Mr. J. P. Morgan.
[To raz EDITOR or THE " Speerseee."1 SIE,—I read with great interest your remarks re Mr. John Pierpont Morgan in last week's Spectator. Then I came across a newspaper cutting in......
The War And Ministers Of Religion.
[TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.") Sia,—After three years' cessation of our work we have our Training College in full swing again. We have a full comple- ment of men, and all......
The Plumage Trade.
[To THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Your correspondent's letter in the Spectator of November 1st, like other letters which have appeared lately in the Press, shows a......
Ght *ptrtator
We suggest that there can be no better Present in Peace ot War than an Annual Subscription to the Spectator. He or she who gives the Spectator as a present will give a weekly......
A Howler.
[To TIM EDITOR or rna "SPOCTAT0a."1 SIR,—The following rendering of a well-known passage in Virgil may amuse you and your readers:— " Mihi parvus julus Sit comes, et lenge......
Poetry
WILD Donegal's a sacred place, A land that dreams apart, alone. Like some shy maiden full of grace, Whose heart's her own. Here the great winds are never laid. And lights and......
A Cat Story.
[TO THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR."] have never been a lover of cats or a believer in their capacity for disinterested affection, but a recent experience has considerably shaken......
Not Ice.—when " Correspondence " Or Articles Are Signed With
the writer's name or initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked" Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agreement with the views therein expressed or......