The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 66, April, 1863 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 66, April, 1863.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 66, April, 1863 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 305 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 66, April, 1863.
“Handel,” “Haydn,” and “Mozart,” Richard Grant White’s “Shakespeare,” and the articles on “Patrick Henry,” “Washington Irving,” “Milton,” “Southey,” “Schiller,” “Swift,” and many others we might name, are admirable specimens of literary composition.  Among miscellaneous articles that deserve particular praise are a well-written and elaborate history of the Jewish people and literature under the title “Hebrews”; a picturesque account of “London”; a summary of all that is known about “Japan”; excellent histories of “Newspapers” and “Periodical Literature”; a brilliant article on “Athens” by the late President Felton; a review of “Arctic Discovery”; valuable and exceedingly interesting papers on “Army,” “Artillery,” “Infantry,” and “Cavalry,” with one on “Gunnery” by Commodore Charles Henry Davis; “Painting”; “Sculpture”; “Serfs”; “Slavery”; “Hungary”; and the best published account of the “Mormons.”  The article on the “United States” fills one hundred and twenty pages, including thirty-three pages of fresh statistical tables, and gives an admirable summary of our history down to last September; it closes with a comprehensive survey of American literature.  The supplement gives a biography of nearly every general in the Union and Rebel armies.

The promises of the editors on the score of impartiality have been well kept.  It would be too much to expect them to satisfy everybody, or never to be caught tripping; but in the great questions of religion and politics, they seem to have preserved a happy mean between the outspoken freedom of the partisan and the halting timidity of the man who never commits himself because he never has an opinion.  Their contributors represent nearly every Christian creed, every shade of politics, and every part of the English-speaking world, from Salt Lake City to London, and from Mobile to Montreal.

We have only to add that the Cyclopaedia does fuller justice to our own country than she has ever received from such a book before; that the historical and statistical articles present the latest accessible information; and that, so far as our opportunities of examination permit us to judge, the book, though of course not free from errors, is accurate to a more than ordinary degree.  The labor of the editors has been careful and conscientious; and they have produced a work which must long endure as a valuable contribution to American literature and a credit to American scholarship.

Manual of Geology: treating of the Principles of the Science with Special Reference to American Geological History, etc.  By JAMES D. DANA. 8vo.  Philadelphia:  Theodore Bliss & Co.  London:  Trabner & Co.

No work on any science has yet been published in our language more exhaustive of facts, more clear in statement, or more philosophical in general character and arrangement, than Dana’s “Mineralogy,” as presented in its last and revised edition.

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The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 11, No. 66, April, 1863 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.