23 JANUARY 1892

Page 1

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

The Spectator

case.

Cardinal Manning, with his semi-Socialist leanings, had evidently created for

The Spectator

himself much popularity in London. His funeral on Thursday was marked not only by the utmost pomp of ecclesiastical ceremonial which his Church can in this country command, but...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

T HE funeral of the Duke of Clarence on Wednesday at Windsor was a stately but quiet ceremony, the Queen being reluctantly persuaded, by advisers who deserve the thanks of the...

Death, though not this time through his new weapon the

The Spectator

influenza, has seized another notable victim. This is Professor John Couch Adams, Lowndean Professor of Astronomy at Cambridge, who in 1845, forty-six years ago, discovered by...

The Lord Mayor has invited all who took a leading

The Spectator

part in collecting presents for the Royal wedding, which was to have come off on February 27th, to meet and discuss what is to be done with the money. A variety of suggestions...

On Wednesday, a letter from Mr. Gladstone to the Home-

The Spectator

rule candidate at Rossendale was communicated to the Press. The letter begins by expressing the writer's deep interest in Mr. Maden's invitation to Rossendale " to concur with...

NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.

The Spectator

With the " SPECTATOR" of Saturday, January 30th, will be issued, fratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT.

Page 2

On Wednesday, the Times' correspondent in Tangier tele- graphed that

The Spectator

he had seen the British Minister, Sir Charles Euan-Smith, who had informed him that "the tribes have quietly dispersed to their homes, awaiting orders from the Sultan for the...

The practice of libelling politicians has received a check in

The Spectator

France. The Intransigeant, the organ of the Boulangists and the Reds, has recently declared war on M. Constans, the Minister of the Interior, and has libelled him furiously, in...

Lastly, Mr. Gladstone asserts that Rossendale is being in- vited

The Spectator

"to the systematic support of a Tory Government which founds its chief claim to favour on its having done more than any other Tory Government to alienate the Irish from the...

The unwarrantable statements in Mr. Gladstone's letter have stirred the

The Spectator

Duke of Devonshire out of his momentary seclusion. In his usual calmly dignified style, the Duke, in a letter to the Times published on Thursday, points out that in 1886 he was...

The Bill on religious education which is to be introduced

The Spectator

into the Prussian Parliament, has been published, and is seen to go very far. The parents of any child, if they hold a religions belief, may insist that the child shall be...

Matters in Portugal have evidently reached a crisis. An enormous

The Spectator

sum, more than a million, in bonds, has been ab- stracted from the coffers of the Royal railway, and personages of great importance are implicated. The King has dismissed his...

Page 3

The Liverpool Chamber of Commerce, which lately re- monstrated with

The Spectator

Lord Salisbury for his want of energy in not seizing more territory in West Africa, and for allowing France to annex lands and make treaties with natives, received on Tuesday,...

The report of the Registrar-General proves that the present Influenza

The Spectator

epidemic is exceptionally severe. The returns for the week ending Saturday last, published on Wednesday, show that in London the deaths from influenza were 271, as against 95...

We have dealt elsewhere with some of the subjects that

The Spectator

are being considered by the Council of Judges, which met on Monday and appointed a committee of investigation; but must notice here the very significant report of a joint com-...

Great sensation was caused by the appearance of the signa-

The Spectator

ture of Alderman George Shepperd on one of the Unionist papers at the Rossendale nomination, which took place on Tuesday. Mr. Shepperd has hitherto been reckoned a Gladstonian,...

Bank Rate, 3 per cent.

The Spectator

New Consols (21) were on Friday 95.1.

A correspondent of the Standard, writing from St. Peters- burg,

The Spectator

declares that in one particular district, Cheiabinak, the people, especially the women and children, are dying of hunger, the unburied bodies of men and cattle being seen in...

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

THE MONARCHY. S OMETHING of natural human pride must have flecked the melancholy with which most Englishmen have read the accounts of the funeral of the Duke of Clarence. To...

Page 5

M. CONSTANS.

The Spectator

119 relics of General Boulanger's party, aided by a ection of the Extreme Radicals, are determined that France shall not forget who is her strongest man. The former have never...

Page 6

THE PROBLEM OF TANGIER.

The Spectator

T HERE is nothing the diplomatists dread so much as attempts to discount the difficulties of an inter- national problem. Not unnaturally, their guiding principle is to let...

Page 7

. THE NEW PRUSSIAN EDUCATION BILL.

The Spectator

P ROBABLY no praise that could be given to the German Emperor would be more distasteful than to say that he was like Prince Bismarck. Yet in one feature of his character he...

Page 8

IS THERE HOPE FOR COUNTRY GENTLEMEN ?

The Spectator

A T various times during the last few years, there have been indications of partial recovery from the severe agricultural depression which has so long afflicted this country, in...

Page 9

THE COUNCIL OF JUDGES.

The Spectator

W HEN newspapers like the Times and the Daily Telegraph write as they wrote on Tuesday last a propos of the Council of Judges, it is evident that the dissatisfaction felt with...

Page 11

THE MORAL EFFECT OF THE EPIDEMIC.

The Spectator

I T has not been amusing, but it has been most interesting, to observe the demeanour of the English " classes " since they first became aware that an epidemic had broken out...

Page 12

WINGS AND EYES.

The Spectator

T HE critics and admirers of Mr. Waterhouse's fine picture of the winged sirens on the ship of Ulysses did not, so far as we recall the discussion to which the artist's treat-...

Page 13

EMIGRATION IN THE DARK.

The Spectator

N EARLY all emigration, even that of the most intelligent and best educated members of the community, is more or less a leap in the dark. The emigrant is far better aware of the...

Page 14

CORRESPONDENCE.

The Spectator

THE TECHNICAL EDUCATOR ABROAD. "You will find it most convenient to take the train to Allington, which is about four miles from Wanfold. You will be able to get a fly at...

Page 15

A TAME HARE.

The Spectator

[To Tar ED/TOR or ram "arrerrzroa.n SIR,--In your interesting article on " Possible Pets," in the Spectator of January 2nd, I see you ask : Who, since the days of Cowper, has...

VITALITY IN THE ROYAL FAMILY.

The Spectator

[To THY EDITOR OF T111 " SNICTATOR."] Sts,—After all, is it not too early to assume that the family of Prince George show a tendency to low vitality ? We can take the average...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

ANGLICAN AUTHORITY. [To THE EDITOR OF TIM " Spirerrroz2 . 1 Sin,—Archdeacon Denison, against the Spectator, says that the Church of England has authority, but is prevented from...

Page 16

MAURICE'S HOME FOR GIRLS.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—You were good enough in the summer to allow mention in your columns of what was then only a project in the air,— the improvement of...

A CORRECTION.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPEOTATOR."1 SIR,—May I expect the justice at your hands of giving inser- tion to the lines I send you, conveying my most emphatic denial of the...

EUCALYPTUS OIL AND THE INFLUENZA.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTITOR.”] SIR,—That the use of eucalyptus oil is a valuable precaution. against influenza, we have little doubt, and our own experience is very much...

[To TEE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—In a paragraph of

The Spectator

the Spectator of January 16th, you call attention to the immunity from influenza produced by the scattering of a few drops of eucalyptus oil in a room. May I say that by far the...

THE SMALL WORRIES OF LIFE.

The Spectator

LTo THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR." SIR,—The Spectator of January 16th contains an essay on " The Small Worries of Life," which I read with the greatest interest, mentally...

HYMNOLOGY.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—The collection of hymns to which you have referred, the only one bearing my name, appeared in 1858, with the title, Hymns, Chants, and...

Page 17

POETRY.

The Spectator

THE SORROW OF A THRONE. THE Mountain in his winding-sheet of snow, With bare head drinks the cup of heaven's pain And feels the grinding glacier,—not in vain ; For, to the...

BOOKS.

The Spectator

MR. HARDY'S " TESS OF THE D'URBERVILLES." MR. HARDY has written one of his most powerful novels, perhaps the most powerful which he ever wrote, to illustrate his conviction that...

MEMORIAL TO CARDINAL NEWMAN AT OXFORD. [To THE EDITOR OP

The Spectator

THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—The sentimental objection to the site proposed for this statue is, not that it is within eye-reach of the Martyrs' Memorial, but that it is in close...

Page 18

SONGS OF THE WEST.* HERE is a book that is

The Spectator

a good deed. England, that was one of the first countries to awake to the interest of traditional, or so-called popular poetry, and that set other countries to • Songs and...

Page 19

BEAST AND MAN IN INDIA.*

The Spectator

As its title suggests, Mr. Kipling's sketches with pen and pencil deal mainly with the domesticated or semi-domesticated animals of India. Hitherto beasts of the chase have so...

Page 20

DR. PETERSON'S " QUINTILIAN."* THE work of enlarging the scope

The Spectator

of classical study in England goes on satisfactorily. Nothing has been done for Quintilian by scholars in this country since 1821 (a fragment by Pro- fessor Mayor, which...

Page 22

HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES.*

The Spectator

Sons six months ago, we noticed the first four volumes of Mr. Henry Adams's work. A second instalment, consisting of Vols. V. and VI., is now before us. The able handling of...

Page 23

MR. GIFFORD PALGRAVE'S " VISION OF LIFE."* Tam poem is

The Spectator

given to the world under very peculiar circum- stances. The writer left it in a very incomplete condition. Only the First Book—containing, in round numbers, about three-eighths...

Page 24

CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

Poems. By William Edward Hartpole Lecky. (Longmans.)— The author of " The History of England in the Eighteenth Century " has so high a place in literature, that he cannot fail...

The Man of Genius. By Cesare Lombroso. With Illustrations. (Walter

The Spectator

Scott.)—This is a book written with more pretension than good sense. Having discovered that genius is a disease, and that the signs of degeneration are found more freqtiently in...

Page 25

The Trance of Fitzerse. By Alfred Fitzerse. (The London Literary

The Spectator

Society.)—It would be rash to say that anything in fiction is an original idea ; otherwise we should have said that the dominating idea of this story is an unquestionable...

The Older Nonconformity of Wrexham. By Alfred Neobald Palmer. (Woodall,

The Spectator

Minshall, and Thomas, Wrexham.)—The curious in the religious movements of the country and the world should read this volume, which has a general and British, as well as a local...

Engravings, and their Value. By J. Herbert Slater. (L. Upcott

The Spectator

Gill.)—The author of this valuabl 3 book starts with the statement that " the valuation of engravings, if it is to be accomplished satisfactorily, requires g -eat technical...

Descriptive Lists of American, International, Romantic, and British Novels. Compiled

The Spectator

by W. M. Griswold. (Griswold, Cam- bridge, Mass.)—This bulky volume of more than six hundred pages, printed in double columns, must have given no slight labour to the compiler....

NovaLs.—A Woman's Heart. By Mrs. Alexander. 3 vols. (F. V.

The Spectator

White and Co.)—This is a powerful story, worthy of the author of "The Wooing o't," but painful to a degree. Lord de Walden leaves the wife whom he had once really loved, for an...

Japanese Letters. Eastern Impressions of Western Men and Manners, as

The Spectator

contained in the Correspondence of Tokiwara and Yashiri. Edited by Commander Hastings Berkeley, R.N. (John Murray.)—The first glance at this volume will remind the reader of the...