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THE WRITER

AND

THE AUTHOR

Are two Boston monthly magazines designed to interest and help all who are engaged in literary work. They are both conducted by the same editor, a practical newspaper man of long and varied experience, and all their articles, by well-known literary people, are practical, helpful, timely, bright, and interesting. Although distinct, they are closely connected, and each magazine supplements the other. THE WRITER is published the first, and THE

AUTHOR the fifteenth of each month.

THE WRITER

Is the only periodical in the world devoted solely to explaining the details of literary production, and it has come to be regarded as indispensable to all who write, or who are interested in literary work. Its department of "Queries and Answers" alone is worth many times the cost of the magazine. The department of "Helpful Hints and Suggestions" gives many ideas about saving and easing labor at the desk. The department of "Literary Articles in Periodicals" is the only published index of literary articles printed in the daily and weekly papers and in the magazines, and makes a file of THE WRITER essential in every library. The four bound volumes of the magazine now ready make the best handbook of journalism

extant.

THE AUTHOR

Special Offer

Includes both original and selected matter, and an important part of its purpose is to reprint from newspapers and magazines closely condensed summaries of the articles indexed from month to month in THE WRITER's list of "Literary Articles in Periodicals.'

A complete set of both magazines to the end of 1891, including four bound volumes of THE WRITER, two bound volumes of THE AUTHOR, and a subscription for both magazines for this year will be sent prepaid for TEN DOLLARS. A complete file of the two magazines will be invaluable in any writer's library.

For either magazine, ONE DOLLAR A YEAR. Single copies,
When ordering the magazine ask for a prospectus of

Subscription Price

ten cents.

THE WRITER'S LITERARY BUREAU

Which aids writers in finding the best market for their MSS., and serves as a medium between authors and publishers. It also gives honest advice and unprejudiced criticism of MSS. when desired. For full particulars address, naming THE MAGAZINE OF POETRY,

THE WRITER,

Box 1905, Boston, Mass.

No Sample Copies of THe Writer or THE AUTHOR Sent Free.

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TYPEWRITER.

A strictly first-class machine. Fully warranted. Made from very best material, by skilled workmen and with the best tools that have ever been devised for the purpose. Warranted to do all that can be reasonably expected of the very best typewriter extant. Capable of writing 150 words per minute, or more, according to the ability of the operator. PRICE,

$100.00.

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and during that time we have never had a complaint. It has been used and has become a standard remedy with physicians who treat nervous disorders.

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404 Main Street, BUFFALO, N. Y.

For Sale by all Druggists or Sent by Mail, $1.00.

"The Literary Sensation of the Century."

THE LIGHT OF THE WORLD;

OR, THE GREAT CONSUMMATION.

BY SIR EDWIN ARNOLD.

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Illustrated with Portrait of Mr. Arnold, and 14 full-page reproductions from Hoffmann's celebrated paintings on the Life of Christ. Introduction by Richard Henry Stoddard. Cloth, square 12mo, 286 pp. Price, $1.75. Paper edition, Illustrated with Frontispiece. Price, 50 cents.

Funk & Wagnalls, American Publishers.

The Boston Herald says: "People will read Sir Edwin's poems with a hungering desire to come into closer touch with our Lord's humanity, and they will, perhaps, find in his treatment that the poet has done more than the theologians or the commentators to make our Lord's life and mission clear to them."

The New York Herald says: "The diction is careful, noble, pure and exquisite, as becomes the subject, the clime and the characters; it will please all readers of poetry, and fill Christian souls with rapture. Perhaps it may do far more. Should The Light of the World, like The Light of Asia,' be translated and read in the East, it will be a more effective tract than any the missionaries have put forth, for the author never forgets, what the missionary seldom remembers, that Jesus was Himself an Oriental."

The Christian Nation, New York, says: "It is a work of subline conception, full of exquisite imagery and richness of thought." The Boston Herald says: "No recent poet has attempted a more daring performance, and no one of the poets who has heretofore dealt with this subject, from Milton to our own day, has been equally happy in avoiding what should not be touched, and in portraying those events and scenes in our Lord's life in Palestine, and in his experience among men which admit of the poet's handling, and with which the imagination is properly allowed to play. . . . The poem is sure of an unprecedented and popular reading." The Mail and Express, New York, says: "No poet of the present time is so popular as Sir Edwin Arnold. He has the whole world of English-speaking people for his readers. The publication of a new poem from his pen-the longest he has yet written-is of literary importance."

FUNK & WAGNALLS, Publishers, 18 & 20 Astor Place, N. Y.

THE

MAGAZINE OF POETRY

A QUARTERLY REVIEW

ILLUSTRATED

JULY 1891

CHARLES WELLS MOULTON

BUFFALO N Y

CONTENTS FOR JULY,

WILLIAM DAVIS GALLAGHER.

Portrait by Roche, Louisville, Ky.

SARAH M. B. PIATT

Portrait by Guy & Co., Cork, Ireland.

S. WEIR MITCHELL.
JOHN JAMES PIATT

Portrait by Guy & Co., Cork, Ireland.

KATE TUCKER GOODE .

Portrait by Perkins, Baltimore, Md. ANNIE E. HUBBART BARKER ZADEL BARNES GUSTAFSON

Portrait by Walery, London, England.

THERON BROWN .

BERTHA MAY IVORY

Portrait by Scholten, St. Louis, Mo.

RICHARD K. MUNKITTRICK.
DEXTER CARLETON WASHBURN
CHRISTOPHER P. FLANDERS
SARA LOUISA OBERHOLTZER.
With portrait.

SARAH J. D. STEVENS
MARION MANVILLE.

Portrait by Pryor, La Crosse, Wis.

SARAH STOKES WALTON

Portrait by Tichenor, Burlington, N. J.

WILLIAM DAVIS GALLAGHER

DONALD FITZ-RANDOLPH M'GREGOR

Portrait by Wendel, New York.

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TERMS.-$2.00 a year in advance; 50 cents a number. Foreign, nine shillings. Booksellers and Postmasters receive subscriptions. Subscribers may remit by post-office or express money orders, draft on New York, or registered letters. Money in letters is at sender's risk. Terms to clubs and canvassers on application. Magazines will be sent to subscribers until ordered discontinued. Back numbers exchanged, if in good condition, for corresponding bound volumes in half morocco, elegant, gilt, gilt top, for $1.00, subscribers paying charges both ways. Postage on bound volume, 35 cents. All numbers sent for binding should be marked with owner's name. We cannot bind or exchange copies the edges of which have been trimmed by machine. CHARLES WELLS MOULTON, Publisher, Buffalo, N. Y. Copyright, 1891, by Charles Wells Moulton. Entered at Buffalo Post-Office as Second-Class Mail Matter.

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