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49 THE CHARLOTTE MEDICAL JOURNAL. ing glimpses of the personal relations ,that existed between the most famous members of the Atlantic School. Then follow chapters on "Kansas and John Brown" and "Civil War," dealing with episodes less fitly grouped among the "Cheerful Yesterdays," perhaps, and yet not lacking in humorous suggestion. Hardly less entertaining are Col. Higginson's reminiscences of his own participation in public affairs since the war. LITERARY NOTES. Lippincott's Magazine for July, jS^S.—The complete novel in the July issue of Lippincott's is "Harold Bradley Playwright," by Edward S. Van Zile. This diadatist is no hack, but a man of marked ability, culture, and character : the rehearsals of his play brings to the front a brilliant thought previously obscured actress, who proves to be also an original and charming personage. The scene is in New York, and the story is Mr. Van Zile's best work thus far. "A Limit of Wealth," by Frank H. Sweet, deals with a returned Klondiker of modest views. Mary Agnes Tincker's "An Evening in Rome" introduces the Abbe Liszt. "Their Great Crisis," as recounted by Nathaniel Stephenson, is that of three young lawyers. Under the heading, "A National Derelict," Fred. Perry Powers sets forth the decadence and obstructiveness of Spain. William Ward Crane writes on "Names of War-Ships." "John C. Calhoun" is painted, fron a southern stand-point and in his private life, by Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, D.D., whose reminiscences are of value as those of a neighbor who knew his subject well. Anne Stuart Baily furnishes an interesting account of "An Old Virginia Resort," the Sweet Springs. Sundry hints on Cheap Trampings in Switzerland," liable to be of value to the impecunious traveller, are given by Alvan F. Sanborn. A partial history of "The Wagner Cult" in America comes from Philip G Hubert, Jr. Little Barr Morgan writes pleasantly of her "Feathered Friends." Dr. Charles C. Abbott, who is always a naturalist, praises "The Unlettered Learned." "Zola as an apostle of Temperance" is considered by Professor Victor Wilker, who, while not defending the great novelist's excessive realism, takes the ground that his work is no less really than professedly that of a moralist. Theodore Stanton presents a somewhat extended list of American "Literary Men as Diplomatists. The poetry of the number is by Jenny Terrill Ruprecht, Mary Kent Davey, Grace Shoup, Carrie Blake Morgan, and Madison Cawein The July Forum.—All the articles in The Forum for July are particularly "readable" ; and there is not a dull paper in the issue. While so much biographical matter relative to the late Mr. Gladstone is being presented to the public by the press and the magazines, The Forum has for its leading article a sketch of the deceased statesman by Mr. Justin McCarthy, M. P., written four years ago with the stipulation that it should not be published till after Mr. Gladstone's death. Mr. McCarthy says: "lam not writing a biography of Mr. Gladstone. The public life of Gladstone belongs to history, and is open to the study of anyone and everyone. I am rather desirous of telling in a cursory sort of way how that life began, how that career was directed from its beginning, how the nature and the genius of the man asserted themselves, how he came to slough old beliefs and to cast away old prejudices, how as Bright said of him, he was always struggling toward the light. My idea is to make a study from personal memory of the man rather than a chronicle of his career." From these avowals of the author it will be gathered that Mr. McCarthy's article makes exceptional interesting reading." The Review of Reviews continues strong on war topics. In the July number the editor reviews the whole campaign up to the landing of our troops for the advance on Santiago, showing the precise part which Lieutenant Hobson's exploit had in the general scheme ; Dr. William Hayes Ward treats of Hobson's career as that of the typical young American student; Mr. Edwin Emerson, Jr., the brilliant young newspaper correspondent, gives notes of his adventurous journeyings in Porto Rico last month ; and Dr. Max West, the statistician and economist, summarizes "Our New War Taxes" in an interesting article. "International Cartoon Comments on Our War with Spain" and the "Record of Current Events" also cover the situation up to date. Phil Robinson, the war correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette, whom the Spaniards have put into jail at Matanza, is one of the cleverest writers on out-door subjects in the English magazines. His latest contribution "Some Notable Dogs in Fiction" is reprinted in The Living Age for July 11, from the Contemporary Review.
Object Description
Rating | |
Fixed Title * | NCHH-21: Charlotte Medical Journal [1892-1921] |
Document Title | Charlotte Medical Journal [1892-1921] |
Subject Topical | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Description | Absorbed Carolina medical journal in 1908 and continued its vol. numbering with v. 58. Vol. 4, no. 3 (Mar. 1894) misnumbered as v. 4, no. 5. |
Publisher | Charlotte, N.C. : Blakey Print. House, 1892-1921. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1898 |
Identifier | NCHH-21-013 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 13 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-21/nchh-21-013.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-e; nchh-21 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-21-013 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-21 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb2666817 |
Revision History | keep |
Description
Fixed Title * | Page 49 |
Document Title | Charlotte Medical Journal [1892-1921] |
Subject Topical | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Subject Topical Other | Medicine -- North Carolina -- Periodicals. |
Description | Absorbed Carolina medical journal in 1908 and continued its vol. numbering with v. 58. Vol. 4, no. 3 (Mar. 1894) misnumbered as v. 4, no. 5. |
Publisher | Charlotte, N.C. : Blakey Print. House, 1892-1921. |
Repository | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Health Sciences Library. |
Host | University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill |
Date | 1898 |
Identifier | NCHH-21-013-0057 |
Form General | Periodicals |
Page Type | all; report/review |
Language | English |
Rights | This item is part of the North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection. Some materials in the Collection are protected by U.S. copyright law. This item is presented by the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill for research and educational purposes. It may not be republished or distributed without permission of the Health Sciences Library. |
Filename | charlottemedical131898char_0057.jp2 |
Digital Collection | North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection |
Sponsor | The North Carolina History of Health Digital Collection is an open access publishing initiative of the Health Sciences Library of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Financial support for the initiative was provided in part by a multi-year NC ECHO (Exploring Cultural Heritage Online) digitization grant, awarded by the State Library of North Carolina, and funded through the Library Services and Technology Act (LSTA). |
Volume Number | 13 |
Issue Number | 1 |
Page Number | 49 |
Health Discipline | Medicine |
Full Text | 49 THE CHARLOTTE MEDICAL JOURNAL. ing glimpses of the personal relations ,that existed between the most famous members of the Atlantic School. Then follow chapters on "Kansas and John Brown" and "Civil War" dealing with episodes less fitly grouped among the "Cheerful Yesterdays" perhaps, and yet not lacking in humorous suggestion. Hardly less entertaining are Col. Higginson's reminiscences of his own participation in public affairs since the war. LITERARY NOTES. Lippincott's Magazine for July, jS^S.—The complete novel in the July issue of Lippincott's is "Harold Bradley Playwright" by Edward S. Van Zile. This diadatist is no hack, but a man of marked ability, culture, and character : the rehearsals of his play brings to the front a brilliant thought previously obscured actress, who proves to be also an original and charming personage. The scene is in New York, and the story is Mr. Van Zile's best work thus far. "A Limit of Wealth" by Frank H. Sweet, deals with a returned Klondiker of modest views. Mary Agnes Tincker's "An Evening in Rome" introduces the Abbe Liszt. "Their Great Crisis" as recounted by Nathaniel Stephenson, is that of three young lawyers. Under the heading, "A National Derelict" Fred. Perry Powers sets forth the decadence and obstructiveness of Spain. William Ward Crane writes on "Names of War-Ships." "John C. Calhoun" is painted, fron a southern stand-point and in his private life, by Charles Cotesworth Pinckney, D.D., whose reminiscences are of value as those of a neighbor who knew his subject well. Anne Stuart Baily furnishes an interesting account of "An Old Virginia Resort" the Sweet Springs. Sundry hints on Cheap Trampings in Switzerland" liable to be of value to the impecunious traveller, are given by Alvan F. Sanborn. A partial history of "The Wagner Cult" in America comes from Philip G Hubert, Jr. Little Barr Morgan writes pleasantly of her "Feathered Friends." Dr. Charles C. Abbott, who is always a naturalist, praises "The Unlettered Learned." "Zola as an apostle of Temperance" is considered by Professor Victor Wilker, who, while not defending the great novelist's excessive realism, takes the ground that his work is no less really than professedly that of a moralist. Theodore Stanton presents a somewhat extended list of American "Literary Men as Diplomatists. The poetry of the number is by Jenny Terrill Ruprecht, Mary Kent Davey, Grace Shoup, Carrie Blake Morgan, and Madison Cawein The July Forum.—All the articles in The Forum for July are particularly "readable" ; and there is not a dull paper in the issue. While so much biographical matter relative to the late Mr. Gladstone is being presented to the public by the press and the magazines, The Forum has for its leading article a sketch of the deceased statesman by Mr. Justin McCarthy, M. P., written four years ago with the stipulation that it should not be published till after Mr. Gladstone's death. Mr. McCarthy says: "lam not writing a biography of Mr. Gladstone. The public life of Gladstone belongs to history, and is open to the study of anyone and everyone. I am rather desirous of telling in a cursory sort of way how that life began, how that career was directed from its beginning, how the nature and the genius of the man asserted themselves, how he came to slough old beliefs and to cast away old prejudices, how as Bright said of him, he was always struggling toward the light. My idea is to make a study from personal memory of the man rather than a chronicle of his career." From these avowals of the author it will be gathered that Mr. McCarthy's article makes exceptional interesting reading." The Review of Reviews continues strong on war topics. In the July number the editor reviews the whole campaign up to the landing of our troops for the advance on Santiago, showing the precise part which Lieutenant Hobson's exploit had in the general scheme ; Dr. William Hayes Ward treats of Hobson's career as that of the typical young American student; Mr. Edwin Emerson, Jr., the brilliant young newspaper correspondent, gives notes of his adventurous journeyings in Porto Rico last month ; and Dr. Max West, the statistician and economist, summarizes "Our New War Taxes" in an interesting article. "International Cartoon Comments on Our War with Spain" and the "Record of Current Events" also cover the situation up to date. Phil Robinson, the war correspondent of the Pall Mall Gazette, whom the Spaniards have put into jail at Matanza, is one of the cleverest writers on out-door subjects in the English magazines. His latest contribution "Some Notable Dogs in Fiction" is reprinted in The Living Age for July 11, from the Contemporary Review. |
Digital Format | JPEG 2000 |
Print / Download PDF Version | http://archives.hsl.unc.edu/nchh/nchh-21/nchh-21-013.pdf |
Document Sort | all; group-e; nchh-21 |
Volume Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/identi/searchterm/NCHH-21-013 |
Title Link | http://dc.lib.unc.edu/cdm/search/collection/nchh/field/documa/searchterm/NCHH-21 |
Catalog Record link | http://search.lib.unc.edu/search?R=UNCb2666817 |
Revision History | keep |
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