Certain Personal Matters
by H. G. Wells
Certain Personal Matters is an 1897 collection of essays selected by H. G. Wells from among the many short essays and ephemeral pieces he had written since 1893. The book consists of thirty-nine pieces ranging from about eight hundred to two thousand words in length. A one-shilling reprint (two shillings in cloth) was issued in 1901 by T. Fisher Unwin. The essays in Certain Personal Matters are written from a consistent first-person perspective, but only one (ironically, given the title) describes an identifiable event in Wells's life—how he responded to being diagnosed with tuberculosis in the fall of 1887.
Chapters
- Thoughts on Cheapness and My Aunt Charlotte
- The Trouble of Life
- On the Choice of a Wife
- The House of Di Sorno
- Of Conversation
- In A Literary Household
- On Schooling
- The Poet and the Emporium
- The Language of Flowers
- The Literary Regimen
- House Hunting as an Outdoor Amusement
- Of Blades and Bladery
- Of Cleverness
- The Pose Novel
- The Veteran Cricketer
- Concerning a Certain Lady
- The Shopman
- The Book of Curses
- Dunstone's Dear Lady
- Euphemia's New Entertainment
- For Freedom of Spelling
- Incidental Thoughts on a Bald Head
- Of A Book Unwritten
- The Extinction of Man
- The Writing of Essays
- The Parkes Museum
- Bleak March in Epping Forest
- The Theory of Quotation
- On the Art of Staying at the Seaside
- Concerning Chess
- The Coal Scuttle
- Bagarrow
- The Book of Essays Dedicatory
- Through a Microscope
- The Pleasure of Quarrelling
- The Amateur Nature Lover
- From An Observatory
- The Mode in Monuments
- How I Died
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