Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1..

Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1..

It may be seen, by the foregoing table, that a thorough system of education for the masses requires that one third of the aggregate population should be kept at school for a goodly portion of the year.  This is essential, under Democratic Government, in order to bring each generation up to the appreciative point.]

[Footnote E:  The free colored population of Charleston in 1860, did not vary materially from four thousand.  The associated value of their property would give to each $390.  Each family or six persons would possess, according to this estimate, $2840.  This would be a full average of wealth to the free population of the United States—­the amount varying in the different States from $2200 to $2500 to each family of six persons.]

DESTINED TO BE THE BOOK OF THE SEASON

* * * * *

As published in the pages of THE CONTINENTAL MONTHLY, it has been pronounced by the Press to be

“SUPERIOR TO UNCLE TOM’S CABIN.”

“FULL OF ABSORBING INTEREST.”

“Whether invented or not, True, because true to Life.”—­HORACE GREELEY.

* * * * *

WILL SHORTLY BE PUBLISHED,

==In a handsome 12mo vol. of 330 pages, cloth, $1,==

==AMONG THE PINES,==

BY EDMUND KIRKE.

(Symbol:  Pointing Finger) Read the following Notices from the Press;

“It contains the most vivid and lifelike representation of a specimen family of poor South-Carolina whites we have ever read.”—­E.P.  WHIPPLE, in the Boston Transcript.

“It is full of absorbing interest.”—­Whig, Quincy, III.

“It gives some curious ideas of Southern Social Life.”—­Post, Boston.

“The most lifelike delineations of Southern Life ever written.”—­Spy, Columbia, Pa.

“One of the most attractive series of papers ever published, and embodying only facts”—­C.C.  HAZEWELL, in the Traveller, Boston.

“A very graphic picture of life among the clay-eaters and turpentine-makers.”—­Lorain News, Oberlle, Ohio.

“The author wields a ready and graphic pen.”—­Times, Armenia, N.Y.

“There are passages in it of the most thrilling dramatic power.”—­Journal, Roxbury, Mass.

It is the best and most truthful sketch of Southern Life and Character we have ever read.”—­R.  SURLTON MACKENZIE, in the Press, Philadelphia.

“Has a peculiar interest just now, and deserves a wide reading.”—­Dispatch, Amsterdam, N.Y.

“An intensely vivid description of things as they occur on a Southern Plantation.”—­Union, Lancaster, Pa.

“The author is one of the finest descriptive writers in the country.”—­Journal, Boston, Mass.

“It presents a vivid picture of Plantation Life, with something of the action of a character that is more than likely to pass from t story into history before the cause of the Rebellion is rooted out.”—­Gazette. Taunton, Mass.

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Continental Monthly, Vol. II. July, 1862. No. 1. from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.