July 1892
In This Issue
Explore the July 1892 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Political Assessments in the Coming Campaign
“The clerk is bound to feel that there is some duress in the matter, when a committee of the association with which his immediate superior is closely connected requests him for campaign funds. He ought to be allowed to contribute or not, just as he sees fit.”
In a Japanese Garden
General McClellan
The Prometheus Unbound of Shelley
Talleyrand
Two French Personalities
Tales of Three Villages
Comment on New Books
The Other Truth About the Dakotas
The First Americans in Europe
Hens and Their Laureate
My First Disillusionment
Chicago
Don Orsino
Unguarded Gates
Arabian Horses
Looking Toward Salamis
The American Idealist
The Calumniator
A Florentine Episode: In Two Parts. Part First











