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The Dial/Volume 15/Number 170

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The Dial, Volume 15
Number 170 (July 16, 1893)
577309The Dial, Volume 15 — Number 170 (July 16, 1893)
THE DIAL
A Semi-Monthly Journal of



EDITED BY {Volume XV.
FRANCIS F. BROWNE. {No. 170.
10 cts. a copy.} Office: 24 Adams St.
82. a year.} Stevens Building.

CHICAGO, JULY 16, 1839






THE DIAL




THE DIAL (founded in 1880) is published on the 1st and 16th of each month. Terms of Subscription, 82.00 a year in advance, postage prepaid in the United States, Canada, and Mexico; in other countries comprised in the Postal Union, 50 cents a year for extra postage must be added. Unless otherwise ordered, subscriptions will begin with the current number. Remittances should be by check, or by express or postal order, payable to THE DIAL. Special Rates to Clubs and for subscriptions with other publications will be sent on application; and Sample Copy on receipt of 10 cents. Advertising Rates furnished on application. All communications should be addressed to

THE DIAL, No. 24 Adams Street, Chicago.



No. 170.
JULY 16, 1893.
Vol. XV.

Contents.


PAGE
THE TOWER OF FLAME. (The White City: July, 1893.)
R. W. Gilder
27
THE CONGRESS OF AUTHORS. (With Extracts from the Papers Read)
27
Arthur Howard Noll
36
William Morton Payne
40

Poems by Two Brothers.—The Earl of Lytton's King Poppy.—Watson's The Eloping Angels.—Brown's Old John.—Block's El Nuevo Mundo.—Fawcett's Songs of Doubt and Dream.—Cawein's Red Leaves and Roses.—Under the Scarlet and Black.—Cap and Gown.—Under King Constantine.—Hovey's Seaward.—Appleton's Greek Poets in English Verse.—Sargent's Horatian Echoes.—Rhoades's The Æneid of Vergil in English Verse.— Poetical Works of Samuel Taylor Coleridge.

Mr. Leslie Stephen as an Apologist.—Some delightful burlesques on the plays of Ibsen.—Statistics of crime and poverty in the United States.—Poland in history.—A readable and practical guide for amateur photographers.—Appreciative chats on American artists.—Interpretations of Tennyson's Idylls of the King.—A sailing-voyage from New York to Cape Town.—A good summary of the French Revolution.