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As to the future, Lord Salisbury insisted that the question
The Spectatorof the reform of the House of Lords cannot be raised at a time when a definite duty is required of the existing House of Lords. "You cannot swap horses when crossing a stream."...
The correspondent of the New York Herald at New Granada
The Spectatorhas furnished his paper with accounts of the pitched battle fought on May 20th between the Nicaraguan Government and the inSurgents. The Government had thirteen hundred troops,...
Herr Miquel, the German Minister of Finance, declares that Germany
The Spectatorcan quite well afford the expense of the Army Bill ; but the figures with which he sustains his argument are unsatisfactory. What is the use of saying that this and that nation...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE leaders of the German Centre Party have published their manifesto, which is bitterly hostile to the Military Bill. They repeat that all relics of the Culturkampf must be...
Lord Salisbury has had a splendid reception in Ulster, and
The Spectatorthe huge meeting in Belfast, which he addressed on Wednes- day, was, perhaps, more impressive in its personnel and its enthusiasm than any yet held there, not even excluding...
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On Thursday Lord Salisbury made another speech in the Ulster
The SpectatorHall, in which he pointed out that, so far from the Union having been a failure for Ireland, it had enabled Ireland to tide over two great economic catastrophes such as have...
Lord Randolph Churchill has a singular power over popular audiences,
The Spectatorand he may be aware that he owes part of it to exaggeration and violence of speech. Labour leaders, we notice, use the same weapons, and they become influential. Still, we...
Mr. Bryce, speaking at Aberdeen on Tuesday, delivered aa good
The Spectatora defence of the Government as it is on the cards for a Cabinet Minister to make. He boasted fairly enough of the stability of the Parliamentary majority which they command in...
The International Miners' Conference assembled at Brussels on Monday, the
The Spectatorproceedings being opened by Mr. Burt as Chairman of the International Committee. The 339,500 English miners who belong to Unions, out of a total of 560,000, were represented by...
Mr. E. Blake, M.P., the Canadian Minister whom the Irish
The Spectatorhave persuaded to join the Irish Home-rule forces, followed Mr. Bryce in a speech full of all the conventional phrases about the wrongs of the past and the generous conciliation...
The Government of New South Wales has been driven to
The Spectatorthe creation of paper-money. There are nearly four millions of current accounts—not deposits in the technical sense— locked up by the Bank reconstructions, and of course, there-...
The Co-operative Congress, which has been sitting at Bris- tol
The Spectatorduring the past week, has given occasion for the usual congratulations and complaints,—congratulations that the yearly turn-over of the societies is fifty millions, that they...
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The iron trade of the country, and the business of
The Spectatorthe raisers of iron-stone, are in a bad way. The Iron and Steel Institute held its annual meeting on Wednesday; and the address of the President, Mr. Windsor Richards, was one...
Mr. Lutton, of the Witness, Montreal, writing in the Times
The Spectatorof Thursday, gives some curious facts as to the condition of Quebec, which prove how wise it is of Mr. T. W. Russell to insist that the Province offers an object-lesson in...
It is cold comfort for English agriculturists to hear that
The Spectatoragriculture in America is almost 'equally depressed. In the Eastern States, the farmers complain that they are ruined by Western competition—in Maine, for instance, there are...
The Siamese Government appears to be seriously alarmed by the
The Spectatorpressure put upon it by the French Governor-General at Hue. Mr. Verney, English Secretary to the Legation here, has allowed himself to be interviewed by Reuter, and evidently...
Whatever the depression in trade, there is always some- thing
The Spectatoruseless which the rich will buy at fancy prices. A few years ago it was odd china, Lord Dudley, for example, giving thousands of pounds for a china ship, which a housemaid might...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorLORD SALISBURY IN ULSTER. T OED SALISBURY had to admit, in his first speech to 1 the people of Belfast, that the English people have not been as quick to catch the significance...
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THE SITUATION IN GERMANY.
The SpectatorH AS the German Emperor a card up his sleeve ? If he has not, his meditations just now must be of rather a gloomy kind. His throne is in no danger, nor is his prerogative ; but...
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MR. BRYCE AT ABERDEEN.
The SpectatorW E often wonder why it is so difficult as it appears to be to make a perfectly candid• speech on either side of a great political controversy. Even Mr. Bryce, who can succeed...
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LORD ROBERTS INATHE CITY.
The SpectatorW E do not know whether Lord Roberts will make a good debater, for he has as vet had no chance of displaying his ability in that way, but he certainly can make an effective...
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ENGLISH AND FOREIGN WORKING MEN.
The SpectatorI F any one desires to re-establish his faith in the English working man, he has only to watch him when he ("tomes into direct comparison with his Continental brethren. There...
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CANON SCOTT HOLLAND ON WELSH DISE STABLISHMENT. B ELIEVERS in the
The SpectatorRevolution of 1688 may be thank- ful that Canon Scott Holland was not in power under Queen Anne or George I. Had he been, the Pre- tender would undoubtedly have been restored....
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PROFESSOR HUXLEY ON ETHICS AND COSMIC FORCES.
The SpectatorW E cannot say that Professor Huxley made his ethical assumptions fully intelligible in the " Romanes lecture" which he delivered at Oxford last week. We fully understand, and,...
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MR. GLADSTONE ON SOCIAL INTERCOURSE.
The SpectatorM R. GLADSTONE'S very kindly little speech at Hawarden on Monday, when opening the Hawarden Institute, will probably have a wider effect than he designed to give it. He wanted,...
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WILD-RABBIT FARMING.
The SpectatorT "proverb that "what is one man's poison may be another man's meat" could not be better illustrated than by a comparison of Mr. Simpson's interesting little book on "The Wild...
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EGOTISM.
The SpectatorI F asked what egotism really is, the majority of people would promptly answer, vanity or selfishness. But we shall find, if we think, that more is required than these "short...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorLORD RANDOLPH CHURCHILL AND MR. CAMP BE LL-BANNERMA.N. [To THE EDITOR OF THE" SFROTATOR."1 SIR,—In one of your paragraphs on the "News of the Week," in the Spectator of May...
SIR C. GAVAN DUFFY AND THE IRISH CIVIL SER VICE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPEOTATOR."1 SIR,—I am lost in astonishment to read the following state- ment in Sir C. Gavan Duffy's communication to you in the Spectator of May 20th...
RELIGIOUS EDUCATION IN BOARD SCHOOLS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SplicTATOR."1 Sxn,—My reply to the objections raised by the Rev. J. W. Diggle to the non.employment of Board teachers as the religious teachers in public...
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MISSIONARY THEOLOGY.
The Spectator[TO TEE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR." J SIR,—I have read with interest and entire agreement your article on Mr. Horton's view of Modern Christianity. My object in writing this...
AN ASIA MINOR MIRACLE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE 44 SPECTATOR:] Sin s —Having just read " Vaeuus Viator's " paper on Lourdes in the Spectator of April 15th, which reached me by to.day's steamer, it has...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE STOIC'S COUNSEL. [Written, we are told, by a young girl.] GO to—complaining Soul, Thou are not fit to be, If thou bewail what share of dole The Gods apportion thee....
A TOMTIT'S NEST.
The Spectator[To THR EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR." SIR,—A pair of tomtits have built and hatched under an inverted flower-pot in my garden. The nest is on the ground, but in a sheltered and...
MISS BURNEY'S " EVELINI."
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPROTATO11,1 Sru.,—Will you allow me to correct a statement in your notice of my edition of the above (Spectator, May 20th) ? The reviewer remarks that I...
BEETHOVEN.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOE OP TICE "SrEcTiaolt."1 wish, if you please, to enter a protest against Baethoven's being viewed, as it appears to me he is viewed in Mr. Watson's sonnet, as if...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE PRISON LIFE OF MARIE ANTOINETTE.* Ow October 16th in the present year, exactly a hundred years will have elapsed since the execution of Marie Antoinette. Nothing therefore...
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HISTORY AND POETRY OF THE SCOTTISH BORDER.* IT cannot be
The Spectatorgoing far amiss in the way of classification to describe the author of that admirable book, The Feeling for Nature in Scottish Poetry, as a Scottish Wordsworthian in the * The...
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RECENT NOVELS.* THE woman question again, and this time from
The Spectatorthe point a view occupied by a writer who, whatever his deficiencies, cannot be accused of a sentimental refusal to look facts in the face. In fact, Mr. George Gissing is rather...
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ABERDEEN DOCTORS.* Mits. RODGER, the daughter of the late Dr.
The SpectatorJohn Hill Burton, has written an elaborate history of a famous medical school, which is more likely to attract "Aberdonians," as she is fond of calling them, than the general...
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LANCIANI'S NEW BOOK ON ROME.*
The SpectatorTHE chief subject of this volume is the change of the Rome of the °mars into the Rome of the Popes ; but there is much that does not strictly belong to this topic. In fact,...
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A ROMANCE AND A NOVEL.* THE two species of fiction,
The Spectatorthe romance and the novel, are very fairly represented by the latest stories of Mr. Fergus Hume and Mrs. Forrester, in which both writers are seen at their best. Mr. Hume...
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Fragments of Two Centuries. By Alfred Kingston. (Warren Brothers, Royston.)—The
The Spectatorcontents of Mr. Kingston's little book are well described by the title. He has collected a miscellaneous and varied series of odd events, social, sporting. and political, which,...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorCoursing and Falconry. By Harding Cox and the Hon. Gerald Lascelles. The "Badminton Library." (Longmans and Co.)—It must always remain a pleasure to see a sport so old as...
Mamma: a Retrospect of Life and Travel in Lower Burmah.
The SpectatorBy Deputy-Surgeon-General C. T. Parke. (W. H. Allen and Co.)— We are not quite certain as to the real aim of these reminiscences. They appear to us veiled in a slight haze, and...
Dick or the Doctor. By Rex Raynor. (Digby, Long, and
The SpectatorCo.)— There is plenty of humour in this Australian story, but the characters are over-drawn, and much that otherwise would have amused us is too obviously forced. The...
Essays in Miniature. By Agnes Repplier. (Gay and Bird.)— Whatever
The Spectatorsubject she handles, be it an incident in social life, or a point in literature, Agnes Repplier treats it with the true literary touch and skill. Thoughtful and yet light,...
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In the Key of Blue, and other Prose Essays. By
The SpectatorJohn Addington Symonds. (Elkin Matthews and John Lane.)—The essay which gives a name to this volume is a very ingenious piece of writing by an author whose premature death is a...
detail how Herbert Williams, an imaginary person it need hardly
The Spectatorbe said, brought an action for injury suffered by him through an accident on a tramcar belonging to the West Middlesex Company, also an imaginary entity. The brief for the...
" gentleman " has no pre cise equivalent in any
The Spectatorforeign language, and that the conception which it denotes is a very interesting one. By way of illustrating this conception, he b as collected a number of extracts from...
the central figure of his account of English Literature during
The Spectatorthe latter half of the sixteenth century. He begins with his birth in 1552 (circa), and ends with his death in 1509. This occurred in London, whither the poet had fled from...
The Life and Times of Bishop White. By Julius H.
The SpectatorWard. (Dodd, Mead, and Co., New York.)—William White was the first Bishop in the English line of the Episcopal Church in America, and the great work of his life is said to have...
book first appeared in 1874. It consists of nine lectures,
The Spectatornever, however, delivered, or intended to be delivered, orally, though, as Dr. Dale remarks, they are written as if this purpose had been in Mr. Rogers' mind. This is the eighth...
Literary Blunders. By Henry B. Wheatley, F.S.A. (Elliot Stock.)—The editor
The Spectatorof the" Book-Lovers' Library "has contributed a lively little volume to the series, but one more amusing, per- haps, than instructive. Mr, Wheatley does not tell us how many of...
in the" Golden Treasury " Series. It may be hoped
The Spectatorthat it will now have a still wider circulation. Cowper has several distinguished rivals in the art of letter-writing, but for humour, for pathos, for spontaneity, and for the...
Berris. By Katherine S. Macquoid. 2 vols. (Ward and Downey.)—This
The Spectatoris not as good work as we expect to get from Mrs. Macquoid. Her heroine is a silly, selfish person, without anything about her to interest, except her beauty, and beauty on...