of extremely long descriptive sentences when relating Wheeler's story and how Twain slows it down through his use of linguistics, bad grammar, and heavy dialect.

  • The broad humor in the actual telling of the story. The story is layered so that there is not just one or two anecdotes told, but various parts throughout the whole are funny.

  • Twain depicts the humorous personal characteristics of both frontier characters, Simon Wheeler, and Jim Smiley.

  • The amusing story line that ends with one man outwitting another—Jim Smiley had outwitted everyone throughout the story, but he was not as smart as he thought.