The more famous North American Review is generally considered to be its successor.
Oliver Wendell Holmes describes the magazine thus, in his disquisition on Ralph Waldo Emerson: "The Anthology was the literary precursor of the North American Review, and the theological herald of the Christian Examiner.
It mingled extracts and original contributions, theology and medicine, with all manner of literary chips and shavings.
It had Magazine ways that smacked of Sylvanus Urban; leading articles with balanced paragraphs which recalled the marching tramp of Johnson; translations that might have been signed with the name of Creech, and Odes to Sensibility, and the like, which recalled the syrupy sweetness and languid trickle of Laura Matilda's sentimentalities.
It printed articles with quite too much of the license of Swift and Prior for the Magazines of to-day.