23 NOVEMBER 1912

Page 1

We presume that the Turks are counting upon their ability

The Spectator

to improve their position day by day, partly through strengthening the Tchatalja lines and partly by the arrival of fresh reinforcements. Against this, however, must be placed...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

W E regret to say that as we write on Friday the news comes that the armistice, of which we have written at length in our leading columns, has come to an end and that fighting...

On Tuesday came the news of a great Servian victory

The Spectator

at Mona stir, by means of which the last coherent portion of the Turkish western army was destroyed. The action seems to have been one of the bloodiest and most hard-fought of...

We have received the following note from the Portuguese Legation

The Spectator

:— " The Portuguese Legation in London, having taken notice of the Spectator's comments on its protest sent on the lath inst. and being inhibited by diplomatic usage from...

On Monday the House of Commons was crowded to hear

The Spectator

Mr. Asquith's reconsidered scheme for circumventing the recent adverse vote against the Government. Mr. Asquith explained that the Government had decided that, instead of simply...

The latest news in regard to the diplomatic situation must,

The Spectator

we think, be described as, on the whole, reassuring. In the first place, the Servians have agreed to give full satisfaction to Austria-Hungary in the matter of the Consular...

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

The Spectator

case.

On Tuesday Mr. Herbert Samuel moved the new Financial Resolution

The Spectator

in a speech of five minutes. Mr. Mildmay very justly pointed out that the Liberals were abandoning Free Trade ; the strange thing was that they voted for what they all...

Page 2

The representatives of the divisions of the British Medical Association

The Spectator

who met in London on Tuesday passed the follow- ing motion by an overwhelming majority :— " That in the opinion of this Representative Meeting the Regu- lations issued by the...

On Wednesday in the Commons Mr. Samuel moved that the

The Spectator

new Financial Resolution be agreed to. He said that grants, or bounties, on exports of goods were prohibited by the Bill, but that if bounties injurious to British trade were...

The decision of the Cabinet not to proceed in the

The Spectator

present Session with the Mental Deficiency Bill is well described by the Times as a social misfortune. The facts and figures on which the measure is based are appalling, and...

Though there has been considerable response to Mr. Strachey's appeal

The Spectator

through the Press in regard to the National Reserve, we regret to say that it has not been any- thing like as large as we had hoped. Still, we do not doubt that the amount of...

We are glad to read in the Times of Thursday

The Spectator

a leading article strongly supporting the recommendations of the Divorce Commissioners as to the reporting of divorce cases. We are well aware that the dread of publicity is a...

This Committee of five will not have plenary powers to

The Spectator

act for the Association, but can only report on the negotiations. The proposed conditions will then have to be considered by the divisions of the Association throughout the...

While dealing with the Reserve we may draw attention to

The Spectator

a curious fact. The bulk of the men who join are ex-.Regulars, whereas the bulk of the officers are ex-Tohneteers. No doubt this is to be accounted for by the fact that the...

Mr. Lloyd George ridiculed the contention that there would be

The Spectator

more friction in the future than in the past. For one thing there would be only 42 Irish members, instead of 102, at Westminster to make trouble. He absolutely denied that...

Page 3

The death of Mr. Norman Shaw, R.A., in his eighty-first

The Spectator

year, has removed the most outstanding of British architects. An artist of great originality and independence, he had few opportunities of showing his capacity as a designer of...

On Monday, before the Select Committee on the Marconi agreement,Sir

The Spectator

Alexander King, Secretary to the Post Office, was recalled and was olosely questioned by Mr. Terrell. At length he exclaimed: "I object to being questioned as if I were a...

Lord Desberough, the Chairman of the Thames Conservancy Board, was

The Spectator

the plaintiff in two libel actions in the Court of King's Bench which were withdrawn on Tuesday on the defendants unreservedly apologizing. The libel was contained in a letter...

On Thursday in the course of the examination of Sir

The Spectator

Alexander King a good deal was said about an article in the Spectator. We cannot on a Friday deal with the matter in detail, but we may make one or two observations of a general...

In truth, Sir Alexander King, with his wild and foolish

The Spectator

assertion that " the whole article is meant to suggest that somewhere or other, perhaps in my person, there was cor- ruption," and with his talk of " nasty suggestions," is...

Compositors immensely reinforces the arguments of those who advocate the

The Spectator

repeal of the Trade Disputes Act. Messrs. Vaoher maintained that the Society had libelled the firm by alleging that it treated its employees unfairly, and the Society did not...

As Sir Alexander King's way of meeting one charge by

The Spectator

answering another, and a totally different one, seems likely to spread, we will repeat once more that we have never charged, or intended to charge, any member of the Government...

Bank Rate, 5 per cent., changed from 4 per cent.

The Spectator

October 170. Consols (2i) were on Friday 75 1 1—Friday week 75i. Bank Rate, 5 per cent., changed from 4 per cent. October 170. Consols (2i) were on Friday 75 1 1—Friday week 75i.

Page 4

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

UNIONIST POLICY. T HE speeches made by Lord Lansdowne and Mr. Boner Law at the Albert Hall announce in fact, thou g h not in so many words, that the extremists amon g the Tariff...

Page 5

THE NEGOTIATIONS FOR PEACE.

The Spectator

O N Wednesday the " Cease fire! " sounded throughout the Bulgarian and Turkish trenches at Tchatalja, for an armistice had been agreed upon in order that the Turkish and...

Page 6

BOUNTIES FOR IRELAND. T HE debates of the week on the

The Spectator

Home Rule Bill have made it lamentably clear that the Liberal Party is indifferent to Free Trade. No doubt the party continues to profess a strong theoretical belief in Free...

Page 7

" AS IF NOTHING HAD HAPPENED."

The Spectator

T HE Government, in spite of their defeat in the House of Commons, and in spite of the loss of nearly a Parlia- mentary week and a half at a time when hours are declared. by...

Page 8

AGRIC171211IRE AND POLITICS IN IRELAND. T HE controversy between the politicians

The Spectator

and the co- operators in Ireland, which has lasted for over twenty months, is not yet settled. The issue arose, as some of our readers may remember, in connexion with a request...

Page 9

MINOR MOTORISTS. A REVOLITTION is approaching in the use of motor-cars.

The Spectator

It is almost certain that within the next three or four years motor - cars of a very light type, cheap to run and cheap to buy, will have come into general use among those who...

Page 10

PREJUDICES OF THE TABLE.

The Spectator

A N item of the Roman epicure's menu, referred to in an article on Varro's book of farming in last week's Spectator, suggests a reflection on ancient and modern tastes in diet....

THE HUNTING INSTINCT.

The Spectator

T ITERE should be something of the hunting instinct in all male children. Its growth may have to be checked, because civilized life makes little call for the hunter ; but it...

Page 11

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

BRAZIL AND COMPENSATION TO GERMANY. [To rex EDITOR OP TIM "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, - It was with considerable displeasure, but not without some degree of amusement, that I read the...

Page 12

LTO THR EDITOR or ran " SPNCTATOR.”.1 SIB,—As one who,

The Spectator

during a period of more than seven years, has lived in practically all the big cities of Brazil and also up country, 1 desire to protest against the letter of Mr. Ormsby-Gore...

[TO THR EDITOR OF TEE " arscrwros."]

The Spectator

Sra,—I am glad to see from the letter of Mr. Seymour Ormsby-Gore in your last week's issue that the settlement of Germany in South America is not entirely deprecated by British...

THE NATIONAL RESERVE.

The Spectator

[To TIER EDITOR or TER " SPECTATOR:1 Sra,—Allow me to congratulate you on your public-spirited action in taking up the cudgels on behalf of the National Reserve. It is really...

[To TRY EDITOR or TIER "Srscriras."]

The Spectator

Sin,—Your correspondent writing on this subject expresses a hope, in which we can all join, that the Powers will come to an amicable agreement on questions which may arise on...

Page 13

[To TER EDITOR OF TER "SPECTATOR. " ] Sin,—" 0. B. G."

The Spectator

asks what can be done for fellows in his position, that is to say, men able and well qualified to join the Territorial Force but for the fact that they say "I won't "? May I...

LOG-ROLLING.

The Spectator

[To Taw EDITOR Or TIER ''SPROTATOR.,") Sin,—Nob since 1903, when Mr. Chamberlain first advocated a complete reversal of England's fiscal policy, have the prospects of the...

[To TIM EDITOR 01 THE "SPECTATOR:1 Six,—Last year you were

The Spectator

kind enough to insert a letter from me drawing attention to the necessity of the National Reserve being provided with a uniform if they were to be expected to fight in case of...

SNAP DIVISIONS.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OP TH1 "SPECTATOR.n Six,—In your leading article last week upon the Parlia- mentary crisis produced by the division upon Sir Frederick Banbury's amendment you...

Page 14

THE INDEPENDENT MEMBER, [To THE EDTTOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:1

The Spectator

SIR, — In your leading article in last week ' s issue of the Spectator on Mr. Asquith ' s motion to rescind Sir F. Banbury ' s amendment on the financial resolutions of the Home...

THE GOVERNMENT AND THE DOCTORS.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:1 Sra,—In your article in the issue of November 16th there is a slight error. The medical benefits under the Insurance Act do not emerge till...

PLAYING THE GAME.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR 07 THE "seserevos.."1 Sia, — If Ministers are not content to play the game in the English fashion, voting in the House of Commons might as well be abolished. If...

PARLIAMENTARY TYRANNY.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR,—Disraeli in 1840, in answer to a legal member who enlarged on the tyranny of the courts in the time of Charles I., gave "a vivid account...

Page 15

CAN ANGLO-SAXONS COLONIZE THE TROPICS?

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR or THE " SPECTATOa. "] SIR,—The question put by Dr. Arthur in your issue of November 16th is of great importance. For the principal European nations have annexed...

YET ANOTHER SOLUTION OF THE HOME RULE PROBLEM. [To THE

The Spectator

EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—In a "Life" of Professor Blackie, the well-known, in his day, professor of Greek in Edinburgh, and an advocate of " Home Rule " all round, the...

[To TIM EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOIL1 SIR, —The Hawaiian Islands

The Spectator

may give Dr. Richard Arthur some material that will be of use in his study of the possibility of permanently settling Anglo-Saxons as tillers of the soil in tropical lands. Like...

THE WHITE SLAVE TRAFFIC BILL.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] observe you criticise in a sneering manner some remarks of the Nation on the above Bill. Perhaps you will quote the following passage from...

Page 16

MR. BALFOUR AND LORD MORLEY.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR 07 THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR, —Mr. Balfour's "Deism" is not Lord Morley's, whose conception of Deity and, by consequence, his attitude towards it, is that of John...

ITo THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.")

The Spectator

SIR, — Dr. Richard Arthur will find some information bearing upon this subject in an admirable " History of Jamaica," written by the Rev. Mr. Gardner, a Congregationalist...

ANTIPATHIES OF MEN OF GENII'S.

The Spectator

(To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, —In his " Religio Medici," Sir Thomas Browne says, "I have no antipathy, or rather idiosyncrasy, in diet, humour, air, anything. I...

Page 17

Dean Mu. EDITOR,—

The Spectator

Thanks very much for your letter and kind reference deceased brother Ted. I very much regret thef - full record of the family, which has somehow got mislaid or lost; but the...

THE TURKS.

The Spectator

[To TER EDITOR or SRI " SPICTATOR."1 SIE, — Can you tell me the true origin and derivation of the word " Turk " P That given in the " Century Dictionary " seems to me to be...

A SERVICE RECORD.

The Spectator

[To TER EDITOR OP TRY "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—I think the enclosed cutting, taken from the monthly journal of my old regiment (the 15th East Yorkshire) may be of interest to you...

THE MODERN GREEK.

The Spectator

[TO TR. EDITOR Or TR. "Srscraroa."] SIR,—The following remarks are taken from a private letter just received from an English gentleman long resident in Greece, and, as they show...

THE LATE MR. WILLIAM BLACKWOOD.

The Spectator

[To TER EDITOR or TR. "Srseraron."] STS,--The notices of the late Mr. William Blackwood have rendered justice to the charm of his personality and his sporting instincts, both...

HUNGER-STRIKING IN THE SECOND CENTURY.

The Spectator

[To TEE EDITOR or THR "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—Your correspondent " X. Y. Z." (Spectator, Novem- ber 9th, 1912) finds an instance of a hunger-strike in the seventeenth century, but...

AN OCCUPATION FOR THE IDLE RICH.

The Spectator

[To TER EDITOR OF TR. "SPECTATOR."] SIR, — May I point out one small way P It is often possible to pick up an old fifteenth-century black-and-white house that needs restoration...

PORTUGUESE RULE.

The Spectator

[To Tall EDITOR OF TRH " Sracraroa."] SIB, — The following extract from a letter from Lorengo Marquez may be of interest to you. The writer is a public school and university man...

Page 18

FOX-HUNTING.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. " ] Sin,—In your article on " The Fox and the Law" (Novem- ber 9th) you describe fox-hunting as "the earliest and chief of English pastimes."...

PARTRIDGES IN TREES.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.”] your review of Mr. Bennett's " Those United States," in your issue of November 16th, it is Written : " On page 5 Mr. Bennett seems to accept...

THE MARCONI AGREEMENT.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "'SPECrsTOR. 1 SIR,—The Postmaster-General wishes to call your attention to the answer, a copy of which is enclosed, which he has giVen to a question...

Page 19

BOOKS.

The Spectator

LORD HALIFAX THE TRIMMER.* WE congratulate Sir Walter Raleigh on having done a piece of literary work perfectly. Some people may think it a small matter to write twenty-eight...

POETRY.

The Spectator

THE LONG ROAD HOME. THIRRes a wind up and a sighing along the waterside, And we're homeward bound at last upon to-night's full tide : Round the world and back again is very far...

NOTICE.—When "Correspondence" or Articles are signed with the writer's name

The Spectator

or initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked "Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or with the mode of...

Page 20

DAWN IN DARKEST AFRICA.*

The Spectator

WE have not often read a book dealing with native questions which has convinced us so thoroughly as this one of the painstaking impartiality and essential sobriety of judgment...

Page 22

A STUDY OF BYRON.*

The Spectator

THE imperishable part of Byron, his great poems and his incom- parable letters, has received its meed of justice from the world. But his fame is based as much on a career as on...

Page 23

LITERAL TRANSLATION. * THE simultaneous appearance of all these volumes

The Spectator

sets the mind running once more on the much-discussed question of the art and function of the translator. To attempt a solution by analysing the translating animal into genera...

Page 24

A PRINCESS OF THE ITALIAN REFORMATION.* IN Giulia Gonzaga, Countess

The Spectator

of Fondi, Mr. Hare has added a newand unusually attractive figure to his galleryof Renaissance ladies. She was a cousin by marriage of Isabella d'Este, and as a young girl in...

Page 25

LETTERS TO WILLIAM ALLINGHAM.*

The Spectator

IT is impossible for a reviewer to do much more than notice a book like Letters to William Allingham, because of the number of correspondents and the diversity of their...

GEORGE GISSING.f.

The Spectator

THE latest volume in Mr. Seeker's excellent series of critical studies provides a very clear and intelligent treatment of a difficult subject. Although Gissing's most productive...

THE POLITICAL CAREER OF RICHARD BRINSLE Y S HERIDAN.* MR.

The Spectator

SADLER'S Stanhope Prize Essay deals with a subject on which, in spite of the many volumes that have been written about Sheridan and his period, the last word has yet to be said....

Page 26

Tho Adventures of Billie Belshaw. By Mrs. George de Horne

The Spectator

Vaizey. (Mills and Boon. 6s.)—Billie Belshaw is a clerk in an insurance office, and it is impossible to deny he is rather a vulgar young man, but his irrepressible good spirits...

SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

[Under this heading we notice such Books of the wear as hays not been reserved for review in other forms.] Lyrics and Poems from Ibsen. Translated by Fydell Edmund Garrett....

FI CTION.

The Spectator

GITLNEI GOLD.* THE romance of au/venture on the verge of Empire, as we have had already occasion to point out, is no longer the monopoly of the male novelist, and among the...

READABLE NOVELS.—Cheadle and Son. By Hamilton Gibbs. (Chatto and Windtts.

The Spectator

6s.)—Mainly concerned with a young man's development in a varied career at Oxford, where the writer is very much at home.—The Heather Moon. By C. N. and A. M. Williamson....

The Snarer. By Brown Linnet. (John Murray. 3s. 6d. net.)—

The Spectator

No more delightful character than that unrepentant old sinner Betsy Blythe has appeared within the last ten years in the pages of fiction. She is a most abominable old...

Page 27

The Ready Guide to British Birds. By B. A. Carter.

The Spectator

(Sidgwick and Jackson. 2s. 6d. net.)—A valuable guide for beginners. Birds are arranged approximately in order of size, and distinguishing features of colour, flight, movements,...

The English Character. By Spencer Leigh Hughes, M.P. (" Sub

The Spectator

Rosa.") (T. N. Foulis. 5s. net.)—In the two dozen essays that make up this volume Mr. Hughes nominally discusses various -characteristics of English life. In reality he gives...

Studies and Appreciations. By Darrell Tiggis. (Dent and Sons' Ss.

The Spectator

net.)—Mr. Figgie's collection of critical essays will please many who disagree with some of his opinions. He always expresses himself well, even if uncompromisingly. A series of...