The Pleasures Of Waste.
[To TIER EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—" Held up " in a Highland village by days of rain, one is specially thankful for the ever-welcome interest and stimulation of the......
[to Vii Editor Op Ter "spectator." J Sir,—the Reply To
your correspondent Mr. Wilkins in your issue of September 5th seemed so obvious and so conclusively in your favour that I hardly knew whether he was to be taken seriously ; but......
The New Patents Act.
[To THE ED/TOR OP TEE " SPECTATOR"'] SIR, —Your correspondent "G." in the Spectator of Septem- ber 5th surely overlooks the most practical points when he claims the above as a "......
Poetry.
HAMBLED ON. And whenever a Hambledon man made a good bit you would hear the deep months of the whole multitude baying away in pure Hampshire, ' Go hard I go hard 1 Tich and......
[to Thr Editor Or Vtr "sprctator."] Sir, —your...
(Spectator, Septem- ber 5th), points out what be is pleased to call a "serious grammatical error" which constantly disfigures your pages. It may be well to refer him to "The......
Church Unity.
[TO THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR:] SIR,—No practical Christian expects, or even perhaps deems altogether desirable, uniformity in religious organisations, but every common-sense......
Notice.—when Articles Or "correspondence" Are Signed With...
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 with the mode of......