Comparing The Notorious Jumping Frog And The Storm

528 Words2 Pages

The two stories that I chose to discuss are Mark Twain’s “The Notorious Jumping Frog" and Kate Chopin’s “The Storm”. These stories had very different settings, yet they both reeked of irony. In Mark Twain’s “The Notorious Jumping Frog” Jim Smiley is a betting man and frankly bets on everything, from the health of another man’s wife, to a dog, and eventually a jumping frog. One day he found a frog and this frog, Dan’l Webster how to jump. Jim Smiley was confident that his frog could beat any frog in the entire land in a jumping contest. He ran into a stranger and expressed his faith into his frog. The stranger said that he didn’t have a frog to bet against, so Jim Smiley asked the stranger to hold his frog while he goes to and finds a frog to challenge Dan’l Webster. While Jim is gone looking for a frog, the stranger loads Dan’l Webster down with …show more content…

A father and son are at the town store, waiting out the storm because they felt it was just too unsafe to risk making back home. Claxita (the wife and mother) is at home frantically worried about her husband and son, when an old lover stops by. He is invited inside to wait out the storm, since it is really starting to rain pretty hard. As the storm violently erupts, Claxita and her ex-lover engage in behavior that is inappropriate and it abruptly stops as soon as the storm passes. Claxita’s lover leaves her house as quickly as the storm does and soon her son and husband come home safe and sound. Her husband has a can of shrimp that he picked up at the store for dinner that evening. Nothing is ever said or mentioned about Claxita’s affair and it seems to have come and gone just like the storm. American Realism is typically not stories that involve romantic type of plots, and although Claxita did have an affair, I did not consider this story to be a romantic one. To me, it was riddled with irony, disruption, and

Open Document