September 1921
In This Issue
Explore the September 1921 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Philanthropic Doubts
Sudden Greatness
“In fifteen years aviation has superposed itself upon civilization. Its future is limitless.”
Prime
A poem
The Next War: An Appeal to Common Sense
Shackled Youth: Comments on Schools, School People, and Other People
Galusha the Magnificent
Orphan Dinah
The Anglo-American Future
The Walpole Beauty
My Old Lady, London
Back-Yard Archæology
Pioneers
The Fourteenth of September: 1321-1921
What Is a Puritan?
Things Seen and Heard
At Thirty
Preaching in London. Ii
Barn Elves
Vatican Politics and Policies
The Labor Situation in Great Britain
What Shall We Do About Coal?
Taking From the Few for the Many
Millinery Madness
On Our Street
An Impulsive Ode to a Picture of Benjamin Franklin on a Box of Sugar
The Contributors' Column
Atlantic Shop-Talk
The Atlantic's Bookshelf
Marcus Aurelius: A Biography Told as Much as May Be by Letters, Together With Some Account of the Stoic Religion and an Exposition of the Roman Government's Attempt to Suppress Christianity During Marcus's Reign
Hail, Columbia! Random Impressions of a Conservative English Radical











