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This unique collection of O. Henry's complete poetry has been formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices. William Sydney Porter (1862-1910), known by his pen name O. Henry, was an American writer. O. Henry's works are known for their wit, wordplay, warm characterization, and surprise endings. Table of Contents: A Contribution Chanson De Bohême Drop a Tear in This Slot Hard to Forget Nothing to Say Tamales The Lullaby Boy The Murderer The Old Farm The Pewee Two Portraits Vanity Sleeping Fancies Trusting Thoughts Thinking The Crucible Biography of O. Henry
An omnibus containing 286 stories and poems.
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Good Press presents to you this unique collection, designed and formatted to the highest digital standards and adjusted for readability on all devices: Introduction:Ralph Waldo EmersonBooks:The Conduct of Life:FatePowerWealthCultureBehaviorWorshipConsiderations by the WayBeautyIllusionsEssays-First Series:HistorySelf-RelianceCompensationSpiritual LawsLoveFriendshipPrudenceHeroismThe Over-SoulCirclesIntellectArtEssays-Second Series:The PoetExperienceCharacterMannersGiftsNaturePoliticsNominalist and RealistNew England ReformersNature:CommodityBeautyLanguageDisciplineIdealismSpiritProspectsRepresentative Men:PlatoEmanuel SwedenborgMichel de MontaigneWilliam ShakespeareNapoleonJohann Wolfgang von GoetheEnglish TraitsSociety and Solitude:CivilizationArtEloquenceDomestic LifeFarmingWorks and DaysBooksClubsCourageSuccessOld AgeLetters and Social Aims:Poetry and ImaginationSocial AimsEloquenceResourcesThe ComicQuotation and OriginalityProgress of CulturePersian PoetryInspirationGreatnessImmortalityPoetry:Poems (1847)May-Day and Other Pieces:May-DayThe AdirondacsOccasional and Miscellaneous PiecesNature and LifeElementsQuatrainsTranslationsOther PoemsAddresses and Lectures:The American ScholarAn Address in Divinity CollegeLiterary EthicsThe Method of NatureMan the ReformerLecture on The TimesThe ConservativeThe TranscendentalistThe Young AmericanLetter to President Van BurenThe Man of LettersThe Celebration of Intellect...Other Essays:The Lord's SupperThoughts on Modern LiteratureWalter Savage LandorThe Senses and the SoulTranscendentalismPrayersFourierism and the SocialistsChardon Street and Bible ConventionsAgriculture of MassachusettsHarvard UniversityEnglish ReformersEurope and European BooksThe TragicPast and PresentWarPerpetual ForcesDemonologyThe PreacherMiltonThoreauMichael AngeloPlutarchEzra Ripley, D.D.Mary Moody EmersonSamuel HoarCarlyleGeorge L. StearnsSaadiAmerican CivilizationThe Fortune of the RepublicThe Sovereignty of EthicsThe Natural History of Intellect
"The Gift of the Magi" is a short story by O. Henry first published in 1905. The story tells of a young husband and wife and how they deal with the challenge of buying secret Christmas gifts for each other with very little money. As a sentimental story with a moral lesson about gift-giving, it has been popular for adaptation, especially for presentation at Christmas time.
Includes split fore-edge painting of American Indian scenes. The egding is gilt, painings are visible only when pages are at an angle. The fore-edge paiting (fanning right) contaitins a village scene with warrior on horseback, two standing men (one of them wearing a feather war bonnet) and a woman, with two tipis and a view of two mesa mountains in the background. Second painting fanning left shows a hunt scene, with two hunters on horseback and four buffalo.