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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE Protocol is published at last. It is a very short and toler- ably clear document, and registers formally the opinion of the Six Powers which sign it upon the means...
Sir Michael Hicks-Beach and Mr. Ward Hunt both made speeches
The Spectatorat Conservative banquets on Wednesday, the one at Gloucester and the other at Peterborough, and both of them very bad ones. Sir Michael Beach took credit to England for...
The latest news does not inspire much hope as to
The SpectatorTurkish ad- hesion to these terms. The Times' own correspondent at Cettinge telegraphs on April 5, that Prince Nicholas had on that day ordered his representatives at...
Mr. Biggar (M.P. for the county of Cavan) has placed
The Spectatoron the Order-Book of the House of Commons notices of his intention to move the rejection of the Prisons (Scotland) Bill, the Public Health (Ireland) Bill, the Valuation of...
Prince Bismarck has again sent in his resignation, ostensibly on
The Spectatorthe ground of ill-health, really, it is believed, because he thinks the Emperor favours " particularism " too much, and will not give him enough control over other Imperial...
The Daily News publishes an interesting account of the Turkish
The SpectatorParliament. It appears to be hardly yet at work. A tribune has been erected, French fashion, for the speakers, but only one man, the Member for Brussa, a Ulema accustomed to...
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A horrible scene occurred in an execution at Leeds on
The SpectatorTuesday, through the breaking of a rope,—a scene which ought to compel the public to reconsider the needless risk of such scenes, and the absolute necessity for an executioner...
Lord Lytton, on 28th March, took the opportunity of some
The SpectatorBills for decentralisation being brought before the Legislative Council to explain his "foreign policy." He is disinclined to leave the small States beyond the border alone,...
The Times' correspondent at Philippopolis warns its readers that a
The Spectatornew series of massacres may be in preparation there. The last massacres occurred in May, and the villagers dread a recur- rence of them next month. The old threats have...
Englishmen are apt to forget, what natives always remember, that
The SpectatorNepaul is now the last remaining State in India which is thoroughly Hindoo, even Travancore having been in some par- ticulars demoralised, and being governed by a family which...
An unusual accident on Monday night frightened the whole of
The SpectatorNorth London. The proprietor of the Welsh Harp, Hendon, either permitted or engaged a diver named Tatham to let off a new torpedo in the great reservoir at Kingsbury, and two...
A memorial has been addressed to the Archbishops and Bishops
The Spectatorof the National Church by the Dean of St. Paul's, Canon Gregory, Mr. T. T. Carter (Rector of Clewer), the Warden of Keble Col- lege, the Provost of Eton, and something like...
The Lancet has received what may be presumed to be
The Spectatoran accurate account of the Pope's health. A few days ago, after he bad complained for some time of weakness, his Holiness was seized with pain in the right leg, sharp enough to...
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An amusing letter from Heligoland to last Saturday's Times, signed,
The Spectator" H. Gatke," states that on that little rock at all events, and as the writer believes elsewhere in climates-colder than England, the sparrow is a partially migratory bird ; and...
There being trouble in the Transvaal, a well-informed corre- spondent
The Spectatorof course writes to the Times. His account, published on Wednesday, reveals a curious scene. The President of the Republic, who, strange to say, is a clergyman, the Rev. F....
Mr. E. J. Reed, formerly Chief Constructor of the Navy,
The Spectatorhas pointed out in a long letter to Wednesday's Times how utterly ineffectual Mr. Ward Hunt's new proposals are for giving a higher status and a better income to the Engineers...
A correspondence in Wednesday's Times between Mr. Ashbury (M.P. for
The SpectatorBrighton) and Mr. Gladstone, on the subject of a hint in a speech of the former, delivered at Brighton on the 30th of January, that the Ex-Premier had profited so largely by the...
The institutions of cheap postage and of electric telegraphs must
The Spectatorbe very questionable blessings to distinguished personages, in a country so domestic and so fond of homely felicitations as• Germany. We are assured by the Times' correspondent...
The Catholic Union of Great Britain has published a protest
The Spectatoragainst the Italian Bill on "Clerical Abuses," which puts the Catholic objections to it very fairly. It points out that the proposed Bill, by forbidding the clergy to criticise...
Mr. Gladstone in his recent speech at the City Temple
The Spectatorabout preaching, struck a heavy blow at written sermons, and the Satur- day Review, remarking thereon, has said that the practice of reading written discourses prevails in no...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE PROTOCOL. T HE mouse is born, and a very little one it is. The Protocol laid before Parliament on Thursday, on which all the Diplomatists of Europe have been labouring for...
PRINCE BISMARCK.
The SpectatorT HE resignation of Prince Bismarck, whether it be real or only a scene in high political comedy, is an event of European importance. If it be real, one great security for the...
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THE HIGH-CHURCH MEMORIAL.
The SpectatorI T is difficult, no doubt, to do justice to both sides of any political question, but on a question of ecclesiastical politics the exercise of common fairness seems all but...
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THE MORMON BISHOP, JOHN LEE.
The SpectatorT HE execution of " Bishop " John D. Lee marks, we imagine, a turning-point in the history of the Mormon Church,- that strangest and in some respects most interesting product of...
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THE NEW FRENCH ARMY.
The SpectatorT HE valuable paper in Blackwood on the French Army of 1877, which is evidently written by a very competent and careful military critic, and probably by one of the ablest...
LORD PENZANCE.
The SpectatorTHA T Lord Penzance should resign—if he has resigned,—the Office of Judge of the Provincial Courts of Canterbury and York, is less surprising than that he should ever have...
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REALISM IN UNBELIEF.
The SpectatorT HERE can be no doubt that it is even more incumbent on people who profess a strong religious conviction to realise what they believe, and not to use vague and unmeaning...
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MR. RUSKIN'S WILL.
The SpectatorO F all the qualities appertaining to men, and sometimes found even in great men, the one which is becoming moat rare in our days is childlikeness. We do not mean childishness,...
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THE LATE MRS. NASSAU SENIOR'S WORK
The SpectatorW E gave last week a brief notice of the late Mrs. Nassau Senior, and of her employment as Inspector of Work- houses ; but there are some aspects of that work on which it may be...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE NEW ASCETICISM. [TO THE EDITOR OF THE SPECTATOR."] .VI,—While thanking you for your admirable and helpful estimate of Miss Martineau's character and creed, I cannot but...
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LAND TENURE IN IRELAND.
The Spectator(TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Mr. Bence Jones's letter in the current Spectator is pleasant and useful. It is pleasant to find an Irish landlord discarding the absurd...
MISS MARTIN EAU AND THE " PROSPECTIVE RE VIE W."
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") S111, —I have not had an opportunity of reading Miss Mar- tineau's " Autobiography," but on my return to England, after a lengthened...
A LAYMAN'S DOUBTS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] an article headed " A Merchant's Faith," which appeared in the Spectator of March 10, you observe that " we should wel- come any occurrence...
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EPIGRAMS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.1 SIR,—In your article on " Epigrams" you remark that it has been disputed how far a play upon words is permissible in an epigram, and within...
DIGGING PARTIES.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Young Oxford and young Cambridge athletes are now doubtless beginning to make plans for the "Long." With Dr. Schliemann's discoveries...
THE DWINDLING SUPPLY OF CANDIDATES FOR ORDERS.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.'] Sin,—There is a sentence in Miss Martineau's " Autobiography" which, however harshly expressed, throws some light on the in- creasing...
[TO THE EDFFOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.1 SIR,—In his valuable
The Spectatorletter on land tenure in Ireland (Spectator, March 31), Mr. Bence Jones has alluded to the successful occupa- tion of small holdings in France and Belgium. It would add much to...
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AN APRIL PICTURE.
The SpectatorA BLACK-WALLED barn, with roof of sombre red ; Within, a dusty, sunlit granary-floor ; On either side a widely-opened door Let in broad sunlight on the thresher's head, And...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE primrose-head is bowed with tears, The wood is rippling through with rain, Though now the heaven once more appears, And beams the bounteous sun again. From every blade and...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorTHE LIFE OF SIR WILLIAM FAIRBAIRN.• IT is a great pleasure to meet with a biography so modest, so compact, and in every way so worthy of praise as this. The chief duty Mr. Pole...
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WHATEVER may be thought of the conclusions which Mr. M'Lennan
The Spectatorpropounded a dozen years ago in Primitive Marriage, that work unquestionably formed a new departure in specula- tion as to the history of society, and now that it is reprinted...
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WALFORD'S TALES OF OUR GREAT FAMILIES.*
The SpectatorMR. WALFOBD is well known as an industrious compiler of works on the history of our leading families, and any book from his pen is likely on this account to recommend itself to...
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ITALY, FROM THE ALPS TO MOUNT !ETNA.*
The SpectatorIT is not easy to produce within anything like reasonable compass a work descriptive of the whole of Italy, but the present volume, ambitious though it be, satisfies us about as...
THE MAGAZINES.
The SpectatorTHE " Symposium," in the Nineteenth Century, is, on the whole, a success. It is not a debate, still less a conversation, and tends every now and then to be a little tedious ;...
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A Plea for Art in the House. By W. J.
The SpectatorLoftie, F.S.A. (Mao. milieu -and •Co.)—We wonder what- new series for the benefit of the British masses will next be commenced. Here we have the initial volume of the" Art at...
Village Preaching for a Year. By the Rev. J. Baring-Gould,
The SpectatorM.A. Second Edition. (W. Skeffington and Son.)—The merits and demerits of these sermons may be discerned from a single example,—a sermon on the text, " Take the rod, and speak...
Nettle - Stings ; or, Country Quartos. By a Yorkshire Pen. 3
The Spectatorvols. (Sampson Low and Co.)—The " nettle " is, we suppose, Mrs. Blu'ster, a slanderous old woman of worse than doubtful antecedents, who rules the little sea-side place of...
Biding - Out the Gale. By Annette Lyster. 3 vols. (Samuel Tinsley.)
The Spectator—Singleton Trelawney, who reminds us somewhat, by the way, of James Hannay's " Singleton Fontenoy,"minna his fancy and scholarship, is cursed with a father, obstinate, selfish,...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The Spectatorincorrect interpretations of the Scripture phrase, " the kingdom of the heavens." That phrase, he insists, always refers to a human kingdom, which from the time of Adam had been...
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An Essay on New South Wales. By G. H. Reid.
The Spectator(T. Richards, Sydney ; Triibner and Co., London.)—It is difficult in a narrow com- pass to give a fair idea of this work. The different industries of the colony are so manifold,...
The Lost Gospel and Its Contents ; or, the Author
The Spectatorof "Supernatural Religion" Refuted by Himself. By the Rev. M. F. Sadler, M.A., Rector of Honiton. (G. Bell and Sons.)—The title of this book shows that it is purely...
Within the Arctic Circle. By S. H. Kent. 2 vole.
The Spectator(Bentley.)— There is little to be said about these volumes. Some years ago it would have given them a special interest that they came from a lady's pen. There is nothing unusual...
Notes on the Churches of Derbyshire. Vol. II. By Charles
The SpectatorCox. (Chesterfield : Palmer and Edmunds. London : Bemrose.)—Mr. Cox continues, with a zeal that is beyond all praise, his labour of describing the Derbyshire churches, dealing...