Letters To The Editor.
MR. BRIGHT'S PLAN FOR IRELAND. [To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR.") you allow me to suggest a means by which the objection you so forcibly point out to Mr. Bright's plan for the......
Quarrels In A Library.
I F evils are to be measured by duration rather than by intensity, a quarrel with a favourite book is of the worst. There is a pertinacity of malice about a book which is......
" Imperiitm Et Libertas."
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] SIR,—Lord Beaconsfield alone can tell us whether, as you sug- gest, he borrowed his motto, " Imperhun et Libertas," from Lord Clarendon's......
[to The Editor Of The "spectator.']
Sin,—As your only objection to the settlement of the Irish land question proposed by Mr. Bright, is the fear of a pos- sible combination of the Irish farmers to resist the......
Th1 Higher Life In Art.
[To THE EDITOR O' THE "SPECTATOR.'} SIR,—I would not be so ungracious as even to seem to contro- vert your courteous review of "The Higher Life in Art," but there is one passage......
[to The Editor Of The "spectator."]
SIR,—I beg to direct your attention to the following passage from Cicero's Fourth Oration against Catiline, quoted by " A Roman," in a letter to the Morning Post for January......