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Jim Smily and His Jumping Frog
Mark Twain was a great humorist—more genial than grim, more good-humored than ironic, more given to imaginative exaggeration than to intellectual sophistication, more inclined to pathos than to melancholy.
On Twain
Archibald
Henderson

Jim Smily and His Jumping Frog

Volume X, Part 5

Bibliographic Record

Contents

HARVARD CLASSICS SHELF OF FICTION, VOLUME X, PART 5
NEW YORK: P.F. COLLIER & SON, 1917
NEW YORK: BARTLEBY.COM, 2000

Biographical Note
Criticisms and Interpretations.

  1. By T. Edgar Pemberton
  2. By Albert Bigelow Paine
  3. By Archibald Henderson
Jim Smily and His Jumping Frog