CONTENTS
Underlined titles are in this issue
| CONTENTS. | ISSUE. |
| A.C., The Experiences of the, | 52. |
| Agnes of Sorrento, | [51], 52, 53, 54. |
| American Civilization, | 54. |
| Author of “Charles Auchester,” The, | 56. |
| Autobiographical Sketches ofa Strength-Seeker, | [51]. |
| Childhood, Concerning the Sorrows of, | 53. |
| Clough, Arthur Hugh, | 54. |
| Cooper, James Fenimore, | [51]. |
| Ease in Work, | 52. |
| Forester, The, | 54. |
| Fremont’s Hundred Daysin Missouri, | [51], 52, 53. |
| Fruits of Free Labor in the Smaller Islands of the British WestIndies, | 53. |
| German Burns, The, | 54. |
| Health of Our Girls, The, | 56. |
| Hindrance, | 55. |
| Horrors of San Domingo, The, | 56. |
| Individuality, | 54. |
| Jefferson andSlavery, | [51]. |
| John Lamar, | 54. |
| Letter to a Young Contributor, | 54. |
| Light Literature, | [51]. |
| Love and Skates, | [51], 52. |
| Man under Sealed Orders, | 55. |
| Methods of Study in NaturalHistory, | [51], 52, 53, 54, 55, 56. |
| My Garden, | 55. |
| Old Age, | [51]. |
| Our Artists in Italy, | 52. |
| Père Antoine’s Date-Palm, | 56. |
| Pilgrimage to OldBoston, | [51]. |
| Raft that no Man made, A, | 53. |
| Richelieu, The Statesmanship of, | 55. |
| Rifle, The Use of the, | 53. |
| Saltpetre as a Source of Power, | 55. |
| Sam Adams Regiments in the Town of Boston, The, | 56. |
| Slavery, in its Principles, Development, and Expedients, | 55. |
| Snow, | 52. |
| “Solid Operations in Virginia”, | 56. |
| South Breaker, The, | 55, 56. |
| Spain, The Rehabilitation of, | 53. |
| Spirits, | 55. |
| Story of To-Day, A, | [51], 52, 53. |
| Taxation, | 53. |
| Then and Now in the Old Dominion, | 54. |
| Walking, | 56. |
| War and Literature, | 56. |
| Weather in War, | 55. |
| What shall We do with Them?, | 54. |
| POETRY. | |
| Astraea at the Capitol, | 56. |
| At Port Royal, 1861, | 52. |
| Battle-Hymn of the Republic, | 52. |
| Birdofredum Sawin, Esq., toMr. Hosea Biglow, | [51], 53. |
| Compensation, | 54. |
| Exodus, | 54. |
| Lines written under a Portrait of TheodoreWinthrop, | 55. |
| Lyrics of the Street, | 55. |
| Mason and Slidell: A Yankee Idyl, | 52. |
| Message of Jeff Davis in Secret Session, A, | 54. |
| Midwinter, | 52. |
| Mountain Pictures, | 53, 54. |
| Order for a Picture, An, | 56. |
| Out of the Body to God, | 56. |
| Per Tenebras,Lumina, | [51]. |
| Sonnet, | 56. |
| Southern Cross, The, | 53. |
| Speech of Hon’ble Preserved Doe in Secret Caucus, | 55. |
| Strasburg Clock, The, | 54. |
| Sunthin’ in the Pastoral Line, | 56. |
| Titmouse, The, | 55. |
| True Heroine, The, | [51]. |
| Under the Snow, | 55. |
| Volunteer, The, | 55. |
| Voyage of the Good Ship Union, | 53. |
| REVIEWS AND LITERARY NOTICES. | |
| Arnold’s Lectures on translating Homer, | [51]. |
| Book about Doctors, A, | 54. |
| Botta’s Discourse on the Life, Character, and Policy ofCount Cavour, | 55. |
| Cloister and the Hearth, The, | 52. |
| De Vere, Aubrey, Poems by, | 54. |
| Dickens’s Works, Household Edition, | 55. |
| Harris’s Insects Injurious toVegetation, | 55. |
| John Brent, | 54. |
| Leigh Hunt, Correspondence of, | 55. |
| Lessons in Life, | 52. |
| Müller’s Lectures on the Science of Language, | [51]. |
| Newman’s Homeric Translation in Theory and in Practice, | [51]. |
| Pauli’s Pictures of Old England, | 55. |
| Record of an Obscure Man, | 55. |
| Tragedy of Errors, | 55. |
| Willmott’s English Sacred Poetry, | 52. |
| FOREIGN LITERATURE, | 54, 55. |
| OBITUARY, | [51]. |
| RECENT AMERICAN PUBLICATIONS, | 52, 53, 54, 55. |