Home > The Lady, or the Tiger? Summary & Study Guide > Essays and Criticism > Francis Richard Stockton
The Lady, or the Tiger? | Francis Richard Stockton
In the following excerpt, Henry C. Vedder comments on Stockton's use of language and wit in an analysis of the style of his short fiction.
American humor has now a world-wide repute, and is enjoyed if not appreciated by an international audience. The goddess of fame has been more lavish than discriminating in the distribution of her favors to American humorists. It is a single type of humor that has become known to foreign readers as distinctively American,—the type of which Artemus Ward and Mark Twain (in a part of his writings) are the best representatives. This humor is broad; it deals largely in exaggeration; it produces gales of merriment by a fortunate jest; it lacks delicacy, constructive power, and literary form....
[The entire page is 1057 words long]
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