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NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorP RESIDENT McKINLEY sent his annual Message to Congress on the 6th inst.,—an exceedingly wordy docu- ment filling more than ten columns of type, and conclusive only on one...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTRADE-UNIONISM IN DANGER. T RADE-UNIONISM is in danger, but not from the attacks of the employers. Rather it is in danger from the inability of the members, or perhaps we ought...
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THE AMERICAN PRESIDENT'S MESSAGE.
The SpectatorI T is possible, just possible, though excessively, indeed almost wildly, improbable, that the American President has been quietly and courteously warned by the Continental...
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UNIVERSAL SUFFRAGE. T HE National Liberal Federation at its meeting at
The SpectatorDerby adopted the policy of universal adult suffrage, and of universal adult suffrage for women as well as men. That is a great and striking event, and if it is endorsed and...
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THE " YELLOW PERIL" alter all the conditions of life.
The SpectatorAnd it is equally hard to believe that, if they do feel as all other human beings would feel, they are absolutely powerless to protest against or to avenge such treatment. Can a...
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ITALIAN POLITICS.
The SpectatorI TALIAN affairs have for the most part little attraction for Englishmen. They want the two things which ordinarily make foreign politics interesting,—principles and men. We...
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THEMUNICIPAL PROBLEM IN NEW YORK. T HE Review of Reviews Annual
The Spectatoris apt to be a sensa- tional product, and this year's issue is no exception to the rule ; but while the details are presented to the reader by Mr. Stead in his characteristic...
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tat NEW HEP ! HEP ! T HE novel desire to
The Spectatorpersecute the Jews which is spreading so fast through Europe, and which will produce grave political consequences, is marked by some new and some unexpected features. In the...
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SLEEP.
The SpectatorT HE doctors have been discussing once again the eternal question of sleep, and on Monday the St. James's Gazette gave some remarkable facts as to the ability possessed by cer-...
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CATACLYSMAL CHANGES.
The SpectatorP A.INF1IL experience continued for many years has com- pelled the British public to doubt whether anything will over again raise the price of silver. That is the only way in...
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THE THAMES A SALMON RIVER.
The SpectatorM R. ALGERNON BOURKE, in a letter to the Times of Monday, suggests that an experiment should be made to discover whether the Thames is yet fit for salmon to live in. He would...
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A NEW ROUTE TO THE RIVIERA.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR. " ] Sin,—If any intending traveller to the Riviera wants an entirely new and entirely pleasurable sensation let him try the route from Paris...
CLASSICAL LETTER-WRITERS.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR or TEE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR, — Wonla you allow me a few lines to correct a, wholly unintentional misrepresentation in your kind and interesting notice in the...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE INDIAN FRONTIER WAR. [To vim EDITOR OF TEN "SPECTATOR:] SIR,--In your issue of the Spectator of December 4th, in a paragraph relating to the campaign in the North of ladle,...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorOXFORD. UPoN a hill I stood, and far below Lay the lov'd city in a silver haze : Mine eyes were quick with tears : she lay so fair, So passionless, so sad. 'Twas here our...
THE GOVERNMENT AND THE WEST INDIAN DEMAND.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR Or THE "SPECTATOR. "] SIR,—You ask a question in your footnote in the Spectator of December 4th, and I am simple enough to suppose that you desire an answer. I...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorDEEDS THAT WON THE EMPIRE.* OUR readers may remember that about a year ago we drew attention to Mr. Fitchett's stirring book, Deeds that Won the Empire, a copy of which had been...
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A SURVEY OF HUMAN THOUGHT.*
The SpectatorTHIS first instalment of Mr. Crozier's work on intellectual development, which may be regarded as a sequel to his Civilisation and Progress, is one of the most important and •...
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SHAKESPEARE'S LONDON.*
The SpectatorTHE object of this fascinating little book is to bring vividly before the mind's eye of the reader the actual surroundings amid which the plays of Shakespeare were conceived,...
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PHILIP IL OF SPAIN.*
The SpectatorA NEW book on Spanish history by Major Hume is as welcome to the English as one by M. Morel-Fatio is to the French student of Spain. We can hardly give higher praise than this....
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SECRET SOCIETIES.*
The SpectatorTHERE are only three countries where secret societies possess any real strength—China, Italy, and Russia—and for this very reason, that they are still vigorous, our know- ledge...
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RECENT SHORT STORIES.* THERE is probably no department of literature
The Spectatorin which women compete more formidably with men than that of the • (1.) In the Permanent Way, and other Stories. By Flora Annie Steel. Lon- don : W. Heinemann.—(2.) Human Odds...
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Ecclesiae Londino - Bataute Archivwm. Edidit Joannes Henri- etta Hessels. (Cambridge University
The SpectatorPress.) — Under this title are published four volumes, or to speak more accurately, three volumes, of which one is in two parts, human nature, or possibly the binders, refusing...
CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorMr. Percy Fitzgerald edits Boswell's Life of Samuel Johnson and A Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides (Bliss, Sands, and Co.) — " Boswelrs Life of Johnson,"' so runs the editor's...
The Angler's Diary, by J. E. B. C. (Horace Cox),
The Spectatoris a volume of two hundred odd pages, full of the most particular information as to the fishing to be got in various parts of the world. Great Britain and Ireland naturally...
The Poets and Poetry of the Century : Sacred, Moral,
The Spectatorand Religious Verse. Edited by Alfred H. Miles. (Hutchinson and Co.)—This is the tenth and last volume of a valuable and interesting series. It begins with James Montgomery,...
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A Legend of Camelot : Pictures and Poems. By George
The Spectatordu Maurier. (Bradbury, Agnew, and Co.)—These pictures and poems, with one exception, appeared in Punch. Among them is the tale of the rise and fall of the Jack Sprats, that...
English Minstrelsie. Collated and edited by S. Baring-Gould, M.A. The
The SpectatorAirs arranged by M. Fleetwood Sheppard, M.A. ; F. W. Bussell, Mus.B.; and W. H. Hopkinson. (Jack, Edinburgh.)— We have the seventh volume now before us, with an introductory...
The Shepheard's Calender. (Harper and Brothers.)—Mr. Walter• Crane has adorned
The Spectatorthis new edition of Spenser's poem with twelve drawings illustrative of the months, as well as with decorative borders. True to his theory of book illustration,. Mr. Crane...
The Fairies' Favourite. By T. Mullett Ellis. (Ash Partners.)— Here
The Spectatorwe have the story of the Queen turned into a fairy-tale. We do not profess to know how a child would regard the fancy. It is quite possible that he would resent it as an affront...
Windows : a Book about Stained and Painted Glass. By
The SpectatorLewis F. Day. (B. T. Batsford.)—This is an exhaustive book, dealing both with the technical details as well as the art of designing. The author makes some interesting remarks on...
Photo grams of '97. (Dawbarn and Ward.)—This collection enforces the
The Spectatorconclusion long since come to, that when the photo- grapher poses models and makes a so-called picture the results are invariably terrible, though simple portraits are often...
Church Reform in Spain and Portugal. By H. E. Noyes,
The SpectatorD.D. (Cassell and Co.)—This volume, to which the late Primate of Ireland supplied a preface, gives " A Short History of the Re- formed Episcopal Churches of Spain and Portugal,...
The Portfolio : the Earlier Work of Titian. By Claude
The SpectatorPhillips. (Seeley and Co.)—This is a moat excellent piece of work. Mr. Phillips has avoided the fault of so many recent biographers of the great Italian painters,—the fault of...
The Art of Painting in the Queen's Reign. By A.
The SpectatorG. Temple. (Chapman and Hall.)—The aim of the author has been to give not only a general view, but a particular account, of the prominent painters and schools of painting in...
The Ceramics of Swansea and Nantgarw. By W. Turner. (Bemrose
The Spectatorand Sons.)—The coloured illustrations which abound in this volume certainly prove how low the art of design can sink, in spite of infinite and misapplied labour. To scatter a...
MAGAZINES AND SERIAL PUBLICATIONS.—We have received the following for December
The Spectator:—The Century, Scribner's Magazine,. St. Nicholas, the New Review, Macmillan's Magazine, the Review of Reviews, Blackwood's Magazine, the Cornhill Magazine, the Expository...
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Messrs. De La Rue send us their usual issue of
The SpectatorPocket-books and Diaries. They are always most excellent, not only in appearance, but judged from the standpoint of utility. Even the smaller Diaries and Almanacks are miniature...
CHRISTMAS NIIMBERS. — ArChifecttirdi Review Art Annual, Girls' Own Paper, Boys' Own
The SpectatorPaper, Quiver Annual, Good Words, Sunday Magazine, Phil May's Annual, Pearson's Magazine, Lady's Realm, Woman, Queen Almanack, the Photogram, Black and White, Chatterbox,...
PUBLICATIONS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorAokworth Gm. Beokside Lights, or Svo (0. H. Kelly) 3/6 Adye (J.). Indian Frontier Policy, Svo (Smith & Elder) 316 Allay (J. B.), The Trial of Lord Cochrane, Svo (Smith & Elder)...
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The SPECTATOR is on Sale regularly at MESSRS. DAMRELL AND
The SpectatorUPHAM'S, 283 Washington Street, Boston, Mass., U.S.A.; THE INTERNATIONAL NEWS COMPANY, 83 and 85 Duane Street, New York, U.S.A.; MESSRS. BRENTANO'S, Union Square, New York,...