September 1912
In This Issue
Explore the September 1912 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
In the Noon of Science
"In this age of science we have heaped up great intellectual riches of the pure scientific kind... But what will it profit us if we gain the whole world and lose our own souls?"
Mr. Bryan
The Automatic Citizen
The Contemporaneousness of Rome
Abram's Freedom
Triumphalis
Who Are the Japanese?
A Trip to Ohio in 1810
The Rural Problem and the Country Minister
Two Italian Gardens
A Green Thought
The Autobiography of an Individualist: V
A Real Myth
Autumn in the Islands
Thursday
The Sunset of the Confederacy: Vii
The Moral Value of Scientific Management
The Temple's Difficult Door
Women and Democracy in Switzerland
The Other Side
An Inheritance
Where Cooks Go
Under the Trees











