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The Emperor's telegram has, it is hardly necessary to say,
The Spectatorraised a tempest of feeling throughout Great Britain. It is felt that it assails our whole position in South Africa, and that if the idea it expresses is acted on, say, by the...
The Transvaal drama divides itself naturally into three scenes,—the action
The Spectatorof the " tritlanders," or immigrants, as we prefer to call them, that of Dr. Jameson, and that of the Boers. The immigrants, it is now clear, organised an insur- rection in the...
Dr. Jameson during this period had been fighting hard. He
The Spectatorleft Mafeking on December 29th with a little over five hundred troopers and six Maxim-guns, and marching with Extraordinary rapidity, arrived at Krngersdorp, some fifteen miles...
The attitude of the Continental Powers is not clear. The
The SpectatorRussian Press, as usual, is hostile, but the Russian Govern- ment is reserved. The German Emperor is said to have approached the Czar ; but St. Petersburg has its French...
The latest intelligence (Friday) is understood to indicate that the
The SpectatorGermans, including their Emperor, are surprised at the depth of feeling manifested in Great Britain, and at the feebleness of the response from the Continent to the war cry...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorA NOTHER surprise ; and the most surprising and irri- tating of all. The repeated warnings of the Times' correspondent at Berlin as to the ill-feeling entertained in Germany...
NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS.
The SpectatorWith the " Sneersvon" of Saturday, January 25th, will be issued, gratis, a SPECIAL LITERARY SUPPLEMENT, the outside pages of which will be devoted to Advertisements. To secure...
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The Boers come well out of this story. Their leaders
The Spectatorwere evidently well informed ; they swarmed to Pretoria at the first signal, and they fought in the way they have always found successful. That is, like the Americans at...
The invasion of the Transvaal appears, temporarily, to have paralysed
The SpectatorMr. Cecil Rhodes. The suspicion that he knew of the plot, whether well or ill founded, is, of course, very strong ; and as soon as the Home Government tele- graphed its disgust...
The special correspondents in America all describe the situation there
The Spectatoras still serious, the representative of the Times in particular affirming that " Jingoism is encamped in the White House." They all, however, report that the American public...
On Wednesday the Government gave orders for the mobilisation of
The Spectatora flying squadron, i.e., a force ready to act anywhere should emergency arise. The actual number of ships got ready was not large, but the powerful character of the vessels...
While Mr John Redmond tas again this week struck the
The Spectatornote that England's difficulty is lreland'a opportunity, and while an Irish audience tas been cheering the Boers not for their self-restraint and prudence, but for their...
Sir Edward Clarke has been making speeches to his con-
The Spectatorstituents at Plymouth, in which he has declared himself favourable to some sort of mediation or arbitration as regards the boundary line between Venezuela and British Guiana,...
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The Board of Trade returns for 1895 have been published
The Spectatordaring the past week, and show that owing to the revival of trade in the second half of the year, the twelvemonth must on the whole be counted a prosperous one. Our exports have...
Sir Julian Goldamid, M.P. for South St. Pancras, and perhaps
The Spectatorthe ablest of the occasional Chairmen of Committees in the House of Commons, died on Tuesday at the comparatively early age of fifty-seven, when he had just been elected Vice-...
The deputation that waited upon the Lunacy Commission on Thursday,
The Spectatorto press the point that Dr. Blandford's certi- ficate of lunacy in Miss Lanchester's case was not justifiable, did not gain mach by their interview. It was, indeed, frankly...
On Monday Dr. Donaldson Smith—an American traveller —read a paper
The Spectatorbefore the Geographical Society on his journey south through Somaliland to Lakes Rudolf and Stephanie and thence to the Tana River. Many interesting facts emerged from the...
The reports on the recruiting for the Army during 1895
The Spectatorare on the whole very satisfactory. About 35,000 of the 50,000 men who presented themselves were accepted. Of the remaining, nearly 15,000 were rejected by the medical officers....
Mr. J. P. Wallis, a thoroughly learned constitutional Lawyer, writes
The Spectatorto yesterday's Times to point out that the utmost penalty to which Dr. Jameson is liable under British law, is that incurred under the Foreign Enlistment Act of 1870 (33 and 34...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE GERMAN EMPEROR'S POLICY. T HE gravest difficulty of the hour is to discover accurately what the German Emperor really means. That he is exceedingly unfriendly to Great...
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THE EXPLOSION IN THE TRANSVAAL. T HE history of the explosion
The Spectatorin the Transvaal is becoming, except as to one incident, to be hereafter mentioned, fairly clear. The British immigrants in Johannesburg, locally known as the Uitlanders, moved...
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THE VENEZUELAN QUARREL. P ROBABLY the first object in every Englishman's
The Spectatormind since he heard of the danger of war with the United States, has been how to avoid it without showing so much of what might seem to the Americans to be fear of them, as...
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A PEACEFUL PROSPECT.
The SpectatorI RELAND seems eternally destined to be on the other side,—to be in a condition contrary to the rest of the world. When things elsewhere are peaceful, Ireland is full of...
SELF-COMPENSATING PERILS.
The SpectatorI S the danger greater or less than it was when Mr. Cleve- land first launched his thunderbolt a month ago ? We should say that it was distinctly less, and that for the very...
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THE NEW FORM OF INTERNATIONAL GREED.
The SpectatorO NE of the worst and most dangerous features in the international relations of the present day, is the development of a new kind of greed. Greed, it must be admitted, has...
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TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF OLD CATHOLICISM. T WENTY-FIVE years ago the Old
The SpectatorCatholic movement on the Continent was exciting a good deal of interest in England. It seemed to have great possibilities before it. They were only possibilities indeed, and...
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THE CASES OF PREDICTED CONSCRIPT DRAWINGS.
The SpectatorA MONG the most interesting cases in the December volume of the Proceedings of the Society far Psychical Research, are the groups of narratives in which, according to Mr....
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A THE ETHICAL IDEA OF THE JAPANESE. JAPANESE gentleman, named Tokiwo
The SpectatorYokoi, who is, we believe, pastor of a Christian church in Tokio, but is now studying at Yale College, TJ.S.A., has contributed to a quarterly review called the International...
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THE RED CLIFFS OF DEVON.
The SpectatorT HE widest bay on the English coast is that which stretches from Portland Bill to the Start. This embraces an inner bay, from Beer Head to Otterton Point, seldom seen from the...
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"ECONOMICS AND SOCIALISM."
The Spectator[To TER EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR." l you permit me to offer a remark or two toncbing the notice of my " Economics and Socialism," in the Spectator of January 4th ? The statement...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The SpectatorTHE EXPLOSION IN THE TRANSVAAL. [To THI EDITOR OP TIM " Sr8CTATOR.".1 fin,—History is making itself so rapidly just now that it is somewhat perilous work to forecast the...
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MR. MATTHEW ARNOLD AND THE NEW POET- LAUREATE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEM SPZCIA.TOFL."1 SIR, — In your note on Mr. Austin's appointment to the Laureateship you say, " We happen to know that Matthew Arnold greatly admired one of...
POETRY.
The SpectatorTO AMERICA. A MESSAGE FROM THE MAID. [roan of Are before engaging the English, summoned them to Peace and to a joint Crusade.] O FOR the Maiden's hail beyond the fosse At...
ART.
The SpectatorSPANISH ART AT THE NEW GALLERY.—IL REALISM AND CARICATURE. A "VERY youthful, an untrained, or a matured bad taste, will find pleasure in the work of Vaamonde, R. de Madrazo,...
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BOOKS•
The SpectatorTHE GERMAN EMPEROR WILLIAM IL* TnrNcuLo's reflection that "misery acquaints a man with- strange bedfellows," should be extended so as to include greatness. For here is our...
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GA.LT'S NOVELS OF SCOTTISH LIFE.* " BaLzac fat un homme
The Spectatord'affaires et un homme d'affaires endette." That is how Taine begins his essay on Balzac, with a sentence which ought to apply, above all men in the world, to Scott ; bat, look...
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BIBLIOMANIA.t
The SpectatorTHE author of The Book-Hunter in London has written a very instructive and sometimes entertaining account of a sport with which he seems to be thoroughly conversant ; it is...
IDEAL FRANCE.*
The SpectatorTHERE is perhaps no truer measure of human genius than the strength of the influence which it leaves behind in those who have been linked with it in the closest intimacy. It...
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SOCIALTSII ABROAD AND AT HOME.*
The SpectatorPROFESSOR NITTI'S Catholic Socialism, as translated by the late Miss Mary Mackintosh—amid the weakness and suffering of her last illness—is a book of great interest and value....
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SIR H. MAXWELL'S "POST MERIDIANA."•
The SpectatorSin HERBHRT MAXWELL devotes one of these dozen papers to the consideration of the subject of " bores," and yet the difficulty of not boring people is one which is escaped by...
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CURRENT LITERATURE.
The SpectatorThe attempt which Mr. Fisher Unwin makes in Cosmopolis to establish an international review, is undoubtedly a daring one, but it is also one that can only be justified by...
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' The Entr'acte Annual for 1896 is, as in previous
The Spectatoryears, compiled by Mr. W H. Combes, and illustrated by Mr. Alfred Bryan. This fact is in itself a guarantee of the letterpress being lively and varied, and the illustrations...
The Reliquary and Illustrated Archmologist. Edited by J. Romilly Allen.
The Spectator(Bemrose and Sons.)—This is the first volume of a new series of this quarterly We may quote, as giving a summary of the objects to which it is directed, the following des-...