28 SEPTEMBER 1901, page 16

The Dictionary Of National Biography.

[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—While thanking you for your sympathetic notice of the first two volumes of the supplement to the "Dictionary of National Biography" in......

The Czar's Objects.

rTO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR.1 Sra,—In your issue of September 21st, p. 380, you say : "The banishment of all suspected Anarchists to an island in the ocean" is a project......

Tennyson's "in Memoriam."

[To THE EDITOH OF TIIE "SPECTATOlt."] SIE,—May' I be allowed to say that the point on which I expressed a difference of opinion from Professor Bradley (Spectator, September 7th)......

[to Tee Editor Or The "spectator.") Sin,—may I Make Another

suggestion as to what may pCP.. sibly have been in Tennyson's mind wlsen he wrote the first lines of the elegy beginning— ":My love has talked with rocks and trees; He finds on......

A Correction.

. [TO THE EDITOlt OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Szn,—Mr. Edward Eggleston may be "shaky in his classics, as you state in the notice of his "Transit of CiVilizano n contained in your......

The Spectre Of The Brocken.

ITO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:1 Sin,—If your correspondent (the Rev. Henry Latham, Spectator, September 21st) will go out on his lawn some bright dewy morning when the sun is......

• [to Thu Editor Of The "speci.a.tor., Sir, — In Your Issue

of September 21st your correspondents describe two kinds of "the natural phenomenon known as the Spectre of the Brocken." In the description quoted from the Abbe Gorreb the......

"a Fit Of Happiness."

[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sia,—In your article entitled "A Fit of Happiness" in the Spectator of September 21st you say :—" Experience would seem to suggest that in......