March 1919
In This Issue
Explore the March 1919 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
War Neuroses
“The man whom an hysterical paralysis protects from a hated return to the front does not consciously will his paralysis, nor does he easily believe it to be the result of a wish, unexpressed and unrecognized by himself.”
What Won the War?
“Sea-power and land-power have combined mightily to achieve the prize; to these two we must add this other great force, — an ‘imponderable,’ — which deserves to rank among the weapons of war.”
The Atlantic's Bookshelf
Ambassador Morgenthau's Story
The Eyes of Asia
The Development of the United States From Colonies to a World-Power
Java Head
Echoes of the War
Commonplaces in Buzuluk
Birth
An American Idyll. I: Episodes in the Life of Carleton H. Parker
Bridging the Gulf
The Marne
My Ántonia
When I Read Names of England
Voyage Sentimentale
A Great Little Soldier
Birds of a Feather: V. the Best Way (Concluded)
The Contributors' Column--March Atlantic
The House of the Mind
The War and the Mind Oe Great Britain
Some South African Snakes
The Gift
Lies
Developing the Estate
The Return of the Burgomaster
Territorial Claims of France
The Peace Congress and the Balkans
Bolshevism: A Liberal View
Ten Centuries of the Uplift
Concerning Kitchens
Dar'st Thou, Cassius?











