[to The Editor Of The " Spectitor."1
Six,—The following are the real facts about the points Mr.. Taylor raises in his second letter :- 1. It was notorious at Nottingham that Mr. Taylor dis- believed in the......
Books.
THE LIFE OF LORD GODOLPHIN.• GODOLPHIN has always remained little more than a name in history, although for eight stirring years he was the chief adviser of the Crown. Nor is......
Students' Blunders.
[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. "] Sin,—Of students' blunders, few surely can equal in ingenuity• the following answer to a question in a French examination paper :—Q. " Give......
Sun-dial Inscriptions.
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."] SIE,—I have been much interested by the letters in the Spectator of July 6th and 13th, relating to " The Book of . Sun-Dials," by my late......
Lord Coleridge On Keble. [to The Editor Of The "
SPECTATOR.'] Sin,—Lord Coleridge has obliged us, and no one can be more sincerely grateful to him than I am, with a paper on Mr. Matthew Arnold in the New Review, a paper, as it......
[to The Editor Of The "spectator. "] Do Not Hope To
convert Dr. Bell Taylor, and those who think with him, from the view that M. Pasteur's treatment is not only inadequate but harmful ; but a case such as I will relate as simply......
Sunday Excursion Trains.
[To Tun EDITOR OP " SPECTATOR. " ] Sin,-11 great effort is to be made on Wednesday next to stop railway traffic on Sundays between London and Brighton. The effort is nominally......