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In sending his letter to the Press Sir Frederick Maurice,
The Spectatorwho was recently Director of Military Operations—a very high position in which he had access to every source of information—has taken a gravely heroic course. In spite of his...
On Tuesday in the House of Commons Mr. Boner Law,
The Spectatoranswering a question by Mr. Asquith—the Prime Minister, by the way, was absent on an occasion on which there was little excuse for his absence—announced that the question of...
Sir Edward Carson asked whether the proceedings before the Judges
The Spectatorwould be public, and whether Cabinet Ministers and ex- Cabinet Ministers would be examined. Mr. Bonar Law thought the inquiry must necessarily be held in private. Sir Edward...
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
The SpectatorT HE sensation caused by the publication of the letter from Sir Frederick Maurice in the papers of Tuesday, charging the Prime Minister and Mr. Bonar Law with untruthfulness,...
The question as to the reference to the Versailles War
The SpectatorCouncil, and as to the number of white troops in Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Palestine, would seem to be capable of simple proof or disproof, but the words in which the Prime...
Coming to (3), General Maurice denies the truth of the
The Spectatorfollowing words used by the Prime Minister :— "In Mesopotamia there is only one white division at all, in Egypt and in Palestine there are only three white divisions, the rest...
THE PAPER SHORTAGE.
The SpectatorTO OUR READERS.—The shortage of paper has obliged us to adopt the policy, already adopted by many of our contemporaries, of refusing to allow the " Spectator " to be "on sale or...
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General Allenby's second - advance across the Jordan into - Gilead; which be g an
The Spectatoron Tuesday week, ended in a retirement last Saturday. The Audtrallati cat-airy captured Es Raft on the plateau on Wednesday week, but a motinted. bri g ade watchin g the Jordan...
The Adinitalty have announced the - eirtablishinent of 'a- freed' prohibited
The Spectatorarea in the North Sea, and this area is-the most • gigantic minefield which the imagination has ever conceived:possible. Its base runs between Norway and Scotland, and the...
The point We - with. to insist upon is that there - ought
The Spectatorto be an inquiry, aa - &Aida' froin'a debate, add' Moreover an inquiry Which satisfies the House of Commons. It is net enou g h for the Govern- ment to say that, as the proposal...
The Admiralty announced on Thursday that the British merchant shipping-completed
The Spectatorin April amounted to 111 ; 633 tons, as compared with 161,674 tons in March. Lord Pirrie explained at-the same time that the disappointing reduction was due ; first, to the fact...
On Tuesday night it was arranged that Mr. Asquith should
The Spectatormove on Thursday that a Select Committee of the House should be appointed to inquire into the 'Maurice letter. As we write on 'Thursday morning iOe afto•at tbe iskttantagebf...
If General Maurice should be shown by a proper inquiry
The Spectatorto' have weighed hiswords insufficiently ; he can expect no mercy. For that would prove that he took the rashest of all courses without verifying his facts. If, on the other...
If the /Ionise of Comnions nllotild yet have an opportunity
The Spectatorto discuss precedents for in q uiriess-though we !mist say that we know of no precedent for such an accusation of untruth- fulness as General Maurice' has brought against the...
In the Hougeof Commons 'on Wednesday Mr. °Wynne aaked whit
The SpectatoractiOn th'e' Government proposed to take in the case of Captain Redmond, the Membet for Waterford, who .was present at -the meeting . of the Irish 'Parliamentary - Party held in...
On the Western Front there has been a lull ghee'
The Spectatorthe Eiii6tny suffered his severe defeat south of Ypres on April 29th.. The Germans opened a • heaary' bortsbardnie:nt on the seine -teeter,' from Locre. to Ypres, on - Sistaiday...
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On Friday week Lord Robert Cecil talked to the American
The Spectatorcorrespondents about Germany's coming "peace offensive," the expected sequel to the failure of "the Kaiser's battle." The peace move might begin in full strength within two...
The controversy between Germany and Holland regarding the transport of
The Spectatorsand, gravel, and broken stone has been settled by Holland giving in, influenced, no doubt, by the thinly veiled threats of recent weeks. The transport of these materials, so...
Mr. Lloyd George, after a visit to the front last
The Spectatorweek, told a journalist that he had found the Generals and their officers and men all very confident of victory. "I met no Pacifists and no pessimists among them. They could not...
It is useless to say that the brewers can always
The Spectatorbe taxed more heavily, because if a brewer be taxed more heavily, he can make his profits only by corrupting the nation—by forcing more and more drink upon the people. This...
In moving the second reading of the Bill imposing increased
The Spectatorpostal charges, Mr. Illingworth intimated on Monday that letters to soldiers serving abroad would still be carried at the present rate. Colonel Collins urged that this privilege...
It was announced on Monday that Lord French had been
The Spectatorappointed Lord-Lieutenant of Ireland, in place of Lord Wimborne, and that Mr. Edward Shortt had succeeded Sir H. E. Duke as Chief Secretary. Lord French as an Irishman and a...
We sincerely hope that the matter will not again be
The Spectatorallowed to drop. We have demanded State Purchase during the war because w e regard it as the first step to Prohibition for war purples. We are not teetotalers, and have never...
Germany, having used the " self-determination " of the Ukraine
The Spectatoras a means of dissolving Russia into helpless fragments, has now overturned the Ukraine Government, set up a dictatorship under General Skoropadski as Hetman, and proclaimed...
The State Purchase of the Drink Trade has been brought
The Spectatoragain into the field of practical politics by the Reports of the English, Scottish, and Irish Committees. All the Committees are agreed that there is no point of financial...
The Papal organ, the Osservatore Romano, formally denied last week
The Spectatorthat the Papal Nuncio at Vienna had taken action against the Prince-Bishop of Laibach for associating himself with the Southern Slav agitation. The Bishop, who is the head of...
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TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorTHE HISTORY OF MR. LLOYD GEORGE'S FIRST AND LAST (?) ADMINISTRATION.-11. nth AMATEUR STRATEGIST AND THE SOLDIERS. T IIE main point to'retneinber in Mr. Lloyd George's rela-...
IFI THE PRIME MINIST1R 1 S PLEDOE: • ERE is Mr. Lloyd George's
The Spectatorpledge to the people' of North-East Ulster, made on March 7th, 1917 " In the north-eastern portion of . Ireland you have 8.4i0pulation as hostile to Irish rule as the rest of...
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THE SITUATION ON THE WESTERN FRONT IN THS LIGHT OF
The SpectatorTHE PARIS SPEECH. We have quoted enough from the Paris speech to show the mind of the sophist in strategy. We have only to look to the Western Front to see its tragical...
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THE SOLDIER'S DUTY.
The SpectatorO NE aspect of the intense excitement which has been caused by General Maurice's letter is the perplexity . of the public as to the right, or otherwise, of a soldier to take...
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ITALY AND THE YUGO-SLAVS. T HE anxieties of Austria with regard
The Spectatorto her subject races have been immensey increased within the last few weeks by the drawing together of Italy and the Yugo-Slays. Until the present year the racial antipathies...
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" V.N.F." AND " S.P.E.S."
The Spectatorrl 1HE initials" V.N.1 1 '." stand for " Vereeniging Nederlandsch Fabrikaat " (Society for Dutch Manufacture), and by the authorization of this Society are placed upon goods of...
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1HE EFFORT TO ' LOSE ATTENTION.
The SpectatorM OST men's experience of the toil of life begins with the effort to pay attention. Do we not remember in our earliest schooldays a weary struggle to keep the mind from...
LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectator[Letters of the length of one of our leading paragraphs arc often more read, and therefore more effective, than those which fill treble the space.] IRELAND AND OON SCRIPTION....
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ULSTER AND HOME RULE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR.") SIL—When, full of patriotism, the Ulstermen volunteered to fight for Britain, they did so under a direct pledge as to Home Rule. When they...
THE DANGER OF UNCONTROLLED ZIONISM.
The SpectatorITO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."] Sin,—Has it occurred to Mr. Brodrick that the question whether a certain group of people is or is not a nation can be decided only by that...
[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorFIR,—May I be permitted to congratulate you upon the vigour and pertinacity with which you continue in your attempts to make the nation realize the danger to our whole Empire...
THE CHURCH AND THE PUBLIC WELFARE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEE" SPECTATOR."] Sin,—There is much talk just now about Church Reform of one kind and another. It seems to me that if every Christian observed the two...
REFORM OF THE SECOND CHAMBER.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE" SPECTATOR.") SIR,—With regard to the question of the reform of the Second Chamber, may I suggest that the function of a Second Chamber would properly be...
THE PRIME MINISTER'S PLEDGE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF TEE" SPECTATOR."] SIR,—" It is no use mincing words."—(The Prime Minister, on Ireland.) "There is no use in mincing words," I heard a statesman cry,— I do not...
MR. LLOYD GEORGE'S ADMINISTRATION.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTriOR."] suppose you will not accept any remonstrance. I am a regular reader of the Nation. There is always a market for malevolence, and the spleen...
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FARM TENANCIES.
The Spectator(To THE Ernroa OF THE " SPECTATOR.") SI.R., — If your correspondent Mr. C. F. Ryder will inquire of his local surveyor of taxes, or even of the Clerk to the Income Tax...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:]
The SpectatorBrodrick has done well to explain his objections to Zionism. He now states that his whole contention is (a) that the Jews are not a nation but a religious body, and (b) that...
DOGS FACED WITH FAMINE.
The Spectator[To THE EDITOR OF THE" SPECTATOR."] Sin,—The Spectator has ever shown a generous interest in dogs. and it seems natural to address to you some "Thoughts on the Cause of the...
THE ABOLITION OF THE POOR LAW.
The Spectator[To THZ EDITOR OF THE SPECTATOH."1 SIM, — It may not he widely known that at the annual meeting of the Association of Poor Law Unions in England and Waled, held Iii London hi...
THE SUNKEN ROADS OF THE SOMME.
The Spectator[TO THE EDITOR or THE " SFEOTATOR."] Soo—The sunken roads of the Somme (which are matched in all lands of similar soil conditions which have been tilled for many years) are...
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POETRY.
The SpectatorTHE PEACE OF SPRING. BEAUTIFUL on the mountains are the feet of Spring, which oometh Yearly the graves of last year's flowers to deck with new; Yearly the migrant swallow back...
HOPE.
The SpectatorHow long, we ask, how long ? And there is none to say. Cold, cold is all the day, And sorrowful and dark ; With every dawn fresh troubles throng, And joy has passed away. But...
ART.
The SpectatorTHE ACADEMY. Iv is inevitable that people who regard Art seriously, and to whom it is a very important part of their inner life, should in these days strain their eyes to see...
NOTICE.-1When "Correspondence" or Articles are signed with the writer's name
The Spectatoror initials, or with a pseudonym, or are marked " Communicated," the Editor must not necessarily be held to be in agree- ment with the views therein expressed or with the mode...
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WITH THE SCOTTISH NURSES IN RUMANIA.*
The Spectator• Will tin Scottish Series in Eumania. By Yvonne IltzBoy. London: Joint Murray. L5s. net.j We have reason to be proud of the part that our women have played in the war. Like our...
BOOKS.
The SpectatorJOSEPH CHOATE.* Ma. STRONG does not profess to have written a complete or, on the domestic and social side, an authorized biography of Mr. Choate, but within the limits laid...
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A CENTURY OF DIPLOMACY.*
The SpectatorYvzs GUYOT has been moved by "the resurrection of an old eaytb "—the League of Nations—to examine afresh the history of European relations since the Tsar Alexander I. thought to...
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FICTION.
The SpectatorIMPOSSIBLE PEOPLE.* THE title of Mrs. Wemyss's story is deliberately ironical. Joanna Templar and her husband John were " impossible " in the cant sense attached to the word by...
DEMOCRACY AND A CITIZEN ARMY.t IT was significant that one
The Spectatorof the first acts of the first Revolutionary Assembly after the deposition of Louis Capet was the inauguration • Under One Roof. By Mary Cholmondeky. London : John Murray. [45....
UNDER ONE a ROOF.*
The SpectatorMiss CHOLMONDELEY'S new book is a collection of studies of members of her own family—her father, her mother, her sister Hester, and the old nurse and friend known as "Ninny."...
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The Happy Hospital. By Corporal Ward Muir. (Simpkin, Marshall, and
The SpectatorCo. Is. 6d. net.)—Many of our readers who remember Mr. Ward Muir's lively sketches of the military hospital in which he has served almost since the outbreak of war will be glad...
Select Constitutional Documents illustrating South African History, 1795-1910. Edited by
The SpectatorG. W. Eybers. (Routledge. 21s. net.)— This well-edited collection of documents will be of great value to students of the complex history of South Africa. Some of the papers...
The English Catalogue of Books for 1917. (Publishers' Circular. 8s.
The Spectator6d.)—This indispensable record of the year's books appears in its usual form- and with its accustotned promptitude. The prefa- tory analysis shows that the output for 1917 was...
The Poetical Works of Gray and Collins. Edited by Austin
The SpectatorLane Poole and Christopher Stone. (Oxford University Press. 2s. 6d. net.)—This scholarly edition, printed in good clear type, contains of Gray not only the Odes and the Elegy,...
King George and the Royal Family. By Edward Legge. (Grant
The SpectatorRichards. 30s. net. )—Mr. Legge seems to have kept a large common- place book for facts and fancies regarding the King and the Royal Family, and to have printed it in these two...
SOME BOOKS OF THE WEEK.
The Spectator[Notice in this column does not necessarily preclude subsequent review." The third number of Lord Charnwood's excellent quarterly, Recalled to Life (John Bale, Sons, and...
'The Freshwater Fish Committee of the Board of Agriculture and
The SpectatorFisheries has issued a most instructive little pamphlet on The Capture of Eels, which may be had free of charge by any one who writes for it. The Committee is indeed so anxious...
Edible Oils and Fats. By Cl, Ainsworth Mitchell. (Longmans and
The SpectatorCo. Os. 6d. net.)--This useitd teohnical handbook, dealing with a subject of great importance, includes an instructive chapter on margarine. The French chemist Mege-Mouries, who...
The Geographical Journal for May contains Sir Aston Webb's interesting
The Spectatorpaper on the London Society's proposals for the improve- ment of the capital, including new main roads, new parks, the embankment of the south side of the river from Lambeth to...
The Cambridge University Presta has published an interesting volume of
The SpectatorSelections from the Poems of William Worthworth, edited by Mr. A. Hamilton Thompson (2s. 6c1. net), including some of the finest of the shorter poems and select passages from...
Grammar crud Vocabulary of the Samoan Language. By H. Neffgen.
The Spectator(Kegan Paul. 5s. net.)—Some devout Stevensonians Will be glad tohnow of this practical little guide to the Samoan tongue, translated from the German by Mr. Arnold B. Stook. It...
READABLE NOVELS.—Thon—Dcuth—Arnateure. By MIS._ John Swift Joly. (John Long. 2s.
The Spectator6d.)—An account of how a set of amateur nurses start a hospital in France, and are so ably led by their trained matron that, Instead of coming to grief as the follies of the...
A dozen of Mr. Leonard Merrick's fellow-authors art contributing introductions
The Spectatorto a new edition of twelve of his novels. The first volume, Conrad in Quest of his Youth (Hodder and Stoughton, Os. net), has an attractive and enthusiastic Prefsee by Sir J. M....
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Lieutenant .Francie Dodd's spirited portraits of Admirals of the British
The SpectatorNavy, already published in quarto form, have now been reproduced on picture-postcards, which should be very popular.
Messrs. Stanford's new map of The War Zone in Europe
The Spectatorin 1918 (3s. (id.), on a scale of one hundred and nine miles to an inch, is well printed, and will be convenient for reference. The belligerent and neutral countries are...