It will be hard to find a March 1867 issue of Blackwood's Magazine in any finer condition than this one. Just a tiny bit of edge wear to paper wrappers. American edition of the monthly. 

See photo #2 for complete contents. 

Some highlights I find include: 

The energetic Margaret Oliphant's serial novel, Part III, The Brownlows. 

English philosopher William Henry Smith on the late Scottish philosopher James Ferrier's Lectures on Greek Philosophy, and Other Philosophical Remains. 

G.R. Gleig (Chaplain-General of British Armed Forces) on the British Army, and its insistence (his complaint) on keeping the major part of its strength sitting idle in India, among other details of the force. This 19 pages open the number. 

Anne Mosley's essay headed "Hymns of the Populace." 

Margaret Oliphant's second contribution to this number, a review of J.H. Burton's The History of Scotland. 

Irish novelist and all-around popular literary man Charles Lever's Cornelius O' Dowd (No. VI of 25 installments). 

Other essays and commentary. 

Author identifications above are drawn from the Wellesley Index (I, p. 126).