25 SEPTEMBER 1897

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NEWS OF THE WEEK.

The Spectator

'TH E latest news from the Indian frontier is, on the whole, satisfactory. The chief fact of importance is that the two British commands—those of General Blood and General Elles...

NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.

The Spectator

With the " SpEcrieroa." of Saturday, October 9th, will be issued, .yratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...

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TOPICS OF THE DAY.

The Spectator

SPAIN AND THE UNITED STATES. D URING the past week there have been persistent reports to the effect that the - United States have sent an ultimatum to Spain declaring that if...

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THE TUNISIAN TREATY. T HERE seems little doubt that the relations

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between France and England are undergoing a process of improvement. We do not mean to say that any very great or any very definite progress has been made towards settling the...

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THE PARTITION OF ENGLAND.

The Spectator

-T HERE is practically no doubt that some sort of scheme for a general combination to strip England of what foreigners consider her ill-gotten acquisitions was at least laid...

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THE SITUATION ON THE INDIAN" FRONTIER S LR WILLIAM LOCKHART, Commander-in-Chief

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designate of the Indian forces, assumes command as soon as he can get to Peshawur of about sixty thousand men, spread over a front which begins about fifty miles north of...

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THE LAST RESORT IN POLITICAL WARFARE. T HE mode of determining

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disputes between two Houses of a, common Legislature is a question which certainly deserves the most earnest attention of all constitution-makers. Within the last decade it is a...

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ANGLICAN UNANIMITY.

The Spectator

I F diversity of opinion be a sign of vitality, the Church of England has every cause to be satisfied with her condition. We are not now thinking of what may be called the...

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AN INVASION FROM MARS.

The Spectator

M R. H. G. WELLS, the novelist who has made such notable use of the scientific imagination as applied to fiction, is at the present moment enchanting the readers of Pearson's...

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SHAKESPEARE ON THE STAGE AND OFF.

The Spectator

T HE King of Siam was taken the other day to hear Don- Giovanni at the Opera. After the performance some one asked for his opinion of it. "Thank you," replied his Majesty, "it...

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THE SENSE OF DIRECTION.

The Spectator

T HE present September has seen no such vast assemblies of birds awaiting the right moment to launch them- selves on the southern migration as were last year seen in our river...

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SPANISH PROTESTANTS IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY.

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[To Tire EDITOR. OP THE "SPECTATOR."] SIE,—With all due respect to your reviewer who favoured me with anoticeof my compiled translation of "Spanish Protestants in the Sixteenth...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

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THE EVOLUTION OF THE DEMOCRATIC PARTY IN THE UNITED STATES. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—During the last sixteen years there never was a time when, if we were to...

BOOKS.

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EPIGRAMS AND EPITAPHS.* THE epigram has fallen from its old high estate. By the word " epigram " the Greek meant simply a true thing said ' beautifully and clearly. It was not...

POETRY.

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YOUTH AND SORROW. As yet I have known no sorrow ; very sweet This murmuring summer life has been to me; My days like lilies under water stir, And God has sheltered me from his...

GHOSTS AND THE BALANCE OF DOUBT.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIEe•—IS it hypercritical to suggest that the arguments in the discussion which you have raised in so though tfnl and interesting a manner on...

FROM THE SONG-BOOK OF BETHIA HA_RDACRE- ON, on and on

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the millions press, The prize for few all would possess ; They toil, they seek, they strive, they crave,-- , The end no guerdon, but the grave. God grant each soul some aim...

SEDITIOUS LANGUAGE IN INDIA.

The Spectator

[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:9 Stn,—In the Spectator of July 31st in the note regarding Maulvie Hidayat Hasid you seem to doubt that any "great risk" to India would have...

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THE GUNPOWDER PLOT.*

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WE have a certain feeling, when we take up this book, that there should be a statute of limitation introduced dealing with historical questions of the more traditional order....

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A NEW LONDON GUIDE-BOOK,

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IT is difficult to look at a familiar object with the eyes of stranger, but Mrs. E. T. Cook has succeeded with wonderful sympathy in entering into the feelings of a traveller...

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RECENT FRENCH LITERATURE.*

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M. LE VICOMTE DE SPOELBERCH DE LOVENJOUL is the most ingenious detective that ever set himself to discover the secrets of the past. No sources of evidence are too remote for...

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PROFESSOR RAMSAY'S IMPRESSIONS OF TURKEY"

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PROFESSOR RAMSAY gives us in this volume some incidental results of the labours which have done so much to illustrate the early history of the Christian Church and of the...

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RECENT NOVELS.*

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The Martian is a book which by turns disarms and dis- concerts a critic. The late Mr. du Manner was by all accounts a very engaging and fascinating man, and his amiability...

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Burns's Clarinda. Compiled by John D. Ross, LL.D. (John Grant,

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Edinburgh.)—This may be a harmless, but is not at all a necessary, book. A certain interest, no doubt, attaches to the lively grass-widow, who was such a curious compound of...

The Clyde : River and Firth (A. and C. Black),

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whi.11 is edited by Messrs. M. J. B. Baddeley and E. D. Jordan, is a very good and singularly well condensed guide—it extends only to eighty- three pages—to what is still...

Scottish Border Life. By James C. Dibdin. (Methuen and Co.)

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—Although the sketches which compose this book are "original," they will be found rather disappointing, especially by such readers as hoped a good deal from the author's...

The Free Library : its History and Present Condition. By

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John J. Ogle. (George Allen.)—This is a very interesting, carefully written, and eminently opportune contribution to what promises to be the valuable "Library Series," edited by...

CURRENT LITE RAT LIRE.

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In Camp and Cantonment. By Edith E. Cuthell. (Hurst and Blackett.)—This is a pleasant holiday volume composed of slight and superficial, but on the whole readable, "stories of...

On Many Seas. By Frederick Benton Williams. (G. P. Putnam's

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Sons.)—Mr. William Stone Booth, who edits this story of the "life and exploits of a Yankee sailor," assures us that it is "the plain story of a plain man told in his own words."...

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scaooL-BOOKS.

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In the "Warwick Shakespeare" (Blackie and Son) we have The Tempest, edited by Frederic S. Boas, M.A.; and Cymbeline, edited by Alfred J. Wyatt, MA. In the intro- duct ion Mr....

The Jewish Year - Book. September 27th, 1897—September 16th, 1898. Edited by

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Joseph Jacobs. (Greenberg and Co.)—This volume gives a variety of information under various headings, such as the "Jewish Calendar" with "Explanations," "Jewish Holidays and...

List of Members of the Royal Yacht Squadron. 1815 - 1897. By

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Montague Guest. (Zaensdorf.)—It will be sufficient to quote the first paragraph of the preface. "In this book is comprised a short history and the name of every member who has,...

Kempis. (Arthur L. Humphreys.)—This is an edition of the De

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Imitatione Christi of the simplest kind. There is no ornament, no annotation, no surroundings of any kind, but large type, showing clearly against dead-white paper. Every one's...

Painters and their Works. By R. N. James. (Upcott Gill.)—

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This is the third and last volume of a very useful and well carried out dictionary of artists. Deceased English and foreign painters are included in the work.

The Man on the March. By Martin Cobbett (Mr. Sporting

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Notions). (Bliss, Sands, and Co.)—This volume contains a col- lection of papers published in the sporting newspapers. About a quarter of a century ago Mr. Cobbett was...

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Applica:ions for Copies of the SPECTATOR, and Communications upon matters

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of business, should NOT be addressed to the EutiOlt, but to the Ptinmsuan, 1 Wellington Street, Strand, W.C.

PUBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.

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Actor's Art (The), edited by J. A. Hamerton, re 8vo (Redway) 6/0 Alexander (Mrs.), Barbara: Lady's Maid and Peeress, cr 8vo...(F (V. White) 6 0 Anderson (R.), The Silence of...