The Trimmed Lamp: and other Stories of the Four Million
O. Henry
Lu par Marian Brown





Born in 1862 and died in 1910, O. Henry’s birth name is William Sydney Porter; however, he adopted the pen name O. Henry while in prison. He published 10 collections and over 600 short stories during his lifetime.
The Trimmed Lamp follows The Four Million and provides another series of short stories that take place in New York City in the early years of the 20th century and are representative of the surprise endings that popularized O. Henry’s work. They also capture his use of coincidence or chance to create humor in the story. O Henry wrote about ordinary people in everyday circumstances. He is quoted as once saying, “There are stories in everything. I’ve got some of my best yarns from park benches, lampposts and newspaper stands.”
I hope you enjoy the following readings as much as I enjoyed recording them.
(Summary by Marian Brown) (5 hr 54 min)
Chapitres
Trimmed Lamp, The | 27:07 | Lu par Marian Brown |
A Madison Square Arabian Night | 15:58 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Rubaiyat of a Scotch Highball | 14:20 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Pendulum | 11:57 | Lu par Marian Brown |
Two Thanksgiving Day Gentlemen | 12:50 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Assessor of Success | 14:41 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Buyer from Cactus City | 14:05 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Badge of Policeman O'Roon | 12:02 | Lu par Marian Brown |
Brickdust Row | 18:09 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Making of a New Yorker | 12:51 | Lu par Marian Brown |
Vanity and Some Sables | 13:37 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Social Triangle | 12:27 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Purple Dress | 11:54 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Foreign Policy of Company 99 | 14:00 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Lost Blend | 12:06 | Lu par Marian Brown |
A Harlem Tragdey | 13:15 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Guilty Party - An East Side Tragedy | 14:29 | Lu par Marian Brown |
According to Their Lights | 13:09 | Lu par Marian Brown |
A Midsummer Knight's Dream | 10:56 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Last Leaf | 14:00 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Count and the Wedding Guest | 13:47 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The County of Elusion | 19:11 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Ferry of Unfulfillment | 9:15 | Lu par Marian Brown |
The Tale of a Tainted Tenner | 12:41 | Lu par Marian Brown |
Elsie in New York | 16:04 | Lu par Marian Brown |
Critiques





Ben
Although the reader has a strong, clear voice, her frequent mispronunciations significantly tarnished the listening experience. They took me entirely out of the story multiple times. It was evident she had neither rehearsed nor taken the time to look up unfamiliar words and foreign names. This disappointed me, because I really wanted to report that I had enjoyed listening to O. Henry’s stories. I hope this reader will adopt the habit of researching words and doing a practice-read, because, as noted, she does have a clear voice, and she carefully enunciates … her mispronunciations.
very entertaining





westovem
I enjoyed listening to these O. Henry stories; there were several I hadn't heard before. The reader was adequate – very clear – but occasional mispronunciations (e.g., “egregious” and “Scheherazade”) tended to break the spell of the story.





Stand Tall
Excellent and very humorous, stories, as well as a Great reader. If there is inaccuracies in the vocabulary it is probably intended by O. Henry.