網頁圖片
PDF
ePub 版
[graphic]

THE CENTURY ILLUSTRATED MONTHLYS MAGAZINE

[The entire contents of this Magazine are covered by the general copyright, and articles must not be reprinted without special permission.] THE CENTURY MAGAZINE. CONTENTS FOR FEBRUARY, 1890.

[blocks in formation]

The "Merry Chanter"

With pictures by C. D. Gibson.

Old Age's Ship and Crafty Death's.

A Side Light on Greek Art. .

With pictures of terra-cotta groups.

Abraham Lincoln: The Capture of Jefferson Davis; The End

of Rebellion; Lincoln's Fame

With a picture of the Review of the Union Troops at the Close of the War.

Abraham Lincoln:

I. The Life Mask. .

II. The Cenotaph

How Sal Came Through

With pictures by E. W. Kemble.

Smiles and Tears.

Pursuit and Capture of Jefferson Davis.

With a facsimile of a poster.

A Corner of Old Paris

With eighteen facsimiles, portraits, etc.

"The Realm of Congo":

I. By the Commissioner of the U. S.

II. By One of Stanley's Former Officers

With pictures by F. H. Lungren from photographs.

Emerson's Talks with a College Boy..

With a frontispiece portrait.

The Merit System versus The Patronage System.

TOPICS OF THE TIME.

[ocr errors]
[merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small][ocr errors][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

633 The Fire-Risk

Further Electoral Reform . .
The New President of Columbia College.

Was Swedenborg Insane ?
Base-Ball and Rounders
"The Newness".

OPEN LETTERS.

. George S. Burleigh The New

An Anecdote of Jefferson Davis
Comments on "Abraham Lincoln: A History'

A Valentine..

My Grandmother's Turkey-tail Fan "By de Massysippi Sho'"

Tardy Wit

BRIC-A-BRAC.

Theodore Roosevelt.

[merged small][ocr errors][merged small]

57

[ocr errors]

6

[ocr errors]

62

[ocr errors]
[merged small][merged small][ocr errors]

Terms:-$4.00 a year in advance: 35 cents a number. Bound volumes (containing the numbers for six months) in old gold or green cloth top, each $3.00, or without gilt top, $2.75. The same in half-russia, gilt top, $4.00. Booksellers and Postmasters receive subscriptions. Stuben may remit to us in P. O. or express money orders, or in bank checks, drafts, or registered letters. Money in letters is at sender's risk.

Back numbers will be exchanged, if in good condition, for corresponding bound volumes in gold cloth, with gilt top, for $1.00 per s (six numbers); half-russia for $2.25; olive-green cloth, plain top, 75 cents each; subscribers paying charges both ways. Postage on THE CENTE umes, 35 cents. All numbers sent for binding should be marked with owner's name. We cannot bind or exchange copies the edges of which kare trimmed by machine. Cloth covers for binding THE CENTURY, 50 cents. Leather backs and corners, for binding in half-russia, 65 cents.

LL SMITH, Prest.
SCOTT, Treas.

CHESTER, Ass't Treas.
ELLSWORTH, Secy.

THE CENTURY CO. 33 East 17th Street (Union Square), New-York, N. F.

[graphic][merged small][merged small][merged small][merged small]

FEB 3 1890

LIBRARY

[blocks in formation]

My Dear Adams: Without you I should not have seen the place, without you I should not have seen the things of which these notes are impressions. If anything worth repeating has been said by me in these letters, it has probably come from you, or has been suggested by being with you - perhaps even in the way of contradiction. And you may be amused by the lighter talk of the artist that merely describes appearances and envelops things monotonous and confused in a covering of dreams. And you alone will know how much has been withheld that might have been indiscreetly said. If only we had found Nirvana but he was right who warned us that we were late in this season of the world.

J. L. F.

[ocr errors][ocr errors][merged small]

AND YOU TOO, OKAKURA SAN: I wish to put your name before these notes, written at the time when I first met you, because the memories of your talks are connected with my liking of your country and of its story, and because for a time you were Japan to me. I hope, too, that some thoughts of yours will be detected in what I write, as a stream runs through grass-hidden, perhaps, but always there. We are separated by many things besides distance, but you know that the blossoms scattered by the waters of the torrent shall meet at its end.

YOKOHAMA, July 3, 1886.- Arrived smooth like the brilliant blank paper of the

yesterday. On the cover of the letter which I mailed from our steamer I had but time to write: "We are coming in; it is like the picture books. Anything that I can add will only be a filling in of detail."

We were in the great bay when I came up on deck in the early morning. The sea was

prints; a vast surface of water reflecting the light of the sky as if it were thicker air. Far off streaks of blue light, like finest washes of the brush, determined distances. Beyond, in a white haze, the square white sails spotted the white horizon and floated above it.

The slackened beat of the engine made a Copyright, 1890, by THE CENTURY Co. All rights reserved.

« 上一頁繼續 »