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Mr. Gladstone's difficulties are multiplying rapidly. There is a cry
The Spectatorin North Wales for requiring all Welsh Liberal candidates at the General Election to give a pledge that, if elected, they will refuse to support Home-rale unless Mr. Gladstone...
Prince Albert Victor, better known as Prince Edward, the next
The Spectatorheir to the Throne after the Prince of Wales, has been created Duke of Clarence and Avondale, and Earl of Athlone. It is a pity that he will not be called by the Scotch title,...
The remarks made on the following day to a Welsh
The Spectatorand Yorkshire party, who had sung to Mr. Gladstone, were much pleasanter, and more in the spirit of a host who is entertaining a multitude of agreeable guests. He complimented...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HERE is something which strikes the imagination strongly in the arrest, effected in Paris on Thursday, of the Russian anarchists. Far in the North-East, secluded in a...
Another awkward spoke will be put in the wheel of
The Spectatorthe Home-rule policy by the declaration of.the General Assembly of the Established Church of Scotland against Mr. Gladstone for his speech and vote in favour of...
Ten thousand Gladstonian. Liberals, including three thousand from Bristol alone,
The Spectatorthe remainder coming from Yorkshire and the Midlands, organised a visit to Mr. Glad- stone at Hawarden on Tuesday. Of course Mr. Gladstone did not attempt to address so large a...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " SPECTATOR" of Saturday, June 28th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
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But the most remarkable part of Professor Tyndall's speech was
The Spectatorthe part in which he attacked, not Mr. Gladstone, but Mr. Gladstone's friends and followers, and called them Mr. Glad- stone's " phonographs." " Whatever he speaks into them...
The Co-operative Congress, held at Glasgow last week, was marked
The Spectatorby an unusually picturesque incident. On Saturday, a lifeboat, " Co-operator No. 3," the third gift of the kind made to the nation by the Co-operative Union, was launched on the...
We noticed last week the admirable speech made by Mr.
The SpectatorBurt to the International Miners' Congress, held at Jolimont, in Belgium. Throughout the debates, the English delegates displayed not only strong sense, but a thorough spirit of...
Lord Rosebery opened the Co-operative Congress at Glasgow on Monday
The Spectatorwith a pleasant speech, in which, however, he avoided the burning question,âthe refusal of most producing Societies to make partners of their men. After describing the...
Mr. Gladstone received a few more tourists at Hawarden on
The SpectatorThursday, and assured them that Scotland and Wales are entitled to Home-rule as well as Ireland, though their need of it is nothing like as great. Indeed, he said that to get...
Professor Tyndall delivered a brilliant piece of invective against Mr.
The SpectatorGladstone. in a meeting held in support of the Government at Guildford on Wednesday. He said that never till he found "the integrity, if not the existence, of this British...
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Meissonier's picture of Napoleon in 1814, only 30 in. by
The Spectator20, has just been sold for £34,000, the highest price ever given for the work of a living artist. The art world naturally exults over this solid proof of appreciation; but we...
Unsuccessful speculators have a harder time in France than in
The SpectatorEngland. On Wednesday, the French Courts found M. Secretan, founder of the Societe des Metaux, guilty of mono- polising an article of necessary use, and of distributing...
Corruption in contracts, the bane of all French administra- tion,
The Spectatorwould seem to have invaded the marine administration, supposed, on the whole, to be the purest of the departments. M. Gerville de Reache, deputed to examine the management of...
A correspondent of the Times of Thursday, writing from Paris,
The Spectatorgives a very curious account of experiments made in what is now called " hypnotism " at the Salpetriere Hospital, under the direction of Dr. Charcot. A patient of this class,...
American Senators can occasionally play the fool, like American Congressmen.
The SpectatorSenator Blair, from New Hamp- shire, in the debate on a Bill ordering three new war-ships, resisted, moving that, as an alternative, the President should be directed to request...
The Times' correspondent in Paris is endeavouring to force the
The Spectatorcustodians of Prince Talleyrand's Memoirs, now long over- due, to give them to the world. By means which he does not reveal, he has obtained passages from them, and by...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE GERMAN CLAIM IN AFRICA. T HE struggle between the British and German Govern- mentsâfor we think it clear there is a struggle, though it may be one of wrestlers rather...
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THE WELSH GLADSTONIANS' REVOLT. T HE disintegrating tendency which is inherent
The Spectatorin the Home-rule policy is already bearing its natural fruit in Wales. There the Welsh Gladstonians are getting restive under the heavy demands on their loyalty to their leader,...
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MR. GLADSTONE AND PROFESSOR TYNDALL.
The SpectatorI T seems something like cynicism to say,âwhat, human nature being what it is, is nevertheless, we believe, true,âthat alike in Mr. Gladstone's speech on Tuesday in Hawarden...
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THE NEW COSMOPOLITANISM.
The SpectatorA NEW kind of Cosmopolitanism is developing itself among us which will one day, and probably within no long time, exercise an important political effect. Com- munication...
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M. CARNOT'S TOURS.
The SpectatorM CARNOT has discovered, or had discovered for ⢠him, a new use for a President of the French Republic. He is most serviceable when he is kept moving. The best President is a...
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THE CRETAN QUESTION.
The SpectatorI T is said that the Cretans are making up their minds to another insurrection, under the idea that, whether it succeeds or fails, they will force the hand of the Greek...
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DR. LIDDON ON THE SPIRIT OF TRUTH.
The SpectatorD R. LIDDON, in the magnificent sermon which he preached at St. Mary's, Oxford, on Whit-Sunday, dwelt with even more than his usual force on the posthumous life of our Lord in...
THE CRUX OF CO-OPERATION. TA ORD ROSEBERY'S speech to the Co-operators
The Spectatorat Glasgow on Saturday last, was more remarkable for its omissions than for what it included. As to much that was of interest in regard to the progress of the cause, he was...
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THE CHARM OF CROWDS.
The SpectatorT HE last Bank Holiday, according to the Times, has " broken the record." The people of London, who, as we constantly forget, are more numerous than the Scotch, the Swedes, the...
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CORRESPONDENCE.
The SpectatorNOTES OF A PILGRIMAGE. IL-JERIISALEM : THE TEMPLE. ONE of the earliest convictions impressed upon the mind of the traveller to Palestine is that the Turk is a nui- sance. The...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorMR. GL.A_DSTONE AND tifITCH - FILSTOWN. [To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."' SIR,âAs a very old reader of the Spectator, I cannot forbear entering my protest against the...
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IRISH CATHOLICS AND REGISTRATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTâ¢TOH. ⢠'] Sin,âIn your article on "Mr. Parnell's Position," you remark that you are "a little surprised to find that if the Irish Catholics...
THE SABBATICAL DAY.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR, â In your article on "The Sabbatical Day" you speak of Sabbath observance among the ancients as being peculiar to the Hebrews. You say...
THE LOST DOGS OF FLORENCE.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, â I should be glad if I could interest your readers in the state of things now existing in Florence as regards the poor stray dogs...
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"ME " AND "I"
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIR,âMr. Harper puts a question to me in the Spectator of May 24th ; perhaps, therefore, you will admit my answer. He asks, " In It's me,'...
THE SONGS OF BIRDS AND THE PHONOGRAPH.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR,âI was standing for some time a few evenings ago listening to the song of a thrush, which I have listened to a hundred times before...
AN EXPLANATION.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, âIn a letter from me which you published on April 19th, I ventured to express the opinion that "to impute intellectual fallibility,"...
TRANSMIGRATION.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR. OF THE " SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, â I used the word " evolution " somewhat loosely, as im- plying development through many processes, and I acknow- ledge that in...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorFAITHFUL UNTO DEATH. BY wintry sun's declining glow A wanderer found Modelled in freshly-fallen snow A curious mound. Was it the humour of the storm, Or Nature's jest, To...
ART.
The SpectatorADD DUNTHORNE'S GALLERY. Ix a gallery which is a sort of unpleasant annexe to its refreshment-room, the Royal Academy starves the art of water-colour, or rather, having...
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BOOKS.
The SpectatorIT is impossible to doubt that Mr. Gore's essay on " The Holy Spirit and Inspiration " is one of the most important in this volume, probably that which, after the preface, gives...
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RECENT NOVELS.*
The SpectatorSIR HENRY CUNNINGHAM is to be warmly congratulated on The Heriots, which is, so far, the most brilliant novel of the year ; a book of which it can be saidâand higher praise of...
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MR. DITFFIELD'S "LATIN HYMNS."⢠THE author of this valuable and
The Spectatorinteresting book did not live to complete it. But in Professor Thompson he found a friend who was able and willing to complete it for him. It is im- possible to speak too highly...
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DEFOE'S " COMPLEAT ENGLISH GENTLEMAN."*
The SpectatorTHIS treatise was written in 1729, and is one of Defoe's last works. It appears now for the first time in print, admirably edited by a German scholar, who dates his preface from...
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THE TWO ENGLISH DICTIONARIES.*
The SpectatorTHE merits of the New English Dictionary have been universally acknowledged. It claims to be constructed on historical principles," and this claim has been allowed by common...
SCOTTISH NATIONAL MEMORIALS.*
The SpectatorTHIS is, like The Century of Portraits which was noticed in the Spectator some time ago, one of those truly magnificent books which are among the results of the Glasgow...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe fifth volume of the new edition of Chambers's Bncyclo- prdia is, in respect of biographies, especially interesting and important. Among these are a careful Life of Goethe by...
The World and the Cloister. By Oswald John Simon. â¢
The Spectator2 vols. (Chapman and Hall.)âThis is a tale of a serious kind, which a thoughtful reader, whether he agree with its main purpose or no, will certainly find repay the trouble of...
Strange True Stories of Louisiana. By George W. Cable. (Kagan
The SpectatorPaul, Trench, Trlibner, and Co.)âMr. Cable has been at great pains to collect these "true stories," and to examine the evidence for their authenticity, evidence which he sets...
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plain of figures that are labelled " strange " by
The Spectatorthe artist, if they seem somewhat extravagant. The strangest of all is certainly Lewis Darrell. In fact, the author does not make his action quite intelligible. One may guess,...
The Minister of Baptism. By the Rev. Warwick Elwin. (John
The SpectatorMurray.)âThis is a learned and exhaustive monograph on a subject which in former times gave rise to vehement controversies, and which, though now, so to speak, in abeyance,...
History of the County Palatine and the Duchy of Lancaster.
The SpectatorBy the late Edward Baines. Edited by James Croston, F.S.A. Vol III. (Heywood, Manchester.)âThis important work, an enlarged and revised edition of what was before one of the...
Old Crusty's Niece. By T. Jackson Wray and J. Jackson
The SpectatorWray. (Nisbet.)âThis is a sufficiently interesting story of the "poetical justice" kind. Perhaps the best part of it is the discovery by the elder Mansford that it is a...
to wit, and a novel incidentâat least, as far as
The Spectatorour acquaintance with sporting literature is concernedâin the discomfiture of a rival by a man's skilful imitation of a horse's cough. Then we have some theatrical life,...
Cosette. By Katharine S. Macquoid. 2 vols. (Ward and Downey.)âA
The Spectatornovelist has more resources than one might on first thoughts imagine in dealing with the subject of French courtship. This time Mrs. Macquoid enlists our sympathies on behalf of...
picturesque and interesting subjects, no one has yet told in
The SpectatorEnglish for so Miss van Alstine remarks, and our own recollection sup- ports her negativelyâthe romantic story of Charlotte Corday. The author has carefully studied her...
The Contemporary Pulpit. Second Series, Vol. IL (Swan Sonnenschein and
The SpectatorCo.)âTwelve sermons, reported in full (whether with the preachers' sanction or not, we are not informed), with an " expository section," " new outlines," "outlines of texts,"...
beautiful story. Externally, it has the appearance of an ordinary
The Spectatornovel, and the opening pages do not lead us to expect anything different, as they record a quite ordinary experience in the life of a lonely, middle-aged woman ; but very...