24 MARCH 1877

Page 1

Lord Dudley on Thursday made a speech advocating English effort

The Spectator

to secure justice to the Turkish Christians, which induced Lord Derby to give the House of Lords the " latest information" about the negotiations. After complaining that the...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

T ORD DERBY has not purchased an escape even by throwing the children to the wolves. On Monday, peace was assured. On Tuesday, peace was certain. On Wednesday, peace had been...

It was stated last week that Sir Henry Elliot was

The Spectator

to go back to Constantinople, an arrangement which would have convinced the Turks that we still intended to support them. Mr. Forster, however, having asked questions on the...

Prussia has sustained her first severe defeat in the arrangement

The Spectator

of Imperial affairs. A Court of Appeal is to be created for the whole of Germany, and Prince Bismarck proposed in the Federal Council that it should be located in Berlin. He...

Mr. R. Yorke, on Tuesday, moved for the appointment of

The Spectator

a Royal Commission into the "origin, uses, objects, present con- stitution, customs, and usages of the Stock Exchange;" and "whether such usages, &c., are in accordance with the...

Midhat's Parliament has been got together, and on the 19th

The Spectator

of March, the Sultan, "leaning on his sword "—the only Turkish sceptre—listened to the reading of the first " speech from the throne." The idea of the speech was that Sultan...

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

The Spectator

case.

Page 2

Mr. O'Shaughnessy, M.P. for Limerick, drew the attention of the

The Spectator

House of Commons yesterday week to the state of primary education in Ireland, and moved a resolution to the effect that steps should be taken to press on education there,...

The latest news from the Cape is tolerably satisfactory. It

The Spectator

is quite evident that the Zulu King has not lost his awe of Great Britain, for he has denied any intention of commencing hostilities. Secocoeni has accordingly made peace with...

The Allocution delivered by the Pope on the 12th March,

The Spectator

and fully reported in Monday's Times, is much the most effective address he has made since the occupation of Rome by the Italian Government. And for this there is a good...

The German Government has taken a step towards granting a

The Spectator

certain autonomy to Alsace-Lorraine. A Bill has been introduced allowing the provincial Parliament to legislate for the province, and taking it out of the hands of the general...

Mr. Lloyd Jones has been giving a couple of lectures

The Spectator

on the relations between Capital and Labour, in reply to Mr. Leone Levi's lectures on the same subject, but we regret to observe that they are not reported by the general Press...

The extreme aversion of most Englishmen to professional money- lenders

The Spectator

was strongly marked in a case tried on Thursday before the Middlesex Sessions. Lord Marcus Beresford had dealings with a solicitor, a Mr. Tidy, from whom he borrowed money at 30...

The Duke of Richmond and Gordon's Burials Bill has been

The Spectator

printed, and is, of course, exactly what the speech in which it was introduced gave us reason to expect. It consolidates a good many Acts to which Dissenters object ; and offers...

Page 3

A man of some literary note,—rather, perhaps, as the late

The Spectator

Mr. Crabb Robinson mid of himself, for the literary friends whom he made and whom he endeared to him, than for - any literary work achieved by himself,—Charles Cowden Clarke,...

'The School Board -of London had mrinteresting , discuesion on -- Wednesday - on-the needlework

The Spectator

requirements- Of the new Code, - concerning which they - were unanimously - of -opinion that the - standards - suggested are far too bigh, - with apparently one - exeeption,that...

Mr. Gladstone, in his speech on "Preaching" at the - City Temple

The Spectator

on Thursday, gave remarkable sketches of three great preachers or Speakers whom he hadimown,—Dr. Newman, Dr. Chalmers, and Mr: Shell,—all of whom had great faults of manner,...

Dr. C. W. Siemens, President this year ef the Iron

The Spectator

and Steel Institute, and a great authority on Coal, -gave us, in his inaugural lecture -on Wednesday, an opinion which Will be pleasant to housewives. He thinks we are probably...

Dean Stanley delivered, yesterday week, at the close of his

The Spectator

Rectorial term, a farewell address to the students of St. Andrew's University, which was chiefly devoted to the progressive char- acter of theology. He declared that this...

If a report in the Echo can be trusted, Mr.

The Spectator

Justice Brett is Kontributimgsomething to the democratising of the Bench. At the -Huntingdonshire Assizes, says our contemporary, Sir Balliol Brett sentenced a man to amonth's...

Consols 'were on Frfaity461- *If.

The Spectator

Page 4

THE STOCK-EXCHANGE COMMISSION.

The Spectator

W E do not exactly see why the Government disliked the idea of appointing a Royal Commission to inquire into the management of the Stock Exchange so much. They sub- mitted to...

TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

THE FAILURE OF THE NEGOTIATION. T HE emancipation of the Eastern Christians still depends upon the decision of an Emperor who cannot make up his mind, but to all appearance,...

Page 5

THE POPE'S ADVANTAGE.

The Spectator

T HE English Press is still childishly afraid of saying anything that appears to favour a Catholic cause, how- ever clear may be the justice of that cause. Miss Harriet...

Page 6

THE NEW DANGER TO NAVAL POWERS.

The Spectator

L ORD CHARLES BEEESFOBD'S interesting speech of Monday on the use of 'Torpedoes, coming as it does so soon after those remarkable achievements of•the - French torpedo the...

Page 7

PRINCE BISMARCK ON THE CONSTRUCTION OF MINISTRIES.

The Spectator

A GREAT part of Prince Bismarck's speech on the Official Organisation of the German Empire deals with matters which have no interest for, and indeed, are scarcely intelligible...

Page 8

THE IRISH LAND QUESTION AGATN.

The Spectator

MBROUGHOUT the long and most interesting discussions JL upon Mr. Gladstone's Irish Land Law, we maintained that the single defect of that law was that it did not go far enough,...

Page 9

THE CHANCES OF PERSONAL INJURY.

The Spectator

I N a very pleasant little book just published, a biography of the marine painter, J. C. Schetky, an artist of whom we are ashamed never to have heard before, the author has...

Page 10

MISS MARTINEAU'S INTELLECTUAL ACRIMONY. NO one can read • Miss

The Spectator

Martineau's autobiography without • being struck with the bitterness of the majority - of her personal judgments. There • is hardly a period of her - life - without some...

Page 11

PROGRESS OF TRADE WITH CENTRAL ASIA.:

The Spectator

[COMMUNICATED.] A paper of considerable interest with this title was read by Sir Douglas Forsyth at the Indian Section of the Society of Arts last week, and the discussion that...

Page 13

THE BOSTON-SPA CASE.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR, —The writer of the article on " Compulsory Courtesies " takes far too superficial a view, to do justice either to the school- master,...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

The Spectator

THE INDIAN FAMINE. [TO THE Fames OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR,—Having now spent ten days in what may be called the heart of the famine districts of the Bombay Presidency, I think...

Page 14

ART.

The Spectator

POPULAR ART.—III. POTTERY AND PORCELAIN Ix my last article on " Popular Art," I gave some few leading prin- ciples by which the choice of furniture and its arrangement should be...

VIVISECTION.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:'] you allow me to supplement your reference to Sir William Thomson's condemnation of Dr. Rutherford's experi- ments, devised and carried out,...

THE LATE MR. ODGER.

The Spectator

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.1 SIR,—I have no sympathy whatever with Professor Beesly's suspicions of the grounds of your coldness towards my friend, Mr. Odger, but I...

POETRY.

The Spectator

"QUID, SI MUNDUS EVOLVATUR ?" Is there no Pilot's hand that guides Yon gallant ship to thread her way From Thames or Hudson to Cathay, Though tossed the seeming sport of winds...

Page 16

BOOKS.

The Spectator

HARRIET MARTINEAU'S AUTOBIOGRAPHY.• [THIRD NOTICE.] Miss MARTINEAU'S most earnest admirers, and those who are least able to share in that admiration, will probably agree that...

Page 17

THE POETICAL WORKS OF EBENEZER ELLIOTT.* INDIGNATVDT was in large

The Spectator

measure the source of Elliott's poetical power. The wrongs of mankind, or rather of a special class, in- spired his verse ; he seldom writes what deserves to rank above...

Page 18

ENGLAND IN SHAKESPEARE'S TIME.*

The Spectator

TOWARDS the middle of the sixteenth century, Reginald Wolfe (afterwards printer to Queen Elizabeth) conceived the idea of publishing a Universall Cosmographie of the Whole...

Page 19

WOLFGANG MENZEL.*

The Spectator

ON April the 23rd, 1873, . there died at Stuttgart a man well known and also much abused in German literature. Tolerance • Denkanirdigkeiten. Reransgegeben on dem Bohn, Conrad...

Page 21

DIANA, LADY LYLE.* DIANA, LADY LYLE, is not a widow,

The Spectator

as her style would lead the reader to suppose, but a wife, the wife of a baronet who addresses people in the second person singular ; says "aside," when he ob- serves her...

Page 22

Principles of New Testament Quotation. By Rev. J. Scott, M.A.

The Spectator

(T. and T. Clarke, Edinburgh.)—This is a book for Biblical students, and we think it will be of service to them. The different varieties of quotation are classified and...

Vivienne. By Rita. 3 vole. (Sampson Low and Co.)—The title

The Spectator

, is not attractive to those who remember the "Idylls of the King," but the Vivien of the story is not the heroine who gives it a name, but a certain Countess de Verdreuil,...

Euripides' Hecuba aria Medea. Cambridge Texts, with Notes. By F.

The Spectator

A. Paley. (Deighton, Bell, and Co., Cambridge.)—We have here- two of Euripides' most familiar plays, edited, with brief notes, for-settee} - use by Mr. Paley. The Hecuba and...

CURRENT LITERATURE.

The Spectator

The Poetical Birthday Book. Edited by the Countess of Portsmouth. (Hatchards.)—This is a very dainty little book, a collection of morceaus from the poets which illustrate the...

The St. James's Lectures; Companions for the Devout Lye. (John

The Spectator

Murray.)—These seven lectures are all on subjects of general interest, and will, we are sure, be acceptable to a wide circle of readers. The first is on that now much-read and...

Debretes House of Commons and Judicial Bench, 1877, compiled and

The Spectator

edited by Robert H. Mair (Dean), is, we are told, "personally revised by Members of Parliament and the Judges." It is a complete and useful book of its kind, A brief sketch of...

Page 23

Ministerial Duties : Charges by the late Archdeacon Batten. Edited

The Spectator

-by-Dr. Vaughan. (Macmillan and Co.)—Dr. Vaughan has done good service in republishing these charges. They are evidently the utter- ances of a man who in every branch of his...

`'Mar's White Witch. By G. Douglas. 3 vols. (Samuel Tinsley.)—

The Spectator

'We felt inclined to wish, en getting to the end of this novel, that it had been cut short at the conclusion of the first volume. For that volume is eery-good. The laird, his...

vineyards and bodegas." They appeared first in a daily paper,

The Spectator

and are now republished, with additions. His descriptions are curious and entertaining, and readers who care for these subjects, as, indeed, most readers do, more or loss, will...

A Thousand Miles Up the Nile. By Amelia B. Edwards.

The Spectator

(Len- mans.)—This book is worthy of its subject. Many volumes have been written about the Nile, since Herodotus, first of the million of travellers who have looked on the...

A very seasonable reprint is Turkey, being Sketches from Life,

The Spectator

by the Roving Englishman. (Routledge.)—The papers of which the volume is in part composed were published in Household Words, and were re- printed with additions about...

How We Learned to Help Ourselves. By Lalla McDowell. (Christian

The Spectator

Hook Society.)—This is a good story of how a family, reduced by an adverse turn of trade to poverty, learned to dispense with the luxury and ease to which they had been used. It...

...The Roll-Call of Faith. By the Rev. Charles D. Bell,

The Spectator

M.A. (W. Hunt and Co.)—This volume consists of sermons on the eleventh chapter of 'the Epistle to the Hebrews, which Mr. Bell persists in con- sidering the work of St. Paul. In...

Our Frdulein. By W. H. Watts. (Chapman and Hall.)—A young

The Spectator

English lady, reduced to great difficulties by the death of her father, takes by special recommendation of a mutual friend the management of the household of a certain German...

Sunday Echoes in Weekday Hours : a Tale illustrative of

The Spectator

the Miracles. By Mrs. Carry Brock. (Seeley.)—We can but expect that a tale in which the Old and New Testament miracles are illustrated by the history of a few months in the...

Page 24

The Tender Toe : Essays on Gout. By William Lomas,

The Spectator

M.D. (Effingham Wilson.)—This is a sensibly-written little book, and the gouty would do well to follow its precepts. That they will do so of their own accord, without pressure...

Lion Jack: Adventures in the Capturing of Wild Beasts. By

The Spectator

P. T. Barnum. (Sampson Low and Co.)—The exciting nature of the adven- tures of which Lion Jack is the hero is only equalled by their impro- bability. The whole book might be...