November 1904
In This Issue
Explore the November 1904 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Country Life
"Country Life" was the opening lecture of a course given by Mr. Emerson at the Freeman Place Chapel in Boston, in March, 1858. It was followed by "Works and Days" (printed in Society and Solitude), "Powers of the Mind," "Natural Method of Mental Philosophy," "Memory" (the matter of these three mostly now found in Natural History of Intellect), and "Self Possession." "Concord Walks," which will be printed in connection with "Country Life" in the last volume of the Centenary Edition of Mr. Emerson's works, was originally a part of the lecture, as given by him to his neighbors in the village Lyceum.—Edward W. Emerson
The United States in the Philippines
Jean-François Millet
Isidro
A Letter From Japan
The Renascence of Sapphira
The American Coup d'Etat of 1961
A Clipper Ship and Her Commander
Close Election Contests
The Scanty Plot
Was Sir Walter Scott a Poet?
Work and Play
Our Fathers' Friends
A Case of Intellectuality
On Improving the Style of the Bible
The Fertile Hand
Abiding London
The Pack-Mule
The Plague of Novels
Two Historians
A Life of Zola
Cyclopædias of English Literature
Brandes's "Main Currents"
The Tyranny of the Calendar
The End of the Story
The Curse of Deliberation
New Thoughts on the Puritan Conscience
Les Gens De Ma Connaissance











