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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorC RETE is to be partially freed. Lord Salisbury on Thurs- day described in the Lords, and Mr. Balfour repeated in the Commons, the compromise upon which the Concert of Europe...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE POWERS AND CRETE. T HERE is nothing for it, we suppose, but to accept the compromise on which the Powers have agreed, unsatisfactory, or even irritating, as it must be...
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MR. MORLEY AND THE POLITICAL PENDULUM.
The SpectatorM R. MORLEY did not quite like Mr. Augustine Birrell's dubbing him " the select preacher" for the Eighty and Russell Clubs this day week, though it was at Oxford that he was...
LORD SALISBURY AND THE COMMONS.
The Spectatorr ERE are defects in our constitutional system pro- ducing great practical evils, which it seems positively silly not to correct, yet which are never corrected. One of them is...
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THE MISSION TO MENELEK.
The SpectatorT "progress of the great Mission which the British Government is sending to the Emperor Menelek, with, we hope, a sufficiency of striking presents ordered by telegraph from...
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THE EMPIRE AND THE ARMY.
The SpectatorW E notice with the greatest possible interest and satisfaction the proposal to restore the name of the Royal Canadian Regiment, and to place its depot at Toronto. A petition...
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THE RECENT SCARE IN THE CITY.
The SpectatorS UPERFICIAL observers of what happens in the Stock markets are always amazed by the apparently irrele- vant consistency with which a war scare affects all classes of...
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THE NEW UNITED STATES AMBASSADOR. T HE appointment of Colonel John
The SpectatorHay as the United States Ambassador to England will be a very welcome one to English society. Whether that will make the appointment equally popular amongst our cousins over the...
CANON GORE ON EVOLUTION AND THE FALL.
The SpectatorI N the Guardian of Wednesday week (February 17th) is published a most interesting lecture of Canon Gore's, delivered at Sheffield, on "The Theory of Evolution and the created...
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A SURVIVAL OF TORTURE.
The SpectatorT HE remarkable case of legal torture in France to which M. de Blowitz calls attention in the Times of Monday, reminds us all rather unpleasantly how imperfect the civilisa-...
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SHIRE HORSES AT ISLINGTON.
The SpectatorT HE Londoner's comment on the "English elephants" shown this week at the Agricultural Hall is that they are "all alike." So they are in general form and appearance; and as,...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorHAS ARBITRATION FAILED ? [TO THE EDTTOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'.] S In, Judi alteram partem is a maxim you always recog- nise. So, with every confidence in your indulgence, I pray...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTROOPER PETER HALKET.* OLIVE SCHREINER has just missed writing a very short tale which might have produced something like the effect of Mrs. Stowe's great and memorable study...
THE BATTLE OF NAVARINO.
The Spectator[To TEN EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR."] S IR, —When Sir William Harcourt, in the House of Commons, -quoted the well-known official description of the battle of Navarino as an...
13:ra,—Assume that the murderer of Miss Camp was a woman,
The Spectatorand your moat interesting article may yet throw light on the case. You state that the murder appears to be the result of sud- denly aroused or gratified hatred, but suggest that...
POETRY.
The SpectatorFLY, 0 our Flag, across the foam, White angel 'twist blue depth and height; From heart to heart, from home to home, From Greece to where her children fight. Tell thou our...
SIR, propos to your wise remark in the Spectator of
The SpectatorFebruary 20th on " The True Cause of the Failure of Arbitra- tion," that human nature is "agin it," is the following : — A Peace Convention was being held in one city, and the...
▪ am endeavouring to gather deeds or copies of deeds
The Spectatorrelating to the religious house of St. Mary Overy (St. -Saviour's), Southwark, to form our capitular record chest. The -violent form of dissolution which fell on the house under...
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LIFE OF SIR GEORGE TRYON.* WE are glad that the
The Spectatortask of recording Sir George Tryon's life and services has fallen into such capable hands as those of his brother-officer, Admiral Fitzgerald ; it is obvious that none but a...
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SECONDARY EDUCATION UNDER EDWARD VI.*
The SpectatorEnglish Schools at the Reformation is one of those books that, as soon as they are written, are at once regarded by the student as indispensable, and with regard to which his...
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THE HISTORY OF MODERN PAINTING.*
The SpectatorTHE task Dr. Mather has set himself, concluded in this third volume, naturally becomes more difficult as more recent times are embraced, down to the very latest modes in...
FRENCH LITERATURE.* IN Divagations M. Stephane Mallarme has given us
The Spectatora final edition of that prose, critical in intent, creative in form, which has obtained him a place apart in the literature of his century. • (1.) Divagations. Par 8t6phana...
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RECENT NOVELS.•
The SpectatorSINCE the appearance of Pretty Miss Neville some fifteen years ago we have always turned to Mrs. Croker's books in the confident expectation of finding good entertainment...
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Venerabilis Baedae Opera Historica. Edited by C. Plummer, M.A. 2
The Spectatorvols. (Clarendon Press.)—Here we have the critical edition of Bede which the present Bishop of Oxford, writing in the " Dictionary of Christian Biography " (1877), regretfully...
A Stumbler in Wide Shoes. By E. Sutcliffe March. (Hutchinson
The Spectatorand Co.)—Rupert van Halm, "the tit - ambler," and Leon, the Spanish Jew, are both capital studies of a weak and a strong man respec- tively; and the two heroines, Myrtle van...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorOrgeas and Miradou. By Frederick Wedmore. (James Bowden.) —Mr. Wedmore is one of the few English writers of to-day of whom it may be said without exaggeration that he could not...
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The Pace of a Soul. By Joseph Dawson. (Unicorn Press.)—
The SpectatorPerhaps the assumption of the rank of a Baronet on a card would be the least likely to be detected of such forgeries, but the author should have known better than to trespass on...
Basile the Jester. By J. E. Muddock. (Chatto and Windus.)—The
The Spectatorfortunes of the hero are woven with those of Mary Queen of Scots, and no more interesting subject could be chosen for a historical romance. We are compelled, however, to say...
The Italians of To - Day. By Rene Bazin. (Digby, Long, and
The SpectatorCo.)—It is rather a pitiful picture which M. Rene Bazin draws of the Italian peasant, and a very hopeless one of Italian finance and prosperity generally. We have just been...
The " fifth " edition of the Handy Reference Atlas
The Spectatorof the World, edited by J. G. Bartholomew (John Walker and Co.), contains, we are informed, as many as eighty new maps, while the accom- panying text has been enlarged and...
English Essays. With an Introduction by J. H. Lobban (Mackie
The Spectatorand Son.)—We have no fault to find with the criticisms that Mr. Lobban passes in his introduction on English essayists. We should not, perhaps, rank Goldsmith, in this capacity,...
In the Days of Strife. By E. Yolland. (F. V.
The SpectatorWhite and Co.) —The period covered by this story is 1666-85, and the scene is France. It is concerned, therefore, with the religious strife of that time. The hero is a refugee,...
Applications for Copies of the SPECTATOR, and Communications upon WHIM'S
The Spectatorof business, should NOT be addressed to the EDITOR, but to the Pin:misuse., 1 Wellington Street, Strand, W.C.
Through the Buffer State. By John Macgregor. (F. V. White
The Spectatorand Co.)—Dr. Macgregor relates his travels in Siam with a chatty effervescence that is quite innocent of style or seriousness. If the reader . is thus saved the possibility of...
The SPECTATOR is on Sale regularly at Meanie. Dammam, awn
The SpectatorUPHAM'S, 283 Washington Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.; Tun INTERNATIONAL NEWS COMPANY, 88 and 85 Duane Street, New York, U.S.A.; MESSRS. BRENTANO'S, Union Square, New York City,...
NOTICE.—The INDEX to the SPECTATOR is published half- yearly, from
The SpectatorJanuary to June, and from July to December, on the third Saturday in January and July. Cloth Cases for the Half- yearly Volumes may be obtained through any Bookseller or...
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DEATH.
The SpectatorOn Thursday, February 11th, at the Old Downs, Hartley, Kent, Lucy Adnam, wife of Lt.-Col. Joseph Hartley, and dau g hter of the late Geo. Lyford Salter, a g ed 70.
PUBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorAmerican Text-Book of Prosthetic Dentistry, 8vo (Hirschfeld) 26/0 Beers ( H. A.), Initial Studies in American Letters, or 8vo (Gay A Bird ) 6/0 Bullock ( 8. F. ) , Rin g o'...