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The Viennese are full of expectation of great results from
The Spectatorthe visit of the Archduke Franz Ferdinand to St. Petersburg. They seem to expect that he will renew some old bonds between Austria and Russia, who have at present strong common...
Prince Henry of Prussia has been well received in America,
The Spectatorand is making himself popular by his simplicity of demeanour. After a reception by the President in Washington marked at once by cordiality and an absence of gush in the...
Before we leave the subject of the war we may
The Spectatornotice the agitation in regard to the fate of Kritzinger which is now moving many minds. We feel certain that Kritzinger will receive absolute justice, and that unless it is...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE war news of the week is both good and bad. On Thursday news was received that the Boers had cap- tured an empty convoy near Klerksdorp, and that the escort, consisting of...
The Barcelona riots have ended for the moment, and though
The Spectatorthere have been disturbances in some of the smaller cities, the troops have been successful in all, though not until General Weyler had obtained permission from the Queen....
The Sultan has struck a blow which may prove to
The Spectatorhave a recoil. He suspects all around him of hostility to his person, and last week ordered Marshal Fuad Pasha, the moist trusted soldier in Turkey, to be carried on board a...
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In the House of Lords on Monday Lord Tweedmouth moved
The Spectatora Resolution declaring that in the opinion of the House a Joint Committee should be appointed to inquire into all purchases made by or on behalf of the War Office, "for the...
With the new Treaty Japanese finance becomes of import- aice
The Spectatorto Great Britain, which in many quite imaginable :ontingencies may have to subsidise her ally. We welcome, ;herefore, an account of the position of the Japanese...
It was announced on Thursday that Lord Rosebery and his
The Spectatorfollowers had formed an organisation to be called "The Liberal League." The president is to be Lord Rosebery, and the vice-presidents Mr. Asquith, Sir Henry - Fowler, and Sir...
Paris was on Wednesday en fête in honour of Victor
The SpectatorHugo. His bust was placed in the Pantheon in presence of the President and of the leading men of every department of the State. The ceremonial was magnificent, and passed...
, The Government of Italy has been overthrown by a
The Spectatorvote upon the choice of a Speaker, but the King has directed the Premier, Signor Zanardelli, to return ta power with a reconstructed Ministry. The fall seems to have been the...
In the House of Commons during the past week there
The Spectatorhas been little of importance doing except the Navy Estimates. Mr. Balfour has, we regret to say, been laid up with influenza, and this has prevented Procedure being dis-...
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Speaking generally, they recommend the improving of the conditions in
The Spectatorthe existing camps, and the breaking of them up into smaller units rather than their wholesale removaL The Committee further endorse the pass-system, on the grounds of health...
The Report of the Ladies' Committee on the Concentration Camps
The Spectatorwas published on Friday week, and affords welcome evidence of the intelligence, the humanity, and the practical common-sense shown by those who served on it. The Com- mittee...
On the resumption of the debate on Monday Mr. Kearley,
The Spectatorbringing up the case of the Cobra,' charged the Admiralty with deliberately buying a jerry-built" coffin" ship with its eyes open, and severely criticised the proposed scheme of...
In the House of Lords on Thursday Lord Lytton moved
The Spectatorthe second reading of a Bill to amend the Factory Acts with a view to bringing in the laundries of charitable institutions, which, it may be remembered, were omitted last year...
The Duke of Devonshire addressed the Liberal Unionist Council at
The Spectatorthe Palace Hotel, Westminster, on Thursday afternoon. In a speech of considerable vigour, and marked by all the sincerity and common-sense' which used to charac- terise the...
On Tuesday night the question of the "repression of the
The Spectatorengineers," their inadequate pay, and the withholding of executive rank, having been brought up by Messrs. Platt Higgins and Allan and Sir Fortescue Flannery, Mr. Arnold-...
The Report on Army Recruiting for 1901 was issued on
The SpectatorTuesday. It has been spoken of as showing very unfavour- able results, but we cannot endorse such a verdict. On the contrary, it appears to us extraordinarily satisfactory that...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE CRISIS IN THE LIBERAL PARTY. T HE process of following the crisis in the Liberal party in detail is by no means an easy one. No sooner does a plain issue appear to have been...
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"COMPULSORY VOLUNTEERING."
The SpectatorD URING the worst period of the war, and while the question of conscription was much in the air, a body of young colliers were disiussing the whole problem from various points...
PRINCE HENRY'S RECEPTION.
The SpectatorT HERE is only one bad point about this reception of Prince Henry in America,—it may deceive the Emperor :William. He has evidently been informed by his agents in Washington...
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THE STRIKES IN SOUTHERN EUROPE.
The SpectatorTHAT there can be no fire without fuel is at least as 1 sensible an adage as the old one that if there is smoke there must be fire. There must be some reason . for the epidemic...
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INQUIRY INTO WAR QUESTIONS.
The Spectatorgrin discussion which took place in the House of Lords on Monday on the need of an inquiry into the work done by the various Army Departments, and by the Army itself, during the...
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THOMAS PETERSON GOUDIE. T HE intellectual interest of the" Gondie case,"
The Spectatorthat is, the heavy forgeries on the Bank of Liverpool, consists, we fancy, to the majority of men wholly in the figure of the principal criminal. There was nothing interesting...
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OUR ANCIENT WOODLANDS.
The SpectatorI T is beyond comprehension why the people of this country are not more practical and more sensitive than they are in the matter of our ancient and natural woodlands. There are...
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THE MECHANISM OF WAR.
The SpectatorIIT.-THE OFFICER'S OFFICER. N OTHDTG in that paradox, a democratic Monarchy, is more paradoxical than its Army, with its internal absolutism, its iron rules, and iron-bound...
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I To TEE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.")
The SpectatorSIR,—Most of the obituary notices of the late Lord Dufferin have referred in justly appreciative terms to his great powers of public speaking. Rarely has death carried away so...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorLORD D17FFERIN. [TO TRE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 Sin,—Few people in England are, I think, aware of the intense pride and almost personal affection for the late Lord...
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THE LATE MR. A. PATCHETT MARTIN. [To THE EDITOR OF
The SpectatorTHE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—The publication in the Spectator of February 22nd of the late Arthur Patchett Martin's last poem emboldens me, as one who was much associated with him...
AMERICA AND PRINCE HENRY OF PRUSSIA.
The SpectatorITO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Royal personages are such infrequent visitors in our democratic land that it is not unnatural that the approaching visit of Prince...
CLASS DISTINCTIONS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIE,—A propos of your article on "Class Distinctions amongst the Poor" (Spectator, February 22nd), I am tempted to send you the following...
ADDISON'S "SPECTATOR."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sra,—Those of your readers who also, on occasions, enjoy reading daily a number of your forerunner, the Spectator a the eighteenth century,...
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A PERSONAL EXPLANATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIE,—I apologise for calling Mr. Crawley-Boevey's pamphlet anonymous (Spectator, February 22nd). It was -an inad- vertence due to the fact...
[TO THE EDTIOIS OF TEZ "SPECTATOR.")
The SpectatorSTE,—Referring to the article in the Spectator of Feb- ruary 22nd on "Class Distinctions amongst the Poor," the vicar of a large East End parish told me that when he took bis...
ANTICIPATIONS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OIF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—Writing under this heading in the Spectator of February 22nd, Sir Herbert Maxwell states that Hedley's ‘Puffmg Billy' of 1813 was the...
EDMUND BURKE ON THE WEEK-END RECESS. [To Tan EDITOR OP
The SpectatorTHE "SPEOFATOR."] Sin,—The Spectator of February 22nd contains some judicious remarks on the opposition offered by Sir . H. Campbell- Bannerman and others to proposed...
THE BOOK OF THE RIFLE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—In the review of the above book which appears in the Spectator of February 22nd a wish is expressed that "Mr. Conan Doyle or some...
[To THE EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR:]
The SpectatorSin,—May I add to your deeply interesting article on "Anticipations" the following words from the Prophet Nahum,—ii. 3, 4?—" The valiant men are in scarlet." And : "The chariots...
SHAKESPEARE AND VICTOR HUGO.
The Spectator[TO TEE EDITOR OF TEE "SPECTATOR."] SIB,—Victor Hugo had great imagination. But he was an avowed student of Shakespeare. Hence my comment. The following two lines of his play...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorLORD DUFFERIN. [IN MEMORIAM, FEBRUARY 12orn, 1502.] THE frozen February day Creeps on from hour to hour, Winter lies cold on Helen's Bay, And white on Helen's Tower. But icier...
THE ANGLO-JAPANESE TREATY.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIn,—Surely it is a mistake to regard the Anglo-Japanese Treaty as a " blow " directed either against Russia or against France. It is an...
GREAT BRITAIN AND GERMANY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:1 Sin,—In his long letter in the Spectator of February 22nd Mr. Horsfall compares statistics of mime in England and Germany. and puts down : in...
TUFTED DUCKS AND FISH. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."1
The SpectatorSut,—In the article in your last issue headed "The Birds of Reservoirs" the writer alludes to the tufted duck, and describes it as "a sea species, feeding on fish." The tufted...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorIT was not possible in our first notice to give much more than an introduction to Mr. Kidd's work. That being so, we said little of any defects it may possess. It is not without...
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MR. DOOLEY'S OPINIONS.*
The SpectatorIN a notice of one of "Mr. Dooley's" earlier volumes we rashly committed ourselves to the view that his creator would not be able to "keep it up" indefinitely : that he would be...
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NAPOLEON THE GREAT.* THIS book deserves to stand beside the
The Spectatorclassical works of Thiers and Lanfrey. The narrative is brilliant, accurate, and up-to-date ; its reflections furnish instructive links between the past and present ; while the...
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ROMAN AFRICA.*
The SpectatorTwo nations in the world—the Roman and the English—have shown themselves supreme in the art of colonising, and each of them won a conspicuous triumph in Africa. The Phoenicians,...
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The Lover Fugitives. By John Finnemore. (C. Arthur Pearson. Gs.)—Much
The Spectatorgratitude is due to Mr. Finnemore for having pro. duced a capital novel with a historical background, in which, though there is much serious sword-play, plenty of blackguardly...
The Old Bank. By William Westall. (Chatto and Windus. 6s.)—The
The SpectatorOld Bank is a spirited story of provincial life, in which an extraordinary number of unusual things happen. The girl in whom the plot centres is the adopted daughter of a widow,...
NO
The SpectatorTHE WESTOOTES.* WORK from the pen of Mr. Quiller-Couch is welcome alike for its literary quality and its point of view. To the sedulous novel reviewer whose sense of style is...
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LETTERS FROM JOHN CHINA.MAN.
The SpectatorLetters from John Chinaman. (R. Brimley Johnson. is.)— These letters purport to be written by a native of China who has lived long in the West. They contain a favourable sketch...
The Yellow Fiend. By Mrs. Alexander. (T. Fisher Unwin. 6s.)—This
The Spectatoris a very grim and uncomfortable book. The "Yellow Fiend" is the gold that warps more than one character in the story. The miser is well done, and there is originality in the...
The Story of Teresa. By Anne Macdonell. (Methuen and Co.
The SpectatorCs.)—Mies Dfacdonell would have been more successful had her story been less lengthy. It requires enormous talent to write a book as long as The Story of Teresa without its...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorTHE MYSTIC ROSE: A. STUDY OF PRIMITIVE MARRIAGE. The Mystic Bose v a Study of Primitive Marriage. By Errest Crawley, MA. (Macmillan and Co. 12s. net.)—This is not a book which...
The Opportunist. By G. E. Mitten. (A. and C. Black.
The Spectator6s.)— A political romance is always opened with a pleasant little stir of excitement by London readers. For by some extraordinary twist of the human mind, people like to read...
Women in Love. By Alfred Satre. (George Allen. 6s.)—Mr. Bistro's
The Spectatorlittle book of studies may be stigmatised as neither fish, flesh, fowl, nor good red herring. The sketches are dialogues with lengthy stage directions, but they are hardly...
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SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Under this heading we notice such Books of the week as have not been reserved for review in other forms.] Sermons and Lectures. By the late Rev. Brooke Lambert. Edited by Rev....
THE ORIGIN AND SIGNIFICANCE OF HEGEL'S LOGIC.
The SpectatorThe Origin and Significance of Hcgel's Logic. By J. B. Baillie. (Macmillan and Co. 8s.)—Whatever be the cause of the fascina- tion which Hegel exercises over the academic...
Head Hunters, Black, White, and Brown. By Alfred C. Haddon.
The Spectator(Methuen and Co. 15s.)—We cannot attempt to give anything iike an adequate account of this book. It is a typical specimen of present-day travelling. A generation ago a volume...
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Walford's County Families of the Unitei Kingdom (Chatto and Windus,
The Spectator50s.) has now reached its forty-second year, a most interesting and valuable publication, the correcting and keeping up of which must entail upon its conductors a quite...
One of the "Handbooks for the Clergy" (Longmans and Co.,
The Spectator2s. 6d. net) is Patristic Study, by H. B. Swete, D.D. Professor Swete, after an introduction, gives brief accounts of the Christian writers from the sub-apostolic times down to...
The Gospels and the Gospel. By G. R. S. Mead,
The SpectatorM.A. (Theo- sophical Publishing Society. 4s. Od. net ) —Mr. Mead begins with a sketch of the recent progress of Biblical criticism. The tone is not altogether what one would...
School, College, and Character. By Le Baron Russell Briggs. (Houghton
The Spectatorand Co., Boston and New York. 4s. net.)—Mr. Briggs dates his preface from "Cambridge, Mass." These five essays have, therefore, an immediate bearing on the American aspect of...
China War, 1860. By Major-General G. Allgood, C.B. (Long- mans
The Spectatorand Co. 12s. 6d.)—In January, 1860, Lieutenant Allgood (as he then was) had offered to him by Lord Clyde the post of D.A.Q.G. in one of the divisions of the force then being...
In the series of "The Temple Bible" (J. M. Dent
The Spectatorand Co.) we have received Isaiah, edited by A. B. Davidson, D.D. (Is. net). Dr. Davidson occupies in this edition the moderate position which we have been long accustomed to...
St. John's Gospel. By Dr. Hans Munich Wendt. Translated by
The SpectatorEdward Lummis, M.A. (T. and T. Clark. 7s. Gd.)—Professor Wendt's theory is that the Gospel presents the phenomenon of two strata, one consisting of. notes and memoirs of very...
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A Devout Commentary on the Epistle to the Ephesians. By
The SpectatorA. Bertrand Wilberforce. (Sands and Co. 39. 6d.)—We have no criticism to offer on this book, but we may say generally that it justifies the descriptive title adopted by the...