1844 



"YEAR OF JUBILEE. 



» 1893 



A-PPROJlCHIIVO THE CLOSE OF 



ITS FIFTIETH YEAR 



LITTELL'S LIVING AGE 



continues to be 

 The Reflex of the Age in which It Lives. 



It selects from the whole wide field of European Periodical Literature the best produc 

 tions of The Ablest Living Writers, embracing articles of present interest and of permanent 

 value in every department. 



ART, ESSAYS, TALES, 



SCIENCE, REVIEWS, TRAVELS, 



POETRY, POLITICS, FICTION, 



HISTORY, MEMOIRS, BIOGRAPHIES, 



LITERATURE, CRITICISMS, REMINISCENCES. 



OBSERVE ! The Living Age is a Weekly Magazine of sixty-four pages, giving 



more than Three and a Quarter Thousand double-column octavo pages of reading matter 



yearly, forming four large volumes; presenting a mass of matter Unequalled in Quality and 



Quantity by any other publication in the country. 



The following list contains the names of a few of the many Prominent Authors whose arti- 

 cles appear in recent issues of The Living Age. 



Herbert Spencer, J. Theodore Bent, 



Richard Benyon, F. R. G. S., Sir Theodore Martin, 



Prof. James Bryce, Prince Kropotkin, 



Mrs. Andrew Crosse, 



Coventry Patmore, 



John Addington Symonds, 



C. Gavin Duffy, 



St. Loe Strachey, 



William Huggins, 



Andrew Lang, 



C. T. Buckland, F. Z. S., 



Edward A. Freeman, D. C. L., 



Archibald Forbes, 



Mrs. Thackeray-Ritchie, 



Frank Harris, 



Algernon Charles Swinburne, 



J. Norman Lockyer, F. R. S., 



■Walter Pater, 

 W. H. Mallock, 

 Lady Blake. 

 Sir Robert S. Ball, 

 Edward Dicey, 

 G. Shaw Lefevre, 

 F. Buxton, 

 Alfred R. Wallace, 

 Miss Octavia Hill, 

 V. Paget. 



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 Nothing poor or unworthy has ever appeared in the columns of The Living Age." — The 

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 we commend it as heartily as ever as a grand repository of the literature of the age." — N. T. 

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