LITTELL'S LIVING AGE. 



♦ 



Tff 1891 THE LIVING AGE enters upon its forty-eighth year. 

 _L It has met with constant commendation and success. 



A TVEEKLY MAGAZINE, it gives fifty-two numbers of sixty-four 

 pages each, or more than Three and a Quarter Thousand double-col- 

 umn octavo pages of reading-matter yearly. It presents in an inexpen- 

 sive form, considering its great amount of matter, with freshness, owing 

 to its weekly issue, and with a completeness nowhere else attempted, 



The best Essays, Reviews, Criticisms, Tales, Sketches of Travel and Discovery, Poetry, Scientific, 



Biographical, Historical, and Political Information, from the entire body 



of Foreign Periodical Literature, and from the pens of 



Tlie Foremost Xji-cing -w riters. 



The ablest and most cultivated intellects, in every department of Literature, 

 Science, Politics, and Art, find expression in the Periodical Literature of Europe, and 

 especially of Great Britain. 



The Living Age, forming four large volumes a year, furnishes from the great 

 and generally inaccessible mass of this literature the only compilation that, while 

 within the reach of all, is satisfactory in the COMPLETENESS with which it em- 

 braces whatever is of immediate interest, or of solid, permanent value. 



It is therefore indispensable to every one who wishes to keep pace with the 

 events or intellectual progress of the time, or to cultivate in himself or his family general 

 intelligence and literarv taste. 



o:E*iTtfio:isrjs . 





•' It is nearly half a century since the first volume of 

 this sterling publication came from the press, and to- 

 day it stauds the most perfect publication of its kind 

 in the world. . There is but one LIVING Age. though 

 many have essayed hnitatioas. While their intent 

 has no doubt been worthy, they have lacked that rare 

 discriminatin.tr judgment, that fineness of acumen, and 

 that keen appreciation of what constitutes true excel- 

 lence, which makeLiTTEix's Living Age the incom- 

 parable publication that it is. Xo one who has once 

 become acquainted with its educating and uplifting 

 qualities will ever be induced to dispense with its 

 visitations.'" — Christian at Work, New York. 



"It is indispensable to intelligent people in this busy 

 day."' — New- York Evangelist. 



"Many other and deservedly popular favorites have 

 entered the periodical field, but none of them have 

 diminished the importance of The Living Age. . 

 With its aid it is possible for the busy reader to know 

 something of universal literature. Indeed it may well 

 be doubted whether there exists any more essential 

 aid to cultivation of the mind among English-speak- 

 ing people; and its importance increases with the 

 ever-growing rush and hurry of modern times. . 2so 

 one knows its value so well as the busy man who 

 without it might well despair of keeping in any way 

 posted as to the trend of modern thought in this day of 

 immense activity." — Episcopal Recorder, Philadelphia. 



"This periodical fills a placethatno other occupies. 

 . Biography, fiction, science, criticism, history, poetry, 

 travels. Whatever men are interested in, all are found 

 here." — The Watchman, Boston. 



"It contains nearly all the good literature of the 

 time." — The Churchman, New- York. 



" Like wine, it only improves with age. . The same 

 amount of valuable reading cannot be found elsewhere 

 for so small a sum.** — Christian Intelligencer. New York. 



" It would be cheap at almost any price."' — Califor- 

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"It stands unrivalled." — The Presbyterian, Phila. 



*'Xo man will be behind the literature of the times 

 who reads The LIVING Age." — Zion's Herald, Boston. 



"It is incomparably the finest literary production 

 of modern times. In its own peculiar sphere it has 

 no peer. It embraces within its scope the matured 

 thoughts, on all subjects, of the greatest authors and 

 ripest scholars in Europe." — Herald and Presbyter, 

 Cincinnati. 



" There maybe some things better than The Living 

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"It retains the characteristics of breadth, catho- 

 licity and good taste winch have always marked its 

 editing. The fields of fiction, biography, travel, 

 science, poetrv, criticism, and social and religious 

 discussion all come within its domain and all are well 

 represented. . The readers miss very little that is 

 important in the periodical domain." — Boston Journal. 



" It mav be truthfully and cordially said that it never 

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" Xo better outlay of monev can be made than in sub- 

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" One who keeps up with The Living Age keeps 

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"To read it is itself an education in the course of 

 modern thought and literature."— Buffalo Commercial 

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"Coming weeklv, it has a great advantage over the 

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"It is one of the invaluables to those whose time is 

 limited.*' — Houston {Tex.) Post. 



" In it the reader finds all that is worth knowing in 

 the realm of current literature."— Canada Presbyte- 

 rian, Toronto. 



"It enables its readers to keep fully abreast of the 

 best thought and literature of civilization."— Christian 

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"He who subscribes for a few vears to it gathers a 

 choice library, even though he may have no other 

 books."' — New- York Observer. 



Published Weekly at $8.00 a year, free of postage. 



CLUB PRICES FOR THE BEST HOME AND FOREIGN LITERATURE. 



[" Possessed of Littele'S Living Age, and of one or other of our vivacious American, monthlies, a 

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For 810.50, The Living Age and any one of the four-dollar monthly magazines 

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