LI^ EI^g -JJVING AGE. 



"«a TN 1886, THE LIVING AGE enters upon its forty-third year. It 

 -L has met with the constant commendation of the leading men and 

 journals of the country, and with uninterrupted success. 



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

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

 column 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, Serial and Short Stories, 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 



Tla.© Foremost Xj±-*7-±:sxg; "Writers. 



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 



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

 the reach of all, is satisfactory in the COMPLETENESS with which it embraces 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 literary taste. 



OFIMZOIUS . 



"Hardly elsewhere in the English language, and 

 certainly In no other written speech, are such treas- 

 ures of literature to be found as In The Living Age. 

 The aim of the conductors is to give the best and 

 freshest thought of the time; and in this they are 

 succeeding now, as for so many years, to the great 

 satisfaction and profit of a multitude of at once ex- 

 acting and satisfied readers." — New-York Evangelist. 



" Covering as it does every department of litera- 

 ture, presenting the matured thought of the best 

 writers on all the current topics of the time, it gives 

 in a single volume what would otherwise have to be 

 sought for through the pages of many." — Christian 

 at Work, New York. 



"Nearly the whole world of authors and writers 

 appear in it in their best moods. . Art, science, and 

 literature find fresh and eloquent expression in its 

 pages from the pens of the best writers of the day ; 

 and the reader is kept well abreast of the current 

 thought of the age." — Boston Daily Journal. 



" Tt is not too much to say that with it one com- 

 mands the whole field of current literary activity; 

 and it has never been so bright, so comprehensive, so 

 diversified in interest as it is to-day." — Daily Even- 

 ing Traveller, Boston. 



" It has now for many years held the first place of 

 all our serial publications. . The only possible objec- 

 tion that could be urged to it is the immense amount 

 of reading it gives. . There is nothing noteworthy in 

 science, art, literature, biography, philosophy, or 

 religion, that cannot be found in It. . It contains 

 nearly all the good literature of the time. . It gives 

 in accessible form the best thought of the age." — 

 The Churchman, New York. 



"It may be truthfully and cordially said that it 

 never offers a dry or valueless page."— New-York 

 Daily Tribune. 



" It enables its rtaders to keep fully abreast of the 

 best thought and literature of civilization." — Chris- 

 tian Advocate, Pittsburg. 



"No person who desires to keep pace with the 

 development of modern thought can afford to dis- 

 pense with it." — Am. Christian Review, Cincinnati. 



" Both solid and light reading are here included, — 

 novels and short stories, grave and lively essays, 

 poems, reviews; in short, a general risumi of peri- 

 odical literature. . Through its pages alone, it is pos- 

 sible to be as well informed in current literature as 

 by the perusal of a long list of monthlies." — Phila- 

 delphia Daily Inquirer. 



" A grand repository of the literature of the age. . 

 It has become indispensable." — New- York Observer. 



" Biography, fiction, science, criticism, history, 

 poetry, travels, whatever men are interested in, all 

 are found here."— The Watchman, Boston. 



" Foremost of the eclectic periodicals." — New- York 

 Daily World. 



" In fact, a reader needs no more than this one pub- 

 lication to keep him well abreast of English periodi- 

 cal literature."— Sunday-School Times, Philadelphia. 



" In subscribing for it, our readers will secure more 

 for their investment than in any other way of which 

 we are cognizant." — Iowa Churchman, Davenport. 



" Every one of its fifty-two numbers brings some- 

 thing which one must read, to know what is being 

 thought of and talked Of." — Hartford Daily Courant. 



" It is indispensable to every one who desires to 

 possess an intelligent idea of the currents of contem- 

 porary thought." — Canada Presbyterian, Toronto. 



" Coming once a week, it gives, while yet fresh, the 

 productions of the foremost writers of the day." — 

 Montreal Daily Gazette. 



" One cannot read every thing. . No man will be 

 behind the literature of the times who reads The 

 Living Age." — Zion's Herald, Boston. 



"It saves not only time, but money." — Pacific 

 Churchman, San Francisco. 



" It furnishes a complete compilation of an indis- 

 pensable literature."— Chicago Evening Journal. 



" The queen of all the eclectics." — Southern 

 Churchman, Richmond. 



" The best publication we know in the world." — 

 Daily Morning Star, Wilmington, N.C. 



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



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For $10.50, The Living Age and any one of the four-dollar monthly magazines (or 

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