September 1894
In This Issue
Explore the September 1894 print edition below. Or to discover more writing from the pages of The Atlantic, browse the full archive.
Articles
The New Storm and Stress in Germany
“The ideals of the inner life are once more beginning to assert themselves, and it is clear that there is going to be once more a German literature.”
Tante Cat’rinette
“It would be difficult, perhaps unsatisfying, to explain why Tante Cat’rinette, on that particular morning, when a vision of the rising day broke suddenly upon her, should have believed that she stood in face of a heavenly revelation. But why not, after all?” A short story
Philip and His Wife
Rus in Urbe: Brief Memoranda
Old Boston Mary: A Remembrance
An Onondaga Mother and Child
The Kidnapped Bride
The Religion of Gotama Buddha
For Their Brethren's Sake
Up Chevedale and Down Again
Ave Atque Vale
From the Reports of the Plato Club: In Two Parts. Part One
A Morning at the Old Sugar Mill
In a Washington Hop Field
An Enterprising Scholar
A Reading in the Letters of John Keats
Books Illustrated and Decorated
Comment on New Books
Impressions of the Theatre
The Discomforts of Luxury: A Speculation
Restaurant Américain
Two Stools
It Goes Without Saying
Italian Grace Notes
Silent Partner