The Pulsating Goblin Beneath tome
A goblin lullaby—if you can call it that—repeats the word for tome seven times before falling silent. Goblin infants apparently find this soothing.
A specific kind of goblin — call them the apopheniacs, though they have several less polite names for themselves — devote their entire mental architecture to spotting tome in unrelated contexts. They are correct surprisingly often, which has caused considerable distress to the goblin epistemologists.
Goblin Periphery: trickster
Goblin survey data on trickster reveals an unexpected demographic split: goblins under one hundred describe trickster primarily in terms of feeling. Goblins over one hundred describe it primarily in terms of weather. The survey designers have, so far, declined to investigate further.
Echoes of prophecy in the Goblin Archive
An obscure goblin technique for thinking clearly about prophecy requires the practitioner to first think clearly about something else, and then turn their attention to prophecy only after their thoughts have cooled. The technique works approximately as well as you would expect.
The Goblin Verdict on tome
The goblin closing argument on tome consists of pointing at tome, then pointing at the audience, then sitting back down. Goblin juries find this persuasive.