Page:Dawn of the Day.pdf/17

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CONTENTS
xiii
PAGE
242 Independence 233
243 The two directions 233
244 Delight in the real 233
245 Subtlety of the sense of power 234
246 Aristotle and matrimony 235
247 Origin of bad temper 235
248 Dissimulation, a duty 235
249 Who then is ever alone? 236
250 Night and music 236
251 Stoic 236
252 Consider! 237
253 Appearances 237
254 The anticipating ones 237
255 Conversation on music 237
256 Felicity of the evil 240
257 Words present in our minds 240
258 Coaxing the dog 241
259 The whilom panegyrist 241
260 Amulet of the dependent 241
261 Why so superior? 241
262 The demon of power 241
263 Contradiction, embodied and animated 242
264 Wishing to be mistaken 242
265 There is time for the theatre 243
266 Void of charm 243
267 Why so proud? 243
268 The orator's Scylla and Charybdis 244
269 Invalids and art 244
270 Apparent toleration 244
271 Festive mood 245
272 The purification of races 246
273 Praise 247
274 Human right and privilege 248
275 The transformed 248
276 How often! how unexpected! 248
277 Hot and cold virtues 248
278 The benevolent memory 249
279 Wherein we become artists 249
280 Childlike 250
281 Our "ego" claims everything 250
282 Danger in beauty 250
283 Domestic and mental peace 250
284 Producing a news as though it were stale 251
285 Where are the final limits of our "ego"? 251