April 1892
In This Issue
Explore the April 1892 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Some Notes on French Impressionism
“Most wonderful of all is the way in which the painter manages, by mere pigments put on canvas, to make you feel all the heat and harmony and happiness of summer.”
An American at Home in Europe
A Drive Through the Black Hills
The Wind's Summons
The Private Life
Admiral Farragut
American Sea Songs
The Limit in Battle Ships
Don Orsino
Benaiah
Federal Taxation of Lotteries
Legal Disfranchisement
Literature and the Ministry
Lounsbury's Studies in Chaucer
Montcalm and Lévis
Comment on New Books
We Boast of What We Have Not
Friends in Council
What the Canvasser Said
What the Objector Said
What the Advocate of the Heart Said
What the Friend Said of Forgiveness











