16 FEBRUARY 1884, page 2

Sir Charles Dilke Made A Powerful Speech In Reply, In

which• ' he maintained that but for the mistaken policy of Cherif& Ministry in the Soudan, the idea of the British Government in entering Egypt might have been fulfilled. An......

On Thursday, Sir W. Lawson Brought Forward His Amend- Ment

which makes it the duty of the Government to leave Egypt as quickly as may be ; but the brunt of the contest fell to Mr. Forster. and Sir Charles Dilke. Mr. Forster, though......

The Lord Chief Justice And Mr. Justice Stephen Delivered...

Saturday the unanimous judgment of the Queen's Bench Division of the High Court of Justice in the action " Bradlaugh v. Gosset," in which Mr. Bradlaugh brought an action against......

We Regret To Notice The Death, On Monday Morning, Of

Mr. T. Chenery, the Editor of the Times, and one of the most learned Orientalists in England. He was not, we think, quite in his place as a journalist, though he had wide......

Lord Granville's Reply Was In Substance The Same As The

replies given in the House of Commons, and mentioned below, but he explained some details of great interest. He showed that the Government had from the first been opposed to the......

In The Commons, Sir Stafford Northcote Opened The Debate In

a speech singularly wanting in fire. He devoted the first half of it to proving that as the British Government was supreme in Egypt, they ought either to have forbidden General......

Mr. Gladstone Rose After Sir S. Northcote, And Replied In

a speech which does not satisfy us as to the policy pursued in Cairo, but which was of unusual brilliancy, deeply impressed the House, and, as far as the Soudan is concerned,......