"It fairly represents, as no other of our weekly journals does, the best thought and culture of America."—North American Review.

"It appears to fill the bill presented in Captain Shandon's Prospectus of the Pall Mall Gazette, as a paper published by gentlemen for gentlemen, and appealing to the gentlemen of America for support."—San Francisco News Letter.

"A newspaper which has done much to show that American journalism may attain a far higher level than that to which we have hitherto been accustomed. It is written by men of ability for a cultivated audience, and is free from those appeals to popular ignorance and prejudice which deface the pages of most of its contemporaries."—London Pall Mall Gazette.

"A Radical journal of acknowledged power and respectability."—London Times.

"A paper in every respect equal to the best English journals."—London Saturday Review.

"The Saturday Review considers the New York Nation the ablest paper in America. This is saying a great deal, particularly as, we venture to say, the writer had not seen one of every fifty papers published in the country. We dare, however, say he was not very far from the mark."—Anglo-American Times (London).

"I regard the Nation as one of the very best of our journals. Politically, it has no superior."—Hon. Lyman Trumbull.

"The best journal in America; and not only so, but better, on the whole, than any in England."—Prof. Goldwin Smith.

ADDITIONAL TESTIMONIALS.

"I like The Nation thoroughly, not only for its ability, but its tone. I have particularly liked many of its critical articles, which have seemed to me in every way superior, and level with the best culture of the time. They have thought in them and demand it of the reader—a very rare quality in most of the criticism of the day."—Prof. Jas. Russell Lowell.