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The consequence of these horrors has, of course, been a
The Spectatortotal destruction of confidence in the Government, and a recru- descence of the fiercest revolutionary spirit. The people doubt whether , the Duma will meet, or when met will...
The revolution has as yet succeeded in only one province,
The SpectatorFinland. There the entire population joined in the " strike " ; the Russian agents of despotism were all dismissed; the gendarmes were disarmed, and a civic guard provided for...
rioting, during which the police were compelled to fire, with
The Spectatorthe result of a hundred casualties among the rioters. Every- where in the Cisleithan dominion the dispute stirs up the most bitter animosities of race, the Germans being deter-...
T HE reactionaries of Russia are struggling fiercely against their downfall.
The SpectatorTheir plan is to let loose the lowest populace of the cities upon the "intelligents " and the Jews, prohibiting the soldiers on one pretext or another from interference, and...
Count Witte began by attempting to include in his Cabinet
The Spectatorrepresentatives of the various political parties, but the result has been a complete failure. Prince Eugene Troubetzkoi, the only member of the Constitutionalists who accepted...
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The Prince and Princess of Wales landed in Bombay on
The Spectatorthe King's birthday, and met with a very cordial reception. Replying to a Municipal Address, the Prince observed that he inherited both from his father and Queen Victoria a love...
The New York election has not overthrown Tammany, but it
The Spectatorhas given a shock to its power. The great city has re-elected Mr. McClellan, who is the nominee of the corrupt organisa- tion, but his majority has been greatly reduced, and he...
The most trenchant comment on Mr. Chamberlain's speech which has
The Spectatoryet appeared is that of Lord Hugh Cecil in Tuesday's Times. After comparing Mr. Chamberlain's method of healing the discords of the Unionist party with Pride's Purge, Lord Hugh...
The European Powers are slowly creeping towards the coercion of
The Spectatorthe Sultan. Their union has not been broken yet, and it is stated that within a fortnight fifteen men-of-war will be assembled off the coast of the Levant with orders to seize...
Mr. Asquith, whose inhuman use of statistics perturbed Mr. Chamberlain
The Spectatorso seriously last week, returned remorse.. lessly to the charge on Tuesday at Basingstoke. Free- traders, he observed, had never accepted the view that the export trade was the...
The National Memorial to Mr. Gladstone--.-erected on a site provided
The Spectatorby the London County Council at the eastern junction of Aldwych with the Strand—was unveiled on Saturday last by Mi., John Morley. Lord Peel, who presided, after alluding to his...
On Friday evening last week Mr. Chamberlain addressed a great
The Spectatormeeting of his constituents in Birmingham. With the most significant part of his speech—his attack upon Lord Londonderry and his demand for an early Dissolution—we have dealt at...
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Mr. Lyttelton's speech at Leamington on the Chinese labour question,
The Spectatorsummarised in our last issue, has been hailed by all the Ministerial organs as a triumphant vindication of the Government policy. One of his great points was that the total...
Coming to the Alliance itself, Lord Lansdowne heartily eulogised the
The Spectatorsincerity and straightforwardness of Japanese diplomacy. " Whether in the field of diplomacy or war, we have gained an ally at whose side we may be proud to find ourselves." The...
The annual Guildhall Banquet took place on Thursday evening. Speeches
The Spectatorwere delivered by the Prime Minister, Lord Cawdor, Mr. Arnold-Forster, Lord Lansdowne, and the American Ambassador. In replying to the toast of "His Majesty's Ministers," Mr....
Lord Cromer contributed to Thursday's Times a very interesting letter
The Spectatoron a point raised in Lord Edmond Fitz. maurice's recent Life of Lord Granville. In that work it was stated that Gordon originally was sent to the Soudan with a purely advisory...
Lord Lansdowne was entertained by the Junior Constitu- tional Club
The Spectatoron Monday night at a banquet given in his honour on the completion of the Anglo-Japanese Alliance. In reply- ing to the toast of the evening, Lord Lansdowne, with characteristic...
The Birthday Honour list issued on Thursday proved more than
The Spectatorusually uninteresting. A peerage has been conferred on Mr. Alexander Forbes-Leith, who showed great enterprise and liberality in raising and equipping Volunteers in Scotland...
The results of the election of the new Lord Rectors
The Spectatorof Edinburgh and Glasgow Universities last Saturday show the strength of the reaction against the present Government and all associated with it. At Edinburgh Mr. Haldane beat...
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MR. BALFOTJR AND P 11:111 UNEMPLOYED.
The SpectatorN O sadder or more saddening deputation has ever waited on a Prime Minister than that which Mr. Balfour received on Monday. When women and children come on the stage we are...
THE ANARCHY IN RUSSIA. TOPICS OF THE DAY.
The SpectatorT HE anarchy of opinion which prevails among the governing groups of Russia, combined, as we repeat once more—for it is the ultimate secret of the situation— with their...
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THE CONGO REPORT. and that any abuses which might have
The Spectatorexisted years ago were being, or had been, firmly repressed. If not openly by the Congolese authorities themselves, yet by news- papers and persons acting under their...
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THE BEGINNING OF THE END.
The Spectatortogether Tariff Reformer and hesitating Free-trader in an unnatural alliance is getting very frayed and thin. The fates sometimes select unexpected agents, and in this case they...
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THE GLADSTONE MEMORIAL W E agree with the Duke of Devonshire
The Spectatorthat the public memory of Mr. Gladstone, of his character We were unable to follow Yr. Gladstone in the later years of his life, for we thought, and still think, that his first...
POPE'S " LADY SUFFOLK."
The SpectatorA LATELY published " Report on the Manuscripts of the Marquess of Lothian Preserved at Blickling Hall, Norfolk," throws a new ray of light on the character of the celebrated...
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T HE child's fairy-tale is, we think, safe for the present.
The SpectatorDuring the past week its existence has been gravely imperilled. It appears that at a Wiltshire village with the attractive name of Maiden Bradley (surely there, if anywhere,...
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I N the quiet woods and all among the yellowing hedge-
The Spectatorrows, in the glade and under the ancient tree standing alone in the pasture, wherever a solemn oak spreads its crooked limbs the ground beneath is thickly bestrewn with acorns....
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Sts,—Some time ago you were good enough to publish a
The Spectatorletter from me in which I endeavoured to warn the friends of the Auxiliary Forces against a too-ready subscription to the view that Mr. Arnold-Forster had abandoned any part of...
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LETTERS TO THE EDITOR.
The Spectatorsuggest that on the occasion of the deputation of the unemployed waiting upon him, Mr. Balfour's silence on one point was the most eloquent part of his speech. I refer to his...
[To THE EDITOR OW THE "SPROTATOR:]
The SpectatorSin,—Was not your article on " The Cant of Efficiency " in your issue of October 28th a little tortuous P Did not it set up a bogey only to knock it down P It would have made...
[To THE EDTTOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:1 Sin,—Are we as a
The Spectatornation losing our practical common-sense P I trust not; but surely we must be on the downward grade if seven thousand people in Birmingham can be so carried away by the fervid...
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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorStn,—On September 9th my wife and I drove to see the Etruscan tombs on the hill over against Orvieto (not the Necropolis Mancini). We were accompanied by a guide. After a time...
[To THE EDITOR or TEE "SPECTATOR. " ]
The SpectatorSin,—I think you will allow a short rejoinder to your reviewer's reply in last week's issue to my previous letter. There appears to be a little confusion as to the issue. His...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE "SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, —In your editorial remark
The Spectatorattached to the letter of "The Author of A Retrograde Admiralty " in your issue of October 28th you rightly sum up the high speed question in the following words : " Of course,...
Silk—Perhaps the following quotation from Charles Lamb in Dean Stanley's
The Spectator"Memorials of Westminster Abbey," referring to the Garrick monument, may be of interest in connection with the interment within the Abbey walls of the late Sir Henry Irving....
[TO THE EDITOR OP THE " SPECTATOR:']
The Spectatoryour issue of November 4th, in his letter to you touching the claims of great actors to be buried in the great Abbey, Canon Duckworth asks : " What did Garrick leave behind him...
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[TO THE EDITOR OF THE "SPECTATOR:1
The SpectatorSIR,—In the Spectator of October 28th appears a eulogistic poem by Mr. F. Edmund Garrett on the deeds of the Johannesburg " Outlanders " (Imperial Light Horse) at Elandslaagte,...
[TO THE ED/TOR OF THE " SPECTATOR."]
The SpectatorSin,—The attention of the public has during the last few weeks been again drawn to the great scarcity of employment in West Ham, and to the distress which accompanies it. How...
[To THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR. " ] SIR, — Those of your
The Spectatorreaders who consider that the attack upon the classics is often one-sided will applaud the courage of the writer in your last issue in openly suggesting what the advocates of...
15 0 THE EDITOR OF THE " SPECTATOR:1 SIR,—I have just
The Spectatorread your very interesting article on Cambridge House in the Spectator of November 4th, and I confess that I am not very much surprised to hear that the Mission is in want of...
[To THE EDITOR OP THE " SPROTATOR."]
The SpectatorSIR, —In your review of the Life of Haydon by Mr. G. Pesten in last week's issue you say of his paintings that " they are worth recovery, if recovery be possible, for the mere...
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could write to a friend : I love to think
The Spectatorof your little girl, and her joy in the bursting buds ; give her a kiss from me." Never weary of well-doing and well-thinking, his ninety-fifth year was entered before he was...
ownership in these chapels, and the Healing Act of 1844
The Spectatorwhich quieted the Unitarian possession. In the earliest days, however, a literary note lightened the gravity of the daily life. Thomas Martineau had been a pupil of Mr....
mind against these judgments Scripture cannot have any authority, for
The Spectatorupon its authority they themselves decide." He had, in fact, definitely abandoned external authority.
The period from 1840 to 1848 was full of stress
The Spectatorand strain. Considerable family trials accompanied continual work. He, however, steadily developed the doctrine of an inward base development of character. Conscience is the...
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IT is no disparagement to the contents of this volume
The Spectatorto say claim to the title of a trained and scientific economist. " Throughout my treatment of this class of subjects," he writes, " I have regarded them from the standpoint of a...
cannot doubt that the need will in time produce the
The Spectatorman, but in the meantime Lord Goschen appears unfortunately to be the last of a line, illustrated by the names of Peel and Gladstone, with whom it was the first business of...
The first-named of these two papers carries the reader back
The Spectatorto days when the loosening hold of the Cobdenite philosophy upon public opinion first began to be apparent, and when Mr. Goschen—who was as regarded foreign and Colonial policy...
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speech we should be glad to see that meaning restored.
The SpectatorIn a tale the interest lies in the bare drama,—the actions or acci- dents of the figures as determined by external events. The same is true of romance, with the proviso that...
of the true fire. Miss Doney, like Mrs. Browning, is
The Spectatorapt to be carried away into abstractions and conceits which often jar on the reader. She is the slave of certain epithets—" white" is the moat tyrannical—and the language of...
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The Secret Kingdom. By Frank Richardson. (Duckworth and Co. 6s.)—In
The Spectatorthis audacious extravaganza, bound in the uncompro- mising colours of the Zingari Club, Mr. Frank Richardson exhibits that fine sense of irresponsibility which has on several...
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effect. It is to be hoped that if the colouring
The Spectatorshows any sign of fading, a careful copy of it will be made. We know too little of the art of coloured sculpture, of which some day there may be a Renaissance. SOME BOOKS OF...
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Garrod (E. K.), The Unit of Strife, cr 8vo (Longman)
The Spectatornet 8/6 Gibbon (P.), The Vrouw Grobelaax's Leading Cases, cr 8vo W. Blackwood) 6/0 Gould S. B.), A. Book of the Riviera, cr 8vo - (Methuen) 6/0 Gray ( B. K , History of English...
and Mr. Cumming Walters, deciding in favour of the former.
The SpectatorBriefly put, it is this : Edwin Drood is not dead ; Helena marries Crisparkle, and Rosa marries Tartar. 27es Forester. By John Nisbet, D.Aec. 2 vols. (W. Blackwood and Sons....
MAGAZINES AND SERIAL PUBLICAT10NS.—We have received the following for November
The Spectator:—The Century, the Pall Mall Maga- zine, St. Nicholas, the Review of Review:, Harper's Magazine, the Windsor Magazine, Cassier's Magazine, the Sunday at Home, the Month, the...
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Can be easily removed without drugs and starvation.
The SpectatorTAKE KALARI BISCUITS Instead of toast and bread at all meals. Write for Free Sample and Booklet to- KALARI BISCUIT DEPOT, 50 Regent St., London.
FIRE. LIFE. SEA. GENERAL ACCIDENTS.
The SpectatorROYAL EXCHANGE A.D. 1720. ASSURANCE. The Corporation is prepared to act as EXECUTOR OF WILLS, TRUSTEE OF WILLS AND SETTLEMENTS. Apply for full Prospectus to the SECRETARY....
RESTFUL EASY CHAIRS,
The Spectatorwhich are designed and manufactured with a view to affording the Greatest possible Ease and Comfort. They are manufactured in HAMPTONS' own workshops from only the best...
Wasson (G.), The Green Shay, cr 8vo (Constable) 6/0 Townshend
The Spectator(R. B.), The Bride of a Day, cr tiro (G. Allen) Train (A.), McAllister and his Double, cr 8vo (Newnes) Verrall (A. W.), Essays on the Four Plays of Euripides, 8vo (Carob. Univ....
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The SpectatorEPPS'S COCOA EPPS'S COCOA EPPS'S COCOA Everybody knows that it is an admirable food, the nicest and most nutritious beverage for the breakfast table. It is made in a moment...
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J. H. DAVIES, Registrar. J. H. DAVIES, Registrar.
The SpectatorDENDLETON HIGH SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, MAN- CHESTER.—WANTED in January FORM MISTRESS able to teach History and some Mathematics or Latin. Training or Experience and Degree (or...
Applications, with References and copies of not more than three
The SpectatorTesti- monials, to be sent to me at the Education Offices, 92 Nortbgate Street, Chester, on or before Friday, the 17th November proximo. A. E. LOVELL, Director of Education and...
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The Spectator0 Column, two-thirds width of page, £8 fis. COMPANIES. Outside Page £16 16 01 Inside Page £1414 0 Five lines (45 words) and under in broad column (half-width), 5s ; and la a...
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The Spectatorclasses of risks, and services of skilled surveyors are always available to inspect risks, to quote premiums, and to assist the public in arranging their insurances. Policy...
ST. ANDREWS SCHOOL FOR GIRLS COMPANY, LIMITED. ST LEONARDS JUNIOR SCHOOL
The Spectator(ST KATHABINES), ST ANDRE WS.—For Girls from seven to fourteen. The climate of St Andrews is considered eminently suitable for children from India and the Colonies, and special...
ProMiums.—The rates of premium charged will be found below the
The Spectatoraverage - rates of British offices, both for with-profit and without-profit business. Expenses. — The total annual expenses, including commission, charged to the Life...
R OEDEAN SCHOOL FOR GIRLS, BRIGHTON.— A. FOUNDER'S SCHOLARSHIP will be
The Spectatorcompeted for in June, 1906. The value is such as to reduce all expenses for board, laundry, and tuition to £30 a year.—For particulars of the Examination, apply to Miss WRAITH,...