21 OCTOBER 1871

Page 1

On the other hand, Mr. P. Barry, who writes himself

The Spectator

" treasurer" (we suppose of the Social Alliance), wrote to Thurs- day's papers to say that Mr. Scott Russell is in possession of " the signatures of the Lords," and that he...

Prince Bismarck and M. Quertier have made a new Conven-

The Spectator

tion, supposed to be a little more favourable to France. On condition that the productions of Alsace and Lorraine are admitted into France at a low rate of duty until the end of...

France has been troubled this week by rumours of disturbances

The Spectator

in Corsica. Something or other has evidently occurred in the island, for the fleet has been thither in hot haste, and ohasseurs-a- pied have been ordered to Ajaccio, but no...

The Birmingham Education League has been thundering against the Government

The Spectator

and Mr. Forster this week with some- thing of the old Radical intensity of wrath,—and indeed, has, we are strongly disposed to think, overshot its own mark. The country, with...

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

The Spectator

case.

Mr. Dixon, M.P., made for his purpose, as he usually

The Spectator

does, a very able speech, of which the leading features were the very much lower tone in which he spoke of compulsion as compared with the language of the League last year, the...

The real state of the facts as to the "

The Spectator

Now Social Alliance " is involved in a good deal of mystification. Lord Salisbury has admitted that the resolutions were shown to him "confidentially " last June, when he...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

T HE Emperor of Germany opened the Reichstag in person on Monday in a lengthy speech. His Majesty told the members that the military budget was not quite ready, but that it...

Page 2

The Bavarian Government has explained itself fully with rela- tion

The Spectator

to the " Old Catholics." It declares that it will protect them and recognize them as Catholics, and that the dogma of the Pope's infallibility is a danger to the State which has...

On foreign policy, Lord Granville congratulated himself that if he

The Spectator

had been attacked for pusillanimity, he had been attacked in good company,—with Mr. Canning, with Lord Palmerston, with Lord Aberdeen, with Lord Clarendon. He described his...

A Derbyshire magistrate, Mr. 3. C. Cox. of Belper, declared

The Spectator

himself, amidst groat cheering, willing to go to prison rather than pay a rate for the support of denominational schools. Mr. Joseph Cowen, of Newcastle, bitterly attacked Mr....

The American Government seems a little perplexed what to do

The Spectator

with Fenians. " General " O'Nie]l and some of his followers have recently attempted a raid upon Manitoba, where they doubtless expected • assistance from the old Riel party....

M. Leon Say, the new Prefect of the Seine, has

The Spectator

come over to express the acknowledgments of Paris for the sympathy of Lon- don when, on the raising of the seige, her population seemed in danger of starvation. He was...

Lord Granville presided on Thursday at the banquet of the

The Spectator

Manchester Reform Club, but his speech is reported with such elaborate and almost incredible badness in all the London papers that it is by no means easy to guess what he said....

Lord Derby, while distributing prizes on Wednesday to the 1st

The Spectator

Lancashire Rifle Volunteers, of which corps he is Colonel, made a most sensible speech about our military position. He thought it improbable that this country would be dragged...

Page 3

The Daily Telegraph has joined the Peace Society, wishes us

The Spectator

to put down our Army and Navy, and to surrender England at once to the first invader. At least that is the only legitimate inference from its fearfully and wonderfully eloquent...

Mr. Butt and the Home-Rule party in Ireland have fished

The Spectator

up, as they think, a solid grievance. When an Irishman catches a fish he sells it, and there is an end of that matter, but there ought not to be an end. The State ought to pay...

M. Casimir P4rier, the new French Secretary of the Interior,

The Spectator

is a Free-trader, but on most other questions a decided Conservative, with a leaning towards very " strong " government. He has demanded from the President a carte- blanche, and...

Mr. J. 0. Heyworth, of Liverpool, as owner of property

The Spectator

in Chicago, explains the destruction of that city in a line. The roofs are of paper steeped in pitch, and covered with gravel. Slates are strictly protected, and are...

Brigham Young, the Mormon ruler, has been arrested at Utah,

The Spectator

and held to bail to answer the charge of " living lewdly and lascivi- -ously " with sixteen women, —a few of those whom he calls his wives. The penalty for the offence is a term...

The Queen's University in Ireland seems to be so apprehensive

The Spectator

of being recast in some sense more agreeable to Roman Catholics than to Protestants, that it is driven in its excitement of mind to deal very unfairly with its own Catholic...

Mr. Rylands addressed his constituents at Warrington on Wed- nesday,

The Spectator

in a speech which reads as if it had been made twenty years ago. He was opposed to any increase of the Army, and in favour of a great reduction in expenditure ; hoped to see a...

The Lancet calls attention to the enormous manufacture of the

The Spectator

new sedative drug, Chloral. It states that it is sold by tons a week, and quotes a letter from Baron Liebig, affirming that one German chemist manufactures and sells half a ton...

Consols were on Friday 92i to 921.

The Spectator

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

MR. GLADSTONE'S FORTHCOMING SPEECH. M R. GLADSTONE must make a great speech at Greenwich. The local dispute, the long preparation, the absence of ordinary political excitement,...

Page 5

THE EDUCATION LEAGUE AT BIRMINGHAM. T HERE can be no manner

The Spectator

of doubt but that the character and language of the Education League this week at Birmingham is by far the most formidable threat to the Govern- anent, and especially to one of...

Page 6

THE OPENING OF THE GERMAN PARLIAMENT. T HE Emperor's speech at

The Spectator

the opening of the German Parliament has given great satisfaction to the City, and as the City seldom looks forward more than a single twelve- month, the satisfaction is...

Page 7

THE PEERS AND THE WORKING-MEN.

The Spectator

W E have incurred political, intellectual, and moral censure for venturing to believe that Mr. Disraeli's attempt to get a new social movement inaugurated by the Peers was not a...

Page 8

THE NEW YORK FRAUDS.

The Spectator

T HE groat municipal contest in New York loses none of its interest. The New Yorlc Times, which has all along been in the van of the attack, followed up its exposures of the...

Page 9

THE EDUCATED SOLDIER.

The Spectator

VERYTIIING that is worth doing is worth doing well, may be a rule not without its exceptions, but certainly Soldiering is not one of them. It is a truism to say that now, as at...

MOROCCO AND SIR JOIIN DRUMMOND IIAY.

The Spectator

W E fear we have been unjust to Sir John Hay, the British Minister in Morocco. Immediately after the appear- ance of our article censuring him for resisting the free development...

Page 10

VON SEYFFERTITZ'S POLITICAL CRANE.

The Spectator

I N the delightful book about birds which Messrs. Laboucbere and Jesse are translating from the German of Dr. A. E. Brehm* there is a story of a tame crane which differs from...

Page 11

ARE MEN TO FLY ? T HE symbolical present sent of

The Spectator

old by the Scythian: to Darius, son of Hystaspes, was interpreted to signify that unless his men could swim through the water like the fish, or burrow through the ground like...

Page 12

CORRESPONDENCE - .

The Spectator

THE YO-SEMITE VALLEY. [FROM A CORRESPONDENT.] Sun Francisco, September 10. I IIAVE just accomplished a visit to the famous Yo-Senait6 said by Emerson to be the only natural...

Page 13

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

THE PEERS AND THE WORKING-MEN. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPEOT4T011.1 Sin,—No one has a right to be surprised that the Liberal papers generally, or the Times particularly, should...

Page 14

THE DIFFICULTY OF " SCHOOL FEES."

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR,"] SIR,-1 venture through your columns to suggest that neither the religious liberty of parents nor the consciences of Nonconformist ratepayers...

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPEOTATOR.1 SIR,---I observe in

The Spectator

your leader on the Education question that the Dissenters are still flushed with " dictatorial arrogance," and afflicted with "the most wilful blindness." This is terrible. The...

Page 15

THE BAPTISTS AND NATIONAL EDUCATION.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SFROTATOR.1 Sin,—It is too much to hope that your excellent article on "The Dissenters and the Government," in last week's edition, will con- vince the...

THE NEW POLITICAL INTRIGUE.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " EPEOTATOR.1 Sin,—Your article upon " Mr. Dieraeli's Flank March " con- tains the following words :—" Greatly as the artizans may stand in need of some...

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPEETATOR1 Sin,—Walking over a field-path

The Spectator

in North Oxfordshire with the Spectator of this week in my pocket, I remembered that it was just thirty years since I walked over the same ground, and then I had the Spectator...

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."]

The Spectator

S111 1 —I think that you have somewhat misapprehended the feel- ings of Liberal Dissenters in relation to the subsidizing of Denominational Schools out of school rates....

Page 16

PARISHIONERS AND INCUMBENTS IN AMERICA. [TO Tna mune OF Tu

The Spectator

a " SPEOTATOR:1 SIR,—Will you allow one who has been a constant reader of your paper for many years to say a few words in regard to the selection of incumbents by parishioners?...

BOOKS.

The Spectator

RUSSIA.* THERE has been recently published at Leipzig a pamphlet which well deserves the attention of whoever is curious to know about the present condition of Russia. It is in...

Page 18

TEMPLE'S RUGBY SERMONS, 1862-67.*

The Spectator

Sticn is the simple—must we add unattractive ?—heading, of as valuable a little compendium of Christian thought as it is rarely, very rarely, our lot to meet with. " Sermon "is...

Page 19

AN AMERICAN COOKERY-BOOK.*

The Spectator

THERE is only one proper way of reviewing a cookery-book, and that is to try all the receipts in it. Unfortunately this is not pos- sible for anyone under the rank of a writer...

Page 20

THE COOLIE OF BRITISH GUIANA.*

The Spectator

[SECOND NOTICE.] Mn. Jenkins's book seems to us almost more valuable as supple- menting and explaining the Commissioners' Report for the benefit of the Colonial Office, than for...

Page 22

:BEDE'S ECCLESIASTICAL HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH NATION.* 'Tens is a

The Spectator

retranslation of Bede's work, prefaced by a few and somewhat meagre notes about Bede himself, and furnished with ,paginal annotations which, though nothing unusually profound,...

Page 23

CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

A History of the Kingdom of Kerry. By Id. F. Cusack. (Longman.) —It is much to be regretted that a pains-taking writer should discredit —we really can use no other word—a...

My School Days in Paris. By M. S. Jenne. (Griffith

The Spectator

and Farran.)--• There are many readers, doubtless, to whom this little photographic picture of a life akin to their own, but yet strangely different from it, will prove...

The Bivouac ; or, the Martial Lyrist. By Major R.

The Spectator

Compton Noake. (Chapman and Hall.)—This volume is in part a reprint containing verses previously published under the title of " Songs of the Camp and Barrack-room." In these the...

Page 24

A History of Christian Councils. By C. J. 'Miele, D.D.,

The Spectator

Bishop of Rottenburg. (T. and T. Clark.)—Mr. Clark, Vicar of Taunton, himself known for theological works of value, has done good service to the Eng- lish reader by bringing...

Diary of an Embassy. Translated from the Slavonic. By A.

The Spectator

H. Wratis- law, M.A. (Bell and Daldy. )—This "Embassy " was sent by George of Podiebrad, King of Bohemia, to the Court of France, there to urge on behalf of himself and the...

Man Next to God. (Longmana.)—The author of this book thinks

The Spectator

that the current theology of the day is the rosult of non-natural inter- pretations of the Bible, and he is perfectly confident that, "if some great man would begin his...

The Cambridge Freshman. By Martin Lo Grand. (Tiusloy.)—We suppose that

The Spectator

there is a demand among readers for these pictures of what is the silliest, if not positively the worst side of University life, for they have continued to be produced from the...

Our National Resources, and How They are Wasted. By William

The Spectator

Hoylo. (Sitnpkin, Marshall, and Co.)—The substance of Mr. Hoyle's volume— "an omitted chapter in political economy," he calls it—is this : if we could only do without drinking...

Primeval Man Unveiled. (Hamilton and Adams.)—This book does not prepossess

The Spectator

the reader. It has for a frontispioce a picture, " Scorpio and Ophiuchus," which looks like one of Zulkiel's "hieroglyphics," and as we go on, we find in it very strange notions...