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The latest news from Mashonaland is that the Matabele are
The Spectatoradvancing, but that up to September 28th, the Cape authorities had heard of no collision. Mr. Rhodes is on the spot; and the Boers, in spite of official proclamations from...
The air has this week been full of dynamite. On
The SpectatorSep- tember 24th, as Marshal Martinez Campos was commencing a review at Barcelona, a man named Pallas, a notorious Anarchist, threw an iron bomb stuffed with one of the forms of...
The American Senate appears determined to be "inde- pendent," and
The Spectatorto debate the Sherman Bill until the Session ends. There is a sufficient majority for repealing the law, but the Senators are accustomed to talk against time, and there is no...
The profound belidf in the efficacy of falsehood which characterises
The Spectatorprominent men in South America renders all accounts from Brazil and Argentina more or less mislead- ing. There seems, however, to be a consensus that in Rio the factions are...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE cue in polities, we fancy, is " quiet " till next January. Everybody is worn out. Mr. Chamberlain has gone to America, and the winter sitting is to be devoted to...
Prince Bismarck has been very ill at Kissingen, and the
The SpectatorGerman Emperor, who was shooting with the Emperor of Austria at Guns, telegraphed to him on September 9th, "thanking God" for BOWS of his convalescence, and offering him, for...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " SPECTATOR" of Saturday, October 14th„ will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages qf which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
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Mr. Gladstone's speech in Midlothian, which was delivered on Wednesday
The Spectatorin the Albert Hall, Edinburgh, will, we fear, Mr. Gladstone's speech in Midlothian, which was delivered on Wednesday in the Albert Hall, Edinburgh, will, we fear, disappoint his...
The address delivered on Tuesday by Sir A. Rollit at
The Spectatorthe meeting of the Associated Chambers of Commerce at Plymouth, contrary to expectation, had in it a note of cheer. fulness. He noted that there was "a fairly general, though...
Two important speeches were delivered in Ireland on Tues- day.
The SpectatorAt the fortnightly meeting of the National League, Mr. T. Harrington accused Mr. William O'Brien of endeavouring to palm off on the people of Cork "the lying argument" that the...
The Government is still hunting with a candle for a
The SpectatorViceroy of India. Lord Cromer, the best man possible, has, it is said, been offered the appointment, but has refused it on private grounds, and the renewed rumour as to Lord...
On Sunday evening, Mr. Burns, in addressing a crowded meeting
The Spectatorat the Washington Music-Hall, Battersea, on "The Belfast Trades-Union Congress," declared that all sections of the Congress had practically come to the conclusion that the day...
At Cork on Tuesday, Mr. William O'Brien received a deputation
The Spectatorof evicted. tenants, and gave them what comfort he could when they expressed their "bitter disappointment that the Government had failed to carry out their solemn promises to...
Mr. Gladstone said he believed the Home-rule Bill would reappear
The Spectatornext Session ; and as the Irish will take care that it does, his hope is probably justified. They are not going to run the risk of his retirement, and the consequent disap-...
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The Institute of Journalists, at their annual Conference on Friday
The Spectatorweek, receivpd M. Zola, the French realistic novelist, who delivered an address on "Anonymity in Journalism." He thought the English, or unsigned system, the best in politics,...
The Manchester Guardian, of Monday, publishes some very curious and
The Spectatorsignificant extracts from private letters received from Bombay, dealing with the late riots. According to one of them, elaborate preparations have been made in case of a renewal...
Except that the miners are returning to the pits which
The Spectatoroffer the old wages, there is no improvement in the coal-crisis, and no apparent prospect of improvement. On Friday, the President of the Coal Owners' Federation issued a...
The Session has been phenomenally barren as regards legis- httion,
The Spectatorbut at least one legal improvement of great importance and usefulness has been effected. On Friday week, an Act received the Royal Assent which virtually closes the last of the...
Mr. Fowler, speaking at Wolverhampton on Friday week, gave some
The Spectatorinteresting figures in regard to local self-government, local indebtedness, and local resources. In 1818, when the population was below twelve millions, and when the country was...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorMR. GLADSTONE'S SPEECH. T HE taint of insincerity, so marked in all recent Glad- stonian speeches and manifestoes against the House of Lords, adheres also to their leader's...
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THE LAW OF RIOT. T HE newspapers continue to debate the
The Spectatorquestion of riot, and to consider under what conditions soldiers should be allowed to fire upon mobs, and whether some change in the law might not be beneficial. This newspaper...
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THE SUBSTITUTE FOR STRIKES.
The SpectatorF OR . some reason or other, the present generation has witnessed a very remarkable change in the mental attitude of Englishmen towards Socialism and the visionary projects...
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THE FAILURES OF THE FEDERAL SYSTEM.
The SpectatorI T is becoming a commonplace with many Radicals to say that Federalism works well, and that it offers an acceptable alternative to centralised democracy; but do they ever look...
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brigandage like Southern Italians, are as easy to govern The
The Spectatormurderer used, it would appear, bombs loaded with as any people in the world, are singularly faithful to some kind of dynamite, and Anarchist literature was governors they...
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TRANSPORT.
The SpectatorO N Wednesday the Associated Chambers of Commerce considered the already thrice-considered question of Transport, the President giving the subject special prominence in his...
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MR. OSCAR BROWNING AND THE REFER E N ROM M R.
The SpectatorOSCAR BROWNING has been staying in the Engadine, and "in the country of the Referendum" his thoughts naturally turned to the merits, or demerits, of this piece of political...
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would no longer constitute the dividing line between him to
The Spectatorprison for them, we may, since he has lectured upon us, obtain what benefit we can from observations which lose, Ministerialists and the Opposition ; it is even possible that at...
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THE INSTINCT OF INDUSTRY IN ANIMALS.
The SpectatorA RECENT and interesting contribution to the sum of popular knowledge of animal instinct is M. Frederic Houssay's work on "The Industries of Animals," published in the...
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THE DIFFUSION OF THE GIFT FOR POETRY. E NGLA.ND, or that
The Spectatorportion of England, and it is no small one, which heeds such things, was surprised, nay, startled, some little time ago, when an ingenious and lively writer in one of the...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorTHE HOFER PLAY AT MERAN, 1893. TEE pretty town of Meran, in South Tyrol, already well known to the English traveller as a health or pleasure resort, adds this year to the...
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[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR, — As far as my
The Spectatorexperience goes, it tends to show that spelling depends mainly upon the strength of the imagination. A man who remembers things not by rote, but by calling up pictures of them...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:] SIE, — I think that there
The Spectatorare many different reasons for liability to errors in. spelling in different cases. I may give my own case as one to which your theory does not apply. I used to spell well;...
THE FACULTY OF SPELLING.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIE,—As one who has spent half-a-century in the work of education, may I be allowed to say a word as to spelling ? I am pretty certain that...
BRAZIL.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.] SIE,—In your article on Brazilian affairs, in the Spectator of September 23rd, you say that the wish on the part of Marshal Peixoto "to...
CHILDREN'S LETTERS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") SIR„ — Your article on "Children's Letters," in the Spectator of September 23rd, only confirms the belief that "men are but children of a...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorNATURAL PICTURES. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,—Yonr very interesting article, in the Spectator of September 9th, on the desirability of inducing the Govern- ment to...
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THE CONSUMPTION OF TOBACCO.
The Spectator[TO THS EDITOR. OP TEE " SPHOTATOR," J Sin,—Permit me to draw your attention to an error, probably a misprint, in your paragraph in the Spectator of Septem- ber 23rd, in regard...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTO PEGGY ON THE LAWN. SHE is dressed, like the early Springs, In the daintiest pink and white ; From her mischievous hand she flings Pink-petaled lawn-daisies, the Spright The...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorLEIGH HUNT.* THE epithet " great " is one that is often rather loosely applied, and if the editors of the series entitled "Great Writers" choose to extend it to Leigh Hunt, they...
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SIR GEORGE CAMPBELL'S MEMOIRS.* MEN who had known Sir George
The SpectatorCampbell's record in India at first hand were astonished at his failure to make any im- pression in the House of Commons, while those who knew his record in Parliament were...
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RECENT NOVELS.* MR. W. E. Nonurs has a very level
The Spectatormanner, some readers may say a provokingly level manner, but that is a point which we are not now concerned to discuss. We simply mean that it is not his habit to surprise us by...
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HERR HAUPTMANN.* THE works of Herr Hauptanann are scarcely known
The Spectatorat all in England. The only notice taken of them in any English journal, as far as we have seen, has been that The Weavers was acted once in Berlin and forbidden by the Police,...
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SCOTLAND BEFORE 1700.* THIS book is a sequel, and still
The Spectatormore, a necessary complement, to Mr. Hume Brown's previous work on Early Travellers in Scotland. Scotchmen may have had good reason to complain * Scotland before 1700. From...
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THE RUSSIAN GOVERNMENT,* THERE is something rather incongruous in this
The Spectatorappearance of Von Samson-Himmelstierna'a book upon Russia under Alexander III. The original work was written by an author who is a devout believer in the monarchical system of...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorA New English Dictionary. Parts VI.-VII. Edited by James A. H. Murray. (Clarendon Press.)—Pozt VI. contains "do— Consigner," and Part VII. carries on the work as far as...
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Like a Sister. By Madeline Crichton. (Digby, Long, and Co.)
The Spectator—There is a good deal of Ireland, a considerable amount of China, and possibly a trifle too much of blackguardism of the " deep- dyed " sort in this interesting but too...
Dante's Pilgrim's Progress. By Emilia Russell Gurney. (Elliot
The SpectatorStock.)—This is a selection from the " Commedia," but a selec- tion made in a special way and for a special purpose, not giving passages of special literary or historical...
Telegraph-Wires and other Messages. By E. Amy Northey. (Skoffington and
The SpectatorSon.)—This is an attempt, by moans of allegory and the personification of certain moral and religious ideas, to bring familiar truths home to the minds of the simple and im-...
The Story of Andrew Fairfax. By Joseph Hocking. (Ward, Lock,
The Spectatorand Co.)—Andrew Fairfax is a tale written with some clever- ness, and with excellent intentions. Andrew is a young man who goes down to the old home of his father, works as a...
Faneswood. By Henry Salon Wheler. (Digby, Long, and Co.) —This
The Spectatoris a strange, ill-compacted, but yet not dull or uninterest- ing story of life in college and country-house, by an author who, although he is almost too obviously a tyro, is...
Sweetheart Glen. By William Tirebuck. (Longmans.)—This is a realistic picture
The Spectatorof a boy's life in Wales. Mr. Tirebuck observes closely, and can describe. Nor is he unacquainted, it is clear, with Welsh manners. But there is a suggestion throughout of...
Children of Chance. By Herbert Lloyd.' (William Andrews and Co.,
The SpectatorHull.)—The fundamental idea of this story is not a novel one, but it is very well worked out. An able man, "con- centred all on self" however, deserts, in the interests of...
A Ruthless Avenger. By Mrs. Conney. (Hutchinson.)—Thie at least must
The Spectatorbe conceded to Mrs. Conney, that, although her new book is in three volumes, and although she occasionally writes too splendidly, she is never tedious. This negative success, on...
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men and Men. *By V. S. Simmons. (Osgood, Mcllvaine, and
The SpectatorCo.)—Sarah Lovell is an American young lady who goes to Paris to study under a famous French artist. Her love-story is told here. A countryman of her own is one suitor; she...
TALEs.—Something Occurred. By B. L. Farjeon. (Itoutledge and Sons.)—This is
The Spectatoran amusing story of the extravaganza kind. Harold and Edwina are a very affectionate couple, who have but a very limited acquaintance with the practical aspects of life,...