10th. WILLIAM H. SEWARD, d. 10 0. 1872
I. Lincoln’s Letter to Seward, 5-Pt. I:111-112
II. Walker’s Medicine Show, 18:213

11th. I. Keats’s To Autumn, 13:142-143
II. Carew’s Epitaph, 15:48
III. Disdain Returned, 12:133-134
IV. Song, 12:134
V. To His Inconstant Mistress, 12:135

12th. ROBERT E. LEE, d. 12 O. 1870
I. Robert E. Lee, 16-Pt. II:62-73
DINAH MULOCK CRAIK, d. 12 O. 1887.
II. Douglas, Douglas, Tender and True 12:310-311

13th. SIR HENRY IRVING, d. 13 O. 1905
I. Sir Henry Irving, 17-Pt. II:39-47

14th. JOSH BILLINGS (H. W. SHAW), d. 14 O. 1885
I. Natral and Unnatral Aristokrats, 7-Pt. I:48-51
II. To Correspondents, 9-Pt. I:73-74
III. Russell’s Origin of the Banjo, 9-Pt. I:79-82

And when a man is at home and happy with a book, sitting by his fireside, he must be a churl if he does not communicate that happiness. Let him read now and then to his wife and children.
—H. FRISWELL.

OCTOBER 15TH TO 21ST

15th. I. Tennyson’s Tears, Idle Tears, 12:272-273
II. Shakespeare’s Over Hill, Over Dale, 12:19
III. Poe’s Assignation, 4-Pt. I:81-101

16th. I. Nye’s How to Hunt the Fox, 8-Pt. I:70-78
II. A Fatal Thirst, 7-Pt. II:148-150
III. On Cyclones, 9-Pt. I:83-85

17th. WILLIAM VAUGHN MOODY, d. 17 O. 1910
I. Gloucester Moors, 11:320