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The week has been full of rumours connected with Schleswig-
The SpectatorHolstein, but as they contradict one another, they are scarcely worth discussion. The new facts embodied among them appear to be something like these. The King of Denmark...
It is still hailing epigrams in the Corps Legislatif. On
The SpectatorThursday M. Rouher having pointed to universal suffrage as the test of Mexican feeling, Jules Favre remarked that it was odd policy to kill a nation in order to obtain its vote....
The Conservatives appear inclined to commence an agitation next session
The Spectatorfor ,the repeal of the malt tax. They have an idea that it falls primarily upon the fanner, rather than the beer con- sumer, and are disposed even to make it a test question on...
Mr. Bright made a great speech at Birmingham on Tuesday
The Spectatorevening to his constituents, which, though occupying six columns of the Times, was telegraphed in full, and appeared next morning in all the London papers. The important points...
Dr. Colenso has been condemned by the Bishop of Capetown
The Spectatoron all the nine charges of heresy preferred against him, with the full con- currence of his two brother bishops on every charge. None of them expressed any real doubt either on...
Strange to say, the Prussian and Austrian Parliaments are both
The Spectatorat issue with their Governments, not for going to war, but for being so very moderate. The Prussian Chamber, on January 22nd, voted by 275 to 51 that, "As the direction of...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorMHE South American mails bring intelligence of a catastrophe almost without a parallel in modern history. Two thousand ladies have been burnt alive in the capital of Chili. On...
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The Berlin correspondent of the Times states that the Prussian
The SpectatorGovernment has, for the present, plenty of money, the revenue exceeding the expenditure, and there being an available reserve of some 6,750,0001., a very large sum for Prussia....
The Rev. Harold Browne, Norrisian Professor of Divinity, Cam- bridge,
The Spectatorhas been appointed Bishop of Ely. The appointment is a creditable one, the Church rather wanting a bishop with some acquaintance with theology, but Mr. Browne, we suspect, might...
The distress in Lancashire has, we are sorry to say,
The Spectatorbegun to increase again somewhat rapidly. In the first week of January there were 3,100 more paupers than in the previous week, in the second week 5,620 more than in the first...
The intelligence from America is still strangely devoid of interest.
The SpectatorThe Republicans, it would seem, have called their " caucus " to nominate a president for the 4th July, and the body will assemble at Chicago, perhaps to elect some utterly...
On Monday the magistrates of the Sittingbourne petty sessions were
The Spectatorengaged in examining another alleged breach of the Foreign Enlistment Act, the Government accusing one of their own officials, Mr. Rumble, the engineering inspector of machinery...
The Townley case does not improve. Sir George Grey has
The Spectatorreceived replies from the magistrates who signed the certificate. They all admit that they were "put in motion" by Townley's own solicitor. Three of them at least had prejudged...
The statements made in our article last week on Sir
The SpectatorEmerson Tennent's puff of the Whitworth gun are confirmed by a curious announcement in the military intelligence in Thursday's Times "The Whitworth and Armstrong Committee...
A Catholic elector wrote a sensible letter to Saturday's Times
The Spectatorto defend his party for their adhesion to the Conservatives and to maintain that the true Catholics would all, sooner or later, throw their influence on to that side. It is not,...
A correspondent sends us the following on the Shakespeare Committee
The Spectatorand its non-existent funds Tho' nothing comes of all their schemes and strife, Surely they render Shakespeare homage true, Acting his wittiest drama to the life, Who about...
Herr von Bismark has explained to the Deputies the Prussian
The Spectatoridea on the Schleswig-Holstein case. He wishes avowedly to upset the diplomatic arrangements of 1852 (not the treaty) which con- ceded the separation of Schleswig and Holstein,...
A very wise and vigorous effort is being made in
The SpectatorMunster by Mr. Maguire, the Mayor of Cork, and others, to get up linen manufactories, to alleviate the distress of the labouring population, and it has received generous...
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The Admiralty have decided this year to try the experiment
The Spectatorof building vessels plated with 41-inch iron, but of a small tonnage. The Research, of 1,250 tons, coated from end to end with Warrior plates, has proved a great success, draws...
The subscriptions to the new French loan have exceeded by
The Spectatorfifteen times the amount required.
On Saturday last consols closed at 901, 1, for delivery,
The Spectatorand 901, 91, for February. Yesterday, they left off at 901 for money, and 901, 1, for the present account.
Lady Pasley, of 7 Esplanade, Plymouth, has told, in the
The SpectatorTinter of Thursday, a frightful story of the misery of a little fishing village, called Beer, in the neighbourhood of Axminster. The place is actually plague-stricken with...
The Constantinople correspondent of the Times will have it that
The SpectatorPrince Couza, Hospodar of the Moldo-Wallachian Principalities, is becoming a tool of France. Vast quantities of arms are, it is said, introduced into the country and forwarded...
About 500,000/. in gold and 755,500/. in silver has arrived
The Spectatorfrom New York and the West Indies, The steamer for the East took out 567,940/.
Messrs. Collard and Collard, the pianoforte-makers, have been trying to
The Spectatorexpose a very common and very successful fraud. Pianos are advertised as for sale by distressed ladies, and described so as to create the impression that they are by some...
Consols during the week have fallen I per cent., and
The Spectatorin Greek bonds a further decline, equal to 12 per cent., has taken place. Mexican and Turkish as well as most railway securities have ruled firm.
The stock of bullion in the Bank of England, although
The Spectatorover 100,000/. in gold has been withdrawn for Egypt, has increased 48,111/. The total supply is 13,022,220/.
The demand for money Jr commercial purposes has been far
The Spectatorfrom active this week. In the open market, however, which is well supplied with capital, the lowest quotation for bills is 71 per cent.
Subjoined is a comparison of yesterday's closing prices of the
The Spectatorleading Foreign Securities, with the latest quotations of Friday week :— Greek Do. Coupons .. .. Mexican . Spaniel Passive • • .. Do. Certificates Turkish 6 per Cents.,...
Mr. Richard Oke Millett, a surgeon, of Penpol, West Cornwall,
The Spectatorlias been arrested upon a charge of having poisoned his brother, -Jacob Millett. Deceased, who was in easy circumstances, was living with his brother on 30th December, and ate a...
It would seem that there still lingers some of that
The Spectatorima- ginative confidentialness between the actor and his audience which is always expressed in prologues and epilogues, and a shadow of which has passed into literature in the...
Advices from Paris state that the stock of bullion in
The Spectatorthe Bank of France amounts to 7,200,0001., being an increase of 440,000/. compared with the last return. The quotation for money is still 7 per cent.
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the command of Field-Marshal von Wrangel, Duke Frederick guard of
The SpectatorKiel has been disbanded under menace, and the Austrian half of the army is pouring in at the rate of four non-German Governments to leave the Germans no legal foot was intended...
Bland of temper, was the point the member for Rochdale
The Spectatorintended in his letters to establish to public satisfaction. bidden e there should be no intestate heirship at all, the property lapsing into the revenue, as that of intestate...
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CONSERVATIVE PROSPECTS.
The SpectatorT HE Conservatives are said to be considering in that rather vague way which generally precedes a session of Parlia- ment whether or not it is worth while to make a rush for...
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M. TRIERS AND DR. VIRCHOW.
The SpectatorW E know of few things more striking in politics than the contrast between the position of the French and the Prussian Oppositions. The French is small in number, feeble in...
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THE NORTHERN SANITA.RY COMMISSION.
The SpectatorQ INC E success has visited the Federal arms, the old sneers L) which we used to hear about two years ago have died away. The North is no longer depicted as a people carrying on...
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CLERICAL JUDGES.
The SpectatorO UR English Church has now an admirable and very instructive illustration of the calibre and value of clerical judges sitting to determine questions of heresy. Nine charges,...
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THE LAND WITHOUT A NAME.
The SpectatorWILLT A M BURNS, citizen of 4 41asgow, author of itt letters to Lord Palmerston signed a "North Briton," and leading member, apparently, of the Glasgow Society of St. Andrew, an...
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THE SPENCERS.
The Spectatorfp HE SPENCERS, who have now a dukedom, an earldom, and a barony, and who have possessed several peerages, are the descendants of one John Spencer, who was believed, by those...
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THE YANKEEFICATION OF THE SLAVE STATES.
The Spectator[FROM OUR SPECLAL CORRESPONDENT.] New York, January 15th, 1864. THAT the hare should be caught before much time or attention is given to the manner of cooking him is an...
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M. t HIERS' GREAT SPEECH.
The SpectatorTo THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR." SIR,—I am rather surprised to find you saying in your last im- pression, "We do not think M. Thiers' witty and moderate speeches in the least...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE CHARACTER 01? ST. PAUL.* DR. flowsoa has studied long and honestly the fascinating subject on which he writes, and in the earlier lectures especially there are several...
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THE CITIES OF THE PAST.*
The SpectatorTEIRE is no need of a critic to explain why Miss Cobbe's writings attract. Her style is simply that of an accom- plished, high-minded gentleman, softened, and as it were...
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THE TRIALS OF THE TREDGOLDS.*
The SpectatorIT is scarcely three months since Mr. Dutton Cook's last novel was reviewed in these columns, and lie now appears before the public with another, three-volumed and closely...
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GEORGE CALIXTUS.* WE do not wonder that an English incumbent
The Spectatorshould be in- terested in George Calixtus, for he was, though living in the sixteenth century, and in a remote corner of Germany, the typical English Churchman of to-day. A...
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JOSEPH JOUBERT.*
The SpectatorONE would fain hope that the name and works of the good Joseph Joubert are better known to English readers than is sup- posed by the writer of a charming article in the last...
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The Brown Book for 1861. (Saunders, Otley, and Co.)—The great
The Spectatorfeature of this work is that it gives the names of a thousand of the chief streets in London, and the receiving-house, pillar box, money-order office, commissionaire, telegraph...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorWe have received a photograph of Mr. Laurence's admirable drawing of Mr. Thackeray. The power with which this picture seizes the characteristic expression both of Mr....
The Pentateuch and Book of Joshua Critically Examined. By the
The SpectatorRight Rev. John William Colenso, D.D., Bishop of Natal. Part IV. (Longman and Co.)—In this instalment of his work the Bishop examines critically the first eleven chapters of the...
Sermons Preached in Lincoln's Inn Chapel. By Rev. F. C.
The SpectatorCook. (Murray.)—A volume of carefully written and sensible essays, very well adapted to the sleepy legality of mind which is the attribute of the Benchers of an Inn of Court. We...
The Derbyshire Red Book for 1864. Edited by Henry L.
The SpectatorKemp. (Bemrose and Sons.) — This almanack is the perfection of an almanack for a Derbyshire man, and we do not doubt that in the county it will meet with the support it deserves.
The Queen's English. By Henry Alford, D.D. (Strahan and Co.)—
The SpectatorAs journalists, we shall not be deterred by the severity of the censures of the Dean of Canterbury on the style of newspaper writers from frankly admitting that this is one of...
Who's Who in 1864. Edited by C. H. Oakes, MA.
The Spectator(A. H. Baily and Co.)—This useful old friend, now in its sixteenth year, shows no fall- ing off either in accuracy or in the care with which the information is is brought down...
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Oypah's Return, and Other Poems. By Walter Alfred Hills. (Robert
The SpectatorHardwicke.)--The author calls these "first fruits," and certainly they have not much flavour. In preference, however, to criticism we shall give our readers one of Mr. Hill's...
Poems. By Elinor J. S. Maitland. (Macmillan and Co.)—These verses
The Spectatorwould be better if there was a little less classical enthusiasm about them. When we are told of the Lake of Como that "Pliny called thee his delight In those accents whose...
DEATH.
The SpectatorMAILTORIBANKS—On the 22nd inst., at Brighton, of scarlatina, after forty-eight hours' il'ness, Stewart, second son of Dudley Coutta Marjoribauks, aged eleven years.
Christmas at Old Court. By the author of "Richelieu in
The SpectatorLove." (Bentley.)—This work seems to have been composed in the hope that certain dramatic and poetic compositions might be fortunate enough, when imbedded as plums in the middle...
William Altair ; or, Running away to Sea. By Mrs.
The SpectatorHenry Wood. (Griffith and Farran.)—It is a matter of curious conjecture with us what can have raised in the mind of Mrs Wood such a terror of the sea. If ten of her own children...
BOOKS RECEIVED.
The SpectatorKilmahoe, a Highland Pastoral, by John Campbell Sbairp (Macmillan and Co.)— The Writers before Chaucer, by Henry Morley (Chapman and Hall).—The Smuggler Chief, by Gustave...