1 OCTOBER 1864

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NEWS OF TILE WEEK.

The Spectator

T TIE alarm entertained in the City seems not to diminish, and there is some prospect of a serious panic. The country, despite its prosperity, has been doing a great deal of...

NOTICE—On the 8th of October will be published the first

The Spectator

ofa Series of Articles on the Great Governing Families of Scotland, which will appear from week to week or at short intervals in the " Spectator." With the Introductory drtige...

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puzzled. They want something more than a mere principle, numerical

The Spectator

the latter cease to have any such voice, are reduced a distinct policy capable of description and defence, and they to silence by mere force of numbers, are in fact in the posi-...

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WHO WILL BE PRESIDENT?

The Spectator

G ENERAL M'CLELLAN has, we believe, destroyed the last chance of the Democratic party. It never was, we believe, great, for the vote of 1860 upon which its leaders relied was...

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LORD BROUGHAM.

The Spectator

OR]) BROUGHAM in his eighty-sixth year discoursing at York on almost all things human, and moderating the discussions of acute men who have given much time and thought to...

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THE ILL SOULS' JUDGMENT. A NOTHER landmark has been removed. At

The Spectator

a time when Dissent thunders at the gates of Oxford the Archbishop of Canterbury has made another concession to the levelling spirit of the age. There is only too much reason to...

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WHY WE WENT TO BOOTAN.

The Spectator

T HE Government of Bengal has at last published through the Calcutta Review what is understood to be its account of the unfortunate embassy to Bootan. It is the first narra-...

A MAN AND A " SUBGEN."

The Spectator

A MAN as modest as he is enthusiastic has arisen in New York to proclaim a great scientific truth in the light of which, as he repeatedly tells us, the millenium will approach...

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THE ENGLISH VOLUNTEERS AT BRUSSELS.

The Spectator

T HOSE who have passed through Brussels during the last ten days of September are aware that its streets, always bright and cheerful, then presented a specially animated...

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THE EXCURSIONIST AT BRIGHTON.

The Spectator

THE second week in September, and universal John Bull is at .1. play. Not that his play makes him otherwise than a dull boy, at least to outward appearance. We scarcely think we...

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NAPLES FEELING ON THE ITALIAN CONVENTION.

The Spectator

[FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.] Ministerial lirs which at the time I could not quite understand, not being gifted with second sight, but which might have enlightened me had I...

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THE MARCHES: POLITICAL METAYERS : OUR LADY OF LORETTO.

The Spectator

Macerate, September 12, 1864. TEE Marches have been deservedly called the "Garden of Italy." Not even the choicest districts of Tuscany can outvie the laughing richness of...

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THE SPLIT OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY—SLAVERY AND THE UNION.

The Spectator

[FROM OUR SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT.] New York, September 17, 1864. ONLY a week has passed since I wrote somewhat doubtfully of Mr. Lincoln's re-election ; but in that short time...

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BOOKS.

The Spectator

PRAED'S POEMS.* Tills is a disappointing both, published probably too late even for popularity, much too late for critical sympathy. That Praed was an able man and a thoughtful...

THE LIBERAL PARTY AND REFORM.

The Spectator

To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR." SIR,—I am not going to try to throw a single ray of light upon this question. I only want to urge you to help yourreaders to think about it...

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THE EDUCATION OF GIRLS.*

The Spectator

THE Archbishop of York in his recent able address to the Social Science Association has taken up rather prematurely the ground that the University local examinations, which wore...

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THE NEW BIGLOW PAPERS.*

The Spectator

WHAT is the essence of that unique American humour of which Mr. Lowell's Biglow Papers present us with the highest and most brilliant form ? It is not merely individual genius...

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TICKNOR'S LIFE OF PRESCOTT.*

The Spectator

ELECTRICITY and steam have gone farther than we think towards taking from a strong sarcasm its sting. "Your fathers killed the prophets and ye build their sepulchres" may be as...

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CAPTAIN BURTON'S MISSION TO DAHOME.* Tama two volumes contain Captain

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Burton's narrative of his mission to Dahome in 1863, and his accounts of Dahornan history, religion, constitution, and institutions in general, the Amaz)n army and the grand...

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C URRENT LITERATURE.

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The Knapsack Guide for Travellers in Italy. (John Murray.) — Of all countries Italy is perhaps that for which a knapsack guide is least required, if that term is to be taken in...

The Utilization of Minute L. By Dr. T. L. Phipson,

The Spectator

F.C.S. London, &c. (Groombridge and Sons.)—Tho object of Dr. Phipson is to redeem tho sciences of zoology and botany from the charge of being unpractical. To effect this he has...

A Neglected Fact in English History. By Henry Charles Coote,

The Spectator

F.S.A - (Bell and Daddy.)—The theory of this essay is that too much effect has been attributed to the Anglo-Saxon invasion. The common idea is that the provincial Britons were...

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Mr. Whitworth and Sir Emerson Tennent. From Fraser's Magazine. (James

The Spectator

Madden.)—A republication of the original attack on Sir Emer- son's "Story of the Guns" with his answer and the reviewer's reply, together with Sir Emerson's rejoinder, which now...

Legendary Tales of the Ancient Britons, Rehearsed from the Early

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Chronicles. By Louisa L. J. Menzies. (John Russell Smith.)—The matter of these beautiful old stories is to be found in "Geoffrey of Monmouth," and though not history they...

BOOKS RECEIVED.

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Christian Spiritualism, by W. R. Bertalacci (Emily Faithfulli—Ingram's Law of Compensation for Lands. ito., by J. D. Ingram (Butterworth)—The Warriors of our Wooden Walls and...