A series of personal essays offers intimate recollections of well-known contemporaries, presenting a blend of affectionate anecdote, brisk chronicle, and occasional critical appraisement. Individual pieces sketch temperaments, literary habits, social interactions, and final days of figures such as A. C. Swinburne, Lord Roberts, Theodore Watts-Dunton, Oscar Wilde, Edward Whymper, Stephen Phillips, and S. J. Stone. The author emphasizes friendship and memory as organizing themes, alternating finished portraits with lighter snapshots, and reflects on humor, weakness, devotion, and the way public reputations differ from private character, often closing with quiet meditations on loss and commemoration.