28 MARCH 1896

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The Government is proceeding steadily with its Egyptian policy. Akasheh

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has already been occupied by the advance guard, and a force of five thousand men is on its way to that point, which is eighty miles from Wady Haifa. There or at Sarras it will...

Mr. Chamberlain took up a high tone in his reply.

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He refused to "scuttle" from Egypt, and, refusing, held it to be our duty to complete our noble work by relieving Egypt of all danger to the southward by breaking up the...

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

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• T HE great debate on Egypt came off, as promised, on Friday week, in the form of a motion to reduce the salary_of the Foreign Secretary by 2100, which was defeated by 143...

The Russian and French Governments have voted against the use

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of the Egyptian Reserve Fund for the advance to Dongola, but England, Germany, Austria, and Italy have sanctioned that employment of the money. The reason assigned by the...

At the dinner of the Associated Chambers of Commerce, held

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at the Hotel Metropole on Wednesday, Sir F. W. Grenfell (late Sirdar of the Egyptian Army), dealt with the question of the Soudan. While he commanded he declared that the...

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

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case.

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The reports from South Africa are all bad. Some of

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the defeated Matabele, taking advantage of the withdrawal of the armed police through Dr. Jameson's foolish raid, have risen in two districts, have murdered the whites,...

On Monday the second reading of "the Diseases of Animals"

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Bill was moved by Mr. Walter Long, the President of the Board of Agriculture, and gave rise to an interesting discussion. It really is a Bill to prevent the introduction of live...

Mr. Chamberlain made a very important speech at a dinner

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of the Canada Club on Wednesday, not as representing the Government, but on his own responsibility only, to suggest a possible Zollverein or Commercial Union between this...

The Radical Conference at Huddersfield assembled on Thursday, in considerable

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numbers. There are said to have been. upwards of a thousand delegates, but it was evident that the Conference was not at all in love with the manage- ment of the Executive in...

We shall be deeply interested to watch how the great.

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Colonies take Mr. Chamberlain's proposal. We should, of course, be delighted if it satisfies the Colonies, but we fear that to grant, even in the rough, and with special...

M. Bourgeois, it is evident, knows France. There are pro-

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bably not a hundred Members in the Chamber who approve his Bill for a progressive Income-tax ; but on Thursday, after five days of furious debating, in which insults were...

A very important debate occurred in the Italian Chamber on

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Wednesday. Baron Blanc, Foreign Minister in the Crispi Cabinet, declared that he had made an "alliance" with Great Britain, an "alliance without protocols," which made Italy...

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The death on Sunday last at Brighton of Tom Hughes,

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-or "Tom Brown" as he was so often called after his own hero, will probably have caused a more diffused and general feeling of personal grief than would have been caused by any...

Later on Tuesday the House, at the instance of Mr.

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Buxton, discussed the appointment of a Committee to de; 1 with the administration of the Fair-Wages Resolution passed in 1891. It was alleged by Mr. Buxton that in spite of the...

On Tuesday the House of Commons discussed the question of

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the London water-supply on the second reading of the Chelsea Water (Transfer) Bill,—one of the Transfer Bills of the County Council, which embody the principle of purchase by...

France, it is said, has yet another Pretender. The son

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of the Duo de Chartres, Prince Henry of Orleans, has recently attracted much attention among Monarchists as the ablest, or at least the most attractive, among the Bourbon...

By the death of Archdeacon Denison at the age of

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ninety one of the most singular figures in the nineteenth century,— in it but not of it,—has vanished from amongst us. The most impracticable of Conservatives, he gained a...

Bank Rate, 2 per cent.

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New Consols (2f) were on Friday, 1091.

[*** ERICATUM.—We regret, in the Spectator of March 21st, to

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have described Sir John Colomb, M.P. (late Royal Marine Attillery), as Admiral Colomb, thus confounding him with his brother, Admiral Philip Colomb-]

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TOPICS OF TILE DAY.

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MR. CHAMBERLAIN AS FOREIGN MINISTER. great debate on Friday week on our new policy in Egypt was not unworthy of the occasion. Mr. Morley, who led the attack, was a good deal...

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THE RADICAL DISCONTENT.

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T HE Radicals are in a chaotic state, as the Huddersfield Conference on Wednesday proves to demonstration. If they had gone for "Home-rule all round," as many of them wished to...

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THE CONSCRIPTION IN EGYPT.

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W HAT is the greatest boon that English rule could confer on the people of Egypt ? Abolish the con- scription. That is an answer which can be given without a moment's hesitation...

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THE MEANING OF THE DEFEAT AT ADOWA. T HE defeat of

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the Italians before Adowa may have a grave interest for historians, for a reason which is too generally overlooked. The battle is a bit of weighty evidence as to a coming change...

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MEAT CONSUMERS AND MEAT RAISERS. T HE debate on the Diseases

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of Animals Bill did not contribute much to our knowledge of the controversy. It consisted to a great extent of confident assertions that it would, or would not, be protective....

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A WORD FOR DEMOCRACY. T HE appearance of Mr. Lecky's new

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book, "Democracy and Liberty," which we hope speedily to review at some length—we prefer to read books before reviewing them, an old-fashioned practice which the daily papers...

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MR. GLADSTONE ON THE FUTURE LIFE.

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I N the profoundly interesting paper on " Tne Future Life and the Condition of Man Therein" which Mr. Glad- stone has contributed to the March number of the North America n...

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THOMAS HUGHES.

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A LTHOUGH Mr. Hughes—" Tom Hughes" as he was called wherever the English language is spoken—had passed the allotted span of human life, the news of his death will come with a...

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THE GRASSY WAYSIDES OF ENGLAND.

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T HE Highways Committee of the County Council of the West Riding of Yorkshire urge the District Councils to effect a petty economy by letting the herbage of the grass- margin of...

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THE BLACK LIKE.

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A T this time of the year the interest for the naturalist and botanist ceases, in a certain degree, for awhile. Birds have hardly begun their nests, the summer migrants have not...

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THE ALLEGED BORDEAUX ATROCITY.

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[TO TEL EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:] Sin,—In the Spectator of March 21st, Mr. Bear (who has since been in communication with me) seems to throw some doubt on my statement...

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.

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"CATHOLIC INTOLERANCE IN THE SOUTH OF IRELAND." [To TIIR EDITOR OF TER " SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In the article which appeared in the Spectator of March 14th, dealing with the...

!--E it PEN T-STORY.

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jr o /Is raollUti. or TEL "SPECTATOR.'] SIR,—I do not know if you extend the hospitality of your columns to stories of serpents. Readers of Mr. Rudyard Kipling may remember a...

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[To THZ EDITOR OP THE • SPECTATOR:9 SIE,—The following cat-story

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may be of interest. I was in the habit a few years ago of visiting a certain cottage in this parish, where the front-door, having fallen a little out of the perpendicular, swung...

[To THE EDITOR OP THE • SPECTATOR:9 Sin,—The following veracious

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cat-story may interest lovers of the delightful feline race. My blue Persian is a gentle, sentimental creature, slightly inclined to melancholy, and strangely, even...

CAT-STORIES.

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pro THE EDITOR OF TEE " SPICTATJR.,"1 SIR,—I have long taken great interest in cats. I believe that they, in common with moat other animals, can talk to each other; at any rate,...

THE ETHICAL IDEA OF THE JAPANESE.

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[To THE EDITOR OF TRH " Stem:ma:1 SIR,—At the close of your review (in the Spectator of January 11th) of my paper on " The Ethical Life and Conceptions of the Japanese" you...

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IS CANADA LOYAL?

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Is Canada loyal? Who dares to ask ? Are your Colonist's veins Ducts for some colourless fluid, or red with the blood that stains The bosom of all the earth from Plassey to...

BOOKS.

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THE EARLY STRUGGLES OF THE COMMONWEALTH.* BY the publication of this volume Mr. Gardiner enters on the final act of his great work on the Puritan Revo- lution. The portion of...

POETRY.

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As the daylight deepens, the sun goes down ! Though faint and bleeding, too few to win, We may help others to wear the crown. Ab, fatal shot ! Did ye mark that fall ? 'Twas...

A DOG-STORY.

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[TO THZ EDITOR 01 THE " SPECTATOR.") SIR,—When the guest of the Rev. Edward H. Ingle, in Roanoke, Virginia, I was asked by Mr. Ingle to make the experiment whether I could...

BULLS."

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[To THE EDITOR CP THE "SPECTATOR.") Sin,—An Irish curate, preaching some years ago in a suburban church on the subject of the Prodigal Son, wishing to impress upon the...

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MB,. LYNCH'S " HUMAN DOCUMENTS."* Mn. LYNCH is a clever but

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ambitions and rather affected writer, as the title of his book itself indicates. He appears to take the word " documents " in its literal sense as "teach- lags," and teachings...

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OLD COACHING--DAYS.*

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THE old coaching.days, as far as convenience for travel was concerned, were the dawn of the great days of our present rapid means of communication. The seventy years or so in...

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A WANDERING SCHOLAR IN THE LEVANT.* ONE must go back

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to Eothen to find so delightful a book of Eastern travel as A Wandering Scholar in the Levant. Without being the least imitative in style or intention, and conceived from a...

THE POST OFFICE IN TIMES OF WAR.*

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Ma. NORWAY has written a very amusing book on the diffi- culties of the Post Office during the wars which raged between the French Revolution and the close of the war with...

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STUDIES IN DIPLOMACY.*

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• Studies in Dip:omecv. From the French of Count Benedetti. London : Heonema• n. THE essays which Count Benedetti has collected into this volume have already made their...

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Fifteen Hundred Miles in an Hour. Edited by Charles Dixon.

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(Bliss, Sands, and Foster.)—Mr. Dixon reminds us of M. Jules Verne, and, perhaps more directly, of Edgar Allan Poe. Foe's "Voyage to the Moon" is an admirable piece of fooling,...

CURRENT _ LITERATURE.

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The Saga Book of Lunde. By Jessie M. E. Saxby. (Nisbet and Co.)—We venture to think that the prologue is too long. The plan of the book is to give sundry stories of the...

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The Ladies' Juggernaut, By A. C. Gunter. (Routledge.)—We must confess

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with sorrow that Mr. Gunter has fallen considerably in our estimation ; there is little in this rather amusing and very vulgar romance to remind the reader of the author of "Mr....

The Carlyle Reader. Edited by the Rev. James Wood. (I.

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Thin, Edinburgh.)—Apart from the intrinsic interest of the extracts here put together, the volume is a very instructive lesson in style. The earliest in date come from the essay...

Blake of the 'Rattlesnake.' By Fred T. Jane. (Tower Pub-

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lishing Co.)—Mr. Blake was "the man who saved England" in the war of 189—. Franee and Russia combine their forces and attack us. Mr. Jane has, it would seem, made himself...

Vikings of To - Day. By Wilfred T. Grenfell. (Marshall Bros.) —Some

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three years ago Dr. Grenfell went out at the sending of the Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen, to Labrador, to make a beginning of the mission work there, a work both medical and...

Dr. Gilbert's Daughters. By Margaret Harriet Matthews. (E. Arnold.)--This is

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a story of American life ; Dr. Gilbert is a country doctor, very much wrapped up in the scientific study of his profession ; his daughters are twins, " May " and " Fay " (short...

On the Cards. By Mary Allen. (Jerrold and Sons.)—This is

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a volume of "The Unknown Authors' Series." The idea does not seem a happy one. On the whole, known authors, as far as our pretty large experience has gone, are better than...

Through Russian Snows. By G. A. Henty. (Mackie and Son.)

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—Of course it was necessary for Mr. Henty to is ing his two heroes —he puts the office of hero into commission, so to speak—into Russia, and to arrange for their meeting. But...

Judith. By Evelyn Everett-Green. (Oliphant, Anderson, and Ferrier.)—It is not

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often that a man gets so much good out of going to a money-lender as Leonard Hammond gets in the end, though not till after long trial, out of his acquaintance with Michael...

The Wizard King. By David Ker. (W. and R. Chambers.)—

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This" story of the last Moslem invasion of Europe" is done with plenty of spirit. The "Wizard King" is John Sobieski. He plays his part with much energy in Mr. Ker's pages So do...

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Voyages and Travels of Lord Brassey, K.C.B., D.O.E., from 1862

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to 1894. Arranged and edited by Captain S. Eardley-Wilmot. 2 vols. (Longmans and Co.)—The 'Sunbeam' has become a house- hold word in all English speaking countries, owing to the...

A Handbook of British Lepidoptera. By Edward Meyrick, B.A. F.Z.S.,

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F.E.S. (Macmillan and Co.)—Notwithstanding the num- ber of popular books on British Lepidoptera, a compact handbook to the order was a great desideratum, as nothing of the kind...

The Universities of Aberdeen. By Robert Sangster Bait. (James Gordon

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Bisset, Aberdeen.)—The only fault to be found with this solid work, which has obviously been a labour of love, is that it is too long, and contains a great deal of matter which,...

Prolegomena to Ephesians and Colossians. By the late F. J.

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A. Hort, D.D. (Cambridge University Press.) —These essays have, in a high degree, the characteristics of ample knowledge and close cogent reasoning which we are accustomed to...

With the Yacht, Camera, and Cycle in the Mediterranean. By

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the Earl of Cavan, K.P. (Sampson Low, Marston, and Co.)—In November, 1894, the Earl of Cavan, accompanied by his daughter, and three other young ladies, left London for a few...

Scholia Aristophanica. Arranged, edited, and translated Ly William G. Rutherford.

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Vols. I. and II. (Macmillan and Co.) —Mr. Rutherford is the most original of British Greek scholars. He holds views about classical texts which it is not too much to call...

The Welsh Church. By the Rev. C. J. NowelL (Elliot

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Stock.) —Mr. Nowell carries his history down to the Dissolution of the Monasteries. The most interesting parts of his book are possibly those which concern Gildas and Giraldus...

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The Moving Finger. By Mary Gaunt. (Methuen and Co.)— In

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this volume we have seven sketches of Australian life, all of them powerful, and all of them painted in those gloomy colours which the literary artists of the day so strangely...

A Princess of the Gutter. By L. T. Meade. (Wells

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Gardner, Dorton, and Co.)—Joan Prinsep inherits a fortune from her uncle, with a charge from the dying man to use it better than he has done. She finds that a large part of it...

The Coming of Theodora. By Eliza Orne White. (Smith and

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Elder.)—Theodora is one of those admirable people, often, it is ead to say, as mischievous as they are admirable, who have a passion for setting everybody and everything right....

Figure - Drawing and Composition. By Richard G. Hatton. (Chapman and HalL)—Mr.

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Ration's subject is the human figure. He divides it, after preliminary observations, as "Aim and Method" and "The Figure as a Whole," into "The Head and Neck," "The Trunk," "The...

A Selection of Passages from Plato for English Readers. From

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the translation by B. Jowett, MA. Edited, with introductions, by M. J. Knight. 2 vols. (Clarendon Press.)—Mr. Knight undertook this task of selection at the request of the late...

The Story of the Sea. Edited by "Q?' (Cassell and

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Co.)— Mr. Quiller-Conch has been assisted in his task of telling The Story of the Sea by various writers who are favourably known to the public by their valuable contributions...

AU Men are Liars. By Joseph Hocking. (Ward, Lock, Bowden,

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and Co.)—The characters with which Mr. Hooking constitutes his drama are of the most conventional kind. The cynic, the selfish aristocrat, the woman of the world, the devotee of...

Dialogues of the Day. Edited by Oswald Crawford. (Chapman and

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Hall.)—Mr. Crawfurd has enlisted the services of a number of clever writers, and employed them on what we cannot but think a somewhat thankless task. He seems to have had a...