February 1916
In This Issue
Explore the February 1916 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
Radical’s Progress
“No, comrade. I can never again be as you have known me. I have suffered too much from what I have seen.”
Our Divided Country
“Until the nationality of the immigrant and his descendants has been melted and recast, he is still at heart a foreigner; he is an element of weakness and disunion.”
A Philosopher's View of the War
The Discoverer
A Gossip on Criticism
The Haunted House
What Is Music?
What Is Music?
Constructive Temperance Reform
Girls, Boys, and Story-Telling
Loans and Discounts
The Poet
China, Japan, and the Hundred Days
Black Sheep: Postscript: The Last Journey
Guests
The Pathos of America
On Understanding the Mind of Germany
The Cost
In French Hospitals
At the End of the Line in War Time
The Contributors' Column
A Touchstone for Peace-Makers
Tripod and the County Treasurer
Our 'Wittles'
My Japanese Friend











