Nationality words link to articles with information on the nation's poetry or literature (for instance, Irish or France). Godey's Lady's Book, the most popular women's magazine of the 19th century in the United States, is founded in Philadelphia by Louise Antoine Godey. Its circulation would reach 150,000. The magazine contained recipes, articles on beauty and health, sentimental and didactic writing and book reviews as well as the work of Ralph Waldo Emerson, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, Oliver Wendell Holmes, Edgar Allan Poe and Harriet Beecher Stowe. The magazine lasted until 1898 In Germany, a loose group of writers known as Young Germany (Junges Deutschland) begins to flourish this year. The movement continues until 1850 La bibliothèque canadienne, a French Canadian magazine edited by Michel Bibaud, ceases publication this year (it began in 1825) Thomas Aird, The Captive of Fez Lord Byron, Letters and Journals of Lord Byron, edited by Thomas Moore, biographical Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey, anonymously published, The Devil's Walk; original version published in the Morning Post, September 6, 1799 as "The Devil's Thoughts" George Croly, Poetical Works Ebenezer Elliott, Corn Law Rhymes: The Ranter Caroline Fry, anonymously published, The Listener, poetry and prose John Abraham Heraud, anonymously published, The Descent into Hell Richard Lower, Tom Cladpole's Jurney to Lunnon, told by himself, and written in pure Sussex doggerel by his Uncle Tim, sells at least twenty thousand copies Robert Montgomery, Satan Caroline Norton The Undying One and Other Poems The Faithless Knight Alfred Tennyson, Poems, Chiefly Lyrical, including "The Kraken" and "Mariana" (see also Poems 1842) Charles Tennyson (later Charles Tennyson Turner), Sonnets and Fugitive Pieces Sarah Josepha Hale, Poems for Our Children, written at Lowell Mason's request; includes "Mary's Lamb", with the verse "Mary Had a Little Lamb"; this poem and some others would be reprinted in McGuffy Readers and in various anthologies many times, without credit given to the author Oliver Wendell Holmes, "Old Ironsides", written after the author becomes angry that the , a navy ship that had seen service in the Tripolitan War and the War of 1812 was to be scrapped; first published in the Boston Daily Advertiser and reprinted nationwide, the poem saved the ship from destruction.