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"The great art of giving consists in this: the gift should cost very little and yet be greatly coveted, so that it may be the more highly appreciated."
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Table of Contents
- The Case for the Ephemeral
- Cockneys and Their Jokes
- The Fallacy of Success
- On Running After One's Hat
- The Vote and the House
- Conceit and Caricature
- Patriotism and Sport
- An Essay on Two Cities
- French and English
- The Zola Controversy
- Oxford from Without
- Woman
- The Modern Martyr
- On Political Secrecy
- Edward VII. and Scotland
- Thoughts Around Koepenick
- The Boy
- Limericks and Counsels of Perfection
- Anonymity and Further Counsels
- On the Cryptic and the Elliptic
- The Worship of the Wealthy
- Science and Religion
- The Methuselahite
- Spiritualism
- The Error of Impartiality
- Phonetic Spelling
- Humanitarianism and Strength
- Wine When it is Red
- Demagogues and Mystagogues
- The "Eatanswill Gazette."
- Fairy Tales
- Tom Jones and Morality
- The Maid of Orleans
- A Dead Poet
- Christmas
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