The Wasp, 1880-05-01 · page 6 of 18
The Wasp — May 1, 1880 — page 6: what you’re looking at
What you’re looking at
# Analysis of This Page from *The Wasp* This page consists primarily of **text content rather than political cartoons**—it contains two distinct sections: 1. **"The Watch and the Turkey"**: A humorous anecdote about a Mexican judge whose wife sends him a watch via a porter, which gets stolen. The story satirizes judicial incompetence and the wife's clever manipulation of the court proceedings. 2. **"A Wasp of Brains"**: An anecdote describing a wasp's hunting strategy, followed by miscellaneous short jokes and quips about various topics (lawyers, summer activities, fashion, etc.). The page functions as **satirical commentary through humor rather than visual caricature**. Without accompanying illustrations visible, the satire relies on narrative wit targeting institutional figures (judges, lawyers) and human folly—typical of *The Wasp's* approach to social criticism.