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THE first difficulty was the title. It was felt that Seeing Things at Night might suggest theatrical essays to the exclusion of anything else. That was not the author\'s intention. He meant to suggest rather newspaper articles of any sort done more or less on the spur of the moment for next day\'s consumption. There was also some question as to the order in which the various \"pieces\" should be arranged. The author was tempted to follow the example of Adolf Wolff, a free verse poet who published a volume some years ago called Songs, Sighs and Curses, and explained in a foreword, \"When asked in what sequence he would arrange his poems, Wolff threw the manuscripts in the air, saying \'Let Fate decide.\' They now appear in the order in which they were picked up from the floor.\"

Broun, however, feared that some of his essays might crash through the floor like the mistakes of a cannonball juggler and that others would prove so lacking in weight when put to the test that it would be necessary to pluck them from the ceiling rather than the floor. The arrangement, therefore, is premeditated though haphazard. In respect to his age the author also wishes to explain that the character, H. 3rd, who appears from time to time is his son and not his grandson. He also wishes to acknowledge the courtesy of The New York Tribune, Vanity Fair, McCall\'s, Collier\'s Weekly and The Nation in permitting him to reprint various articles which first appeared in their pages.

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