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Merry Tales

Chapter 2: EDITOR’S NOTE.
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About This Book

A collection of short, humorous sketches and stories that combine tall-tale comedy, satire, and wry social observation. Pieces range from mock-military reminiscences to domestic misadventures and odd personal essays, using exaggerated situations, careful irony, and deadpan narration to expose human vanity, misunderstanding, and pretension. The arrangements alternate longer narratives and brief anecdotes, often subverting expectations by revealing mistaken motives or comic consequences, and balancing sentiment with biting humor. Recurrent focuses include the absurdities of conflict and authority, miscommunication between characters, and the gap between intention and outcome. The tone shifts between playful buffoonery and sardonic commentary while maintaining succinct plots and vivid, character-driven incident.

EDITOR’S NOTE.

The projector of this Series has had in mind the evident desire of our people, largely occupied with material affairs, for reading in a shape adapted to the amount of time at their disposal. Until recently this desire has been satisfied chiefly from foreign sources. Many reprints and translations of the little classics of other literatures than our own have been made, and much good has been done in this way. On the other hand, a great deal of rubbish has been distributed in the same fashion, to the undoubted injury of our popular taste.

Now that a reasonable copyright law allows the publication of the better class of native literature at moderate prices, it has seemed fitting that these volumes should consist mainly of works by American writers. As its title indicates, the “Fiction, Fact, and Fancy Series” will include not only fiction and poetry, but such essays, monographs, and biographical sketches as may appear, from time to time, to be called for.

To no writer can the term “American” more justly be applied than to the humorist whose “Merry Tales” are here presented. It was in an effort to devise some novel method of bringing these stories, new and old, before the public, that this Series had its origin. But, aside from this, those among us who can gather figs of thistles are so few in number as to make their presence eminently desirable.

New York, March, 1892.

Acknowledgment should be made to the Century Company, and to Messrs. Harper & Brothers, for kind permission to reprint several of these stories from the “Century” and “Harper’s Magazine.”