A good question! Naturally, a complete answer won't fit in a forum post - in fact, it could make a small book, which as far as I know nobody has ever written ...
You can calculate the distortion from the curves - most old tube books (Terman, Seely, RDH4, etc) have the detailed procedure. Do this for a few load resistances and you will learn a lot... :^)
The lowest distortion will occur with a flat load line, i.e. a current source load. If the grid curves are equally spaced, this will be zero distortion. When I talk of a triode being "linear", I usually mean in this sense. Even a perfect triode will have distortion if the load line is not flat, so my terminology is a simplification.
The distortion will change for different values of quiescent current and plate-cathode voltage. The wider the range over which the horizontal-load-line distortion is low, the more nearly perfect and linear the triode is - again, that's just the way I use the term.
Incidentally, note that 8.2mA through a 100K plate resistor drops 820 volts, so you need a power supply of 970 volts to run this circuit.