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When one undertakes to write a work, one has already found the subject and at least part of the material, so that it is only a question of developing and organizing it in the way best suited to convince and to please. This part, which also includes style, is usually the part that determines the success of the work and the reputation of the Author; it is the part that makes not quite for whether a Book is good or bad, but for whether it is well or badly crafted.
This Piece is very bad, and I was so sensitive to its being bad after I wrote it that I did not even think it worth submitting. It is easy to do less badly on this subject, but not to do well; for frivolous questions do not admit of a good answer. That is at least one useful lesson to derive from a bad [piece of] writing.