I will be writing about three short stories, all by O' Henry. "Masters Of Arts," "The Man Higher Up," and the one that we all know, "After Twenty Years." The plots are similar; they all have to do with white collar crime, "Grafting".
In "Masters of Arts," a clever machinator, Jimmy Keogh, decides that a president of a South American nation has a very weak detriment to his personality; his pride, and decides to exploit it. He finds a budding young artist from New York, Carolus White, lies about his fame in the US, and finally secures 10,000 dollars for Carolus to do a obscenely tasteless portrait of this president. Carolus cannot do it, he has artistic standards, and therefore loses the money. To create a contrast to this, the machinator takes a incriminating photo of the president, and proceeds to blackmail the president. However, at the moment of receiving the money, Keogh rips up the photo and does not request nor recive the money. He cannot blackmail, he has "standards".
Juxtaposing this is the story "The Man Higher Up". The entire story takes place in New York, where two friends are meeting over plates of pasta. One friend, Jeff Peters, is telling our narrator about his adventures grafting, where Jeff is saying that his pride took him away from burglary, but then cheated a lot of money away from a burglar.
Then our story, "After Twenty Years," a story with a