March 1895
In This Issue
Explore the March 1895 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Immigration and Naturalization
“The problem to be solved—and a most difficult one it is—is, what new legislation, if any, is needed, that … will remedy the pernicious effects, political, social, and economic, which … are resulting from the unchecked immigration and reckless naturalization of foreigners in the past.”
The Seats of the Mighty: Being the Memoirs of Captain Robert Stobo, Sometime an Officer in the Virginia Regiment, and Afterwards of Amherst's Regiment
The Secret of the Roman Oracles
Simulacra
Some Confessions of a Novel-Writer
Gridou's Pity: In Two Parts. Part One
Bova Unvisited
Evening in Salisbury Close
A Singular Life
At the Granite Gate
A Pupil of Hypatia
Some Words on the Ethics of Coöperative Production
The Direction of Education
William Dwight Whitney
Major and Minor Bards
Curtis as a Man of Letters
Comment on New Books
The Nameless Season
A Point of Departure
In Fealty to Apollo
A Gentle Communist
The Scotch Diminutive
The Table of Contents
Heterophemy











