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Reference
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Cambridge History
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Later National Literature, Part II
>
Later Magazines
>
Putnams Monthly Magazine and Its Successors
Scribners Magazine
The Galaxy
CONTENTS
·
VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
The Cambridge History of English and American Literature in 18 Volumes
(190721).
VOLUME XVII. Later National Literature, Part II.
XIX.
Later Magazines
.
§ 12.
Putnams Monthly Magazine and Its Successors
.
Among the less successful attempts at a literary magazine were three which bore the name of another distinguished New York publishing house.
Putnams Monthly Magazine
first appeared in January, 1853, with C. F. Briggs as editor and George William Curtis and Parke Godwin as assistant editors. In introducing itself it said, with an evident glance at
Harpers,
then so conspicuous and so irritating a figure in the magazine world:
A man buys a Magazine to be amusedto be instructed, if you please, but the lesson must be made amusing. He buys it to read in the cars, in his leisure hours at homein the hotel, at all chance moments. It makes very little difference to him whether the article date from Greece or Guinea if it only interest him. He does not read upon principle, and troubles himself little about copyright and justice to authors. If a man goes to Timbuctoo and describes his visit picturesquely and well, the reader devours the story, and is not at all concerned because the publisher may have broken the authors head or heart, to obtain the manuscript. A popular Magazine must amuse, interest, and instruct, or the public will pass by upon the other side. Nor will it be persuaded to come over and help us by any consideration of abstract right. It says, very justly, if you had no legs, why did you try to walk?
It is because we are confident that neither Greece nor Guinea can offer the American reader a richer variety of instruction and amusement in every kind, than the country whose pulses throb with his, and whose every interest is his own, that this magazine presents itself today.
This opinion, that for interest American writings could hold their own with those that might be purloined anywhere in the world, must have been pleasing to American authors. The editors gave evidence of their sincerity by preserving the anonymity of articles, letting each stand on its merits. The first volume contained poems by Longfellow and Lowell, and others of the New England group wrote for the magazine. Curtis contributed his
Potiphar Papers
and
Prue and I,
Lowell his
Fireside Travels
and
Moosehead Journal,
and Thoreau his
Cape Cod Papers.
It would seem that a Journal so edited and so supported ought at this time to have succeeded, even though in mechanical appearance it was somewhat heavy and unattractive. For reasons not fully explained, but supposedly financial, the house of Putnam sold it after two years, and after three years of deterioration under another management it was merged with
Emersons Magazine,
which itself died soon after.
27
Putnams Magazine,
sometimes referred to as a revival of the older
Putnams Monthly Magazine,
began publication in January, 1868. R. H. Stoddard, E. C. Stedman, and Bayard Taylor were connected with the editorial staff, but the list of contributors was hardly as impressive as that of the former
Putnams.
According to the frank statement of the publishers this magazine did not pay, and after three years it was merged with the newly founded
Scribners Monthly.
In 1906 a third
Putnams
made its appearance, this time
Putnams Monthly and The Critic.
The last half of the title was retained from an older periodical which was merged in the new. It was a semi-popular, illustrated, bookish journal which lasted with some changes of name until 1910.
28
CONTENTS
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VOLUME CONTENTS
·
INDEX OF ALL CHAPTERS
·
BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD
Scribners Magazine
The Galaxy
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