1 MAY 1869

Page 1

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

T HE Belgian business is postponed till the Elections are over. M. de Lavalette and M. Frere-Urban could not agree, the former demanding the completion of the Luxemburg contract...

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

MR. SUMNER ON ENGLAND'S OBLIGATIONS TO THE UNITED 'STATES. M R. SUMNER has expounded in the Senate of the United States his conception of the reasons which rendered the late...

Page 5

THE HOUSE OF LORDS IN A FUME.

The Spectator

T HE scene of Monday night in the House of Lords was a very interesting opportunity for the study of character. That usually sedate assembly is very well aware that it has no...

Page 6

MR. NEWDEGATE'S LAST ESCAPADE.

The Spectator

T HE new Parliament has scarcely as yet developed the proper number of bores, and not one bore of the first magnitude,—though Mr. Charley, if he goes on well, may hope...

Page 7

SIR J. P. GRANT IN JAMAICA.

The Spectator

T HE first Report presented to the Colonial Office by Sir J. P. Grant, or at least the first made public, is a very instructive and very characteristic document. It will be...

Page 8

TO SWEAR, OR NOT TO SWEAR ?

The Spectator

Q OME seventeen or eighteen years ago, within the small 0 group of working-men who had been carried to the benches of the Legislative Assembly under the Second French Republic,...

Page 9

TILE DIGNITY OF MONEY.

The Spectator

T is very curious to notice the rapid decay of the old contempt 1 for " mere riches " among the aristocracy. Their idea a hundred years ago was to look down on wealth as...

Page 11

WEIGHING TENNYSON.

The Spectator

II AVE we any sure clue by which to measure the true greatness of the Poets of our own age,—any artifice by which we can relieve ourselves from the pressure of the present,...

Page 14

" NOT OF THIS WORLD."

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,-I have not read Mr. Baldwin Brown's book on Misread Passages of Scripture, but perhaps I can add to your notice of it a word or two not...

Page 15

BOOKS.

The Spectator

CHAUCER'S ENGLAND. * Tuts is a masterly book on a great subject, and we feel confident that those who are the most familiar with Chaucer will the most heartily assent to our...

Page 16

MR. BAYARD TAYLOR'S EARLIEST AND LATEST TRAVELS.*

The Spectator

MR. BAYARD TAYLOR, one of the most vivid as well as sensible of travellers, intimates in his preface to the Byeways of Europe that this will be the last of his many delightful...

Page 19

KITTY.*

The Spectator

" KrrrY " is by no means the best of Miss Betham Edwards' novels, inferior to Doctor Jacob, not equal to John and I, and decidedly below the story which we have always...

Page 20

THE CIVIL POWER LN ITS RELATION TO THE CHURCH; OR, THE SWORD AND THE KEYS.*

The Spectator

WHEN a book starts with a petitio principii, and yet contains a good deal of valuable information well arranged, it is difficult in the limited space of which we can avail...

Page 21

CURRENT LITERAT URE.

The Spectator

The National Church. By Rev. D. Mountfield, M.A. (Longmans.)— "We deny," the writer says, "that there is any divinely appointed form of Church polity from which Christians are...