Page:Scribner's Monthly, Volume 12 (May–October 1876).djvu/6

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iv.
CONTENTS.

PAGE.
Wedding at Ogden Farm, The George E. Waring, Jr. 85
Wesleyan University * William North Rice 648
 
POETRY.
Alpine Picture, An T. B. Aldrich 511
"A Wounded One will Read my Rhyme" John Vance Cheney 688
Bird, The Flown Richard Henry Stoddard 897
Centennial Bells * Benjamin F. Taylor 360
Choice and Chance Paul H. Hayne 720
Courage! George Houghton 241
Fantasy, A Mary S. Withington 623
Flood of Years, The William Cullen Bryant 560
Greetings, The Two Bayard Taylor 118
His Messenger Mary E. Bradley 399
Hospes Civitatis Richard Henry Stoddard 584
"If Love and Life were One" John G. Saxe 46
In Loneliness R. C. Meyers 872
Louise Mary L. Ritter 93
My Birthright Mrs. S. M. B. Piatt 119
My Nasturtiums H. H. 266
Mysteries, The Two Mary Mapes Dodge 888
Nightfall W. W. Ellsworth 336
On a Miniature Henry A. Beers 633
Renunciation Charles Carroll 187
Rosenlied Alice Williams 498
Shadows Anna C. Green 679
"Silence Is Golden" Sara H. Browne 211
Singing Robes Margaret J. Preston 15
Song Celia Thaxter 663
Song Celia Thaxter 478
Song of the Future, A Sidney Lanier 543
Song of the Gloaming John Vance Cheney 221
Summons, The George Wurts 428
Three Friends Elizabeth Stuart Phelps 261
To Dora Mary Mapes Dodge 332
Truant Madge Kate Putnam Osgood 167
Visionary Face, The Paul H. Hayne 28
 
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Topics of the Time.
The Remedy is with the People—Double Crimes and One-Sided Laws—Cheap Opinions—Is it Poetry? 120; Advertising Shame—The Literary Class—A New Departure, 267; The Centennial—The May Conference—From Humility to Excellence—Great Shop-keepers, 429; The Manufacture of Doctors—The Social Evil—The Dead-Beat Nuisance, 590; Harvard Examinations for Women—Village Improvement Societies, 749; The Civil Service—Suspected Duties—English and American Copyright, 898.
The Old Cabinet.
"What is a Sonnet?"—Obscurity in Verse—"Dante and his Circle"—Criticism—The Poet—Telegraph Wires, 125; Reading and Writing—The Academy Exhibition, 269; A Centennial Reflection—Two Classes of Conversers—"A Spanish Anecdote"—Science and Poetry, 433; "A Song of the Early Summer"—Style—"Song"—A Letter to a Contributor—"A Midsummer Song"—Dr. McClintock, 593; The "Literary Feller"—A Crumb of Comfort, 752;—Silly through Theory—A Phenomenon of Dullness—A Discouraging Experience—Criticism—Hawthorne, 901.
Home and Society.
Home Uses of the Exposition—In Moving-Times—Rural Topics: Evergreens, Pears, Grapes and Vegetables, 127; How to see New York—Rural Topics: Flowers, Shrubs, Strawberries, etc.—The

Uses of Change, 272; Paris Fashions—Rural Topics: Thinning Fruit; Summer Pruning; Planting Celery; Tree-Peddlers—The Exhibition as a School, 435; Midsummer Holidays: Short Excursions from New York—The Rules of Croquet—Paris Fashions—Common Flowers, 595; Practical Hints about the Exhibition—Rural Topics: Budding, Spinach, Gathering Pears, Seedling Trees, Planting Strawberries in September—Girls' Names—Paris Fashions, 753; Paris Fashions—Rural Topics: Fall Planting of Fruits and Berries; Shrubs; Field-Mice; Tree-Peddlers, again; Hyacinths—The

Rules of Croquet: II., 904.
Culture and Progress 130, 276, 439, 599, 757, 907
The World's Work 137, 283, 443, 603, 763, 911
Bric-à-Brac * 141, 286, 446, 606, 765, 914