11 SEPTEMBER 1869

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There is a curious rumour going about that some leading-

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'member of the Administration in Spain is disposed to let Cuba go on condition of receiving 100,000,000 dollars "guaranteed by the United States,"—to which there is a pendant in...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

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A s the struggles of the animalcules in a drop of water are mag- nified by the solar microscope on the sheet which serves as the registering surface, into a scene of perfectly...

A curious indication of the unpopularity of the present Govern-

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ment of Spain has occurred in Madrid. The Government had ordered the suppression of a post of the National Guard, and the National Guard thereupon suspecting the Government of a...

M. de Montalembert, who is supposed to be near his

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end, has written a letter expressing the warmest sympathy with that memorial by the Treves Catholics against the supposed objects of the great (Ecumenical Council, the drift of...

The Senatus-Consultum embodying the new reforms passed the Senate on

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Monday by 134 votes against 3,—all the amendments, however, tending in the direction of greater liberty and a more unrestricted power for the Legislative Assembly having been...

*** The Editors cannot undertake to return Manuscript in any

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case.

Mr. Henley, at Bicester, in Oxfordshire, has told his consti-

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tuents that the last session of Parliament was " the very dullest" he ever had the misery to sit through,—a session wherein first it was ascertained that the most indispen-...

The few political speeches of the week have not been,

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on the whole, very important. The Cutlers' Feast at Sheffield yesterday week gave Mr. Roebuck occasion to bark very furiously at some party (unnamed) which he imagines to be...

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A frightful mining catastrophe has taken place in Pennslyvania. A

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colliery, disused for some time in consequence of a strike, was entered again by the miners-202 in number—last Monday. A shaft more than 300 feet deep caught fire at the bottom,...

The approaching Church Congress, which takes place during the first

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week of October, at Liverpool, ought to produce two or three discussions of the highest possible interest. One, which should certainly, if adequately discussed, go far towards...

Nothing can be worse than the accounts from New Zealand,

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both military and political. The last telegram, dated Adelaide, August 12, says that the rebellion is spreading, and great alarm prevails. The more detailed news received from...

There has been a fresh exposure this week of one

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of the most shameful, because one of the most wanton, of our cruelties. A passenger in a Rotterdam and London steamboat gives a most horrible account of the cruelty inflicted on...

Mr. Bright, we suppose, never expected to be asked to

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defend free trade, twenty years and more after it had been successfully tried. But the fact is so. A few weak-kneed people in Lan- cashire have fallen into Protectionist...

The only scene of critical change in politics—of political fermentations

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which. are likely to result in new political affinities— is at present Ireland. There, as we indicated last week, and have shown at length this week, the Roman Catholic Bishops...

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The Bishops unequal to their work are really beginning to

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Tesign. Not only is it understood that the Bishop of Winchester resigns early next month, but he will not even accept, it is said, the full retiring pension to which he is...

The Archbishop of Canterbury, who is always sensible, has been

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telling his clergy that they need not fear lest Parliament should make any changes in the Prayer-Book without the consent of Convocation, since the only difficulty will be to...

The Byron controversy has given a loophole to "A Member

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of Congress," evidently a savage Southerner, to vilify Mrs. Beecher Stowe, "and all the Beechera," in last Monday's Times. His letter, coming, too, from a man who dared not put...

Is the diseased taste for monsters and monstrosities Anglo- Saxon

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mainly, or common to the vulgarer feelings of all mankind ? Certainly, no people can be more vacantly amused and vulgarly curious about disproportions in the shape of dwarfs and...

Dr. Fowler, the medical officer of the East London Union,

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has been to see the Welsh fasting girl, Sarah Jacob, at some village with an unpronounceable name in Carmarthenshire, and he gives it as his opinion that she is in a condition...

Consols were on Friday evening 92-H to 92-14.

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What induces the Times to admit those silly letters of

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Dr. Cumming's about the coming (Ecumenical Council? They are not very funny, they are even very dull, and they do not seem to us adapted to impress a very great number of even...

The wonderful proposal of the Albert liquidators to the policy-

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/holders, to continue the business and make a present of a fifth of the profits to the shareholders who had ruined them, has now been knocked on the head for good. The...

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TOPICS OF THE DAY.

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LORD HARTINGTON'S WARNING. L ORD HARTINGTON'S speech at the Cutlers' Feast at Sheffield was not, we suppose, meant exactly to rally together the proprietary interests of the...

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THE EFFECT OF PRINCE NAPOLEON'S SPEECH.

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F RINGE NAPOLEON need hardly have avowed his profound attachment to the Emperor and his son ;—his speech 'would have scarcely any practical meaning without the help of that key...

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THE IRISH CATHOLIC BISHOPS.

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I F there is one kind of popular literature which more than another has a tendency to make considerate men sick, it is the big, pompous bow-wow with which the leading journal...

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LORD HOBART'S SPECIFIC FOR BRIBERY.

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L ORD HOBART'S prescription of a sovereign cure for Bribery is not to be wondered at. It is the nature of inveterate maladies from time to time to provoke such pre- scriptions,...

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THE GOSPEL OF BLOOD.

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T HE Pall Mall Gazette is seized every now and then with a homicidal mania which cloaks itself in the garb of justice. A short time ago, our contemporary argued that all the...

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BARRISTERS AND ATTORNEYS.

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T HE project of fusing the two branches of the Legal Profes- sion, which has often been started, and which has been lately brought into more active discussion by the Liverpool...

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THE PUBLIC PREPOSSESSION FOR BYRON.

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AiI RS. BEECHER STOWE will probably repent her impul- sive and unjustified confession, when she sees the incredulity with which her story has been received in both England and...

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A DRIFTING STAB.

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EW of the statements made by Professor Stokes in the address with which he opened the recent meeting of the British Association attracted more attention than the assertion that...

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THE WORKING-CLASSES IN THE UNITED STATES, .

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A S mentioned in my last paper, although I was unable to visit California, as the railroad was not completed, I had much correspondence with gentlemen residing there and...

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A TRIP TO 'THE SHETLANDS.—III.

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IT AVING seen Lerwick and explored its surroundings, I prepared for a visit to the northern islands, without which a tour to the Shetlands is no more complete than the...

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THE PROVINCIAL HISTORY OF ENGLAND.

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Cxv.—THE WELal MARCH :—CHESHIRE.—EARLY HISTORY. C HESHIRE certainly formed part of the territories of the Celtic tribe called by the Romans Connum or CORNAVII- and some...

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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

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THE ORIGIN OF CIVILIZATION. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:] SIR,—In your issue of August 28th you do me the honour to notice some iemarks which I offered on Sir John...

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MRS. STOWE AND LORD BYRON.

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ITo THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR,—In reference to the charge made by Mrs. Stowe against the character of Lord Byron, would it not be well to remember the following words...

BOOKS.

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ARTHUR HUGH CLOUGH.* MRS. CLOUGH has done wisely in giving her husband's remains so frankly to the world, and all understanding readers will thank her sincerely for the true...

COMPULSORY EDUCATION.

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(TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") Stu„—In your short notice about compulsory education in last week's number, you say that all that is necessary is" to make all pay- ment of...

THE IRISH CATHOLIC BISHOPS.

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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR,—In your number of the 4th you say of Cardinal Cullen's demand that Government should surrender the whole of the education of...

RAILWAY INVESTMENTS.

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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTA.TOIL") Stn,—In your article of the 28th ult., on railway investments, you say that the London and North-Western pays only 54- on its £100 stock....

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THE BUCICHURST VOLUNTEERS.*

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MR. CAPES has already been some time before the public as a novelist, and has acquired a reputation which is not contemp- tible. We cannot claim acquaintance with his previous...

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BERGENROTH'S SUPPLEMENTARY STATE PAPERS.* THIS volume of the late Mr.

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Bergenroth's collections will be found more readable than most of the Rolls publications from its com- prising State papers which have mostly a direct bearing on two selected...

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THE IVORY GATE.*

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THE reviewer, whose business, if not pleasure, is to criticize novels, may feel some modicum of gratitude towards Mr. Mortimer Collins. His story, being confined within two...

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Norrie Scion; or, Driven to Sea. By Mrs. George Coppice.

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(Nimmo.)— At the close of her tale Mrs. Cupples gives a piece of advice to "would- be-heroes," to the effect that they had better take the advice of parents and guardians before...

The Logic of Nantes. By I. P. Hughlings. (Walton.)--We shall

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best describe this work by its secondary title, as "Au Introduction to Boole's Laws of Thought." It seeks, in fact, to popularize Professor Boole's system, and, if we may use...

We have to notice a compendious and useful edition of

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Plato's Apology of Socrates and Crib, by Dr. Wilhelm Wagner. (Deighton and Bell, Bell -and Daldy.)—The annotations are compressed within a small compass, but deal with all the...

Madame Louise of France. By the Author of Tales of

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Kirkbeck. (Rivington.)—This is an adaptation and condensation of a longer French life, and makes a book sufficiently interesting and readable ; sometimes ex- citing a smile that...

James Wyvern's Sin. By Mrs. Mackenzie Daniel. 3 vols. (Skeet.)

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—We feel irritated by this novel, when we ought not to have felt any- thing beyond weariness. For this we have to blame the title, which, though not attractive, is effective in...

CURRENT LITERATURE.

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Historical Gleanings. By James E. Thorold Rogers. (Macmillan.)— Mr. Rogers sketches Montague, Walpole, Adam Smith, and Cobbett, the first and second somewhat indistinctly, the...

The Hakluyt Society publishes the Fifth Letter of Herz= Cortes

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to , the Emperor Charles V. Translated by Don Pascual de Gayangoa. This is an interesting and valuable document, which has never before appeared in an English form. It gives an...

The Crack Shot, by Edward C. Barber (Sampson Low), is

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a full account of the theory of shooting, that is, of the laws of motion, with particulars of the action of gravity, resistance, &e., of the various systems of manufacturing...

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NEw EDITIONS. — The Great Schools of England, by Howard

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Staunton (Strahan), appears in a new edition. It is revised up to the latest date, and bears every sign of being carefully done. The body of the work supplies abundant...

It may be useful at this time to remind our

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readers of Murray's Handbooks for England. One, which seems as complete as these works usually are, for the counties of Derbyshire, Nottinghamshire, Leicestershire, and...